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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Jul. 09, 1990) Toward Unity
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 09, 1990 Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions
The Reunification of Germany
</history>
<link 00020>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
GERMANY, Page 66
Toward Unity
</hdr>
<body>
<p>BY Otto Friedrich--Reported by James O. Jackson/Bonn and
Jeffery C. Rubin/New York
</p>
<p> "The profound and icy mistrust which the German arouses
whenever he gets any power into his hands is the aftermath of
that vast horrible fear with which, for long centuries, Europe
dreaded the wrath of the Teutonic blond beast."
</p>
<p>-- Friedrich Nietzsche
</p>
<p> The 16 million citizens of East Germany will be $70 billion
richer this week, at least on paper. Even before the day of
reckoning this past Sunday, crowds had been standing patiently
in line to complete the paper work for converting their ostmark
savings into deutsche marks at a rate of 1 to 1 for up to 6,000
marks, and 2 to 1 for anything beyond that. On Sunday itself,
cash was being handed out at some 10,000 bank branches, police
stations and temporary disbursing points. The vast shift in
wealth is part of the price of German unification.
</p>
<p> As of that day of economic union between the Federal
Republic and the German Democratic Republic, an entire society
will be transformed. After nearly a half-century of communism,
East Germans are now living under West German rules on
corporate and union activities, welfare and insurance. Although
there is still no agreement on important details of the
political and military future, the economic merger reflects a
historic moment that until recently few people imagined they
would ever live to see: the peaceful rejoining of Germany.
Before long, the united country will take West Germany's
official name, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the G.D.R.
will formally be abolished.
</p>
<p> The merger process is not proving to be easy--and no one
expected it to be. The most nettlesome outstanding issue is the
military future of Central Europe, with Moscow balking at the
West's insistence that a united Germany remain a full member
of NATO. The West has offered substantial inducements: no NATO
troops in East Germany, the continuance of Soviet forces there
for a time at German expense, plus substantial German aid to
the Soviet economy.
</p>
<p> On the domestic side, questions remain on how to raise the
East to the West's level of prosperity and how to smooth the
joining of different economic and social systems. There are
arguments about where the new capital should be: in the
imperial--and Nazi--capital of Berlin or in democratic but
provincial Bonn.
</p>
<p> Whatever the obstacles, the conservative governments of
Chancellor Helmut Kohl in Bonn and Prime Minister Lothar de
Maziere in East Berlin are pressing full speed ahead. Kohl in
particular is determined, as he puts it, "not to miss the
unification train, which may not come another time." With a
large majority in both Germanys supporting merger--even
though there are some reservations as to speed and cost--the
Chancellor is planning to hold all-German elections in early
December.
</p>
<p> All the economic problems can be negotiated among the
Germans themselves, but among their neighbors, unification has
aroused quite different concerns. Will a united Germany mean
the rebirth of dreaded words like Lebensraum and Drang nach
Osten? In short, will a united Germany turn nationalistic,
threaten its neighbors and try to dominate Europe? "Today the
Germans want to think of the future," says Fritz Stern, Seth
Low professor of history at Columbia University, "but their
neighbors are thinking of the past."
</p>
<p> On the evidence of the past two or three decades, which is
all the evidence needed on most other political questions, such
anxieties seem almost irrational. Germany was mostly united
back in 1949, when the U.S., British and French zones of
military occupation--70% of Germany's 1945 territory and 72%
of the nation's population--were merged to form the Federal
Republic, with its headquarters in Bonn. Economically, the
figures are even more impressive: the East German economy that
now has been joined to that of West Germany forms only
one-tenth of the combined total. During those past 40 years,
the world witnessed cruel wars in Korea, Vietnam, Algeria,
Lebanon, Afghanistan and Nicaragua, but the mostly united
Germans caused no trouble to anyone.
</p>
<p> Yet even their recent peacefulness can apparently be held
against them. "The Federal Republic is unique among the great
powers in [that] it came to life without a drop of blood being
shed in its birth," Arthur Miller wrote in the New York Times.
"No German soldier can say, `I fought for democracy'...What
Germans lack now is the consecration by blood of their
democratic state..." But whose blood should the Germans have
shed in their "consecration," and what would Miller say if any
German were foolish enough to offer such a gory theory of
"democratic faith"?
</p>
<p> Part of this self-induced anxiety about German unification
derives from the widespread but questionable theory that
different nations have different national characters, that the
Germans, because of their history or their upbringing or
whatever, are both aggressive and docile, robot-like people who
love order and discipline, work and war. Like the stereotypes
of the snobbish English or the immoral French or the crass
Americans, such caricatures are generally created by one's
enemies, often in times of war. "There is such a thing as
national character, but it changes," says William Manchester,
a Wesleyan University adjunct professor of history and author
of The Arms of Krupp. "And the German national character has
changed. The Germans are united by language, by culture. And
young Germany--which is most of Germany today--is also
united by a horror of the Second and Third Reichs."
</p>
<p> The real origin of the suspicions about Germany's future is,
of course, its dark past, namely the crimes committed during
the twelve-year reign of Adolf Hitler. Hitler, after all, did
not commit those crimes by himself; other Germans piloted the
bombers over Warsaw, and other Germans operated the gas
chambers at Auschwitz. Though the majority of today's Germans
were not even born when those crimes were committed, the nation
remains tainted by the Nazi legacy that endures in the world's
memory.
</p>
<p> While millions of people know about the horrors of Hitler's
Third Reich, it seems all too widely forgotten that German
history did not begin in 1933. Nor did it begin in 1871, when
Bismarck created the autocratic Second Reich. German history
goes back more than 2,000 years, to a murky era when a variety
of Germanic tribes lived in a land that, according to Tacitus,
"either bristles with forests or reeks with swamps." Even then,
German tribesmen had a reputation as fearsome fighters, and it
was immensely important to the future history of Europe that
they annihilated three Roman legions in the Teutoburg Forest
in A.D. 9, leaving the Rhine as the frontier between the Roman
and Germanic worlds. But it was the Romans who originally
invaded those forests to "pacify" the Germans, as they had
pacified Gaul and Britain.
</p>
<p> The Germanic tribes began moving into Roman territory during
the 3rd century, not as the "barbarian" invaders of popular
legend but as immigrants and refugees. Even the Visigoths, who
conquered Rome in A.D. 410, subjecting it, in Gibbon's majestic
words, to the "licentious fury of the tribes of Germany and
Scythia," had originally entered the empire peacefully, and
many had loyally served in the Roman army. The celebrated
sacking of Rome was primarily a humiliation, nothing like the
all-out Roman destruction of Carthage, Thebes and Jerusalem.
</p>
<p> The idea of restoring the Roman empire three centuries later
inspired Charlemagne to voyage to Rome in A.D. 800 and have
himself crowned by the Pope. Both Germany and France claim the
Frankish leader, for he governed from Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle),
and the territory under his rule rather closely resembled what
is today the European Community. Not long after his death,
however, his empire was divided among three grandsons.
</p>
<p> While France and Britain developed centralized monarchies
in the late Middle Ages, the German empire remained a crazy
quilt of kingdoms, duchies, bishoprics, free cities and other
flotsam. In the late 13th century, the imperial crown came into
the hands of a Swiss family named Habsburg, but the Habsburgs'
only real power and wealth came from their family possessions
in Austria and Bohemia; the Germanic Holy Roman Empire, a
concept that exercised a magic attraction in the Middle Ages,
had about as much authority as the United Nations has today.
</p>
<p> And then in 1517, the political divisions also became
religious--and correspondingly bloodier. An obscure monk
named Martin Luther nailed to the church door in Wittenberg his
95 theses against the Roman Church's sale of indulgences,
partial pardons for souls in purgatory. The Lutheran faith,
subsequently known as Protestantism, spread rapidly across
northern Germany. Then, in the fratricidal ordeal known as the
Thirty Years' War (1618-48), the French, Swedes and other
nations joined in playing out their political and religious
rivalries on German soil. Much of Germany was devastated and the
starving survivors reduced to misery. In one of his best
plays, Mother Courage, Bertolt Brecht sketched the scene: "The
religious war has lasted 16 years, and Germany has lost half
its inhabitants. Those who are spared in battle die by plague.
Over once blooming countryside, hunger rages. Towns are burned
down. Wolves prowl the empty streets..."
</p>
<p> Gordon Craig, professor emeritus of history at Stanford
University and author of The Germans, sums up this tragic
period: "The Germans from earliest times were a free and
independent people, and dreadful things happened to them, which
inhibited those qualities and induced others. After the Thirty
Years' War, habits of authoritarianism and dependence crept
into the behavior of average Germans. One result is what one
German writer has called the `retarded nation.' The nation
never did have the opportunity to get a political education, as
in the English Enlightenment or the American Enlightenment."
</p>
<p> The feebleness of the Habsburg suzerainty over fragmented
Germany inspired not only the aggressiveness of France but also
that of a newcomer--Prussia. Originally a Baltic tribe, the
Prussians were conquered and Christianized in a 13th century
"crusade" by the Order of Teutonic Knights, but only in 1525
was the remote duchy of Prussia acquired through a marriage by
the Hohenzollerns, the family that served as electors of
Brandenburg. Brandenburg-Prussia was a rather bleak and
impoverished land, its capital, Berlin, little more than a
dusty garrison town. But its ruling Hohenzollern family was
shrewd and single-minded in building up its wealth, its
holdings and its army. When King Frederick the Great acquired
the throne in 1740, just as Maria Theresa became Empress of
Austria, he ruthlessly attacked her and seized the prosperous
province of Silesia. Maria Theresa fought two bitter and
unsuccessful wars of revenge, then shamelessly joined Prussia
and Russia in partitioning Poland. Frederick thus put together
for the first time the various Hohenzollern holdings from East
Prussia to the Rhine.
</p>
<p> Frederick's Prussia claimed with some justice to be a major
power in Europe, but his successors lacked his many talents,
and when the French once again appeared on the horizon, Prussia
ignominiously collapsed before Napoleon on the battlefield at
Jena. Napoleon finally abolished the moribund Holy Roman Empire
in 1806, keeping the title Emperor for himself. He seized all
German territory west of the Elbe and created a
French-dominated Confederation of the Rhine, with his brother
Jerome as King of Westphalia. As Napoleon was retreating from
Moscow in 1812, however, the repeatedly beaten Germans rose up
again to fight what they still call the Wars of Liberation. An
allied army defeated Napoleon at Leipzig, drove him back to
Paris and then into exile.
</p>
<p> The Europe that was reconstituted at the Congress of Vienna
in 1815 included a new German Confederation, headed by the
Habsburgs of Austria, but also containing 38 other kingdoms,
duchies, free cities and such. It had a great culture--this
was the age of Beethoven and Schubert, Goethe and Hegel--but
it was hardly a nation. The very idea of German unification was
nothing more than an abstract concept, a dream of liberal
intellectuals.
</p>
<p> The last French invasion was the invasion of another idea:
revolution. When Paris mobs overthrew King Louis-Philippe in
1848, radicals and nationalists all over Europe took heart. The
Italians rose against their Habsburg overlords; and even in
dormant Germany, crowds began marching through the streets of
Berlin, Vienna, Dresden. The armies of Germany's princes
eventually suppressed these demonstrations, but not before
liberals organized a constituent assembly, which met in
Frankfurt and drafted an all-German constitution. The
legislators decided that they could put their ideas into
practice only by offering the crown of a united Germany to King
Frederick William IV of Prussia. But he considered himself King
of Prussia by the grace of God, and scorned any crown offered
him by people or parliament.
</p>
<p> The members of the confederation still met in Frankfurt, and
the Habsburg delegates still exerted unofficial leadership, but
the young Prussian delegate determined that this must be
changed. "Before very long," Bismarck wrote back to Berlin, "we
shall have to fight for our lives against Austria...because
the progress of events in Germany has no other issue."
Prussia's King William I appointed Bismarck Minister-President
in 1862, and within four years, Bismarck was ready for a
showdown with Austria. Prussia's chief of staff, Count Helmuth
von Moltke, had revived the army of Frederick the Great,
making it once again Europe's best. Moltke attacked the
Austrians and cut them to pieces. Germany's three centuries of
intermittent civil war between north and south, Protestant and
Catholic, Hohenzollern and Habsburg, were now over.
</p>
<p> Bismarck was convinced, and probably rightly, that France
would never permit a united Germany, so he provoked Emperor
Napoleon III into a misguided declaration of war. Moltke
invaded France with 300,000 men, trapped the French at Sedan
and captured the Emperor and 100,000 of his men. When an
improvised government in Paris proclaimed the Third Republic
and vowed to continue the war, Moltke insisted on besieging
Paris. By now it seemed clear to the German princes who had
followed Prussia into the war that their future lay in a united
Germany under Prussian leadership. Bismarck artfully arranged
to have William crowned Kaiser (Caesar) in January of 1871 in
the palace of Versailles, that bastion of the French kings,
while the hungry citizens of nearby Paris endured the Prussian
siege.
</p>
<p> For the next 20 years Bismarck used all his craft and guile
to maintain the peace among Europe's constantly maneuvering
rulers. But his Reich was deeply undemocratic: he despised the
legislators of the Reichstag, and was not responsible to them,
but only to the Kaiser, whom he bullied and cajoled. Everyone
expected that when the aged William finally died, his
relatively liberal and high-minded son Frederick would lead the
empire into a more enlightened era. But when William did die,
in 1888, Frederick was already mortally ill with throat cancer,
and so the throne soon passed to his temperamental and bellicose
son William II, then 29, of whom his own mother once said, "My
son will be the ruin of Germany."
</p>
<p> Unwilling to tolerate the domination of the 73-year-old
Bismarck, William forced him out of office, took charge of
military and diplomatic matters and left the rest to
underlings. When a band of pro-Serbian nationalists
assassinated the Austrian Crown Prince Ferdinand at Sarajevo
in 1914, all the great powers found themselves enmeshed in a
net of commitments that almost guaranteed disaster. The
Austrians declared war on Serbia. The Russians went to the
defense of their fellow Slavs and the Germans to that of the
Austrians. When the French mobilized, the Germans declared war
on them, and when the Germans invaded Belgium, the British
honored a commitment to defend Belgian neutrality.
</p>
<p> Historians of the day spent a good deal of effort trying to
demonstrate German "war guilt," but in retrospect, it all seems
more a tragedy of errors. The German strategy somewhat
optimistically called for a bold sweep all the way to Paris and
then an encirclement of the French defenders. But the French
blocked the offensive at the Marne, within 30 miles of Paris.
Then came the years-long horrors of trench warfare, with
thousands of lives wasted for the capture of a few hundred feet
of barbed wire and mud. Plus all the horrors that modern
technology could add to the arts of combat: bombers, tanks,
machine guns, poison gas. When it was over, four years later,
more than 3 million German and Austro-Hungarians were dead, as
well as 4.8 million of the Allies, including 126,000 Americans--not just numbers, but the best of a whole generation.
</p>
<p> The German, Austrian and Russian empires disappeared. In
Berlin the Socialists proclaimed from the balcony of the
imperial palace the birth of what would be known to history as
the Weimar Republic. Though still physically united--minus
West Prussia, which was turned over to the newly independent
Poland to give it a corridor to the sea--Germany was still
divided against itself. Traditionalists in the army, business,
the judiciary and the schools never believed in the republic
at all. Right-wing extremists, including a young Austrian
demagogue named Adolf Hitler, attempted coups in 1920 and 1923.
Others sabotaged the political process by assassinations. A
powerful Communist Party periodically staged strikes and street
battles. The punitive peace treaty imposed at Versailles forced
Germany to pay huge war damages. Out of that came the ruinous
inflation of 1923, when the reichsmark plummeted to 4.2
trillion to the dollar, wiping out both the savings and the
faith of the middle class.
</p>
<p> Substantial U.S. aid helped the Weimar Republic in the late
'20s. But it was a fragile recovery, overseen by a badly
splintered Reichstag and the octogenarian President Paul von
Hindenburg, the losing commander in the war. When the Wall
Street crash of 1929 set off a worldwide depression, Germany's
new prosperity crumbled. The number of unemployed soared from
1.5 million to almost 2.5 million in just the month of January
1930.
</p>
<p> And a new voice was heard in the land, shouting that this
was all the fault of the "system," of foreigners and Jews.
"Germany, awake!" cried Adolf Hitler, and a frightened,
impoverished and traumatized people began to listen. In
private, the neurotic Hitler had a different view: "Brutality
is respected. The people need wholesome fear. They want to fear
something. They want someone to frighten them and make them
shudderingly submissive."
</p>
<p> Hitler's National Socialist Party, which had only 17,000
members in 1926, metastasized to 120,000 in 1929, to 1 million
in 1930. Wealthy industrialists began contributing handsomely.
In the Reichstag, the Nazis held an insignificant twelve seats
until the elections of 1930. By 1932 they had 230 seats, the
largest bloc in the Reichstag.
</p>
<p> Central to the question of what went wrong is the question
of whether Hitler's rise to power was inevitable. Was there
some fatal flaw in the history of Germany that predestined it
to the swastika and the gas chamber? In one sense, everything
that has happened may seem inevitable, simply because of the
fact that it did happen. Yet it is extraordinary how narrowly
Hitler triumphed, how many accidents and variables had to line
up.
</p>
<p> He still did not have a majority in 1932, and the
constitution permitted President Hindenburg to name any
Chancellor he wished, authorizing him to rule by a series of
presidential decrees. The first time Hindenburg summoned Hitler
and asked him to support a conservative regime headed by a
dapper courtier named Franz von Papen, Hitler demanded full
power for himself; Hindenburg not only refused but dressed
Hitler down for lacking "chivalry." In the last pre-Hitler
elections in November of 1932, the Nazis lost strength, from
230 seats to 196. The party was an estimated $5 million in
debt, unable to pay the storm troopers who fought its street
battles. "The future looks dark and gloomy," the Nazi party
chief for Berlin, Joseph Goebbels, wrote in his diary at the
start of 1933. "All chances and hopes have quite disappeared."
</p>
<p> Then in the first week of January, chances and hopes almost
miraculously returned. Hindenburg was persuaded to try the idea
of a new conservative coalition: Hitler as Chancellor, Papen
as Vice Chancellor, with only two other Nazis in the Cabinet.
"In this way," said the non-Nazi Minister of Economic Affairs,
"we will box Hitler in." A fatal misjudgment. A month later,
the Reichstag was in flames, Hitler was persuading Hindenburg
to suspend civil liberties, and the most terrible chapter in
20th century history was about to open.
</p>
<p> So what is the lesson for 1990?
</p>
<p> "There is no European country that hasn't had its moments
of trying to swallow up its neighbors, and I don't think
Germany is any worse than any other country," says Carl
Schorske, Princeton professor emeritus of history and author
of Fin de Siecle Vienna. "Since the war, Germany has become
rather European. In fact, even in the clues of personal
behavior--the way people walk, the way people greet you, the
way they speak their language--in all these things, there has
been a tremendous change in Germany since the Nazis. I don't
see another Nazism on the horizon."
</p>
<p> "Germany is not a fixed concept or entity," says Gordon
Craig. "It's something that has changed through the years. The
history of Germany has been a long, slow, disappointed voyage
toward the light, toward popular freedom. It started with the
Enlightenment and was defeated. It tried to revive and was
defeated by the way Germany was united in 1871. Finally, thanks
to the utter destruction of Germany in 1945, it got another
chance, and is now being realized. We should be celebrating
reunification with at least two cheers."
</p>
<p> "The Germans are being given a second chance," says Stern.
"That is the rarest of gifts, and one can only hope that they
will do justice to it. The Germans deserve friends who feel the
burden of the past, as so many of them do, but who have
compassion for a people who have had so rich and terrifying a
history."
</p>
<p> In Germany itself, there are still observers capable of
taking the future a little less seriously. One of the cleverest
is the novelist and critic Hans Magnus Enzensberger, whose
latest book, Europe, Europe, includes a scene in which an
American reporter visits Berlin in the year 2006. He finds
himself in the midst of an environmental conference being
conducted in the traditional Berlin style. "Masked demonstrators
from the eco-anarchist milieu clashed with officers of the
environmental police. A representative of the chemical
industry, who made profuse ritual protestations of humility and
reassurance, was shouted down." Going to look at the onetime
Berlin Wall, the reporter finds that it is now a nature
preserve. "A unique biotope," says an official. "There are wild
rabbits here, hedgehogs, opossums." The problem is that the
environmentalists' efforts to get rid of the Wall are being
blocked by art historians. "They regard the Wall as a work of
art," the official complains, "because of the graffiti." An
expatriated Scot finally explains to the American that the
"famous reunification" back in the 1990s was "all just coffee
and cakes." "Do you still remember how frightened of the
Germans everyone was in the '90s? And what's happened? Nothing
at all. Since then the German bogeyman has very quietly been
laid to rest. We fell for it because we didn't know the first
thing about German history."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>