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German Reunification
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Image:BRD-DDR.PNG West Germany thumb|right|200px|The [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the
East Germany German Democratic Republic (East Germany).html" title="Meaning of Federal Republic of Germany.html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|200px|The [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany">thumb|right|200px|The [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the
East Germany German Democratic Republic (East Germany)">Federal Republic of Germany.html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|200px|The [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany">thumb|right|200px|The [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the
East Germany German Democratic Republic (East Germany)
'''German reunification''' (''Deutsche Wiedervereinigung'') took place on
October 3,
1990, when the areas of the former
East Germany German Democratic Republic (GDR, in English commonly called "East Germany") were incorporated into the
West Germany Federal Republic of Germany (FRG, in English commonly called "West Germany").
After the GDR's first free elections on
18 March 1990, negotiations between the GDR and FRG culminated in a Unification Treaty, whilst negotiations between the GDR and FRG and the four occupying powers produced the so-called "
Two Plus Four Treaty" granting full independence to a unified German state.
The reunified
Germany remained a member of the
European Community (later the
European Union) and
NATO. There is debate as to whether the events of 1990 should be properly referred to as a "reunification" or a "unification." Proponents of the former use the term in contrast with the
German Empire initial unification of Germany in
1871. Others, however, argue that 1990 represented a "unification" of two German states into a larger entity which, in its resulting form, had never before existed (see
History of Germany). For political and diplomatic reasons, West German politicians carefully avoided the term "reunification" during the run-up to what Germans frequently refer to as ''die Wende'' ("the change").
Background
Aftr
the end of World War II in Europe, Germany had been divided into four occupation zones. The old capital of
Berlin, as the seat of the
Allied Control Council, was itself subdivided into four occupation zones. Although the intent was for the occupying powers to govern Germany together in the borders from 1947, the advent of
Cold War tension caused the
France French,
Britain British and
United States American zones to be formed into the
West Germany Federal Republic of Germany (and
West Berlin) in 1949, excluding the
Soviet Union Soviet zone which then formed the
German Democratic Republic (including
East Berlin) the same year. Additionally, in accordance with the terms of the
Yalta Conference in
February 1945, the provinces of eastern
Pomerania and
Silesia, as well as the southern half of
East Prussia, were annexed by
Poland and the northern half of East Prussia (now known as the ''
Kaliningrad Oblast'') was annexed by the Soviet Union.
The resulting
Expulsion of Germans after World War II expulsions of Germans in the east resulted in the death of 2,000,000 civilians. In the West the U.S. gave in 1947 in to French demands for the coal-fields of the German state of the
Saarland Saar. It was made into
Saar (protectorate) a protectorate of France. In 1955 France under preassure from the West German government agreed to hold a
referendum which led to a reunification with West Germany in 1959. France however retained control of the
Saarland Saar coal-fields until 1981. The Allied plans[http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box31/t297a01.html][http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large/documents/index.php?pagenumber=1&documentdate=1947-03-24&documentid=37&studycollectionid=mp&nav=ok] to internationalize or let France annex the
Ruhr_Area#History Ruhr area, Germanys main industrial centre, were finally dropped in mid 1947 due to the emerging
Cold War and the resulting change in U.S. occupation policy in Germany.
Image:Besatzungszonen ohne text.gif thumb|left|200px|Occupied Germany in 1945
The FRG and the GDR both made competing claims to be the legitimate legal
Successor state successors of the
German Reich. However, the GDR changed its position at a later point, stating that Germany had ceased to exist in 1945 and that both the FRG and the GDR were newly-created states.
The first proposal for a unification of the remaining German territories was the
Stalin Note advanced by
Josef Stalin in
1952 under terms similar to those later adopted for
Austria (see
Austrian State Treaty). It called for the creation of a neutral Germany with an eastern border on the
Oder-Neisse line and all allied troops removed within the year. The West German government under Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer favoured closer integration with
Western Europe and asked that the reunification be negotiated with the provision that there be internationally monitored elections throughout Germany. This condition was rejected by the Soviets. Another proposal by Stalin involved the reunification of Germany within the borders of
December 31,
1937 under the condition that Germany joined the
Warsaw Pact (
Eastern Bloc).
Stalin's proposal came while the
European Defence Community was being discussed, which would have resulted in a rearmed West Germany tightly integrated in the Western bloc. Whether Stalin's offer was genuine or simply a tactical manoeuver to disrupt the ongoing military integration of the West was the subject of a heated debate at the time. Although most historians deny that Stalin was serious about reunification, this question was never definitely answered.
From 1949 onwards, the Federal Republic of Germany developed into a western capitalist country with a "social market economy" and a
democracy democratic parliamentary government. Prolonged economic growth starting in the 1950s fuelled a 30-year "economic miracle" (
Wirtschaftswunder). Across the border, the German Democratic Republic established an authoritarian government with a Soviet-style
command economy. While the GDR became the richest, most advanced country in the Eastern bloc, many of its citizens still looked to the West for political freedoms and economic prosperity. The flight of growing numbers of East Germans to non-communist countries via West Berlin led to East Germany erecting the
GDR border system (of which the
Berlin Wall was a part) in
1961 to prevent any further exodus.
The government of West Germany and its
NATO allies at first did not recognize the German Democratic Republic or the People's Republic of Poland, per the
Hallstein Doctrine. Relations between East Germany and West Germany remained icy until the Western chancellor
Willy Brandt launched a highly controversial rapprochement with East Germany (''
Ostpolitik'') in the 1970s.
The end of the division (“Wende�)
Image:Bethanien06.jpg 250px|thumb|right|Inter-German Border Strip at the Berlin Wall
By the mid-
1980s, the prospect of German reunification was widely regarded within both East and West Germany as a distant hope, unattainable as long as Communist governments ruled Eastern Europe. However, the hope of reunification was suddenly placed within reach by political changes within the Soviet Union. The advent of reformist Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev in
1985 caused waves of reform to propagate throughout the Eastern bloc, presenting an opportunity for change in the GDR.
In August
1989,
Hungary removed its border restrictions with Austria and in September more than 13,000 East Germans escaped to the West through Hungary. Thousands of East Germans also tried to reach the West by staging sit-ins at West German diplomatic facilities in other East European capitals, especially in
Prague,
Czechoslovakia. In September 1989, the GDR announced that it would provide special trains to carry these refugees to West Germany, claiming it was expelling "irresponsible antisocial traitors and criminals." [http://www.worldbook.com/wc/popup?path=features/berlinwall&page.html/1989.htm&direct=yes] Meanwhile, mass demonstrations against the East German regime began, most prominently the
Monday demonstrations in GDR Monday demonstrations in
Leipzig.
Faced with growing civil unrest, long-time East German leader
Erich Honecker was forced to resign as head of the ruling
Socialist Unity Party of Germany Socialist Unity Party (SED) and as head of state on
October 18, 1989. More resignations followed when the entire East German cabinet stepped down on
November 7. The travel restrictions for East Germans were subsequently removed by the new leadership on
November 9,
1989, and many people immediately went to the Wall where the border guards opened access points and allowed them through. Emboldened, many Germans on both sides began to tear down sections of the Wall itself, leading to
Berlin Wall#The fall of the Wall one of the most enduring news stories of the 20th century.
Image:Berlin-wall-dancing.jpg thumb|left|250px|Germans dancing on the Berlin Wall.
On November 28, West German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl outlined a 10-point plan for the peaceful unification of the two Germanies based on free elections in East Germany and a unification of their two economies. In December, the East German ''
Volkskammer'' eliminated the SED monopoly on power, and the entire Politbüro and Central Committee – including leader
Egon Krenz – resigned. The SED changed its name to the
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) and the formation and growth of numerous political groups and parties marked the end of the communist system. Prime Minister
Hans Modrow headed a caretaker government which shared power with the new, democratically oriented parties. On December 7, 1989, agreement was reached to hold free elections in May 1990 and rewrite the East German constitution. On January 28, all the parties agreed to advance the elections to March 18, primarily because of an erosion of state authority and because the East German exodus was continuing apace; more than 117,000 left in January and February 1990.
In early February 1990, the Modrow government's proposal for a unified, neutral German state was rejected by Chancellor Kohl, who affirmed that a unified Germany must be a member of
NATO. Finally, on
March 18,
1990, the first and only free elections in the history of the GDR were held, producing a government whose major mandate was to negotiate an end to itself and its state. As one East German ideologist had noted in 1989, "Poland would remain Poland even if communism fell, but without communism East Germany has no reason to exist."
Under Prime Minister
Lothar de Maizière, East Germany negotiated with West Germany, the United Kingdom, France, the United States and the Soviet Union the preconditions for a German reunification. Despite initial Soviet objections to East Germany being absorbed into the NATO alliance, an agreement was reached which allowed a reunified Germany to remain a part of NATO on the condition that NATO troops were not to be stationed in East German territory. In addition to allaying Soviet concerns, Chancellor Kohl was able to convince the leaders of the United Kingdom and France that a unified Germany would represent no threat to its neighbors by tying German reunification with the tighter integration of Germany into the
European Union.
Parallel to the multilateral negotiations, bilateral negotiations between the East and West German governments led to the signing on
18 May of an agreement for an intermediate step, an Economic, Social and Currency Union, which entered into force on
1 July. On
23 August the Volkskammer approved the proposed
3 October accession to the FRG. The ''Einigungsvertrag'' (Unification Treaty) was signed on
August 31,
1990 by representatives of East and West Germany. On
September 12, 1990 the
Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany (
Two Plus Four Treaty) was signed and officially reestablished the sovereignty of both German states.
Reunification
Germany was officially reunified on
October 3,
1990 when the five reestablished federal states (
States of Germany ''Bundesländer'') of East Germany–
Brandenburg,
Mecklenburg-West Pomerania,
Saxony,
Saxony-Anhalt, and
Thuringia–formally joined the
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany), choosing one of two options implemented in the West German constitution ''(
Grundgesetz)''. As these five newly-founded German states formally joined the Federal Republic in accordance with the (then-existing) Article 23, the area in which the ''Grundgesetz'' (basic law) served as the constitution was simply extended to include them. The alternative would have been for East Germany to join as a whole along the lines of a formal union between two German states that then would have had to, amongst other things, create a new constitution for the newly established country. Though the option chosen clearly was simpler, it is and has been responsible for sentiments in the East of being "occupied" or "annexed" by the old Federal Republic.
To facilitate this process and to reassure other countries, the FRG made some changes to the "
Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany Basic Law" (constitution). Article 146 was amended so that Article 23 of the current constitution could be used for reunification. Then, once the five "reestablished federal states" in East Germany had joined, the Basic Law was amended again to indicate ''that there were no other parts of Germany, which existed outside of the unified territory, that had not acceded.'' However, the constitution can be amended again at some future date and it still permits the adoption of another constitution by the German people at some time in the future.
On
November 14 1990, the German government signed a treaty with Poland, finalizing Germany's boundaries as permanent along the
Oder-Neisse line, and thus, renouncing any claims to
Silesia,
Eastern Pomerania,
Gdańsk (Danzig), and territories of the former province of
East Prussia. The following month, the first all-German free elections since
1932 were held, resulting in an increased majority for the coalition government of Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
Effects of reunification
The cost of reunification has been a heavy burden to the
German economy and has contributed to Germany’s slowed economic growth in recent years. The costs of reunification are estimated to amount to over €1.5 trillion (statement of Freie Universität Berlin). This is more than the national debt of the German state [http://www.steuerzahler.de/]. The primary cause of this was the severe weakness of the East German economy, especially vis-à -vis the West German economy, combined with (politically motivated)
exchange rates from the
East German mark to the
Deutsche Mark that did not reflect this economic reality, resulting in a very sudden (usually fatal) loss of competitiveness of East German industries, making them collapse within a very short time. Today, there are still special transfers of more than €100 billion every year to “rebuild� the eastern part of Germany. Providing goods and services to East Germany strained the resources of West Germany. Money-losing industries formerly supported by the East German government had to be privatised.
As a consequence of the reunification, most of the former GDR has been deindustrialised, causing an unemployment rate of about 20%. Since then, hundreds of thousands of former East Germans have continued to migrate to western Germany to find jobs, resulting in the loss of significant portions of population, especially in highly trained professions. It is also thought to be the actual cause of the majority of problems in Germany which are blamed on the changeover to the
euro{{fact}}. The
Bundesbank (Central bank) has always insisted that the economic problems are not a result of the euro, and are a problem which Germany itself must sort out (presumably referring to reunification){{fact}}.
See also
*
Reunification
External links
-
Germany's Eastern Burden: The Price of a Failed Reunification
-
The End of East Germany
-
German Embassy Publication, Infocus: German Unity Day
-
The Reunification and Its Aftermath
Category:History of Germany Reunification
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ms:Penyatuan semula Jerman
ca:Reunificació alemanya
cs:Sjednocenà Německa
da:Tysklands genforening
de:Deutsche Wiedervereinigung
eo:Germania reunuiÄ?o
es:Reunificación alemana
fr:Réunification allemande
ko:��� 재통�
it:Riunificazione tedesca
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nds:Verenigung vun Düütschland
ja:ドイツ�統一
os:Германы иугонд
pl:Zjednoczenie Niemiec
pt:Reunificação da Alemanha
scn:Riunificazzioni tudisca
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zh:兩德統一
see
German reunification
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