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<text id=90TT0734>
<link 93TG0101>
<link 93TG0099>
<title>
Mar. 26, 1990: The Germanys:Anything To Fear?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Mar. 26, 1990 The Germans
The Reunification of Germany
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 32
COVER STORY
Anything to Fear?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>With unification imminent, the time has come to put the German
question to rest and find a new form of security for Europe
</p>
<p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James L. Graff/Bonn, Christopher
Redman/Paris and Frederick Ungeheuer/Berlin, with other
bureaus
</p>
<p> Two thousand years ago in the piney fastness of the
Teutoburg Forest, near where the city of Bielefeldr is today,
an army of German tribesmen lay in wait for three Roman legions
advancing from the Rhine. Led by the chieftain Arminius, the
Germans ambushed the veteran legionaries and massacred them.
Rome never again tried to extend its empire far beyond the
Rhine. The Roman historian Tacitus called Arminius' ferocious
style of warfare the furor Teutonicus: given to drinking and
fighting, the Germans, he wrote, were tough, hardened warriors
"fanatically loyal to their leaders." Concluded Tacitus: "Rest
is unwelcome to the race."
</p>
<p> The image has endured, to be intensified by the horrors of
two world wars in the first half of this century. There is
still, as there has been for decades, a German question.
Germans and their country have arrived at the end of the 20th
century burdened more than others with the curse of their
history, a fact they may resent but cannot ignore. "The Germans
want to think of the future," says Columbia University's Fritz
Stern, a leading American expert on German history, "but their
neighbors are thinking of the past." In Paris last month,
former Prime Minister Michel Debre spoke warily about the
prospect of a unified German nation. "We French," he said, "who
know our neighbors well, how can we not remind all Europeans
and the world as a whole of the need to guard against abuses
which Germany commits in all areas when it sees an
opportunity?"
</p>
<p> Fear of the Germans, in abeyance for more than 40 years
while the country was divided in a bipolar world, is on the
rise again, triggered by the realization that Europe's destiny
is no longer controlled by the rival superpowers--and that
unification is imminent. Last week in Bonn, representatives of
West and East Germany and the four World War II Allies--the
U.S., Britain, France and the Soviet Union--sat down in the
Foreign Ministry on the Rhine to begin the complicated business
of consolidating, and securing, a single German state.
</p>
<p> At the next meeting, the delegation from East Germany will
represent a government freely chosen in the first democratic
balloting there since 1932. In coming months, the Germanys will
work out the domestic legal and financial aspects of merger and
will join in the so-called two-plus-four talks to end remaining
Allied occupation rights and create a new security system
around Germany.
</p>
<p> The opening session had been intended to cover only
procedural matters, but was forced into substance by a dispute
that illustrates how quickly old apprehensions are resurfacing.
Alarmed by Chancellor Helmut Kohl's ambiguity about the status
of postwar German-Polish borders along the so-called
Oder-Neisse line, the Poles demanded a seat at the table for
discussions of their frontiers. Paris and London backed Warsaw--something that sounded depressingly reminiscent of 1939.
</p>
<p> After 7 1/2 hours of discussion, the conferees announced
that they had agreed to invite the Poles to join in when the
meetings focus on the Oder-Neisse line. In a belated attempt
to reassure other Europeans who feel stampeded by the rush to
unification, Volker Ruhe, general secretary of Kohl's Christian
Democratic Union, said the process was so complex that it might
take two to three years to complete. A single state would not
be achieved, he said, "as long as the external questions are
not settled."
</p>
<p> Kohl, meanwhile, was busy with internal politics, stumping
for East Germany's March 18 election in support of a
conservative alliance there that is linked to his CDU and
laying the groundwork in West Germany for balloting in
December. Appealing to both sets of voters is complicated, and
sometimes contradictory. Kohl told a cheering rally in the
Eastern city of Cottbus that the two states would be joined in
a currency union "as fast as possible." He pledged that
individual East German savings accounts would be redeemed one
for one in deutsche marks (the black market rate is 6 to 1)--a guaranteed vote getter in the East, but one that will cost
West Germans an estimated $100 billion.
</p>
<p> In Bonn, by contrast, the CDU said it would introduce a bill
cutting off special benefits for East Germans flooding across
the now open border; that was to placate West Germans who have
been growing restive at the high price of supporting penniless
new arrivals.
</p>
<p> Determined to go into December's election as "the
unification Chancellor," Kohl has been summoning up on the
hustings the name of Otto von Bismarck, who first achieved a
united Germany in 1871, and closing with the call, "God bless
our German fatherland." But it has also dawned on him that his
politically motivated equivocation over Poland's borders--a
play to German right-wing sentiment--has been damaging. Kohl
last week emphasized that a unified Germany would have "good
relations with all countries in East and West, and I name
Poland in first place." No one need fear the unification of 61
million West Germans and 17 million East Germans, he said. "We
take the fears of our neighbors seriously, but we ask them to
take our wish to come together in one united fatherland
seriously too."
</p>
<p> For many Europeans the inhuman crimes of the Third Reich are
as vivid as yesterday. The very word German can cause a
shudder; some are convinced that history could repeat itself.
Conor Cruise O'Brien, the Irish academic, has a preposterously
anachronistic vision: "In the new, proud, united Germany, the
nationalists will proclaim the Fourth Reich. I can see some of
the consequences: expulsion of Jews, breaking off of relations
with Israel, a military mission to the Palestine Liberation
Organization, a statue of Hitler in every town."
</p>
<p> Even if their heads tell the French that Germany has
changed, the carnage of World War I followed by the humiliating
defeat and Nazi occupation of World War II has not been erased
from their hearts. "The French are deeply insecure," says
Dominique Moisi, associate director of the Institute for
International Relations in Paris. "The Germans are asserting
themselves, and we are growing fearful. Our fears may not be
well founded, but we have them nonetheless, and a fearful
people will not always distinguish carefully between myth and
reality." Recent polls nevertheless show that large majorities
in most Western countries support the idea of German
unification, with young people more strongly in favor than
those who remember the war. In France 68% of those polled said
peace would be strengthened by unification.
</p>
<p> Even in the Soviet Union, where new estimates say 26 million
died in World War II, surveys indicate that a majority does not
worry about a single Germany. Nevertheless, Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze has warned of "sinister shadows of the past...a possible growth of militarism...the ghost of
political revenge." The Soviet government is profoundly
ambivalent about a unification it would much rather delay if
not prevent altogether. In Poland, a third of which is made up
of former German territory, opinion polls indicate that 64% are
against unification.
</p>
<p> Israel harbors the deepest dread, as the collective survivor
of the Holocaust that slaughtered 6 million Jews. "We cannot
know where German enthusiasm may lead," Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir wrote to Kohl not long ago. "The Jewish people cannot
be enthusiastic about this union." Despite a carefully nurtured
reconciliation between Jerusalem and Bonn, which has paid $33
billion in reparations to Jews, memories are powerful. When
Foreign Minister Moshe Arens, aware that Bonn has often been
Israel's best friend in Europe, said he did not "foresee any
breakdown of the democratic institutions in West Germany," the
daily Ma'ariv retorted that Arens and Israel seemed to be
losing their sanity. Jewish acceptance of German unification,
the paper said, "can be discussed in about 200 years, after
ten generations of united Germans have proved that this is
indeed a new Germany."
</p>
<p> The Genetic Fallacy. As Moisi observed, fearful people do
not always recognize reality. In the German case, concern is
based on the assumption that aggression and fascism are in some
way the result of genetic defects that particularly afflict
Germans. If not in the genes, another line of thinking holds,
perhaps the evil is rooted in national character. Neither
notion is scientifically valid. "You can't talk about something
genetically wrong with the German people," says Moshe
Zimmerman, professor of German history at Jerusalem's Hebrew
University. "All the characteristics attributed to Germans may
be found in Swiss, Americans and others." Defining national
character is risky business and leads to stereotyping; though
countries do have observable characteristics, values and
attitudes, they are acquired by growing up and being educated
in a specific culture.
</p>
<p> No one can overlook Germany's historic contributions to
science, music and literature. But there is little argument
about what German political culture includes. During the 19th
and part of the 20th century, many of its theorists were
romantic nationalists, some of them anti-Semitic. Even the
Brothers Grimm, in their collections of fairy tales, emphasized
nationalism, order, discipline and contempt for the Jews.
Modern, post-1871 Germany was organized in the mold of the
Prussian state and strutted the world stage until it lost the
first World War, after which it was plunged into disorder,
depression and despair. As Friedrich Nietzsche anticipated the
response: "Nothing on earth consumes a man more quickly than
the passion of resentment." Out of the shambles of the
well-meaning but ill-fated Weimar Republic surged Hitler and
his criminal reign.
</p>
<p> Patterns of national behavior do change over time, however.
Under Napoleon, France was the scourge of Europe, conquering
the Continent, marching as far as Egypt and Moscow, but for
more than a century France has usually been a victim. When
France launched and lost the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, the
British historian Thomas Carlyle wrote that he felt privileged
to see France, with its "shameless vanity, menacing,
long-continued arrogance," replaced as the leader of Europe by
the "peace-loving, brave, industrious, firm and noble race of
Germans." What Carlyle, entwined in stereotypes, had not
observed was the transformation taking place in Germany under
the drilling of Bismarck and Kaiser Wilhelm I. The Germany of
quiet university towns and small principalities was evolving
into a nation that behaved like an army.
</p>
<p> Germany's nationalist culture came to an abrupt end with
unconditional surrender and military occupation. West Germans
called 1945 Zero Hour, a total break with the past and a new
beginning. Older Germans speak of the postwar years as "when
we got democracy," and many use the image of an inoculation or
the administration of an antidote to Nazi poison. In the
Eastern zone the Soviets would eventually turn the Nazi
dictatorship into a Stalinist one. But in the West, occupation
forces and civil administrations set to work educating their
larger portion of the nation in democracy. The process of
individual "de-Nazification" was relatively ineffective below
the top levels, but all institutions were turned inside out.
</p>
<p> West Germany's Basic Law, its constitution, was essentially
dictated by American and British legal experts. The educational
system, study materials, courts and press were systematically
vetted and rebuilt according to Western precepts. Today the
Federal Republic's armed forces are scrutinized by a Bundestag
ombudsman and taught innere Fuhrung, or inner direction,
including the soldier's duty to refuse illegal or immoral
orders. Neo-Nazi organizations are banned, anti-Semitic
statements illegal. There have been right-wing parties in West
Germany all along, troubling Germans and foreigners alike, but
they have not done well enough at the ballot box to win
representation in the Bundestag, which requires 5% of the vote.
The National Democratic Party peaked in 1969 with 4.3%; the
current shadow on the right, the Republican Party, has sunk
during the debate on Polish borders to between 2% and 3% in
opinion polls.
</p>
<p> Schoolchildren are constantly reminded of Hitler, Nazism,
the Holocaust: they are shown newsreels of death camps, visit
concentration-camp exhibitions, spend a year of high school
history studying the Third Reich. Dozens of books on the
subject, many best sellers, have been published. Hardly a week
passes in West Germany without a special television production
on the war.
</p>
<p> West Germans are among the best informed people on earth--and one thing they know is that they have caused the world
problems. But even well-meaning Germans sometimes feel as if
they were damned by some sort of original sin--and that the
constant reminders of past crimes and transgressions are
overdone. Says Frank Wittig, 20, a Bundeswehr soldier serving
in Bonn: "I think we talk about it too much, maybe because we
think that's what people abroad expect us to do." Kohl has said
repeatedly that the majority of today's Germans were born after
the war and are guilty of nothing. They are tired, he says, of
being preached to by the world, and it is "high time" outsiders
took note of "the positive things that have happened in Germany
since 1945."
</p>
<p> Redundant or not, the antidote seems to have worked. The
Weimar Republic lasted less than 14 years, the Third Reich
twelve. The Federal Republic of Germany is in its 41st year.
Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti says, "The bacteria are
no longer in the body of Germany."
</p>
<p> West Germany has worked hard to overcome the past. Says
William Wallace, deputy director of the Royal Institute of
International Affairs in London: "Their commitment to democracy
is clearly solid. They constantly worry that their institutions
are not perfect, but in fact they work better than in most
other democracies." A similar assessment comes from Jiri Musil,
the director of the Institute of Sociology at the Czechoslovak
Academy of Sciences in Prague, where the memory of German
occupation is still sharp. "My father was killed by the
Germans," he says. "But I do not believe in collective guilt.
I deeply believe that the Germans have changed fundamentally,
that the gap in the long process of enlightenment is now
closed."
</p>
<p> The Fear of Domination. The revived allusion to the "same
old Germans" reveals more than the suspicion of a national
psychosis. It also harkens to perceptions of German arrogance,
selfishness, extremism and lack of concern for others--what
many Europeans mean when they fret that a united Germany will
"dominate" the Continent. In fact West Germany alone, with 19%
of the European Community's population, 22% of its gross
domestic product, 31% of its exports and the mighty deutsche
mark, already dominates Europe. The absorption of East Germany
will add weight to the dominance, even taking into account the
costly effort of bringing the East's run-down infrastructure
and shaky economy up to Western standards, but not
fundamentally alter current reality.
</p>
<p> Europeans may have managed to submerge the fact of West
Germany's economic prowess before. Now they must come to terms
with it. Although mutterings in London, Paris and elsewhere
imply the opposite, running a powerful and profitable economy
with a skilled and diligent work force does not constitute
aggression. When some Western politicians and intellectuals
speak of a revived German threat, they may be fretting about
a future Germany lording it over Europe, but they are also
masking their concern about competing with it economically. The
rise and fall of the deutsche mark, for example, can determine
the value of the other European currencies, and the interest
rates in powerful German banking centers can push rates in
other countries up or down. "All the Italian savers will be
rushing to Frankfurt," says Andreotti.
</p>
<p> "What does one do about it?" asks Shepard Stone, former
director of the Aspen Institute in West Berlin. "The U.S. is
one of the greatest trading powers in the world. So is Japan.
I know a lot of people who don't like the Americans or the
Japanese. But it's smart statesmanship to work with reality.
The Germans have behaved well in the European Community and the
world."
</p>
<p> At E.C. headquarters in Brussels and in capitals around the
Continent there is some apprehension that after unification,
Germany--which may have to provide even more than the 28% of
the E.C. budget it contributes now--will grow tired of being
the "paymaster of Europe." Moreover, Germany might concentrate
on establishing commercial hegemony over the newly freed states
of Eastern Europe, where German firms are already making major
investments. Such a pull to the East, Eurocrats fear, could
delay or even cancel the economic and political integration of
the E.C. West German leaders deny any such intention. "No one
needs to be worried about a German dominance in the European
Community." says Kohl. "A united Germany would also be a
reliable and solid partner."
</p>
<p> By refusing to guarantee the Polish borders, Kohl allowed
much of the world to point the finger and say, See, there they
go again. As Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki told TIME
last week, "All the recent ambiguous statements on the issue
have convinced us that we are correct in demanding that the
border be confirmed before Germany's unification."
</p>
<p> The arrival of a politically more assertive Germany is a
reality that the rest of the world must also take in stride.
Germans are less apologetic and less willing to accept
international tutelage than they used to be, which comes as
something of a shock to others. Yet Germans could do more to
ease the transition. "Little things add up," said Angelika
Volle of the German Society for Foreign Affairs in Bonn. "What
Germany needs right now is Fingerspitzengefuhl, a delicate,
tactful approach."
</p>
<p> The Threat of Neutrality. One of the most unsettling aspects
of unification is that it will take place in a world in flux.
The cold war is ending, communism is evaporating, the alliances
that kept Europe tense but predictable for four decades are
losing their meaning. In that uncertain climate, everyone is
searching for sure, new guarantees of security.
</p>
<p> While Europeans and the superpowers are looking for subtle
ways to contain potential German ambitions, the Germans
themselves are attracted by neutrality. Polls indicate that the
majority in both parts of the country favor withdrawal from
their alliances once they are united. But Germany's Eastern and
Western neighbors suggest that neutrality is totally
unacceptable. The new Germany, they insist, must remain firmly
embedded in NATO and the E.C.; otherwise it could become an
unpredictable force in the heart of Europe. "Our main concern
is with the future of the North Atlantic Alliance," says
British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd, "and the crucial
importance for that alliance and the security of Europe of
continued German membership."
</p>
<p> The Soviet Union is categorically opposed, demanding
neutrality as a condition for unity. West German leaders have
proposed that the new state remain in NATO, though Western
troops and bases could be kept out of what is now East Germany.
"We cannot agree to that," says President Mikhail Gorbachev.
"It is absolutely out of the question." The U.S.S.R. has made
German neutrality an article of faith ever since Stalin's days,
even though Soviet fears might be better calmed by a Germany
answerable to a larger military command than standing on its
own.
</p>
<p> Ironically, it is not clear what might constitute neutrality
in a Europe from which hostile blocs have vanished. For the
first time in modern history every country in Western Europe
is led by a democratic government and every state in Central
Europe is on the road to it. As Social Democratic Party (SPD)
planner Egon Bahr has asked, Who is there to be neutral
against?
</p>
<p> That question will demand an answer in December if Kohl
loses the West German election to the SPD. Some Social
Democrats see little utility in NATO and believe that most of
the voters share their view. The most likely SPD candidate for
Chancellor, Saarland governor Oskar Lafontaine, says flatly,
"Kohl is wrong if he thinks Germany can stay in NATO."
Lafontaine favors a European defense system in a "United States
of Europe." That kind of talk shocks Washington, and the Bush
Administration has decided to put its weight behind Kohl and
his commitment to the Atlantic Alliance. Even in Washington,
however, where long-term planning covers two or three years at
most, policymakers recognize the need to design a new security
framework in Europe.
</p>
<p> The first hints of that design will show up in the
two-plus-four talks. Moscow has already indicated some of its
demands: removal of all nuclear weapons from Germany, tight
limitations on German armed forces, departure of all foreign
troops over several years. Bonn is willing to accept most of
those requirements in the interest of unification, but has not
agreed to the withdrawal of allied troops. If it does, and the
last 195,000 Americans from the Central Front go home, it could
spell the end of NATO.
</p>
<p> Not only the Poles but most of the Western European
governments are demanding admission to the two-plus-four club
as it becomes clear that the security of the entire Continent
is under negotiation. Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van den Broek
contends that a fait accompli will not be acceptable: "We
insist on information and consultations on unification,
especially as it affects our particular interests."
</p>
<p> The new era's most eloquent attempt to restore Germany to
a normal place in European minds came last week in Prague,
where Czechoslovak President Vaclav Havel welcomed West German
President Richard von Weizsacker. Havel had arranged the visit
to coincide with the 51st anniversary of Hitler's arrival in
the city at the head of an occupying army. He called this an
"anti-event," intended to counterbalance the dark memories of
1939 and mark a reconciliation. To speak with disdain about
Germans, Havel told his countrymen, "to condemn them only
because they are Germans, to be afraid of them only because of
that, is the same as to be anti-Semitic." But, he also reminded
the Germans, it is their continuing responsibility to show
Europe and the world that there is nothing to fear.
</p>
<p>VOICES OF EAST AND WEST
</p>
<p>EAST: Steelworker
</p>
<p> Factory hands in Henningsdorf like Alfons Bonk, 40, are
confident of a higher living standard after unification but
wonder if the new state will offer the same social benefits
they enjoy now. And they are concerned that their antiquated
plants may have no future.
</p>
<p>WEST: Refugee
</p>
<p> Jens Bernhardt, 23, was a border guard who escaped over the
Wall before it came down last November and cannot risk going
home yet: he might be arrested for desertion. He believes the
elections will "help determine whether people remain in the
East or all move here."
</p>
<p>EAST: Painter
</p>
<p> He has titled his painting The One and the Others, but
Wolfgang Mattheuer, 62, refuses to give it political
significance. His priority is to keep the Communists from
regaining power. However, he is concerned that politicians of
both Germanys could "erect a new Wall" by "spreading fears."
</p>
<p>WEST: Student
</p>
<p> A biochemistry student at Hamburg University, Sandra
Haubrich, 24, says fears about a single Germany are
exaggerated. "East Germany, not France or Britain, should be
afraid of being overrun," she says, because East Germans do not
understand what life in a competitive society is like.
</p>
<p>EAST: Athlete
</p>
<p> Shot-put champion Udo Beyer, 35, is in no hurry for
unification, though he knows it will come. He opposes a joint
German team for the next Olympics and says proudly that East
German athletes are already training a strong national team of
their own for Barcelona.
</p>
<p>WEST: Camp Survivor
</p>
<p> As a lifelong Social Democrat, Heinz Gartner, 74, knows what
it is to fear Germans. He spent part of World War II in a Nazi
concentration camp and in prison. He understands the anxieties
of neighboring countries over questions like their borders but
says there is "no danger from the overwhelming majority of the
population."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>