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Germany: HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
Current Challenges: In 2005 Germany was still grappling with the effects of unification of the democratic Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the communist German Democratic Republic (East Germany) on October 3, 1990. Unification brought together a people separated for more than four decades by the division of Europe into two hostile blocs in the aftermath of World War II. Economically, a division remains between East and West, exacerbated by the decision following unification to substitute the German mark (subsequently replaced by the euro in January 1999) for the East German currency, generally at a 1:1 rate, and the adoption of similar wages and benefits in both parts of the country in spite of unequal productivity. Despite massive investment from the western part of Germany into the new German states of the East—a transfer of wealth that totaled about US$1.6 trillion from 1991 to 2004—the latter still suffer from extremely high unemployment. Germany’s government, run by a “Grand Coalition” of the Christian Democratic Party/Christian Social Union and the Social Democratic Party, is continuing to pursue an economic reform effort aimed at reversing rising unemployment, currently about 11 percent nationwide but much higher in the East, by reducing taxes and generous unemployment and other social benefits. The expansion of the European Union (EU) in 2004 into low-wage Eastern Europe, including neighboring Poland and the Czech Republic, poses a fresh challenge to Germany’s social-market economy.
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Coping with Division: In its long history, Germany has rarely been united. For most of the two millennia that central Europe has been inhabited by German-speaking peoples, such as the Eastern Franks, the area now called Germany was divided into hundreds of states, many quite small, including duchies, principalities, free cities, and ecclesiastical states. Not even the Romans united what is now known as Germany under one government; they managed to occupy only its southern and western portions. In A.D. 800 Charlemagne, who had been crowned Holy Roman emperor by Pope Leo III, ruled over a territory that encompassed much of present-day Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, but within a generation its existence was more symbolic than real.
Medieval Germany was marked by division. As France and England began their centuries-long evolution into united nation-states, Germany was racked by a ceaseless series of wars among local rulers. The Habsburg Dynasty's long monopoly of the crown of the Holy Roman Empire provided only the semblance of German unity. Within the empire, German princes warred against one another as before. The Protestant Reformation deprived Germany of even its religious unity, leaving its population Roman Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist. These religious divisions gave military strife an added ferocity in the Thirty Years' War (1618–48), during which Germany was ravaged to a degree not seen again until World War II.
The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 left German-speaking Europe divided into hundreds of states. During the next two centuries, the two largest of these states—Prussia and Austria—jockeyed for dominance. The smaller states sought to retain their independence by allying themselves with one, then the other, depending on local conditions. From the mid-1790s until Prussia, Austria, and Russia defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 and drove him out of German territory, much of the area was occupied by French troops. Napoleon's officials abolished numerous small states; as a result, in 1815, after the Congress of Vienna, German territory consisted of only about 40 states.
During the next half-century, pressures for German unification grew. Scholars, bureaucrats, students, journalists, and businessmen agitated for a united Germany that would bring with it uniform laws and a single currency and that would replace the benighted absolutism of petty German states with democracy. The revolutions of 1848 seemed at first likely to realize this dream of unity and freedom, but the monarch who was offered the crown of a united Germany, King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, rejected it. The king, like the other rulers of Germany's kingdoms, opposed German unity because he saw it as a threat to his power.
Despite the opposition of conservative forces, German unification came just over two decades later, in 1871, following the Franco-Prussian War, when Germany was unified and transformed into an empire under Emperor Wilhelm I, king of Prussia. Unification was brought about not by revolutionary or liberal forces but rather by a conservative Prussian aristocrat, Otto von Bismarck. Sensing the power of nationalism, Bismarck sought to use it for his own aims, the preservation of a feudal social order and the triumph of his country, Prussia, in the long contest with Austria for preeminence in Germany. By a series of masterful diplomatic maneuvers and three brief and dazzlingly successful military campaigns, Bismarck achieved a united Germany without Austria. He brought together the so-called "small Germany," consisting of Prussia and the remaining German states, some of which had been subdued by Prussian armies before they became part of a Germany ruled by a Prussian emperor.
Although united Germany had a parliament, the Reichstag, elected through universal male suffrage, supreme power rested with the emperor and his ministers, who were not responsible to the Reichstag. The Reichstag could contest the government's decisions, but in the end the emperor could largely govern as he saw fit. Supporting the emperor were the nobility, large rural landowners, business and financial elites, the civil service, the Protestant clergy, and the military. The military, which had made unification possible, enjoyed tremendous prestige. These groups were pitted against the Roman Catholic Center Party, the Socialist Party, and a variety of liberal and regional political groups opposed to Prussia's hegemony over Germany. In the long term, Bismarck and his successors were not able to subjugate this opposition. By 1912 the Socialists had come to have the largest number of representatives in the Reichstag. They and the Center Party made governing increasingly difficult for the empire's conservative leadership.
The World Wars: In World War I (1914–18), Germany’s aims were annexationist in nature and foresaw an enlarged Germany, with Belgium and Poland as vassal states and with colonies in Africa. However, Germany’s military strategy, involving a two-front war in France and Belgium in the west and Russia in the east, ultimately failed. Germany’s defeat in 1918 meant the end of the German Empire. The Treaty of Versailles, the peace settlement negotiated by the victors (Britain, France, and the United States) in 1919, imposed punitive conditions on Germany, including the loss of territory, financial reparations, and a diminished military. These conditions set the stage for World War II.
A republic, the Weimar Republic (1919–33), was established with a constitution that provided for a parliamentary democracy in which the government was ultimately responsible to the people. The new republic's first president and prime minister were convinced democrats, and Germany seemed ready at last to join the community of democratic nations. But the Weimar Republic ultimately disappointed those who had hoped it would introduce democracy to Germany. By mid-1933 it had been destroyed by Adolf Hitler, its declared enemy since his first days in the public arena. Hitler was a psychopath who sensed and exploited the worries and resentments of many Germans, knew when to act, and possessed a sure instinct for power. His greatest weapon in his quest for political power, however, was the disdain many Germans felt for the new republic.
Many Germans held the Weimar Republic responsible for Germany's defeat in World War I. At the war's end, no foreign troops stood on German soil, and military victory still seemed likely. Instead of victory, however, in the view of many, the republic's Socialist politicians arranged a humiliating peace. Many Germans also were affronted by the spectacle of parliamentary politics. The republic's numerous small parties made forming stable and coherent coalition governments very difficult. Frequent elections failed to yield effective governments. Government policies also often failed to solve pressing social and economic problems.
A modest economic recovery from 1924 to 1929 gave the Weimar Republic a brief respite. The severe social stress engendered by the Great Depression, however, swelled the vote received by extreme antidemocratic parties in the election of 1930 and the two elections of 1932. The government ruled by emergency decree. In January 1933, leading conservative politicians formed a new government with Hitler as chancellor. They intended to harness him and his party (the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, or Nazis), now the country's largest, to realize their own aim of replacing the republic with an authoritarian government. Within a few months, however, Hitler had outmaneuvered them and established a totalitarian regime. Only in 1945 did a military alliance of dozens of nations succeed in deposing him, and only after his regime and the nation it ruled had committed crimes of unparalleled enormity known as the Holocaust.
The Post-War Era and Unification: In the aftermath of World War II (1939–45) and following occupation by the victorious powers (the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, and France), Germany came to consist of two states. One, East Germany, never attained real legitimacy in the eyes of its citizens, fell farther and farther behind economically, and had to use force to prevent its population from fleeing to the West. The other, West Germany, was resoundingly successful. Within two decades of defeat, it had become one of the world's richest nations, with a prosperity that extended to all segments of the population. The economy performed so successfully that eventually several million foreigners came to West Germany to work as well. West German and foreign workers alike were protected from need arising from sickness, accidents, and old age by an extensive, mostly nongovernment welfare system. In 1990 German unification overcame the geographic separation of the two German states, including an infamous wall between West Berlin and East Berlin, but economic integration still has not been achieved satisfactorily. In the first decade of the twenty-first century, the forces of globalization are posing a renewed challenge to the social-market economy in place throughout the nation.
Mail & Guardian Online,Iran is unlikely to be able to develop a nuclear bomb before 2015, the chief of Germany's BND foreign intelligence agency said on Tuesday. ... Germany's Merck Said 3Q Profits Fell - 24 Oct 2006 Forbes,By MATT MOORE , 10.24.2006, 08:53 AM. German drugmaker Merck KGaA, which is acquiring Switzerland's Serono SA, said Tuesday that ... Comstor Germany to Distribute Plantronics Headsets - 24 Oct 2006 TMCnetBy Johanne Torres. Comstor Germany announced today a new distribution agreement with headset manufacturer Plantronics. The new deal ... Crownline Boats In Germany - 24 Oct 2006 WSIL TV,...and for Crownline Boats," said Riem. Crownline's biggest customer is Gunter Siegel of Germany. The company estimates that Siegel ... DISILLUSION, NEAERA Confirmed For Germany's WACKEN OPEN AIR ... - 24 Oct 2006 Blabbermouth.net,DISILLUSION and NEAERA have been confirmed for next year's installment of the Wacken Open Air festival, set to take place August 2-4, 2007 in Wacken, Germany. ... The Nazi Germany/apartheid South Africa invention that could make ... - 24 Oct 2006 SlateHow Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa perfected one of the world's most exciting new fuel sources. Why Democratic-leaning ... IVG purchases four office properties in Germany for €190 million - 24 Oct 2006 Immo-news.net (Comunicados de prensa),IVG Immobilien AG is purchasing an office property portfolio in Germany for €190 million to add to its own portfolio. The seller ... Germany Anxious to Spare its Criminals from Bulgaria's Prisons - 24 Oct 2006 Sofia News Agency,Germany's Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries, however, slammed Stiober for not knowing what he was talking about, and explained that the EU laws only allowed ... BioGaia Signs Agreement For Germany - 24 Oct 2006 NPIcenter (press release),BioGaia has signed an agreement with HSO Pharma, Austria giving the company exclusive rights to market BioGaia´s probiotic tablets and drops in Germany. ... Turkish-German Literature Festival in Germany - 24 Oct 2006 Zaman Online,Essen, a city in Germany, will host the Turkish-German Literature Festival, organized by the Grend Culture Center for the second time this year, between ... Germany Drops in Press-Freedom Index - 24 Oct 2006 Deutsche Welle,Germany lost status in the annual press-freedom rankings by a journalism advocacy group, sliding from 18th to 23rd place amid revelations that the country's ... Germany : Puma on a roll with ambitious plans - 24 Oct 2006 Fibre2fashion.com,Sport giant Puma that boasts 80 stores, plans to open three times the existing number of outlets all over the world by 2010. Currently ... BT Germany to deploy WAN for Rhineland Pfalz communities - 24 Oct 2006 Telecom Paper (subscription),BT Germany has won contracts from the communities in Rhineland Pfalz and from the state Rhineland Pfalz. Under the two-figure million ... Vodafone Germany has 2 million UMTS users - 24 Oct 2006 Telecom Paper (subscription),Vodafone Germany has two million UMTS customers, who generate 7 percent of Vodafone's total revenues, according to Vodafone director Erik Friemuth at Systems ... Golf star has roots in Naples and Germany - 24 Oct 2006 The News-Press,Karlsruhe, Germany, is home of that country's largest oil refinery, two major German Internet providers, and was the birthplace of automaker Karl Benz. ... Condor operates twice a week to Germany - 24 Oct 2006 Herald Publications,BY HERALD REPORTER. PANJIM, OCT 23 – German airline Condor has officially announced commencement of commercial flights between Goa and Germany. ... Germany: ESG flying experimental vehicle goes into operation - 24 Oct 2006 Rotorhub (press release),The mission equipment carrier fulfils an urgent requirement of the German Bundeswehr: helicopter components can now be tested under real conditions during ... Germany to be tougher on foreign students - 24 Oct 2006 United Press InternationalBERLIN, Oct. 23 (UPI) -- Germany is planning to tighten visa procedures for foreign students after a pair botched an attempted train bombing three months ago. ... Air Berlin discounts flights to Germany by 50% - 24 Oct 2006 Cheapflights.co.uk,Book by midnight on Thursday, October 26: Air Berlin is discounting fares on selected flights to Germany and Austria by up to 50 per cent. ... Biggest brain drain in Germany since 1954 - 24 Oct 2006 United Press International23 (UPI) -- Germany is losing its best young brains because they are emigrating to countries where they can make more money or enjoy better working conditions. ... South Africa: SA And Germany to Hold 2010 World Cup Talks - Oct 23, 2006 AllAfrica.com,Zuma is meeting her German counterpart to discuss among other things, South Africa's preparations for the 2010 Soccer World Cup and the Germany's co-operation ... This series of profiles of foreign nations is part of the Country Studies Program, formerly the Army Area Handbook Program. The profiles offer brief, summarized information on a country’s historical background, geography, society, economy, transportation and telecommunications, government and politics, and national security. In addition to being featured in the front matter of published Country Studies, they are now being prepared as stand-alone reference aides for all countries in the series, as well as for a number of additional countries of interest. The profiles offer reasonably current country information independent of the existence of a recently published Country Study and will be updated annually or more frequently as events warrant. |
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