{"id":96421,"date":"2022-07-01T17:05:43","date_gmt":"2022-07-01T15:05:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=96421"},"modified":"2022-07-01T08:10:36","modified_gmt":"2022-07-01T06:10:36","slug":"10-00-77","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=96421","title":{"rendered":"Stop Being Surprised by Germany"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5 style=\"text-align: center;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"center alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.reunion68.com\/Biuletyn\/img\/tablet-1.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"35%\"><\/a><span style=\"text-decoration: underline; color: #000080;\"><strong><a style=\"color: #000080; text-decoration: underline;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/sections\/news\/articles\/stop-being-surprised-by-germany\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Stop Being Surprised by Germany<\/a><\/strong><\/span><\/h5>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong><br \/>\nJEREMY STERN<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\">\n<h4 style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>Blinded by their own Cold War propaganda, Americans can\u2019t see Berlin\u2019s Ukraine policy for what it is<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">.<br \/>\n<img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/tablet-mag-images.b-cdn.net\/production\/2b01dca0aa2b7b17553dea081ebab3085659c347-8192x5464.jpg?w=1300&amp;q=70&amp;auto=format&amp;dpr=1\" width=\"100%\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em>ODD ANDERSEN\/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Germany tries hard to make itself dull, but it still can\u2019t help inspiring an unusual amount of exasperation around the world, for reasons that many if not most Germans believe to be deeply unfair. World War II ended over 75 years ago, after all, before the overwhelming majority of Germans today were born. And didn\u2019t Germany denazify itself while other Western countries continued to pillage weaker nations in the name of colonialism, postcolonialism, anti-communism, and other isms? Isn\u2019t Germany today the very model of a decent, grown-up modern society, repealing a Nazi-era ban on the advertisement of abortion services on the same day the United States turned back the clock on reproductive rights by 50 years? Why must <em>Germany<\/em>&nbsp;always be held to account?<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The prevalence in Germany of this type of lament tends to obscure the actual reasons so many people\u2014Americans, Britons, Poles, Balts, and especially Ukrainians\u2014tend to roll their eyes at German policymakers. While world war has indeed been commendably removed from the policy menu in recent decades, the crimes of national solipsism and wishful self-contradiction remain as German as ever. See, for example, the performance of Chancellor Olaf Scholz over the last two weeks, during which he helped lead a pledge for Ukraine\u2019s candidate status as a future member of the European Union, then dispatched his foreign policy adviser to&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/e1deaa1d-e87f-49c9-8db2-34728155a284\">clarify<\/a>&nbsp;that Ukraine shouldn\u2019t expect EU membership \u201cjust because you\u2019re attacked,\u201d then made an obviously unrealistic&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.sueddeutsche.de\/politik\/bundesregierung-eu-reformen-1.5605949\">demand<\/a>&nbsp;for more German voting weight in the European Council and greater representation in the European Parliament as a condition of Ukrainian membership. In other words, Germany supports Ukrainian accession to the EU, and the reason it probably won\u2019t happen is that Germany will block it\u2014a by-now familiar maneuver that has left many of the states stuck between Germany and Russia rubbing their eyes in disbelief. Trying to keep track of Berlin\u2019s decisions and their relation to any underlying policy has been for many like trying to make sense of a drunk who keeps falling asleep.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In the&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.politico.eu\/article\/olaf-scholz-kaiser-complex-ukraine-lurch\/\">last month<\/a>&nbsp;alone, while&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.dw.com\/en\/putin-must-not-win-this-war-germanys-olaf-scholz-tells-davos\/a-61938607\">insisting<\/a>&nbsp;that \u201cPutin must not win this war,\u201d Scholz has blocked a sale of infantry fighting vehicles to Ukraine, diverting them to Greece so that Athens could be responsible for sending Kyiv its older stock instead. He has promised to send Ukraine 30 decommissioned anti-aircraft tanks it never asked for\u2014and for which Germany has insufficient ammunition anyway\u2014which are not slated to arrive until later this summer. And he announced his intention to send Ukraine an air-defense system the German Defense Ministry reportedly hadn\u2019t ordered yet.<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><strong>There is an undeniable Sprockets-like undertone to Germany\u2019s policy gyrations.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The chancellor also spent the month of May making a show of refusing to visit Kyiv because he believed Volodymyr Zelensky\u2014who was then organizing the evacuation of Mariupol\u2014violated diplomatic etiquette by declining to receive Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Germany\u2019s figurehead president and a longtime ally of Vladimir Putin. Scholz still refuses to say whether he would like Ukraine to win the war, and frequently calls for a \u201ccease-fire\u201d rather than a Russian withdrawal.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">There is, moreover, an undeniable Sprockets-like undertone to these policy gyrations, as difficult as they can be to follow day-to-day or month-to-month. On the same day that the strategic Lyman railway hub fell to Russian forces, Scholz&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/Bundeskanzler\/status\/1530141812509364224\">tweeted<\/a>&nbsp;airily from a convention of Catholic pacifists (who were apparently&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.economist.com\/europe\/2022\/05\/31\/olaf-scholzs-dithering-is-damaging-germanys-international-image\">debating<\/a>&nbsp;whether Jesus was trans), \u201cCan violence be fought with violence? Can you only create peace without weapons?\u201d Indeed, Herr Chancellor.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Needless to say, even well-informed German commentators have been&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.eurointelligence.com\/column\/germanys-duplicitous-chancellor\">speculating<\/a>&nbsp;about what kind of&nbsp;<em>kompromat&nbsp;<\/em>Putin might have on Scholz and other Social Democrats, or at least what kind of threats he must be making in private. Other common accusations range from Scholz\u2019s supposedly poor communication skills to a more general German capacity for indecision, complacency, administrative sloth, and childlike credulity\u2014qualities not otherwise associated with a country that dominates its political and economic environment with consistent and often ruthless determination.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">It\u2019s getting harder, in fact, to square the popular impression of Scholz and his cabinet as weak and confused na\u00effs who see the world as if from inside a Brandenburgian dollhouse with the reality that, for all its twists and turns, Berlin\u2019s Ukraine policy has been firmly grounded in both German history and an interpretation of strategic realities more plausible than most of what passes through Brussels and Washington.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">While President Joe Biden dispatched the U.S. attorney general to Kyiv last week to advise the Ukrainians on how to prosecute Russians for war crimes, Berlin performed a simple calculation. The German energy firm Uniper, Europe\u2019s largest buyer of Russian gas, has seen shipments from Gazprom fall by more than quarter. Gazprom has reduced shipments to Germany via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline by 60%, and is about to shut it down completely for \u201cplanned maintenance\u201d of undetermined duration. The longer Ukraine frustrates Putin\u2019s attempts to win a conventional war, many Germans worry, the more inclined he\u2019ll be to opt for a total gas embargo on Europe. A gas embargo might cause a German depression. Much of its industrial sector would simply shut down. There would be a fiscal crisis across the eurozone, and the return of a balance-of-payments crisis. European unity would split. Trans-Atlantic cohesion would crater.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">There is no sense in pretending that Putin could never afford a gas embargo, German officials have come to believe, given the&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.economist.com\/finance-and-economics\/2022\/05\/13\/russia-is-on-track-for-a-record-trade-surplus\">experience of sanctions<\/a>. After the imposition of Western sanctions in March, Russian exports&nbsp;<em>increased<\/em>&nbsp;by 8% in April. The explosion in the value of Russian commodity exports means Putin\u2019s current account surplus this year may double from last year, making the loss of his foreign exchange assets irrelevant. The West\u2019s arrogant miscalculation about the size and importance of Russia\u2019s economy contributed directly to ruinous dynamics that routinely convulse Western democracies: spiraling inflation, cost of living crises, a looming rise in immigration and refugee flows as supplies continue to fall. The consequences of the anti-Russia sanctions have been worse, Germans argue, than if we had imposed no sanctions at all.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">While Olaf Scholz may have multiple fraud scandals in his past and all the political charisma of a former mayor of Hamburg, a more credible explanation for the gap between German rhetoric and policy with regard to Ukraine is that Berlin simply believes Moscow was right\u2014right that the sanctions regime was doomed to fail, that Western financial and military support for Ukraine is unsustainable, that trans-Atlantic unity will fray, and that Russia will eventually win, no matter what kinds of weapons Germany provides or where it buys its gas. If Germany has a \u201cspecial responsibility\u201d to \u201cremember history,\u201d many German officials believe, it probably shouldn\u2019t risk an economic catastrophe for the sake of the Donbas.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Americans have been especially susceptible to the idea that the German approach to the Ukraine conflict so far\u2014and the two-decade Merkel era of which it is only the latest expression\u2014represents a dramatic break with the historical legacy of 1989 and the diplomatic achievements of reunification. Yet current German policy appears well-aligned not only with Germany\u2019s economic interests, but with the traditional German preference for serving as a \u201cbridge\u201d between Russia and the West\u2014rather than as a bridgehead of the West in the East.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Americans are prone to their own varieties of solipsism in foreign policy, but there is a peculiar and little-understood reason why we seem to be doing a particularly bad job when it comes to Germany today. Paradoxically, it is not Germany\u2019s struggle to come to terms with its own history that is to blame, but American Cold War efforts to suppress and replace that history with our own self-serving, tutelary mythology\u2014which became a kind of self-evident gospel with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but which Germans themselves never believed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The first thing Americans tend to forget about the war and the occupation period is that Germans experienced it very differently than Americans did. When Franklin Roosevelt announced a war policy of \u201cunconditional surrender\u201d in Casablanca in 1943, various U.S. officials opposed it for a number of reasons\u2014but whatever its efficacy, there\u2019s no doubt about how the policy was implemented. Allied strategic bombing campaigns killed approximately 400,000 civilians in Germany, wounded 800,000 more, and rendered 7.5 million homeless. The bombing of Hamburg killed 37,000 people in one week; the firebombing of Dresden killed 25,000 people in three days. Civilians, of course, were not collateral damage, but often deliberate targets of the Allied air raids.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">There are many good reasons that require no elaboration for why we retain a clearer memory today of the supernatural evil of Auschwitz than of the apocalyptic violence of Dresden. But there is a specific reason why Americans tend not to remember the latter much at all.<\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In the two years after the Potsdam conference, American priorities in Europe were reaching a settlement with Stalin, withdrawal, and demobilization. There was nothing about \u201cnation building,\u201d in other words, no intention of \u201cdemocratizing\u201d Germans or even \u201cliberating\u201d them. (A&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/history.state.gov\/historicaldocuments\/frus1945v03\/d351\">directive<\/a>&nbsp;from the Joint Chiefs of Staff to Eisenhower shortly after Roosevelt died clarified that \u201cGermany will not be occupied for the purpose of liberation but as a defeated enemy nation.\u201d) But after negotiations with Moscow broke down, Czechoslovakia fell to a communist coup, and Stalin blockaded Berlin, the United States quickly recognized that it would need a noncommunist bulwark in West Germany for the coming showdown with the Soviet Union. Washington initiated talks about German rearmament only five years after Hitler shot himself. The psychological foundation for a new U.S.-German relationship would have to be conceived.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">It was far from obvious at the time that the occupation forces\u2014a military dictatorship that owed its existence to the preceding wartime policy of violence maximization\u2014would be able to rapidly convert Germans into a prosperous, democratic people. Nor was it clear whether American voters and soldiers would be open to considering Germans their friends. So the urgent but awkward need to anchor at least half of Germany in the emerging Western bloc gave birth to one of the earliest and still most salient official myths of the postwar American empire: \u201cdemocracy promotion.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Americans were henceforth in Germany not as victorious foreign occupiers, but as liberation forces sharing the light of democratic values, market economics, and freedom with the German majority, which had been held hostage by the Nazis but was now open to embracing the American way. And if Germans were eager to repress the recent memory of war and their widespread complicity as individuals and as a nation in a decade and a half of fascist crimes, Americans were suddenly eager to help them. By 1948, the defining image of U.S. involvement in Germany was no longer a sky blanketed by thousands of bombers setting German cities on fire, but of GIs passing out chocolate bars and nylon stockings and dancing with the natives to Benny Goodman as they broke the Soviet blockade of Berlin.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The way the Cold War ended suggests the democracy promotion myth was both effective and justified. From a distance of 75 years, it is also clear how it warped and in some cases deranged Americans\u2019 understanding of a defining moment in their own history. Four generations of Americans have now grown up under the assumption that a primary legacy of \u201cThe Good War\u201d is that the United States brought freedom and democracy to people and places where it had never existed before. In the case of Germany (among others) this isn\u2019t exactly true\u2014Germany before 1913 had a parliament, freedom of the press, and intellectual freedom, in some cases more robust than in the United States at the time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In reality, the eventual West German growth miracle owed more to German corporatist economic principles, and to the establishment of the European Coal and Steel Community, than it did to any free-market values introduced by the United States. It would likewise take a special kind of self-deception to mistake Germany\u2019s greatest postwar achievement\u2014one of the world\u2019s most effective and admirable welfare states, which harks back to Bismarck\u2019s social bargain with the German labor parties\u2014for a postwar American import. Yet it was the example of \u201cdemocracy promotion\u201d in Germany (and also Japan) that U.S. politicians and statesmen repeatedly invoked in their later misadventures, from Vietnam to Afghanistan and Iraq.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The democracy promotion myth that American Cold Warriors invented to position West Germany as a key ally and U.S. dependency prevented later generations of Americans not only from understanding themselves, but from ever truly understanding Germany. Beneath the very real achievements of the Nuremberg trials, the Marshall Plan, and the Berlin airlift was the grubby reality that Americans played a remarkably limited role in Germany\u2019s transition out of Nazism. The policy of denazification in particular left little trace: U.S. control of the press and campaigns to force German civilians to visit concentration camps and watch documentary films of German atrocities were brief, and had pointently little effect on German attitudes during the years of occupation. By 1950, the vast majority of ex-Nazi teachers, bureaucrats, military officers, lawyers, and academics in both East and West Germany had been welcomed seamlessly into the new system. Neither Washington nor Moscow could afford to alienate their German clients for fear of losing them to the opposite bloc.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Nor did ordinary Germans experience life among the American occupation armies as fondly as Americans tend to remember it. Life in the immediate aftermath of unconditional surrender was far worse for most Germans than it had been under the Nazis. There were individuals like Gail Halvorsen, the \u201cBerlin Candy Bomber,\u201d and plenty of other Coca-Cola-drinking, Gary Cooper-miming American eyefuls (hence the U.S. War Brides Act of December 1945). But life in the rubble of cities like Hanover and Frankfurt was preferable only to the Soviet-occupied East, where the Red Army was officially sanctioned to rape and loot. In the years that followed the division of Germany, it was the Americans who were seen as prolonging the suffering of Germans by \u201cusing\u201d them as pawns in their terrifying nuclear standoff with the Soviet Union. Many Germans thus came to understand and remember World War II not on its own terms, but as a kind of overture to the main drama of the hateful Cold War.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The public American position that Germany should be made whole and free itself masked a deep and bipartisan but private recognition that the division of Germany actually served U.S. interests in Europe pretty well. The emergence of two separate Germanys in 1949 put an end to fears that Stalin might march the Red Army to Dunkirk; even the appearance of the Berlin Wall in 1961 was received with quiet relief in Washington, which had spent 12 sleepless years trying to avoid a nuclear standoff over the Allied status in the city. The foreboding image of an Iron Curtain still suggests darkness and tragedy\u2014but from the standpoint of U.S. strategic interests (as opposed to popular American political aspirations), it was for many years preferable to a united, unaligned Germany playing Washington and Moscow against each other.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The fiction of an urgent U.S. desire for reunification also helped convince Americans over time that East Germans were, for the most part, victims like any other of Soviet imperialism and communist oppression. The 4 million East Germans who migrated to the West between 1945 and 1988\u2014and the 140 East Berliners shot and killed at the Berlin Wall\u2014testifies to the substance of the American assumption. But many East Germans also found in the German Democratic Republic both an escape hatch for uncomfortable memories of the Nazi period (blame for Hitler was assigned by the GDR exclusively to the West Germans and their capitalist overlords) and a familiar type of political system in which many ex-Nazis thrived alongside Jewish communists like the Stasi spymaster Markus Wolf. The writer Peter Schneider (often quoted by Tony Judt)&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027138\">referred<\/a>&nbsp;to these dynamics as the \u201cdouble zombification\u201d of East Germans\u2014a reality that contrasted for a while with the idea of a second Germany eagerly awaiting American liberation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The effect on Americans of buying into their own Cold War mythologizing was that it eventually became difficult for U.S. observers and policymakers to understand what was really going on in and between the two Germanys.&nbsp;<em>Ostpolitik<\/em>, West Germany\u2019s policy of d\u00e9tente with Eastern Europe and particularly East Germany that began after 1969, ushered in more than just a slackening of strained relations. The West Germans took the opportunity to flood East Germany with hard currency, propped up its imploding economy, and invested the GDR with a conspicuous degree of diplomatic and political legitimacy, helping to extend its zombified existence.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">At the same time, social unrest in West Germany was providing evidence that the American democratic mythos had sprung some serious leaks. In the 1960s and \u201970s, much of West German politics and society moved in the direction of the kind of hysterical anti-Americanism that still distinguishes parts of Germany today; as the Stasi and Baader-Meinhof gang murdered and kidnapped their fellow countrymen, West Germans turned out in historic numbers to protest U.S. actions in Vietnam and the location of U.S. short-range ballistic missiles. Popular books began to appear in West Germany on events supposedly not permitted in what would later be termed its&nbsp;<em>Erinnerungskultur<\/em>, or official \u201cculture of remembrance\u201d: the mass murder of innocent German civilians during the strategic bombing of German cities; the forced population transfer of innocent ethnic Germans from Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and the Balkans.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Franz Josef Strauss, then minister president of Bavaria and the leader of the Christian Social Union for three decades, famously&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.dw.com\/en\/opinion-the-speech-about-history-that-made-history\/a-18250339\">pronounced<\/a>&nbsp;during this period that \u201ca people that has achieved such remarkable economic success has the right not to have to hear anymore about Auschwitz.\u201d It was in fact not until the generation that came of age in the 1980s and \u201990s that Germans transformed into a people intimately familiar and intensely conscious of the history of the Holocaust, some of the worst scenes of which had taken place in Ukraine.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/tablet-mag-images.b-cdn.net\/production\/bfda22793aac61aa94d4f1d05d081d3943018ba8-3000x2000.jpg?w=1200&amp;q=70&amp;auto=format&amp;dpr=1\" width=\"100%\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em>Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky shakes hands with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on June 16, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine.ALEXEY FURMAN\/GETTY IMAGES<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"ArticleView__content-switch bradford text-article-body-md font-300 mxauto\">\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">By the time the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union imploded, 55 years of mythologizing about the U.S. role in Germany and Europe had provided a ready-made explanation for what Americans saw on television: Communism collapsed because the United States had defeated it. The spirit of near-delirious triumphalism likewise applied to the U.S. interpretation of the significance of German reunification. Americans\u2019 incomplete understanding of the Germans and postwar German history was perhaps never more vivid than when they rapturously applauded the return of a unitary German state\u2014the wealthiest and most populous in Europe, stretching from Belgium to the Baltic Sea\u2014before quickly moving on to more immediate problems, like Saddam Hussein\u2019s invasion of Kuwait.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Yet it was not for nothing that Lech Walesa, founder of the anti-communist Solidarity trade union and the first-ever Polish president elected in a popular vote, commented as he watched the wall come down that Poland would \u201cpay the price\u201d for that happy event. Walesa couldn\u2019t have known at the time that a reunified Germany would be anchored in NATO, the European Union, and a common European currency, or that a future Polish foreign minister would eventually&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/b753cb42-19b3-11e1-ba5d-00144feabdc0\">come to<\/a>&nbsp;\u201cfear Germany\u2019s power less than her inactivity.\u201d He didn\u2019t need to. What Walesa understood was that a reunified Germany would once again see itself as a \u201cbridge\u201d between East and West at just the moment the liberated peoples of the former Warsaw Pact were reaching for the long-awaited prize of self-determination: namely, membership in the West itself.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Today, the United States is once again putting itself at the center of someone else\u2019s story\u2014invoking Lend Lease and the Marshall Plan and the Berlin airlift to conjure the happy ending we\u2019ve already determined is required of the Ukrainian nightmare. Rather than aim for a \u201c<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/sections\/news\/articles\/three-blind-kings-edward-luttwak\">dirty, contemptible compromise<\/a>,\u201d Washington has\u2014rightly or wrongly\u2014made support for an unconditional Ukrainian victory a litmus test for the American democratic ethos, even as American voters have started to lose whatever interest they had in helping the heroic Ukrainians. Convinced of their own centrality to the drama, U.S. leaders can\u2019t or won\u2019t understand that many U.S. allies can\u2019t and won\u2019t stake their futures on whatever the American position happens to be at any particular moment\u2014because according to the internal logic of American partisan warfare, that position will be reversed every few years.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">No one fears and loathes this toxic U.S. political dynamic more than our allies in Berlin. For them, Donetsk and Luhansk are simply not worth a Lehman-style&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/time.com\/6190379\/germany-russian-gas-cuts\/\">contagion<\/a>&nbsp;in Germany\u2019s energy sector. Neither, for that matter, is Odessa, or Kyiv, or Transnistria, or the Suwalki Gap. And why, they ask, should it be otherwise? There is \u201cour relationship with Russia [in the] future\u201d to consider, as Scholz\u2019s foreign policy adviser&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/e1deaa1d-e87f-49c9-8db2-34728155a284\">reminded<\/a>&nbsp;Germans last week after the chancellor\u2019s trip to Kyiv. \u201cThat is at least as exciting and relevant an issue.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Americans are entitled to wonder what all this means for Germany\u2019s status as a member of the Western alliance. What we\u2019re no longer entitled to is surprise.<\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"AuthorBioBlock col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 w100 mt6 mxauto\">\n<div class=\"AuthorBioBlock__container graebenbach mt1_5 text-section-details-sm font-300 color-red\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em><strong>Jeremy Stern<\/strong> is news editor of Tablet magazine.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\">\n<div id=\"content\" class=\"content-alignment\">\n<div id=\"watch-description\" class=\"yt-uix-button-panel\">\n<div id=\"watch-description-text\" style=\"text-align: center;\">\n<p><em>Zawarto\u015b\u0107 publikowanych artyku\u0142\u00f3w i materia\u0142\u00f3w nie reprezentuje pogl\u0105d\u00f3w ani opinii Reunion&#8217;68,<\/em><em><br \/>\nani te\u017c webmastera Blogu Reunion&#8217;68, chyba ze jest to wyra\u017anie zaznaczone.<br \/>\nTwoje uwagi, linki, w\u0142asne artyku\u0142y lub wiadomo\u015bci prze\u015blij na adres:<br \/>\n<\/em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong><em><a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"mailto:webmaster@reunion68.com\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">webmaster@reunion68.com<\/span><\/a><\/em><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style=\"width: 100%;\">\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Stop Being Surprised by Germany JEREMY STERN Blinded by their own Cold War propaganda, Americans can\u2019t see Berlin\u2019s Ukraine policy for what it is . ODD ANDERSEN\/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Germany tries hard to make itself dull, but it still can\u2019t help inspiring an unusual amount of exasperation around the world, for reasons that many [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[6],"tags":[26,24],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/96421"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=96421"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/96421\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":96441,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/96421\/revisions\/96441"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=96421"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=96421"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=96421"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}