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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
| CODA:
Volume XX, No 1, Spring 2003 |
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Postcards
from Planet Jupiter
While traveling
recently through Old Europe (to borrow Donald Rumsfeld’s now shopworn
phrase), I was led to reflect on the obtuseness of the secretary
of defense’s dismissive epithet. For nations no less than wine,
some things improve in the cask. Age is not simply weariness; it
also connotes a sense of limits, an awareness of mortality, greater
calm in dealing with recurrent dangers, concern for one’s progeny,
and more care for posterity’s benevolent judgment. It is a season,
as Shakespeare affirmed, when ripeness is all.
So I pondered
following a busman’s holiday in Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany.
Friends and strangers alike fixed me with anxious eyes to ask what
on earth was happening in America, and why Bush II was so brashly
unlike Bush I. Yet my perceptions differed from those of a valued
student of foreign affairs, Robert Kagan, a Washington policy analyst
now living in Brussels. He claims in a new book that Americans are
from Mars, Europeans from Venus. We do indeed seem to dwell on different
planets, but Venus? Old Europe seems less an aging coquette
than a twin of Jupiter: rotund and grave, girdled by many moons,
wearied by the quarrels and liaisons of younger gods, yet capable
when challenged of hurling an angry thunderbolt in the form of a
veto. Moreover, older Europeans have learned firsthand that the
sun eventually sets on all great empires, and that every rising
power’s folly is to believe it sits at the end of history.
Scrapping
Bismarck’s Diplomacy
The perils of hubris struck me with peculiar force while visiting
Bremen and Hamburg, from whose ports more immigrants came to the
New World than from any other. These mighty Hanseatic trading cities
epitomized the fast-forward expansion of the German Empire from
its formation after the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) until the
catastrophes that flowed from Sarajevo. And nobody did more to propel
Germany’s rise than Prince Otto von Bismarck, whose deeds should
be known to George W. Bush, since at Yale he studied Germany’s past
in a course taught by an astute historian, Henry Ashby Turner.
Bismarck’s
memory is preserved in a museum I sought out at his residence in
Friedrichsruh, in the environs of Hamburg. Here one is reminded
that a century ago all indicators on the bourse of power pointed
to Germany’s ascent: its swift victories in three European wars,
its awesome military machine, its double-digit economic growth,
a fertility rate that assured ample future manpower, all this plus
Europe’s finest scientific institutes, its ablest engineers, and
its most literate populace. When the Nobel Prizes were launched
in 1901, Germany swept the field in medicine, life sciences, physics,
and chemistry. As significant, Germany possessed Europe’s strongest
Social Democratic Party, so well organized that Marxists confidently
expected that founders of the first socialist state would speak
German, not English or French, and certainly not Russian.
In 1888, the
auguries for Germany were exceptionally favorable as Kaiser Wilhelm
II succeeded to the throne at age 29. The new emperor exuded the
outward assurance of a leader born to command. His grandmother was
Queen Victoria, his uncle was the future Edward VII, and every royal
in Europe, ranging from St. Petersburg and Copenhagen south to Athens,
was either his kin or his favor-seeker. Yet some also noted his
tendency to swagger, his love of uniforms, his intellectual shallowness,
and his repeated references to Germany’s providential mission. Tellingly,
his first proclamation as emperor was to his soldiers: "So
we are bound together—I and the army—so we are born for one another,
and so we shall hold together indissolubly, whether, as God wills,
we are at peace or in storm."
It likewise
soon became apparent that Wilhelm II bridled at his reliance on
Bismarck, and on the complex web of alliances the aging Iron Chancellor
had welded to prevent Germany’s isolation. The young emperor, his
courtiers and his advisors—most especially his éminence grise,
Baron Friedrich August von Holstein, a crafty early edition of Karl
Rove— itched to make their own mark, to ensure Germany a place in
the sun (Wilhelm II’s phrase). But the kaiser felt hemmed in by
the Iron Chancellor’s Triple Alliance with Austria- Hungary and
Italy, and by the Three Emperors’ Pact, binding Russia and Austria-Hungary
to the German Reich.
"Deutschland
über alles"
In 1890, seizing on a minor contretemps, the emperor dismissed
Bismarck, ending his 28- year tenure as chancellor, an event indelibly
commemorated in a famous British cartoon, "Dropping the Pilot."
It may well be that the Bismarckian order was fated to unravel anyway,
as David Calleo and others have argued, given its complexity, its
reliance on secret diplomacy, and the personal ties of a tiny ruling
elite. Still, the speed with which the whole structure crumbled,
and the scale of the devastating deluge that followed, was astonishing.
In little more than two decades, Germany’s drive for global supremacy
led to the First World War and the eventual demise of four empires—the
German, Russian, Ottoman, Austria-Hungarian—as well as the creation
of today’s Middle East, with its angry tangle of half-formed nations.
Starting early
in the 1890s, Germany seemed to burst assertively everywhere on
the world stage. Bismarck’s attempts to placate Great Britain yielded
to blunt provocations, and then to a costly naval race that Wilhelm
II vowed he would win. Germany’s pact with Russia, the linchpin
in Bismarck’s structure, was not renewed. By 1893, the old chancellor’s
worst nightmare materialized as republican France moved toward an
entente cordiale with czarist Russia, an odd coupling that paved
the way for the Great War.
"No one
could accuse the Germans of lack of energy," writes Gordon
Craig in his standard Oxford history. "In April 1894 they filed
a claim for the sole possession of the Samoan Islands, in June they
protested the legality of an Anglo-Congolese treaty concluded the
previous month; and in the autumn of the year they quarreled with
the British over the recognition of the Sultan of Morocco, the boundaries
of the Sudan, the future of Portugal’s colonies, and the policy
to be adopted toward Turkey as a result of the Armenian massacre."
In 1898, the
kaiser toured the Middle East, entered Jerusalem on horseback, proclaimed
himself champion of 300 million Muslims, and conjured visions of
a Berlin-to-Baghdad railway. In north China, German breweries and
Lutheran churches sprang up in Shantung, the German enclave in which
the fanatic Boxers first rebelled against "foreign devils"
in 1899. A year later, a multinational peacekeeping force led by
a German, Field Marshal Count von Waldersee, crushed the Boxer Uprising
and sacked Peking. Meanwhile, German traders and agents moved deeper
into east, west, and southern Africa, a forward policy underscored
in 1895 by the celebrated "Kruger telegram" in which Wilhelm
II implied he would back the Boer president Paul Kruger against
Britain. And nervous Europeans noticed that Germany had adopted
as its unofficial anthem "Deutschland, Deutschland über
alles," with its first verse celebrating the Fatherland and
its four rivers—the Maas, the Etsch, the Memel, and the Belt—none
of them in Germany.
In all this,
Wilhelm II benefited from the autocratic political system that Bismarck
had devised. As defined by the historian Fritz Stern, the system
combined constitutional absolutism with democratic trappings. Socialists
and liberals could indeed sit in the Reichstag, but they had no
voice on military and foreign policy, which were judged the province
of the kaiser, the chancellor, and the general staff. Thus Prussian
warlords with negligible accountability fixed the course, and then
escaped the blame, for the blunders (e.g. unrestricted submarine
warfare) that ordained Germany’s defeat in the First World War.
Fischer
Maps the Fatal Course
It was not until after the Second World War that a German scholar
of high standing, Fritz Fischer (1908–99) documented the feckless
extremism of Wilhelmine diplomacy. Himself a conservative and a
professor of history at the University of Hamburg, Fischer sired
a storm in 1961 with Griff nach der Weltmacht (Grasp for
world power), or as put more mildly in its English title, Germany’s
War Aims in the First World War (1967). Drawing on long-sealed
records and unpublished memoirs, Fischer demonstrated that German
leaders planned to establish an imperium of staggering dimensions,
extending in Europe alone from the Balkans to the Baltic: "Command
of the eastern Mediterranean was to compel the adherence of Greece,
while dominion of the Black Sea guaranteed the economic mastery
of the Ukraine, Crimea, and Georgia, and command of the Baltic compelled
Sweden and Finland, with their riches, to take the German side.
On top of all this was the reward of at least economic hegemony
in Rump Russia."
For such heresies,
patriots excoriated Fischer, yet over time he carried the day, winning
the approval of the student generation that now governs Germany.
More than anyone, by exposing the bungling adventurism of Wilhelm’s
circle, he discredited the legend that craven civilians were to
blame for Germany’s defeat in 1918. Fischer’s name still resonates
at his old university, where my wife and I met with Prof. Angelika
Schaser, who has succeeded to both his academic chair and his office.
Her field is contemporary history, closing a circle in Germany,
where the Nazi era is now being thoroughly combed by younger scholars.
Just how thoroughly
became evident during our visit to the Research Institute for Modern
History in Hamburg, where every available document plus hundreds
of oral histories dealing locally with Nazi times are available
on open shelves crowding four large rooms. We met as well with Dr.
Rolf Rietzler, a retired editor of Der Spiegel, who changed
his academic focus and switched universities to study with Fischer,
and who today is completing a memoir based on his paternal generation’s
recollections of the Hitler era in Catholic southern Germany. And
Fischer’s spirit could be sensed in the Bismarck Museum at Friedrichsruh,
where the old chancellor is memorialized, warts and all, and where
near the exit, one finds a blowup of that famous cartoon, "Dropping
the Pilot," beside a label quoting a French member of parliament
declaring in March 1890, "Germany with Bismarck was a great
power with a clear direction. Germany without Bismarck is a problem."
Itemized nearby are the fateful steps leading to Sarajevo.
En route to
Bremen, we paused in Essen to see Villa Hügel, the hilltop
castle erected by the Krupp dynasty in the 1870s, shaped in the
overbearing luxe style once favored by Germany’s industrial barons.
The villa is more like a gusty railway terminal than a residence,
and provision was made for Kaiser Wilhelm II to come directly by
train to a suite kept perpetually ready for his impromptu visits.
The Ruhr furnaces of Germany’s major arms manufacturer from 1870
to 1945 have long since gone cold, and what remains of the Krupp
fortune passed to a foundation established by Alfried Krupp von
Bohlen und Halbach. He was the Krupp sentenced at Nuremberg in 1947
for his war crimes, then released from prison three years later
for Cold War reasons. After his death in 1967, his foundation generously
funded scientific research, scholarship programs, health services,
sports, and the fine arts—just the metamorphosis, one might assume,
that Americans would applaud.
Instead, Donald
Rumsfeld likened Germany to Cuba and Libya after Chancellor Gerhard
Shroeder in an overheated election debate warned against American
"adventurism" in Iraq. So irritated was the secretary
of defense that he declined to shake hands with the German minister
of defense at a NATO meeting. It would take a Swift to do justice
to this latest turn in German-American relations. For much of the
past century, Germans were with some reason stereotyped as incorrigible
militarists, the willing executioners of Jews and Slavs, the martial
aggressors who waged unprovoked wars against half of Europe. So
wide-spread was this perception that influential Americans a decade
ago opposed Germany’s fast-track unification. Op-ed articles then
claimed that even German children playing in a sand-box were more
aggressive than non-German youngsters. Now some of the same voices
decry Germany’s reputed pacifism, its collusion with its historic
adversaries, France and Russia, in placing too high a value on peace
and compromise. (This despite Germany’s peace-keeping role in former
Yugoslavia, its military presence in Afghanistan, and its cooperation
in tracking al-Qaeda operatives.)
Remembering
Old Germany
We tend to forget what war waged by the Old Germany—the pre-Hitler
Germany—was really like. Chemical weapons, though banned by the
Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907, were first used by Germans on
April 22, 1915, against Franco-Algerian troops at Ypres. Chlorine
gas, which Churchill called "this hellish weapon," was
developed at the suggestion of Germany’s leading arms manufacturer,
Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, in hopes of ending the stalemate
on the Western Front. Its inventor was Fritz Haber, a Nobel Prize–winning
chemist who happened to be Jewish. "It would appear,"
writes Fritz Stern in Einstein’s German World (1999), "that
neither Haber nor those closest to him...worried about the legal
and moral issues involved, such was the brutish atmosphere of war.
Gas warfare did not prove decisive, though its horror—the terrifying
choking, the blinding, the deaths, the experience even of survivors
of a living death—has become an inextinguishable part of our collective
memory, an early instance of science put to satantic service."
So horrified
was Clara Haber by what her husband had done that after a stormy
argument in May 1915 she killed herself with Haber’s army pistol.
Do we truly want Germans to worship Mars again? Isn’t it possible
to differ civilly on the vexed question of Iraq without stooping
to insults and rudeness? After all, it was not some sniveling Old
European who remarked that Washington tended to expect its European
partners to salute and shut up, as if they were in the Warsaw Pact.
Instead, it was former national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski
who ventured that devastating comparison during a CNN interview.
If the Germans, who were the first to use weapons of mass destruction,
hesitate to wage a preventive war, their objections deserve something
better than a snarling rebuke.
—Karl E.
Meyer
Note:
In an article in the London Spectator (March 22), the Defense
Department advisor Richard Perle hails the demise of the United
Nations, "the chatterbox on the Hudson [sic],"
and implies that Washington should now liberate other states with
weapons of mass destruction. The voice is Perle’s; the spirit is
Kaiser Bill’s.
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