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[Here is an interesting piece in the NYT on Germany's Chancellor Gerhard 
Schroeder.  Observe how the Nazi past is brushed aside - "What intrigues Mr. 
Schröder is not so much his father's role; "everybody did that," he said. "He 
was a lowly soldier, no sort of leader, and was sent to the slaughter like 
everyone else."  Having brushed this ugly fact aside - going on to spend much 
more time on the country's communist past - Schroeder goes on to pontificate 
on his vision of a "federal Europe" which would effectively concentrate power 
in Germany's hands (just the sort of thing his father was fighting for!!!).  
The fact that this is the same project that the Nazi's committed to, and 
given Schroeder's nostalgic forrays into his own families Nazi past (he 
visited the battlefield in Romania were his father died in support of 
Hitler's brutal Drang Nach Osten earlier this year), is it any wonder that 
many European's, and victims of German genocides and holocausts, remain 
doubtful of Euro integration as advocated by Germany?  On top of all this, 
the new government has reocuppied the old Imperial capital of Berlin and 
initiated its first session in the capital back in the spring of 1999 at the 
same time that German troops were illegally bombing Yugoslavia, a country 
that had been under Nazi occupation.  You can be sure that NATO's move East 
will be accompanied by further attempts to rewrite the history of the 20th 
century to justify its ignoble and Naziesque project of extending its 
dominion over Europe to Russia's borders and beyond.  These "personalized" 
propaganda stories should be seen for what they are, attempts to humanise 
this inhuman objective that has become the pet project of the 
military-industrial wing of the neoliberal elite. It's no wonder then that 
the article includes a portion on the importance of trans-atlantic ties 
between Germany and the USA.] 

July 2, 2001
Schröder, Like Germany, Is Looking Harder at the Past
By ROGER COHEN

BERLIN, July 1 — It is a scene of modern Germany: Chancellor Gerhard Schröder 
in his new office opposite the Reichstag gazing in wonder at a photograph of 
the father he never knew, Cpl. Fritz Schröder with a Nazi swastika on his 
helmet.

"I only recently was given this photograph," Mr. Schröder said in an 
exclusive interview. "Before that, I never had a mental picture of my father, 
and only a very limited relationship to him. For me, in a sense, he never 
existed. So only now, for the first time, am I beginning to deal with him." 

The turbulence of modern Germany as it passed through two world wars, Nazism, 
Communism and division has been such that almost no family has escaped some 
form of personal anguish. And Mr. Schröder, like his country, is treading his 
personal way out of the labyrinth of the past.

Now approaching his fourth year in office, he has been obliged by the move of 
the capital back to Berlin to confront this past in a way more direct than 
his predecessors. Perhaps his most conspicuous achievement has been to allow 
the airing of German trauma in a new atmosphere of openness.

So here the chancellor sits with the newly discovered image of his own 
trauma: a handsome, clear-eyed young Wehrmacht soldier, seen in half-profile, 
some years before his death on the eastern front in Romania in October 1944. 
Mr. Schröder had been born six months earlier, yet another German child of 
war who would be fatherless.

What intrigues Mr. Schröder is not so much his father's role; "everybody did 
that," he said. "He was a lowly soldier, no sort of leader, and was sent to 
the slaughter like everyone else." It is more the uncanny physical similarity 
that inevitably prompts reflections on how fate determines the dilemmas of 
each generation. 

"There's a picture of me when I was about the same age — you have to see it," 
Mr. Schröder, 57, said. "It's exactly the same, without the steel helmet and 
uniform, naturally, as if it were a twin brother. That makes you think. That 
is very interesting."

Certainly the very existence of this intimate conversation is interesting. 
Germany is opening up. 

It is partly the passage of time: ever fewer former Nazis are still alive. It 
is partly unification and the resolution, at last, of Germany's borders: a 
state no longer at risk is inevitably freer in spirit. It is partly the 
arrival in power of Mr. Schröder's postwar generation: these people tend to 
be more moved by Tuscany than by Bismarck. 

The family circumstances that led to the discovery this year of the 
photograph have also presented the chancellor with cause for ethical 
reflection. Research by the newspaper Bild led to three first cousins of Mr. 
Schröder in the former East Germany with whom he had lost contact.

All the cousins were the daughters of Kurt Schröder, the brother of Fritz. 
One of them had the picture of his father that the chancellor now keeps in 
his office and showed during the interview, although he has not yet allowed 
it to be published.

"I knew nothing about these relatives in the east and always said I had 
none," Mr. Schröder said. "So now the fall of the Iron Curtain has become 
personal as well as political. I have to find a relationship to people I had 
not believed existed."

He is not alone. The quest for a satisfactory relationship between west and 
east continues to haunt Germany more than a decade after unification. The 
perception of Mr. Schröder in a still disillusioned east will play an 
important role in his quest to be re-elected next year.

After meeting the chancellor recently, one of the Schröder cousins, Renate 
Gritzke, said: "We always hear that now we are one in Germany. In that case, 
east Germany should not be lagging so far behind."

Unemployment figures tell part of the story. The jobless rate in the east is 
17 percent, compared with 7.1 percent in the west, even after the huge 
transfer eastward of public money. 

Beyond those differences, a psychological gulf remains rooted in resentment 
among former East Germans of what they see as the wholesale dismissal and 
takeover of a society, where, as they like to say, "we also lived."

Ms. Gritzke lived in a particular way. She worked for the East German 
intelligence service, or Stasi, in a unit that bugged embassies. Fluent in 
English, she played a leading role in spying on American and British 
diplomats.

"I have no regrets about what I did," she told The Times of London recently. 
"We joined that organization because we wanted to work for our country."

Mr. Schröder said he saw his cousin's attitude — and that of easterners in 
general — as more rooted in "a form of protest" than any ideology. "Protest," 
he added, "against certain forms of political dominance from the western part 
of the country."

Only in this way, he suggested, was it possible to understand that the Party 
of Democratic Socialism — the successor party to the East German Communists 
— commanded the support of 40 percent of East Berliners.

The chancellor said the Party of Democratic Socialism, which is a strong 
candidate to join the government of the city of Berlin after elections in the 
fall, should no longer be viewed as dangerous. During the cold war, he 
suggested, the loyalty of such parties was ultimately to "Big Brother in the 
Soviet Union."

"But that is no longer the case," he added.

Conservative parties have voiced fierce opposition to the idea of a former 
Communist party's joining the government of the city that was the symbol of 
the cold war. But Mr. Schröder — in this as in almost everything — is a 
zealous pragmatist. 

Of his former Stasi cousin, Mr. Schröder said: "What should I say to the 
woman? I told her, listen, that does not affect my relationship to you, how 
could it?" The chancellor's view seems to be that one should be wary of 
judging the acts of people in situations one had not oneself experienced.

A further meeting with the three cousins together — including Ms. Gritzke, 
whom he previously saw apart from the others — is now planned. Mr. Schröder 
is uncovering his past.

As to the future, the chancellor is the strong favorite to be re-elected next 
year, partly because the Christian Democratic Party remains in considerable 
disarray. He expressed optimism about trans-Atlantic relations in the coming 
years and was very conciliatory toward President Bush, with whom there have 
been a number of differences.

"Look, when Mr. Bush tells President Putin in Ljubljana that Russia is a 
potential partner and no enemy, that is precisely what Europe wants," Mr. 
Schröder said, referring to the recent summit meeting in Slovenia between the 
American and Russian leaders. 

He expressed confidence that differences over the environment and national 
missile defense would be approached in a similar spirit, adding that the 
evolving American foreign policy showed the fruits of dialogue.

But does a united Germany — more relaxed and determined to deal with its own 
problems — still need more than 70,000 American troops on its soil? "The 
American presence is an expression of trans-Atlantic togetherness," the 
chancellor said, "and America's role as a superpower, as the only remaining 
superpower, can and should remain clear in Germany." He added, "I'm no friend 
of those who say, `Thanks, now go home.' "

The European Union is engaged in a project to develop its own rapid reaction 
force that would work in conjunction with NATO but separable from it. Mr. 
Schröder said of that project, "We are not there yet," adding that American 
leadership, especially in logistics, would be needed "for the time being, at 
least my time being."

Of the planned expansion of the European Union, Mr. Schröder said it posed 
the possibility that Europe could become ungovernable. "In the end," he said, 
"it comes down to the question of whether we think of Europe in 
intergovernmental terms or in terms of integration."

He made clear that his own preference was for integration, with — in the next 
10 to 20 years — "a strong central European government," controlled by a 
reformed European parliament with real powers.

"One also needs an ordering of the nation-states that will continue to 
function," he continued. He said he envisaged a possible "Chamber of 
Nation-States" and saw the need for a charter laying out a "division of 
competence." That would define what is Europe's business and what remains the 
business of the nation- states.

Such federalist views cause grave misgivings in several of Germany's European 
partners, which see them as a veiled way for Europe's most populous and 
powerful country to control the fate of the continent.

"There are such fears, but they are unfounded," Mr. Schröder said. "Germany 
has demonstrated that it is the country most eager to integrate, and most 
prepared to put pure national interests second to European interests."

Gazing out at the new Berlin taking shape before the new chancellery on the 
River Spree, Mr. Schröder added: "I believe we have reached a level of civil 
society that has discredited the yearning for dominant personalities, and it 
is good that this is a country that has developed a real democratic quality. 
That is why I live here happily."


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