Foreign policy of Germany
(before WW2)
didnt want to accept the treaty of Versailles
Germany wanted to be integrated into world politics
Hitler built up the army again and prepared for war
The western countries didnt stop Germany when its army got stronger and they grew a possible threat
—> Germany’s appeasement policy worked
Germany always assured to only want equality in the world, but they grew stronger —> shift in power
Autumm 1933
Germany left the league of Nations
26 January 1934
non-aggression pact with Poland
March 1936
Germany marched into Rhineland; France showed no reaction
5 November 1937
Hossbach Memorandum; preparations for war
March 1938
Munich agreement of 30 september
Sudetenland was handed to Germany (England agreed)
Rome-Berlin-Axis
Germany and Italy became close (both facist governments)
—>allience between the two countries
Focus of European powers during pre-war times
Focus was more on the war against communism (Soviet Union)
—>National Socialism had the possibility to grow without restrictions
Outbreak of WW2
Most European powers still struggled with economic problems after Great Depression
Policy of Appeasement worked best with Germany
Only France saw themselves ready for a German attack
The western and eastern powers didnt want to cooperate against Germany
German army was most modern
23 August 1939: Hitler-Stalin Pact and Additional Secret Protocol: non-aggression pact with USSR Germany
Course of war
1 September 1939: Germany attacked Poland —> beginning WW"2
Germany’s tactic: Blitzkrieg / war of aggression
April-June 1940: Germany occupied Denmark, Norway, France
August 1940-spring 1941: Battle of Britain, Germany bombed UK —> failed
22 June 1941: Operation Barbossa, conquering “Lebensraum” in the east; Germany attacked Soviet Union —> failed because fo low temperatures in autumm/winter
End of 1942: Battle of Stalingrad, 6th army surrounded Stalingrad —> forced to surrender
7 december 1941: Pearl Harbour, Japan attacked US American Headquarters on Hawai
8 December: USA entered war by declaring war on Japan
14 August 1941: Atlantic charter, USSR,Britain,USA drafted goals for post-war world
July 1943: British and US-Air forces bombed German cities
4 June 1944: D-Day, allied forces invasion in Normandy
6/9 August 1944: two atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Japan)
Winter 1944/45: German military collapsed
30 April 1945: Hitlers suicide in Füherbunker, German army surrendered —> End of WW2
8 May 1945: official endind / armistice
Holocaust
Nazis deported and executed all of their “enemies”
Mass executions in Eastern Europe to gain “Lebensraum” for Germans
—Ygoal: reduce number of slavic people to make room for German people
Jews were to completely exterminated
Jewish socialists and communists were executed by SA
1933/34: Jews were forced to sell their shops to german Aryans —> Aryanization
Autumn 1935: Nuremberg Laws of Citizenship and Race: legal exclusion of Jews
Pogrom night: destruction of synagogues and Jewish shops, murder of jews (Nov 1938)
From 1940: Mass deportation of jews —> systematic genocide
Peace conference after WW2
8 May 1945
unconditional surrender of Germany
Three winning powers had to decide on how to treat Germany (USA, USSR, Britain)
two ideologies: capitalism and communism
3 Peace conferences
November 1943: Theran conference
February 1945: Yalta conference
17 July 1945: Potsdam conference
Possible solution: Morgenthau Plan; turn Germany into a mere agricultural economy
—> not realized
Outcome of Peace conferences
Occupation zones were installed; French, American, British (west), Soviet (east)
—> Berlin was also seperated into 4 zones
Controlled by the Allied Control Council
German borders were changed; Poland got their land back
5 June 1945: Berlin Declaration, WW2 allies ahd supreme power over Germany
10 February 1947: peace treaties with former allies to Nazi Germany
Tehran conference (1943)
discuss about war strategies against Japan and Germany with the big 3
Yalta conference (1945)
here it was decided, on how to divide Germany and how to put the dividing of power in Europe (as well the big 3)
Potsdam conference (1945)
5 D’s
Deciding over fate of Germany after WW2
5 D’s: Denazifi-, Democrati-, Demilitari-, Decentrali-, Decartelization
Denazification: destruction of NSDAp with all its associated institutions
Democratization: local self-government according to democratic principles
Demilitarization: complete disarmament
Decentralization: geared towards the administration and the economy
Decartelization: destruction of state-run business and monopolies
3R’s
3R’s: Re-education, Reperations, Resettlement
Re-education: (Umerziehung), closely linked to democratization and denazification
Reparations: to be paid by Germany as a compensation for the damage and losses caused
—> the Allied powers could decide what to take as reparations
—> USSR tried to take something, but the East wsnt wealthy
—> Western powers took nearly nothing
Resettlement: affected the German population of the disconnected eastern territories as well as minorities in Czechoslovakia and other eastern European states; they had to be expelled to central and west Germany
—> resettlement was the hardest to carry out since it affected a big part of the population
Consequences of war for German citizens
Germany faced an hour zero
Difficulties with resettlement, displaced persons in WW2 and forced laborers
18% of apartments in Germany were destroyed; 28% damaged
Health problems
Broken energy and water supply —> lack of heating and cooking supplies
All parts of the population affected
Lack of food
Denazification in west Germany
Autumn 1945: Nuremberg trials; 24 Nazis punished (more punishment afterwards)
Dissolving Nazi party and all other organizations or institutions associated or founded by it and prohibiting their re-establishment
active members of Nazi Party wont be employed in; economic organizations, cooperations, the industry sector, education and press
In general, everything which was created or organized by Nazi parties was either abolished, dissolved or destroyed
—> school, police, government, politics and military
Denazification in West Germany
Methods
Main propaganda method: movies
—> make them consciuos of what they did; mostly movies, also visits of the KZs, posters
—> Germans were shocked and felt guilty
German children learned about democracy
Press: independent and new (ARD,ZDF,…) —> make the whole country independent
—>“Amerika-Häuser”; the adults were supposed to learn about democracy (wasnt efective)
—>they didnt want to be educated; not really opposed to Nacional Socialism - Trust issues
Communism was still a “threat” from the east —> change of strategy: Cold War
—> Germany should be allied with USA against their “common enemy”, the USSR
Germany was allowed to be armed again —> contradicting to former policies
—> but all this was quickly not cared about anymore because the threat from the east was bigger
Not a lot of people actually found guilty for what the Nazis did
They started to actually deal with the Nazi past: 70s/80s
Denazification in East Germany
East German regime did not give blame for what happened to the Germans; it simply wasnt talked about —> collective amnesia / NS thinking was never eliminated
many denazification efforts, later stopped abruptly to focus on country’s reconstruction
Communist regime was direct contrast to Nazi regime at first glance (facism worst form of capitalism, they said)
GDR stated that the whole country waas free of fascism —> whitewashed past
still no independent media —> protected the collective amnesia
Contrast to west: denazification also wasnt perfect, but they worked on it (not forgotten)
Anti-Semitism was on the rise in the GDR again —> Holocaust denial
—> voices against this way of dealing with the past were silenced
West European/West Germany: From occupation to cooperation
Prevent Germany from becoming a threat to world peace again
—> eliminate Nazism and militarism, arrest war criminals, industrial disarmament, demilitarization of Germany and control over Germany
Aim of occupation wasnt meant as oppression
Germans have full responsibility for what they did to their country (Eisenhower speech)
USA wanted Western Europe to become capitalist and independent countries
—>building up the economy, so that they will become trading and political partners
plan to achieve that: Merging the 3 western zones into one
First bizone with UK (1946) —> then Trizone with France (1948)
May 1947: own parliamentary board for legislation introduced —> not a new german state
Truman Doctrine
12 March 1947
provided help by USA to every country that felt threatened by communism/USSR
—>Harry S. Truman: president USA
—> showed the start of a division between East and West
Containment policy
Marshall Plan / European recovery plan
Introduced 5 June 1947
named after Secretary of state Marshall
meant to financially support western European countries (eastern countries refused plan)
—> military threat by USSR prevented them from joining Marshall Plan
creating new trading partners —> establish capitalism/democracy to oppose communism
Western countries were glad, because they got help and money
American citizens were not happy, bcause they couldnt understand why they should help
Economic effects: establish inter. market, build up economy, reduce poverty
Psychological effects: Feeling of unity (USA/EU),Cap vs Com, international cooperation
Currency reform
20 june 1948
Deutsche Mark was introduced
East Germany: Satelite states
Stalin had tight grip on east European states
—> Poland, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania
USSR established satellite states with puppet governements
wanted the countries to become communist and not belong to the west
As contrast to Marshall plan: Comecon (January 1949)
—>Council for mutual economic assistance
—> GDR joined in 1950
—>USSR wanted to have sth. similar to the Marshall Plan to support East (did not work)
East vs West
Both sides saw the others as the antagonist (Capitalism vs Communism)
—>both saw their own system as the only good one (more & more alienation)
February-June 1948: London conference, western European states and USA discussed the future of Western Europe —>west Germany was supposed to be integrated (without USSR)
Soviet representative left the Allied Control Council
24 Junge 1948: Berlin Blockade, Western zones in Berlin were cut off from supply
—> reaction: Berlin airlift; supplying citizens by planes with food and goods (about 1 year)
Summer 1948: blockade from west on East Berlin and Soviet zone
12 May 1949: both blockades ended —> “The iron curtain” (introduced by Churchill)
—> metaphorical “border” between West and East / strong and not see-through
—> “you cannot see what is happening on the other side” —> no traveling / trading
Churchill vs. Stalin
Sinews of peace by Churchill
One of the most famous speeches of that time —> first mentioned the “iron curtain”
British have respects for Russians, but its tense —> iron curtain descended across EU
Communist parties are gaining totalitarian control —> police governments established
—> no democracy —> not the peace they wanted
policy of appeasement will not work —> Russians still dont want war
—> they want to expand their territory and doctrines
There should be a settlement quickly
—> otherwise the Russians have more time to prepare for possible future attacks
Reply to Churchill by Stalin
Churchill has friends in Britain and USA
Churchill has a new racial theory: only English-speaking nations can be fully valuable nations —> comparison to Hitler
Soviet Union has suffered many losses under Germany and therefore wants to secure the loyalty of the countries that fought together with them to the Soviet Union
Communism has gained more influence because it proved to be better
In the last year: Communists have been reliable, daring, self-sacrificing fighters against the fascists
Stalin states the complete opposite
—> If west says something, East says the opposite and vice versa
Britain/USA never actually fought against USSR but always provided weapons and military
Foundation FRG
1 July 1948: London documents; guideline for developement of a new constitution
—> All 3 Allies have to agree to the constitution
—> German government can do everything a normal government can do except foreign policy
—> Allies can still intervene if they think the constitution is endangered
—> Every change in the constitution has to be agreed to by the 3 countries
—> They will control if the democratization in every aspect of life is working
Parliamentary Council worked on the constitution
Federalism instead of centralized government
8 April 1949: Allies agreed on Basic Law
8 May 1949: accepted by Parliamentary Council
12 May 1949: accepted by federal governments
23 May 1949: Basic Law was enacted, foundation of Federal Republic of Germany
Konrad Adenauer (CDU) became first chancellor
Foundation GDR
4 October 1949: consultations on founding a new state started with SED (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands) and other parties
7 October 1949: German’s people council enacted constitution and Otto Grotewohl became first minister president of GDR
Sovietization of Eastern Europe
since 1945
USSR established satellite states in Eastern Europeean countries
Example: Poland, communists took over power with the help of the soviet army
NATO was founded
1949
North Atlantic treaty organization
12 founding mebers; only western countries
military and political cooperation
—> against east
Korean War
1950-1953
war between North and south Korea
North Korea was supported by China and the Soviet Union
South Korea was supported by USA
—> First proxy-war in Cold war
Stalin Notes
1952
Stalin proposed a neutral, united Germany without military
First try for a united Germany, didnt work out because of the opposing views on political system
Stalins Death
5 March 1953
Local uprising in Soviet sphere; demanded liberalization
17 June 1953
Uprising in Eastern Germany against new york regulations; more work for the same money
Began in East Berlin; spread over the whole country
Protests against the government and the Sovietization of the country
were violently stopped by Soviet military
State Treaty of Austria
1955
Guaranteed Austrian neutrality
withdrawal of Allied troops
fueled the belief that Stalinist policies might be weakened
Warsaw Pact was founded
Defense treaty between thee Soviet Union and all eastern european countriesinder Soviet control
Eastern counterpart to NATO
Vietnam war
1955-1975
North against West
North wanted communist government for the whole country; supported by USSR
South wanted a country modelling the west; supported by USA
—> proxy war
Big loss for the USA
Hungarian Uprising
1956
also called Hungarian revolution
hungarians fought against Soviet Union Regime; didnt want the Stalinist control
wanted the west to help them, but West didnt want to risk global confrontation
Were beat down by USSR in November, but had achieved internal autonomy
Poznan Uprising
Mass protests in Poland against communist government
Also violently beat down
U2 incident
1960
US spy plane was shot down by Soviet forces over Soviet territory
Cuban missile crisis
1962
USA felt threatened by Soviet Nucelar Missile stationed in Cuba; wanted to pressure USSR into removing them by threatening to attack Soviet ships near the US
Almost broke into a Nuclear War
was solved by a secret arrangment of USSR removing missiles from Cuba and USA removing missiles from turkey
“space race”
1950s-1960s
competition between USSR and USA concerning space technology
political motivation
Prague spring
1968
period of political liebralization and mass protest in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
wanted democracy and protested against Soviet regime
USSR managed to get back control of the country
Only reform: seperation into Chzechia and Slovakia
Brezhnev Doctrine: Soviet Doctrine claiming that any uprising in a socialist country can be
put down with the help of other socialist countries (i.e. countries under Soviet control)
War in Afghanistan
1979-1989
USSR against Afghan Islamist groups Mujahideen
USA and western countries supported the islamist groups to weaken USSR, as well as some Muslim countries
Able Archer 83
1983
Annual NATO exercise
Simulated an atomic war
was very realistic, USSR believed the exercise was to cover up an actual atomic bomb attack
Cuban Missile Chrisis
first Cuba was US-influenced but after Castro overthrew the dictator, it became a communist state and the USSR became more and more involved
the storring of nuclear weapons on Cuba, felt like a thrat to world peace for the USA and they will defend themselve if its needed
In the end both, the USSR removed their missiles from Cuba and the US removed their from turkey
conflict comes from both side, everytime the one party describes the other as the bad guy and thatthey only want to defend themselves
Harmel Report
1967
French forces withdrawn from NATO command in 1966
report calls for a course of deterrenc and dètente in Europe
Reykjavik NATO meetings
1968:
calling for talks with East and West to solve European problems; especially German question
intiatives end because of Prague Spring
SALT 1
1969-1972
First USSR expresses interest in disarmament talks
—> talks begin in November 1969
Strategic Arms Limitation talks
Talks between USA and USSR to limit arms
Tlaks between USA and People’s Republic of China
1972, 1979
“ping-pong-diplomacy”; ping pong players from China and USA became friends; eased the tensions between the countries
pressure on USSR to continue arms limitation talks
SALT II
1972-1979
even more reduction of arms of two countries
Ratification of US is postponed because of Soviet Invasion in Afghanistan
—> 1982: effectively in force; announced by Reagan
1986: no longer in force; US claims that USSR has violated it
Quadripartite agreement on Berlin
1972
Agreement between the four occupational powers of Berlin
Concluded in a better relationship between East and west in Berlin
Strategic Defense Iniative
new front in the arms race between USA und USSR
Intermdiate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty
1981-1987
Signed in 1987
1988: actually ratified by both sides
INFs are eliminated
Announcement of unilateral reduction of Soviet arms forces
1988
Soviet forces and Soviet occupation forces in Eastern Europe are reduced
West German policies
1949-1963
Chancellor: Konrad Adenauer (CDU)
4 goals for government: German unity, economic consolidation, military security, national sovereignity (unity= “policy of strength”
—> make West Germany strong enough to overcome obstacles to unity
Strenght meant cooperation with the west
1951: ECSC (European Coal and Steel community)
1952: EDC (European Defense Community Treaty)
1954/55: Treaties of Paris (included Treaty on Germany); ended the Statue of occupation; FRG was sovereign country, admittance to NATO
western integration shortly dangered before the Hallstein-doctrine because of Stalin notes
1957: joined the EEC (European economic community)
1963: German-French friendship treaty (Elysée-treaty)
East German policies
Chairman of SED (Socialist unity party): Walter Ulbricht (“gead of state”) (govern: Politburo)
Planned economy: focus on heavy (chemical) insustry instead of consumer production
majority of economy was state-owned businesses or trade organizations (small business)
—> economy was fully controlled of the state
Ulbricht was fully convinced of his Communist goals;after Stalin’s death, new Soviet leadership wanted a different direction
—> June 1953: confusion in East germany; led to uprisings (17 June)
1950: joined Comecon
—> Görlitz treaty: recognition of Oder-Neiße-border
1954: Soviet declaration of East German sovereignity
1955: Soviet-East German treaty —> proclaimed the sovereignity of the GDR
1956: admittance Warsaw Pact; created a military cooperation
—> economy was unstable because many skilled and educated workers left the country
—> after building the wall, the economy stabilized
German conflicts and crises
1949-1961
17 June 1953: uprisings in east berlin, quickly and violently put down by Soviet fores; seen as a sign of unity in FRG, became a national holiday there
1948-49: first berlin crisis (Airlift); fterwards situation in Berlin was tense, but peaceful
in Berlin. direct contrast to welathy West and a lack of goods in East
Germans could only cross the border to the other state in Berlin —> thousands of East Germans fled through Berlin (in total 2,7 mio. until 1961)
1955: Geneva summit; meeting of the Allies, no agreement concerning reunification was achieved
1958: second Berlin crisis: Stalins successor Krushchev set an ultimatum to the Western allies; he wanted Berlin as a free City without the Allies occupying it —> he didnt want the Western presence as a constant threat in the East, wanted to stop the mass immigration to the West through Berlin —> ultimatum failed
13 August 1961: Berlin Wall was built
FRG wanted the Allies to intervene the constructions of the wall, but they couldnt want to do anything
After the stream of refugees to the West stopped, West Germany had to hire guest workers from soouth and south- east of Europe
West slowly increased contact and cooperation with East
Rapproachment (Annäherung) with Ostpolitik
By 1963: situation has calmed
1963: US president Kennedy visited FRG; “ich bin ein Berliner” speech
1969: Willy Brandt (SPD) became chancellor of FRG
Dealing with the East until 1969: Hallstein Doctrine, policy of strength, unification through collapse of GDR
—> FRG is the only true Germany, they dont want naything to do with the West
Brandt wanted to change his approach -> new Ostpolitik was introduced (change trough rapproachment) —> 1969: unification through mutual rapproachment
Achievements of New Ostpolitik
—> 7 December 1970: genuflaction (Kniefall) from Willy Brandt, very symbolic
—> 1970: Moscow treaty, treaty of Warsaw: closer relations between West and East
—>21 December 1972: Basic Treaty between the two German states; settled friendly relations as neighbors (1973: both joined the UN)
—>both states were part of CSCE —> Helsinki accords
—> changed the relation between West Germany and the whole East and paved the way for unification
West German domestic affairs 1963-1988
The Peace Movement
1950s Easter marches, protest against remilitarization of West Germany
1970s demonstration against Vietnam war, especially university students
1980: Krefeld Appeal demanded revoking of acceptance of stationing of US middle range missiles by Bundestag; supported by Green Party, churches, trade unions, some Social Democrats
October 1981 in Bonn: 30.000 demonstrators
1983: NATO dual-track decision, peace movement organized more demonstration
—> blockade of American Base to prevent stationing of nuclear rockets
Environmental concerns
1975: first NGO for environment founded (renamed BUND in 1977)
1980: foundation Green Party
—> 1983: seats in Bundestag
- 1985-87: first Green provincial minister
Debate within Green Party about representative vs. Direct democracy
—> discussion had disappeared since Weimar Republic
Women’s right
1960’s: pill was invented, new concepts of sexual freedom
New womens movement; demanded gender equality, especially in family and occupation
New role of women; was criticized by society
Demand for legalization of abortion
1974: law for abortion on demand was passed but declared unconstitutional after
—> only medically or socially indicated abortions until 12 months pregnancy
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