Devising a Sound U.S. Policy Toward an Elected East German Government

Introduction

On 18 March 1990, the 16 million
people of East Germany had the first
opportunity since 1932 to vote in free
elections. In casting their ballots, the
East Germans thoroughly repudiated the
communists, providing a near majority to
the center-right parties. These parties
formed a coalition government with the
Social Democrats on 9 April, one which
excludes the communists from power
altogether. On 14 April, the newly
elected East German parliament adopted a
resolution endorsing incorporation of its
territory into NATO as part of a unified
German state.

Importantly, at virtually the same
moment and following discussions with
Secretary of State James Baker in
Washington, D.C., Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze made clear that his
government was “not persuaded by the
arguments we heard to include the unified
Germany in NATO.”

While the developments in East Germany
are exceptionally promising for the
future evolution of Germany toward a
unified and democratic state, this time
of transition requires a carefully
thought-out U.S. policy which can help
reinforce the pro-democratic groups in
East Germany and support the West German
government’s position that a unified
Germany should remain in NATO.

The Significance of the
March 18 Elections

The election process itself affirmed
the desire of the overwhelming majority
of the East Germans for genuine democracy
and their sense of political
identification with the main political
parties of West Germany. Although there
were more than 60 political groups in
January 1990 and 23 were listed on the
ballot, 70% of the votes cast went to the
parties backed by and now affiliated with
the two major party groups in West
Germany: the center-right CDU/CSU and the
democratic socialist SPD.

The campaign was particularly
noteworthy for the direct and highly
visible role played by West German
leaders and parties. This role clearly
translated in the minds of many voters
into tangible evidence of incipient
unification, whose economic terms were an
important issue in the election.

Summary of the March 1990
Election Results

width=”42%”>Party width=”28%”>Percentage
of the Vote
width=”29%”>Number of
Seats
in Parliament
CDU 41% 163
DSU 6 25
Democratic
Awakening
1 4
Alliance
for Germany
(subtotal)
48 192
Free
Democrats
5 21
SPD 22 88
PDS/Communists 16 66
18 other
groups
9 33
Total 100% 400

With 94% of those eligible to vote
participating, the election represented a
massive repudiation of the Communist
Party (which received just l6% of the
vote) and a major endorsement for the
center-right parties, especially the
CDU-led Alliance for Germany (with 48% of
the total). Exit polls suggest that a
major reason for the much worse than
expected performance of the SPD (22%) in
its area of dominance during the
pre-World War II Weimar Republic is that it
proposed a much slower process of
reunification
while the CDU-led
Alliance and the Free Democrats (with 53%
of the vote) agreed with Kohl on a rapid
process of reunification.

Recent polls indicate that 91% of the
voters in East Germany favor
reunification. It may be that the
overwhelming success of the CDU-led
coalition was mainly due to its
endorsement of unification on the fastest
possible timetable. It is worth noting,
however, that the general disenchantment
with socialism (only 25% feel positively
about it) may also have contributed to
the center-right’s success.

After some weeks of discussions, the
SPD reversed its original opposition to
joining a governing coalition with the
Alliance and, on 9 April 1990, agreement
was announced on a Grand Coalition to
encompass the CDU/Alliance, the Free
Democrats and the SPD. The government,
which will take office on 17 April 1990,
will include the CDU leader Lothar de
Maziere as Prime Minister and eleven
CDU/Alliance cabinet ministers. The SPD
will take seven cabinet seats including
Foreign Affairs and the remaining six
cabinet seats will be divided among the
other parties (with a Lutheran minister
from Democratic Awakening to hold the
defense portfolio).

These decisions portend several
important prospects for the immediate
future:

  • The Grand Coalition will have the
    2/3 majority in parliament needed
    to change the East German
    constitution. This should enable
    it to take the steps required for
    speedy reunification.
  • The political responsibility for
    the next steps will be shared
    among all the leading
    democratic parties.
  • The new government has a popular
    mandate to negotiate with West
    Germany on reunification, a key
    prerequisite for its effective
    participation in the
    “two-plus-four” talks
    on reunification.
  • The communists are excluded from
    the government which should
    facilitate the rapid dismantling
    of the previous regime’s coercive
    institutions.
  • There is explicit agreement on
    the part of the new government
    that a reunited Germany should
    remain in NATO — in principle, a
    major and positive step. At this
    point, however, that position is
    predicated on Germany being
    denuclearized and on NATO’s
    renouncing any first-use of
    nuclear weapons — conditions
    that would have the effect of
    jeopardizing NATO’s deterrent
    capability and eliminating the
    U.S. force presence in Central
    Europe.
  • The leading role of the East
    German CDU should facilitate
    cooperation with the Kohl
    government on the many and
    important practical issues of
    unifying the two Germanies, e.g.,
    agreement on monetary union and
    on the rate of conversion between
    the East German and West German
    currencies.

Dismantling the Coercive
Apparatus

Every communist dictatorship rests on
three key institutions of internal
control: the party, the military and the
secret police. In any country seeking a
transition to democracy from dictatorship
there is always a risk that the elected
government will have authority in some
areas — such as the economy — but that the
coercive apparatus of the former regime
will remain substantially intact
,
thereby continuing to pose explicit (or
implicit) threats to the new government
and population. Therefore, the
transformation or dismantling of these
institutions poses a major challenge for
the new government; if successfully
accomplished, such changes provide major
defenses against the restoration of a
communist regime by coercion.

The Party

In the fall of 1989, the East German
Communist Party had a membership of 2.3
million. Even after all the initial
revelations of corruption, leadership
changes and reorganizations, it still
obtained l,892,000 votes in the 18 March
1990 election. Moreover, in the capital
city of Berlin the communists obtained
30% of the vote.

These data underscore the fact that,
even though the East German communists
have pledged to change and become
participants in democratic politics (as
their co-ideologists have done in many
other nations), the party may yet retain
a cadre capable of disrupting or
otherwise subverting the fundamental
reform program sought by the vast
majority of East Germans. At the very
least, this large and, presumably,
well-placed group represents a
significant intelligence (and possibly
physical) threat to the government
expected to be formed by early 1991 to
rule a unified Germany.

The Army

The East German army had a strength of
163,000 in the fall of l989. The former,
communist government of East Germany
announced in February 1990 that the army
would be transformed into a much smaller,
all-volunteer force. As of December l989,
about 80,000 of its members were reported
to be working in the civilian economy
(e.g., coal mines, hospital wards,
sanitary functions, and factory
production), obliged to replace workers
who had emigrated West.

Reportedly, several hundred East
German officers have applied to enter the
West German armed forces. The West German
Defense Ministry said that while soldiers
might be accepted, it would be extremely
difficult for officers to be
admitted. Presumably, this comment
reflects at least a partial recognition
of the security nightmare that would be
inherent in integrating
communist-recruited and -indoctrinated
military personnel into West Germany’s
armed forces — and, therefore, into
NATO’s alliance structure.

The Secret Police

Statements by the former East German
government (and non-governmental
estimates) placed the strength of the Staatssicherheitsdeinst,
the State Security Service or detested
secret police (universally known as the
Stasi) at about 85,000. The Stasi was
said to have had an estimated 130,000
informers and computerized files on about
5 million East Germans.

The secret police have ostensibly been
dissolved, but a newly elected member of
the East German parliament from a
democratic party recently noted that
while “the technical structure is
gone, we can’t be sure there isn’t a
second structure.” In fact, even
after the East German government had twice
announced the dissolution of the Stasi
,
there are a number of indicators that at
least important elements of the
organization continue to function:

  • In mid-January 1990, the West
    German Minister of the Interior
    said in an interview in Bunte
    magazine that there was “no
    sign that agents have been
    withdrawn. The division of the
    Stasi responsible for espionage
    — the Hauptvervaltung fur
    Aufklaerung
    (HVA) or Main
    Administration for Reconnaissance
    — is functioning as it was in
    Honecker’s time.”
  • A leading West German paper, Die
    Welt
    , wrote on 29 January
    1990 that “The East German
    government has not kept its
    promise of December” to end
    the tapping of telephone calls to
    West Germany, postal censorship
    and contacts with East German
    spies in West Germany.
  • The vice president of the
    anti-communist resistance in
    Angola stated in February 1990
    that hundreds of East German
    personnel continue to prop up the
    internal security and
    intelligence apparatus of the
    Angolan communist regime.
  • Virtually none of the estimated
    thousands of East German spies in
    West Germany have surfaced,
    defected or — to public
    knowledge — been caught or
    expelled.
  • Reports indicate that much of the
    Stasi spy apparatus has simply
    been transferred to Moscow’s
    direct control
    and
    protection. This including
    published charges that Stasi
    files and personnel are being
    moved to Soviet military bases in
    East Germany and to the Soviet
    Union.

Clearly, absent a complete and
effective termination of the Stasi, its
operations and its continuing ties to the
Soviet Union, there is a significant
danger that this apparatus — perhaps in
combination with the residual communist
party and elements of the East German
military — will serve to promote
interests inimical to genuine democracy
and liberty in a unified Germany.

A Recommended Approach for
U.S. Policy

There are a number of actions the
United States should take in the coming
months:

  • Remain firm that a
    reunited Germany should be a full
    member of NATO.
    The Bush
    Administration is to be commended
    for quickly and explicitly
    rejecting the Soviet suggestion
    that Germany might be a member of
    both the NATO and Warsaw
    Pact alliances. On April 11, the
    White House correctly called this
    “another formula for
    neutrality” and reiterated
    U.S. support for “full
    membership of a united Germany in
    NATO.”
  • Accordingly, the United States
    should press for the rapid
    withdrawal of all Soviet troops
    from East Germany and its formal
    withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact.
    Under no circumstances should a
    unified Germany be obliged to pay
    costs associated with maintaining
    such a Soviet presence on German
    soil.
  • Assure that U.S. military
    forces remain an integral part of
    deployed nuclear and conventional
    deterrent in Central Europe,
    including in Germany.
  • Provide regular and
    public reports of continuing
    hostile international actions by
    East German entities
    to
    include espionage, support for
    aggressive foreign regimes and
    technology theft and/or illegal
    transfers.
  • Such reports should also address
    the progress being made toward
    the dismantling of the former
    East German institutions of
    coercion, especially the secret
    police.
    Such public
    information that is objective and
    authoritative could be of
    inestimable help to the East
    German democratic leaders.
  • Encourage West Germany to
    offer amnesty and establish a
    special fund for cash rewards for
    former East German intelligence
    agents, officials and military
    officers who provide reliable
    information on past, present and
    possible future hostile
    activities of the East German
    regime.
  • Stipulate that U.S.
    acquiescence in liberalized
    export controls for high
    technology transfers and
    multilateral financial assistance
    to East Germany be predicated
    upon a demonstrated rupture of
    all East German ties with the
    coercive apparatuses of the
    Soviet Union.
  • Insist on the immediate
    diversification of East German
    oil and gas supplies away from
    the Soviet Union, which currently
    delivers 123% of East Germany’s
    consumption — the balance being
    exportable surpluses over and
    above domestic needs.
    In
    the context of a unifying
    Germany, maintaining this
    inordinate reliance on Soviet
    energy supplies serves only as a
    kind of “payola scheme”
    to move at least $3.5 billion
    annually into Moscow’s coffers.
Center for Security Policy

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