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- <text id=93HT1411>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1953: Konrad Adenauer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 4, 1954
- Man of the Year
- Konrad Adenauer: "We Belong to the West"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> On a mild morning last April, a band of dignitaries gathered
- before the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National
- Cemetery. In the place of honor stood a tall old man whose somber
- mask of a face looked stiffly ahead. Before him, stretching to
- the hilltop, was an array of granite pillars, blocks and
- crosses--the graves of Americans who had died in two wars with Germany.
- Behind him fluttered the black, red and gold flag of the Federal
- Republic of Germany.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. Army band sounded The Star-Spangled Banner. Then it
- broke into the measured strains of Deutschland Uber Alles.
- "This," murmured the old man, "is a turning point in history."
- </p>
- <p> More dramatically than headline or speech or essay, the
- music symbolized an amazing story. In 1953, only eight years
- after the shame, horror and impotence of defeat in mankind's
- bloodiest war, Germany came back. It was a world power once more.
- More than any other, the person who brought this about was the
- stolid old man who stood in Arlington, visibly moved by the
- strains of his national anthem echoing among the tombstones. He
- was Konrad Adenauer, Chancellor of the West German Republic,
- apostle of United Europe, 1953's Man of the Year.
- </p>
- <p> Konrad Adenauer had already guided the hated land of the Hun
- and the Nazi back to moral respectability and had earned himself
- a seat in the highest councils of the Western powers. Though she
- still lacked a formal peace treaty, and the Iron Curtain fenced
- her off from half her land and from 18 million countrymen, Konrad
- Adenauer's West Germany last year emerged as the strongest
- country on the Continent save Soviet Russia.
- </p>
- <p> Her conquerors wooed her for her favors. Neighbors who had
- helped defeat her so short a time ago talked fearfully once more
- of her new strength and her even greater potential. Her economy
- glowed with health. Her products cascaded into the world's
- markets. In September came an election which the whole world
- nervously watched, to see whether the oil of democracy could mix
- with the vinegar of German authoritarianism. The West German
- voters swept all their Communists and Nazis out of national
- office and overwhelmingly put their faith in the dedicated, firm-
- handed democrat, Konrad Adenauer. No longer the passive object of
- other forces, Germany in 1953 was again one of the formidable
- forces of history and Konrad Adenauer one of history's makers.
- </p>
- <p> "This year," said the Man of the Year, "is the year in which
- the re-emergence of Germany...changed the world picture."
- </p>
- <p> Exhilaration in the Valleys. It was a year to alter the
- riverbanks of history. A cease-fire without victory quieted
- Korea, but it was still the quiet of the dormant volcano.
- Mankind's greatest tyrant died; his death touched off a lupine
- scuffle for succession in the Kremlin and opened a new and
- unpredictable era for the tyranny Joseph Stalin fixed on half the
- globe. Radioactive dust particles borne east in a cloud from
- Siberia told the outside world that Russia, too, had plumbed the
- secret of the thermonuclear bomb and could now visit
- instantaneous death on the obscurest cranny of civilization. Yet
- somehow, in the year in which he learned that a mere handful of
- chemicals could blast his world to smithereens, the average man
- of the free world seemed to conclude that the peril of general
- war had lessened.
- </p>
- <p> It was also a year in which a white man and a brown man,
- held together by a light nylon rope, climbed the highest
- mountain. In this feat of the New Zealand beekeeper, Edmund
- Hillary, and the sinewy Sherpa tribesman, Tenzing, millions down
- in the mundane valleys felt a vicarious exhilaration--the reminder
- that by valor and dedication man may surmount his
- Everests.
- </p>
- <p> In the streets of East Berlin, a camera shutter caught for
- posterity the proof that man of 1953, on city streets and against
- the odds, would risk everything for freedom: two brave youths
- fought off Soviet army tanks with stones. It was June 17--the
- day East Germans rose up against their Communist oppressors
- across their barbed-wire land, the day that showed that the Red
- monolith might some day crack.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S., the Big Change came--after 20 years. The
- Democrats packed out and the Republicans moved in. Dwight
- Eisenhower rode down Pennsylvania Avenue and into the White House
- on a surge of immense popularity and high hopes. His popularity
- continued high throughout 1953, but he did not choose to invoke
- it openly, and it remained in reserve, like troops uncommitted to
- battle. His major achievement (whose effects will be measured in
- 1954) was in the field he knew best: a vast readjustment of the
- U.S. military to the age of the atom. In practical politics, a
- field he knew less about and felt a soldier's distaste for, he
- had yet to make his mark. He had yet to harness the divergent
- wills and pressures within the Republican Party, and command
- them, but the signs at 1953's end were that he was prepared. His
- task was made more difficult, perhaps postponed, by the death in
- July of Ohio's Robert A. Taft, the Republicans' great Senate
- leader and selfless counselor of the man who had defeated him for
- the presidential nomination.
- </p>
- <p> Not for what he accomplished, but for the noise he made,
- Senator Joe McCarthy was the most discussed man of 1953. His name
- became an epithet to millions, a cheer to countless others. In
- 1953, McCarthy was the most discussed man of 1953. His name
- became an epithet to millions, a cheer to countless others. In
- 1953, McCarthyism crossed the twelve-mile limit and became an
- international word, widely understood around the world to mean a
- cynical exploitation of genuine fears, a studied contempt for
- fair play, a cunning talent for concealing failures by loudly
- baying after new victims. Too many abroad, urged on by a U.S.
- press that would leave no word of McCarthy unrecorded--no
- matter how outlandish--took him as their image of the American
- statesman and over-emphasized his influence.
- </p>
- <p> Rollin' Along. The republic, though, was in condition to
- survive McCarthy and McCarthyism. Though business pulses slowed a
- bit here & there, never had production been so high or
- prosperity so great. The American of 1953 was still living on top
- of the world, and, as the song says, just rollin' along. In this
- age of managers and machines, of complexities and coordinators,
- this was the achievement of many, not one.
- </p>
- <p> It was also the 50th anniversary of man's first powered
- flight, and it was celebrated by two Americans, first Scott
- Crossfield, flying at 1,327 m.p.h., then the Air Force's Major
- "Chuck" Yeager, ripping through the substratosphere at more than
- 1,600 m.p.h., 2 1/2 times the speed of sound. In sport, Casey
- Stengel of the New York Yankees became baseball's first manager
- to win five consecutive World Series championships. Native
- Dancer, a big grey horse with the legs of a champion and the
- inbred ham of a Barrymore, teamed with TV to make horse-racing
- fans out of millions who did not know a fetlock from a padlock.
- The year brought reminders of previous champions: Jim Jeffries
- died; so did Bill Tilden and Jim Thorpe. Handy Earl Sande, 54,
- and hard up for eating money, cinched on a saddle and tried for a
- comeback (but booted home only one winner). And in the biggest
- sweep since Bobby Jones's "grand slam" in 1930, Ben Hogan wrapped
- up the three big titles of golf, to become sport's Man of the
- Year. It was also the year of 3-D, Cinema-Scope, Cinerama, big
- screen, stereophonic sound and other technical tricks designed
- to make Marilyn Monroe look 64 feet long (couchant) and intended
- to lure back, by sheer gigantism, the public that had been lost
- to 17-inch TV screens. This too was sometimes called progress.
- </p>
- <p> The year's obituary list, not even counting Joe Stalin and
- Bob Taft, was forbiddingly distinguished: Eugene O'Neill, the
- greatest playwright the U.S. had produced; Welshman Dylan Thomas,
- the best young poet in the English language; Sergei Prokofiev,
- Russia's great composer; General Jonathan Wainwright, hero of
- Bataan; Mayor Ernst Reuter, hero of the cold-war battle of
- Berlin; Saudi Arabia's fabulous King Ibn Saud; Britain's
- redoubtable Queen Mary.
- </p>
- <p> Empire Troubles. Asia, with its shortfused peace in Korea,
- its seemingly unwinnable war in Indo-China, and its tendency to
- fear a dying colonialism more than an expansive Communism,
- remained the hot battlefield of the cold war. Appropriately, it
- had not one Man of the Year but three--men diverse in almost
- every respect: Jawaharlal Nehru, the exasperating high priest of
- neutralism; Ramon Magsaysay, the young and dynamic, U.S.-loving
- man of action who became President of the Philippines; wrinkled
- old Syngman Rhee of Korea, the angry ally of the West. Syngman
- Rhee's intractability towards his allies, and his ruthless
- quelling of domestic rivals, led many to dismiss his great claim
- to distinction: without his half-century fight for liberty and
- his stouthearted hatred of Communism, there would have been no
- South Korea to save.
- </p>
- <p> The British Commonwealth crowned its Queen in elegance that
- momentarily revived a great past and lifted spirits. But the vast
- realm over which she reigns trembled again with the ague of
- disintegration--the Sudan broke away, all colonial Africa
- throbbed with the presence or possibility of violence and shouts
- for independence. The Queen was Britain's Woman of the Year;
- Britain's Man was clearly its great, aging political chieftain,
- newly knighted Sir Winston Churchill.
- </p>
- <p> The new Red Empire quavered uncertainly at the change of
- rulers. The cerebral hemorrhage that killed Stalin--if that is
- what did it--assuredly left behind the man of some future year.
- Perhaps he was Georgy Malenkov, the suety, waxen-faced Great
- Russian who donned the dictator's mantle. But perhaps it was
- another, Nikita Khrushchev, Marshal Zhukov, or some figure still
- invisible to the eye of the outside world. One it was not:
- Laverenty Berie, b. 1899, d. 1953 at the hands of the
- executioner.
- </p>
- <p> Communism's Men of 1953 were not its leaders, but its
- subjects. At home the Kremlin was harassed by the restlessness of
- the Soviet masses and a serious crisis in agriculture. Abroad, it
- suffered sharp setbacks--an armistice that acknowledged its
- failure in Korea, the uprisings in East Germany, a rash of
- troubles in the other East European satellites, the stunning
- psychological defeat in the explanation tents of Panmunjom.
- </p>
- <p> Creatures of Destiny. It was a year in which the so-called
- big powers, Eastern and Western alike, seemed less the shapers of
- destiny than its creatures. The change in the hands which
- governed the two greatest powers brought a strange sense of
- indecisiveness to world affairs. The strain of the cold war
- brought hesitations and serious arguments to the Western
- Alliance. The dawning of the thermonuclear age, with its talk of
- megaton bombs (equal to 1,000,000 tons of TNT), cast great and
- sudden doubt on the validity of the thinking and the plans of
- statesmen and diplomats and soldiers. Both sides were caught in
- a sort of pause, to re-examine and to retool. It was in this
- atmosphere of confusion, holding back and reassessment that the
- unhesitant, unconfused, unswerving re-emergence of West Germany
- made its mark on 1953.
- </p>
- <p> Energy, Ambition, Work. Like so many turning points, it was
- a long time in the reaching, but it was a shorter time than even
- the most sanguine German had a right to expect when he crawled
- from the smoking rubble one day in 1945 to learn that the Nazi
- Reich was no more. And, as with most great, historic turns, it
- was made possible by countless events. There was the decay of the
- wartime Alliance, Russia's shortsighted intransigence in the
- German occupation. There was the West's decision to form one
- unified country of West Germany without waiting for a peace
- treaty. There was the Berlin blockade, which jolted the West into
- the urgency of rearmament; the Korean war, which shocked it into
- the decision that it needed German troops as well. There was some
- $3.3 billion in U.S. aid to Germany. There was the privilege of
- concentrating on building industries and markets while West
- Germany's conquerors bent to the ordeal of arming themselves.
- There were the uprisings in East Germany. Above all, there was
- the happy combination of energy, ambition, and respect for work
- which distinguishes the German.
- </p>
- <p> In this mixture of happenstance, deliberate policy,
- improvised decisions and national persistence can be found the
- explanation for the speed of West Germany's comeback. But the
- ideas and leadership of Konrad Adenauer explain, more than
- anything else, the character of the comeback.
- </p>
- <p> When the Western Allies stumbled upon him right after V-E
- Day, Konrad Adenauer was just an old man in a high, starched
- collar, stern and vigorous and proud, already well into the
- twilight of his life. In his three-score-and-ten, his homeland
- had soared and sunk through two great historical phases and
- entered a third. Two of these phases Konrad Adenauer had lived
- out in a routine of efficient ordinariness and relative
- obscurity. He was born (Jan 5, 1876) in the age of Bismarck; he
- was already 42 when the Kaiser fell. Through the sad days of the
- Weimar Republic and the ugly early days of Naziism he was
- respected as veteran mayor of Cologne and a wily politician,
- until he was forced out of office by the Nazis, for whom he
- showed nothing but flinty scorn. Had he died at 70, he would not
- have rated a paragraph in most U.S. newspapers.
- </p>
- <p> He lived not only to see a third phase of German history,
- but to mold it.
- </p>
- <p> He Will Have It. "I remember a meeting of the Cologne
- municipal council in 1918," Adenauer wrote recently. "As mayor, I
- wanted to see the old fortifications circling the city replaced
- not by factories or houses crowded together, but by a refreshing
- green girdle of parks. No one on the council agreed. I began to
- feel that I would have to capitulate. Then...I went all the
- way in marshaling my data...After I had presented the facts
- at several meetings, all the councilmen but one were convinced.
- Finally, that one rose and said: `Let him have his way--he will
- have it anyhow!'"
- </p>
- <p> Germans, Western occupiers and Russian antagonists have all
- since learned to know how that lone Cologne holdout felt. To the
- occupiers, Adenauer has proved a rugged bargainer--tireless,
- insistent, all but immovable. "We are not an African tribe," he
- snapped one day, "but a Central European nation proud of its
- country." On another occasion: "It was the German army and not
- the German people that capitulated, and this the world had better
- remember." One day in 1949, when Adenauer visited U.S. High
- Commissioner John J. McCloy, the two men fell into a Gaston &
- Alphonse routine at the door. "After you, Chancellor," said
- McCloy, "I'm at home here." A chill smile flickered on Adenauer's
- flat, leathery face. "No, no," said he, "after you, Mr. McCloy."
- </p>
- <p> To Germans he also talked sternly. When they complained of
- occupation pressures, or of the slowness of Allied decontrol, he
- stopped them with one indignant question: "Who do you think won
- the war?" He preached: "We must part with concepts of the past.
- When you fall from the heights as we Germans have, you realize
- it is necessary to break with what has been. We cannot live
- fruitfully with lost illusions. I do not believe in fairy tales."
- </p>
- <p> Christians Hold Together. What Adenauer does believe is the
- key to the strategy he has followed to reconstruct Germany and to
- promote the construction of Europe. He believes that:
- </p>
- <p>-- A Christian civilization must hold together politically
- or perish before Communism.
- </p>
- <p>-- West Germany would be swallowed up as a Red satellite if
- it tried to remain neutral and play Russia against the West.
- </p>
- <p>-- West Germany must some day be reunited with the German
- land east of the Iron Curtain, but that day will come only when
- the Western world stands strong enough to force--without war--a
- Soviet withdrawal from Central Europe. He refuses to recognize
- the Oder-Neisse frontier, but is ready to promise not to cross it
- with troops.
- </p>
- <p>-- West Germany must earn the West's trust and confidence by
- demonstrating that its lesson has been learned in the two
- disastrous German adventures of the 20th century.
- </p>
- <p>-- Germany still cannot be trusted to rearm by itself. "It
- is no secret," said close associate, "that he considers Prussians
- savage and dangerous."
- </p>
- <p>-- Nevertheless, the rearmament of Germany is inevitable; if
- it is not armed as a part of a supranational army, with controls
- on its size and use, then it will be armed with a new national
- Wehrmacht.
- </p>
- <p>-- Far greater than the need for German troops is Europe's
- need to unite--politically, militarily and psychologically--those
- historic antagonists in war, Germany and France.
- </p>
- <p> "I deem it false...to speak of German rearmament,"
- Adenauer said not long ago. "This is an expression which has no
- place in those new forms toward which we are striving. We want
- nothing of the old. We do not want to restore a national army."
- </p>
- <p> By "those new forms," Adenauer means the European Defense
- Community. The idea came, providentially, from France. Germans
- could not propose it without risking the impression that it was
- simply a cunning maneuver to unlock the occupation shackles and
- revive the Wehrmacht. But when the enemy from across the Rhine
- proposed it in 1950, Konrad Adenauer could more easily champion
- it.
- </p>
- <p> The Dream Fades. The U.S. made EDC the core of its European
- policy. Britain supported it. Italy could hardly wait to approve
- it. The Benelux countries got behind it.
- </p>
- <p> But by 1953, the clear dream had clouded over. The sharp-
- beaked vagaries of politics tore at the men who did most to shape
- and promote the EDC idea. First, down went Good European Robert
- Schuman, France's longtime Foreign Minister. He was thrown aside
- because France, tortured by division and illusion, turned in
- confusion and fear from its own brain child. Next went Good
- European Alcide de Gasperi, and Italy's ratification became
- questionable. The death of Stalin, and Churchill's insistence on
- sounding out the dictator's successor, gave the French more
- opportunity to haggle and hesitate. The EDC idea was close to
- dying.
- </p>
- <p> Then came West Germany's time to decide. EDC meant several
- unpalatable things to Germans. Two disasters in half a century
- had been enough; thousands wanted never to bear arms again. On
- the other side, Nationalists balked at joining hands with the
- French, and oldtime professional soldiers seethed at the
- "disgrace" of banning for good the Wehrmacht and General Staff.
- Joining in with the West, they argued, might turn the East-West
- German boundary into a 38th parallel and Germany into another
- Korea. It might seal off forever the Communist-held lands to the
- East. Would it not be smarter, more comfortable, less dangerous,
- to stay uncommitted and play off the fears of both sides?
- </p>
- <p> Across West Germany, tireless, graven-faced Konrad Adenauer
- campaigned bluntly on the issue of United Europe. His main
- opponents, the socialists, bluntly campaigned against it. Germans
- had a clear-cut choice. "Our country," said Adenauer, "is the
- point of tension between two world blocs...Long ago I made a
- great decision: we belong to the West and not to the East...Isolation
- is an idea created by fools. It would mean that the
- U.S. would withdraw its troops from Europe. Ladies and gentlemen,
- the moment that happens, Germany will become a satellite."
- </p>
- <p> On Sept. 6, the people of West Germany walked up to two
- doors to the future. Which would they choose? Western diplomats,
- disheartened by the fall of Schuman and De Gasperi, guessed
- timidly that Adenauer and the dream of Europe would squeak
- through--but barely. But the old man in the high, starched
- collar simply rode up to his Rhondorf home, went off to Sunday
- Mass, left order not to be disturbed, and at day's end turned in
- for a long night's sleep.
- </p>
- <p> The Flag of Europe. The results astounded even composed
- Konrad Adenauer. From the historic election, no party was left
- strong enough to challenge Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democrats,
- and no person or bloc within the Christian Democrats was left
- strong enough to challenge Konrad Adenauer. When his followers
- gathered at the Chancellery steps next morning to salute him,
- Adenauer smiled his thoughtful, deep-frozen smile. "Perhaps,"
- said he, "we have won by a little too much."
- </p>
- <p> Adenauer's victory was a victory for Europe, and the West's
- big cold-war success of 1953. When the striped German flag was
- raised in post-election triumph above the Chancellor's Palais
- Schaumburg, the green and white flag of European unity was run up
- alongside it. "The elections," said Konrad Adenauer, "have
- decided that Europe will come about, that the EDC will come
- about, and that the cold war is lost for Russia."
- </p>
- <p> By 1953's end, his certainty was not so widely shared.
- France might or might not ratify EDC. But Germany's vote had
- saved it from death in 1953, and kept alive the hope that in
- 1954, Europe might yet be born.
- </p>
- <p> If the European dream does come true, Adenauer will go down
- in history as one of its creators. If it fails, his efforts will
- still have served Germany well. He has won her respectability.
- </p>
- <p> At the Big Three's Bermuda conference, the absent, uninvited
- Chancellor of West Germany was even more a participant than
- France's ailing Premier, who spoke scarcely a word. Before
- dispatching to Moscow their agreement to a Big Four conference in
- Berlin, the Big Three leaders solicited Adenauer's approval. When
- Prime Minister Churchill suggested it might be wise to consider
- some alternative to EDC for Germany's rearmament, President
- Eisenhower dismissed the proposal with a wave of his hand. The
- U.S. will not consider alternatives, said the President, and
- besides, "EDC is what Adenauer wants."
- </p>
- <p> Decisive Events. West Germany has won this place at the
- council table despite the fact that it is still nominally an
- occupied country, and has yet to arm a single soldier, build a
- plane or roll out a tank.
- </p>
- <p> Seated one day last week in his huge office in the Palais
- Schaumburg, Chacellor Adenauer made a temple of his fingers and,
- chatting with TIME Correspondent Frank White, allowed himself the
- luxury of some mild self-satisfaction. "I cannot avoid smiling a
- little when, as chief of an occupied country, I sit down with the
- leaders of the occupying nations, such as Mr. Eden and M.
- Bidault. In spite of the fact that Germany hasn't yet full
- sovereignty, its economic and political impact is fully felt in
- world affairs."
- </p>
- <p> Adenauer had his own list of "the decisive events' of the
- year, the clear and determined attitude" of the U.S. to take
- the lead in the struggle against Communism, the uprisings in
- East Germany, his own election victory, and President
- Eisenhower's atomic pool proposal, which Adenauer believes "may
- well be the beginning of real understanding between East and
- West." Stalin's death, he says, was "not a factor of major
- importance." It did not increase the chances for peace. "Stalin
- had the power and prestige to alter the course of Kremlin
- foreign policy. His successors have not."
- </p>
- <p> Adenauer has some advance worries for 1954: "There is wind
- in the air, and the sky is not without clouds." Biggest clouds:
- indecision in France, the approaching four-power conference on
- Germany, the state of mind of the U.S. Congress.
- </p>
- <p> As for France: "...The French people have a much clearer
- conception [of EDC] than does the French Parliament...I am
- convinced the French will finally agree to the formation of an
- integrated Europe."
- </p>
- <p> On four-power negotiations: "The hope that the Soviets have
- altered their course is unfounded. Their strategy for the Berlin
- conference is mainly that of delay...The three [Western]
- ministers must maintain an undivided front. Russia will attempt
- to weaken the French will to ratify EDC. If successful...it
- would be Russia's greatest triumph."
- </p>
- <p> On Congress: "I fully understand that there should be
- impatience. I confidently hope, however, that as much as they
- dislike what happens, they will be wise enough not to stop giving
- [moral] assistance and [financial] support at this critical
- moment, when final success is in sight."
- </p>
- <p> "The first six months of 1954 will be decisive."
- </p>
- <p> Near the Heart. As far as it went, the story of Germany's
- rise in 1953 was good for the democracies and bad for Communism.
- But other years and other men will determine whether there will
- be a happy ending. Konrad Adenauer is 78 this month. In the frost
- of his rigid, imperious command over machinery of both party and
- government, few sprouts of leadership have been able to grow.
- "How long I can hold my present office no one can tell," he said.
- "Even I cannot. My health and strength are excellent. Nothing,
- however, is nearer my heart than that before I go...I shall
- have brought Germany securely into the community of free and
- democratic peoples of the Christian West..."
- </p>
- <p> The question mark of the future intrudes like a brooding
- outsider on the encouraging spectacle of a West Germany healthily
- revived, strongly and democratically led, dedicated by its
- electorate to a United Europe as well as to a new Germany. "We
- never question Adenauer's sincerity when he talks of Franco-
- German agreement," said a top French diplomat. "He is truly
- European...But we don't forget another German, Stresemann,
- who wanted good relations with France. Six months after he died
- [1929], what happened? His party and policy collapsed."
- </p>
- <p> Konrad Adenauer himself has also seen the brooding outsider.
- If the dream of Europe collapses, there is, he fears, the
- possibility of a revival of German militarism. "I never minimize
- this possibility if Europe fails," said he last week. "If France
- refuses to accept reconciliation with her former enemy, how we
- would accept the effect of such a reversal I do not know...The
- whole population would be affected. We cannot say what would
- happen. But we have had experience in the past."
- </p>
- <p> "Perhaps I had better not die yet awhile," said Konrad
- Adenauer. "There is still too much to do."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-