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Konrad Adenauer

Konrad Hermann Joseph Adenauer (German: [ˈkɔnʁaːt ˈʔaːdənaʊɐ] (listen); 5 January 1876 – 19 April 1967) was a German statesman who served as the first chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1949 to 1963. From 1946 to 1966, he was the first leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), a Christian-democratic party he co-founded, which became the dominant force in the country under his leadership.

Konrad Adenauer
Adenauer in 1952
Chancellor of Germany (West Germany only)[a]
In office
15 September 1949 – 11 October 1963[1]
President
Vice-Chancellor
Preceded byLutz von Krosigk (1945)
(as leading minister of Germany)
Succeeded byLudwig Erhard
Minister for Foreign Affairs
In office
15 March 1951 – 6 June 1955
ChancellorHimself
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byHeinrich von Brentano
Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
In office
1 March 1946 – 23 March 1966
Bundestag Leader
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byLudwig Erhard
President of the Parliamentary Council
In office
1 September 1948 – 23 May 1949
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Lord Mayor of Cologne
In office
4 May 1945 – 6 October 1945
Preceded byWilli Suth
Succeeded byWilli Suth
In office
13 October 1917 – 13 March 1933
Preceded byMax Wallraf
Succeeded byGünter Riesen
President of the Prussian State Council
In office
7 May 1921 – 26 April 1933
Preceded byFriedrich Carl von Savigny (1847)
Succeeded byRobert Ley
Member of the Bundestag
for Bonn
In office
7 September 1949 – 19 April 1967
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byAlo Hauser
Personal details
Born
Konrad Hermann Joseph Adenauer

(1876-01-05)5 January 1876
Cologne, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Died19 April 1967(1967-04-19) (aged 91)
Rhöndorf, West Germany
Resting placeWaldfriedhof, Rhöndorf, Bad Honnef
Political party
Spouses
  • Emma Weyer
    (m. 1904; died 1916)
  • Auguste Zinsser
    (m. 1919; died 1948)
Children8
Alma mater
Signature

A devout Roman Catholic and member of the Catholic Centre Party, Adenauer was a leading politician in the Weimar Republic, serving as Mayor of Cologne (1917–1933) and as president of the Prussian State Council (1922–1933). In the early years of the Federal Republic, he switched focus from denazification to recovery, and led his country from the ruins of World War II to becoming a productive and prosperous nation that forged close relations with France, the United Kingdom and the United States.[2] During his years in power, West Germany achieved democracy, stability, international respect and economic prosperity, undergoing the Wirtschaftswunder (German for "economic miracle").[3]

Adenauer belied his age by his intense work habits and his uncanny political instinct. He displayed a strong dedication to a broad vision of market-based liberal democracy and anti-communism. A shrewd and strategic politician, Adenauer was deeply committed to an Atlanticist foreign policy and restoring the position of West Germany on the world stage. He worked to restore the West German economy from the destruction of World War II to a central position in Europe, presiding over the German economic miracle together with his Minister of Economics, Ludwig Erhard, and was a driving force in re-establishing national military forces (the Bundeswehr) and intelligence services (the Bundesnachrichtendienst) in West Germany in 1955 and 1956. Adenauer opposed recognition of the rival German Democratic Republic or the Oder–Neisse line. He skillfully used these points in electoral campaigns against the SPD, which was more sympathetic to co-existence with the GDR and the post-war borders. Adenauer made West Germany a member of NATO. A proponent of European unity, Adenauer was one of the founders of the European Union, and a key signatory of the Treaty of Rome; he also pursued Atlanticist links with the United States as a counterbalance.

Adenauer, who resigned as Chancellor at the age of 87 and remained head of the governing CDU until his retirement at 90, was often dubbed "Der Alte" ("the old one"). He also remained a Member of the Bundestag for Bonn until his death in 1967 at the age of 91. According to British politician Roy Jenkins, he was "the oldest statesman ever to function in elected office" and the oldest head of government of a major country in modern European history.[4] As of 2021, Adenauer remains the oldest-ever European head of government and one of the oldest elected European statesmen (paralleled only by Sandro Pertini and Giorgio Napolitano); however, the governments of Tunisia and Malaysia had older heads of government during the 2010s.[b]

Cologne years

Early life and education

 
Adenauer in 1896

Konrad Adenauer was born as the third of five children of Johann Konrad Adenauer (1833–1906) and his wife Helene (née Scharfenberg; 1849–1919) in Cologne, Rhenish Prussia, on 5 January 1876.[5] His siblings were August (1872–1952), Johannes (1873–1937), Lilli (1879–1950) and Elisabeth, who died shortly after birth c. 1880. One of the formative influences of Adenauer's youth was the Kulturkampf, an experience that as related to him by his parents left him with a lifelong dislike for "Prussianism", and led him like many other Catholic Rhinelanders of the 19th century to deeply resent the Rhineland's inclusion in Prussia.[6]

In 1894, he completed his Abitur and began studying law and politics at the universities of Freiburg, Munich and Bonn. In 1896, at the age of 20, he was mustered for the Prussian army, but did not pass the physical exam due to chronic respiratory problems he had experienced since childhood. He was a member of several Roman Catholic students' associations under the K.St.V. Arminia Bonn in Bonn. He graduated in 1900,[5] and afterwards worked as a lawyer at the court in Cologne.[7]

Leader in Cologne

 
Bond of the City of Cologne, issued 1 October 1928; Faksimile signature of Adenauer
 
In Wilhelmshaven in 1928, when a new cruiser was given the name of Köln (Cologne), home city of Adenauer (centre, with left hand visible, next to him Lieutenant-General Wilhelm Groener and Gustav Noske)
 
Heinrich Hoerle: Zeitgenossen (contemporaries). A 1931 modernist painting with mayor Adenauer (in grey) together with artists and a boxer.

As a devout Catholic, he joined the Centre Party (German: Deutsche Zentrumspartei or just Zentrum) in 1906 and was elected to Cologne's city council in the same year. In 1909, he became Vice-Mayor of Cologne, an industrial metropolis with a population of 635,000 in 1914. Avoiding the extreme political movements that attracted so many of his generation, Adenauer was committed to bourgeois decency, diligence, order, Christian morals and values, and was dedicated to rooting out disorder, inefficiency, irrationality and political immorality.[8] From 1917 to 1933, he served as Mayor of Cologne and became a member of the Prussian House of Lords.

Adenauer headed Cologne during World War I, working closely with the army to maximize the city's role as a rear base of supply and transportation for the Western Front. He paid special attention to the civilian food supply, enabling the residents to avoid the worst of the severe shortages that beset most German cities during 1918–19.[9] In 1918, he invented a soy-based sausage called the Cologne sausage to help feed the city.[10][11] In the face of the collapse of the old regime and the threat of revolution and widespread disorder in late 1918, Adenauer maintained control in Cologne using his good working relationship with the Social Democrats. In a speech on 1 February 1919 Adenauer called for the dissolution of Prussia, and for the Prussian Rhineland to become a new autonomous Land (state) in the Reich.[12] Adenauer claimed this was the only way to prevent France from annexing the Rhineland.[12] Both the Reich and Prussian governments were completely against Adenauer's plans for breaking up Prussia.[13] When the terms of the Treaty of Versailles were presented to Germany in June 1919, Adenauer again suggested to Berlin his plan for an autonomous Rhineland state and again his plans were rejected by the Reich government.[14]

He was mayor during the postwar British occupation. He established a good working relationship with the British military authorities, using them to neutralize the workers' and soldiers' council that had become an alternative base of power for the city's left wing.[15] During the Weimar Republic, he was president of the Prussian State Council (German: Preußischer Staatsrat) from 1921 to 1933, which was the representation of the provinces of Prussia in its legislature. A major debate had occurred within the Zentrum since 1906 regarding the question of whether the Zentrum should "leave the tower" (i.e. allow Protestants to join to become a multi-faith party) or "stay in the tower" (i.e. continue to be a Catholic-only party). Adenauer was one of the leading advocates of "leaving the tower", which led to a dramatic clash between him and Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber at the 1922 Katholikentag, the annual meeting of German Catholics, where the Cardinal publicly admonished Adenauer for wanting to take the Zentrum "out of the tower".[16]

In mid-October 1923, the Chancellor Gustav Stresemann announced that Berlin would cease all financial payments to the Rhineland and that the new Rentenmark, which had replaced the now worthless Mark would not circulate in the Rhineland.[17] To save the Rhineland economy, Adenauer opened talks with the French High Commissioner Paul Tirard in late October 1923 for a Rhenish republic in a sort of economic union with France which would achieve Franco-German reconciliation, which Adenauer called a "grand design".[18] At the same time, Adenauer clung to the hope that the Rentenmark might still circulate in the Rhineland. Adenauer's plans came to naught when Stresemann, who was resolutely opposed to Adenauer's "grand design", which he viewed as borderline treason, was able to negotiate an end to the crisis on his own.[18]

In 1926, the Zentrum suggested that Adenauer become Chancellor, an offer that he was interested in but ultimately rejected when the German People's Party insisted that one of the conditions for entering into a coalition under Adenauer's leadership was that Gustav Stresemann stay on as Foreign Minister.[19] Adenauer, who disliked Stresemann as "too Prussian," rejected that condition, which marked the end of his chance of becoming Chancellor in 1926.[20]

Years under the Nazi government

Nazi Party candidates made significant electoral gains in municipal, state and national elections in 1930 and 1932. Adenauer, as mayor of Cologne and president of the Prussian State Council, still believed that improvements in the national economy would make his strategy work: ignore the Nazis and concentrate on the Communist threat. Adenauer thought that based on election returns, the Nazis should become part of the Prussian and Reich governments, even when he was already the target of intense personal attacks.[21] Political manoeuvrings around the aging President Hindenburg then brought the Nazis to power on 30 January 1933.

By early February, Adenauer finally realized the futility of all discussions and any attempts at compromise with the Nazis. Cologne's city council and the Prussian parliament had been dissolved; on 4 April 1933, he was officially dismissed as mayor and his bank accounts were frozen. "He had no money, no home and no job."[22] After arranging for the safety of his family, he appealed to the abbot of the Benedictine monastery at Maria Laach for a stay of several months. According to Albert Speer in his book Spandau: The Secret Diaries, Hitler expressed admiration for Adenauer, noting his civic projects, the building of a road circling the city as a bypass, and a "green belt" of parks. However, both Hitler and Speer concluded that Adenauer's political views and principles made it impossible for him to play any role in Nazi Germany.

Adenauer was imprisoned for two days after the Night of the Long Knives on 30 June 1934; however, on 10 August 1934, maneuvering for his pension, he wrote a ten-page letter to Hermann Göring, the Prussian interior minister. He stated that as Mayor he had violated Prussian laws in order to allow NSDAP events in public buildings and Nazi flags to be flown from city flagpoles, and that in 1932 he had declared publicly that the Nazis should join the Reich government in a leading role.[23][24] At the end of 1932, Adenauer had indeed demanded a joint government by his Zentrum party and the Nazis for Prussia.[25]

During the next two years, Adenauer changed residences often for fear of reprisals against him, while living on the benevolence of friends. With the help of lawyers in August 1937 he was successful in claiming a pension; he received a cash settlement for his house, which had been taken over by the city of Cologne; his unpaid mortgage, penalties and taxes were waived. With reasonable financial security he managed to live in seclusion for some years. After the failed assassination attempt on Hitler of July 1944, he was imprisoned for a second time as an opponent of the regime. He fell ill and credited Eugen Zander, a former municipal worker in Cologne and a communist, with saving his life. Zander, then a section Kapo of a labor camp near Bonn, discovered Adenauer's name on a deportation list to the East and managed to get him admitted to a hospital. Adenauer was subsequently rearrested (as was his wife), but in the absence of any evidence against him, was released from prison at Brauweiler in November 1944.

After World War II and the founding of the CDU

 
Adenauer in 1951, reading in his house in Rhöndorf he had built in 1937. It is now a museum.

Shortly after the war ended, the American occupation forces once again installed him as Mayor of Cologne, which had been heavily bombed. After the city was transferred into the British zone of occupation, however, the Director of its military government, General Gerald Templer, dismissed Adenauer for incompetence in December 1945. Adenauer considered the Germans the political equals of the occupying Allies, a view that angered Templer.[26] Adenauer's dismissal by the British contributed much to his subsequent political success and allowed him to pursue a policy of alliance with the occupying Allies in the 1950s without facing charges of being a "sell-out".

After being dismissed, Adenauer devoted himself to building a new political party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which he hoped would embrace both Protestants and Catholics in a single party. According to Adenauer, a Catholic-only party would lead to German politics being dominated by anti-democratic parties yet again.[27] In January 1946, Adenauer initiated a political meeting of the future CDU in the British zone in his role as doyen (the oldest man in attendance, Alterspräsident) and was informally confirmed as its leader. During the Weimar Republic, Adenauer had often been considered a future Chancellor and after 1945, his claims for leadership were even stronger. The other surviving Zentrum leaders were considered unsuitable for the tasks that lay ahead.[28]

Reflecting his background as a Catholic Rhinelander who had long chafed under Prussian rule, Adenauer believed that Prussianism was the root cause of National Socialism, and that only by driving out Prussianism could Germany become a democracy. In a December 1946 letter, Adenauer wrote that the Prussian state in the early 19th century had become an "almost God-like entity" that valued state power over the rights of individuals. Adenauer's dislike of Prussia even led him to oppose Berlin as a future capital.[29]

Adenauer viewed the most important battle in the postwar world as between the forces of Christianity and Marxism, especially Communism.[30] Marxism meant both the Communists and the Social Democrats as the latter were officially a Marxist party until the Bad Godesberg conference of 1959. The same anti-Marxist viewpoints led Adenauer to denounce the Social Democrats as the heirs to Prussianism and National Socialism.[31] Adenauer's ideology was at odds with many in the CDU, who wished to unite socialism and Christianity.[32] Adenauer worked diligently at building up contacts and support in the CDU over the following years, and he sought with varying success to impose his particular ideology on the party.

Adenauer's leading role in the CDU of the British zone won him a position at the Parliamentary Council of 1948, which had been called into existence by the Western Allies to draft a constitution for the three western zones of Germany. He was the chairman of this constitutional convention and vaulted from this position to being chosen as the first head of government once the new "Basic Law" had been promulgated in May 1949.

Chancellor of West Germany

First government

 
Election poster, 1949: "With Adenauer for peace, freedom and unity of Germany, therefore CDU"

The first election to the Bundestag of West Germany was held on 15 August 1949, with the Christian Democrats emerging as the strongest party. There were two clashing visions of a future Germany held by Adenauer and his main rival, the Social Democrat Kurt Schumacher. Adenauer favored integrating the Federal Republic with other Western states, especially France and the United States in order to fight the Cold War, even if the price of this was the continued division of Germany. Schumacher by contrast, though an anti-communist, wanted to see a united, socialist and neutral Germany. As such, Adenauer was in favor of joining NATO, something that Schumacher was strongly opposed to.

The Free Democrat Theodor Heuss was elected the first President of the Republic, and Adenauer was elected Chancellor (head of government) on 15 September 1949 with the support of his own CDU, the Christian Social Union, the liberal Free Democratic Party, and the right-wing German Party. It was said that Adenauer was elected Chancellor by the new German parliament by "a majority of one vote – his own".[33] At age 73, it was thought that Adenauer would only be a caretaker Chancellor.[34] However, he would go on to hold this post for 14 years, a period spanning most of the preliminary phase of the Cold War. During this period, the post-war division of Germany was consolidated with the establishment of two separate German states, the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (East Germany).

In the controversial selection for a "provisional capital" of the Federal Republic of Germany, Adenauer championed Bonn over Frankfurt am Main. The British had agreed to detach Bonn from their zone of occupation and convert the area to an autonomous region wholly under German sovereignty; the Americans were not prepared to grant the same for Frankfurt.[35] He also resisted the claims of Heidelberg, which had better communications and had survived the war in better condition; partly because the Nazis had been popular there before they came to power and partly, as he said, because the world would not take them seriously if they set up their state in a city that was the setting for The Student Prince, at the time a popular American operetta based on the drinking culture of German student fraternities.

As chancellor, Adenauer tended to make most major decisions himself, treating his ministers as mere extensions of his authority. While this tendency decreased under his successors, it established the image of West Germany (and later reunified Germany) as a "chancellor democracy".

Ending Denazification

In a speech on 20 September 1949, Adenauer denounced the entire denazification process pursued by the Allied military governments, announcing in the same speech that he was planning to bring in an amnesty law for the Nazi war criminals and he planned to apply to "the High Commissioners for a corresponding amnesty for punishments imposed by the Allied military courts".[36] Adenauer argued the continuation of denazification would "foster a growing and extreme nationalism" as the millions who supported the Nazi regime would find themselves excluded from German life forever.[37] He also demanded an "end to this sniffing out of Nazis."[38] By 31 January 1951, the amnesty legislation had benefited 792,176 people. They included 3,000 functionaries of the SA, the SS, and the Nazi Party who participated in dragging victims to jails and camps; 20,000 Nazis sentenced for "deeds against life" (presumably murder); 30,000 sentenced for causing bodily injury, and about 5,200 charged with "crimes and misdemeanors in office.[39]

Opposition to the Oder–Neisse Line

The Adenauer government refused to accept the Oder–Neisse line as Germany's eastern frontier.[40] This refusal was in large part motivated by his desire to win the votes of expellees and right-wing nationalists to the CDU, which is why he supported Heimatrecht, i.e. the right of expellees to return to their former homes.[41] It was also intended to be a deal-breaker if negotiations ever began to reunite Germany on terms that Adenauer considered unfavorable such as the neutralization of Germany as Adenauer knew well that the Soviets would never revise the Oder–Neisse line.[41] Privately, Adenauer considered Germany's eastern provinces to be lost forever.[42]

 
Adenauer speaking in the Bundestag, 1955

Advocacy for European Coal and Steel Community

At the Petersberg Agreement in November 1949 he achieved some of the first concessions granted by the Allies, such as a decrease in the number of factories to be dismantled, but in particular his agreement to join the International Authority for the Ruhr led to heavy criticism. In the following debate in parliament Adenauer stated:

The Allies have told me that dismantling would be stopped only if I satisfy the Allied desire for security, does the Socialist Party want dismantling to go on to the bitter end?[43][44]

The opposition leader Kurt Schumacher responded by labeling Adenauer "Chancellor of the Allies", accusing Adenauer of putting good relations with the West for the sake of the Cold War ahead of German national interests.

After a year of negotiations, the Treaty of Paris was signed on 18 April 1951 establishing the European Coal and Steel Community. The treaty was unpopular in Germany where it was seen as a French attempt to take over German industry.[45] The treaty conditions were favorable to the French, but for Adenauer, the only thing that mattered was European integration.[46] Adenauer was keen to see Britain join the European Coal and Steel Community as he believed the more free-market British would counterbalance the influence of the more dirigiste French, and to achieve that purpose he visited London in November 1951 to meet with Prime Minister Winston Churchill.[47] Churchill said Britain would not join the European Coal and Steel Community because doing so would mean sacrificing relations with the U.S. and Commonwealth.[48]

German Rearmament

From the beginning of his Chancellorship, Adenauer had been pressing for German rearmament. After the outbreak of the Korean War on 25 June 1950, the U.S. and Britain agreed that West Germany had to be rearmed to strengthen the defenses of Western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion. Further contributing to the crisis atmosphere of 1950 was the bellicose rhetoric of the East German leader Walter Ulbricht, who proclaimed the reunification of Germany under communist rule to be imminent.[49][50] To soothe French fears of German rearmament, the French Premier René Pleven suggested the so-called Pleven plan in October 1950 under which the Federal Republic would have its military forces function as part of the armed wing of the multinational European Defense Community (EDC).[51] Adenauer deeply disliked the "Pleven plan", but was forced to support it when it became clear that this plan was the only way the French would agree to German rearmament.[52]

 
Adenauer in 1950 at the Ermekeil barracks in Bonn with Adolf Heusinger (right), one of the authors of the Himmerod memorandum

Amnesty and Employment of Nazis

In 1950, a major controversy broke out when it emerged that Adenauer's State Secretary Hans Globke had played a major role in drafting anti-semitic Nuremberg Race Laws in Nazi Germany.[53] Adenauer kept Globke on as State Secretary as part of his strategy of integration.[54] Starting in August 1950, Adenauer began to pressure the Western Allies to free all of the war criminals in their custody, especially those from the Wehrmacht, whose continued imprisonment he claimed made West German rearmament impossible.[55] Adenauer had been opposed to the Nuremberg Trials in 1945–46, and after becoming Chancellor, he demanded the release of the so-called "Spandau Seven," as the seven war criminals convicted at Nuremberg and imprisoned at Spandau Prison were known.[56]

In October 1950, Adenauer received the so-called "Himmerod memorandum" drafted by four former Wehrmacht generals at the Himmerod Abbey that linked freedom for German war criminals as the price of German rearmament, along with public statements from the Allies that the Wehrmacht committed no war crimes in World War II.[57] The Allies were willing to do whatever necessary to get the much-needed German rearmament underway, and in January 1951, General Dwight Eisenhower, commander of NATO forces, issued a statement which declared the great majority of the Wehrmacht had acted honorably.[58]

On 2 January 1951, Adenauer met with the American High Commissioner, John J. McCloy, to argue that executing the Landsberg prisoners would ruin forever any effort at having the Federal Republic play its role in the Cold War.[59] At the time, American occupation authorities had 28 Nazi war criminals left on death row in their custody. In response to Adenauer's demands and pressure from the German public, McCloy and Thomas T. Handy on 31 January 1951 reduced the death sentences of all but the 7 worst offenders.[60]

By 1951 laws were passed by the Bundestag ending denazification. Denazification was viewed by the United States as counterproductive and ineffective, and its demise was not opposed.[61] Adenauer's intention was to switch government policy to reparations and compensation for the victims of Nazi rule (Wiedergutmachung).[62][63]

Officials were allowed to retake jobs in civil service, with the exception of people assigned to Group I (Major Offenders) and II (Offenders) during the denazification review process.[63][64] Adenauer pressured his rehabilitated ex-Nazis by threatening that stepping out of line could trigger the reopening of individual de-Nazification prosecutions. The construction of a "competent Federal Government effectively from a standing start was one of the greatest of Adenauer's formidable achievements".[65]

Contemporary critics accused Adenauer of cementing the division of Germany, sacrificing reunification and the recovery of territories lost in the westward shift of Poland and the Soviet Union with his determination to secure the Federal Republic to the West. Adenauer's German policy was based upon Politik der Stärke (Policy of Strength), and upon the so-called "magnet theory", in which a prosperous, democratic West Germany integrated with the West would act as a "magnet" that would eventually bring down the East German regime.[66]

Rejecting the Reunification Offer

In 1952, the Stalin Note, as it became known, "caught everybody in the West by surprise".[67] It offered to unify the two German entities into a single, neutral state with its own, non-aligned national army to effect superpower disengagement from Central Europe. Adenauer and his cabinet were unanimous in their rejection of the Stalin overture; they shared the Western Allies' suspicion about the genuineness of that offer and supported the Allies in their cautious replies. Adenauer's flat rejection was, however, still out of step with public opinion; he then realized his mistake and he started to ask questions. Critics denounced him for having missed an opportunity for German reunification. The Soviets sent a second note, courteous in tone. Adenauer by then understood that "all opportunity for initiative had passed out of his hands,"[68] and the matter was put to rest by the Allies. Given the realities of the Cold War, German reunification and recovery of lost territories in the east were not realistic goals as both of Stalin's notes specified the retention of the existing "Potsdam"-decreed boundaries of Germany.

 
Adenauer with Israeli President Zalman Shazar, 1966

Reparation to victims of Nazi Germany

Adenauer recognized the obligation of the West German government to compensate Israel, as the main representative of the Jewish people, for The Holocaust.[failed verification] West Germany started negotiations with Israel for restitution of lost property and the payment of damages to victims of Nazi persecution. In the Luxemburger Abkommen, West Germany agreed to pay compensation to Israel. Jewish claims were bundled in the Jewish Claims Conference, which represented the Jewish victims of Nazi Germany. West Germany then initially paid about 3 billion Mark to Israel and about 450 million to the Claims Conference, although payments continued after that, as new claims were made.[69] In the face of severe opposition both from the public and from his own cabinet, Adenauer was only able to get the reparations agreement ratified by the Bundestag with the support of the SPD.[70] Israeli public opinion was divided over accepting the money, but ultimately the fledgling state under David Ben-Gurion agreed to take it, opposed by more radical groups like Irgun, who were against such treaties. Those treaties were cited as a main reason for the assassination attempt by the radical Jewish groups against Adenauer.[71]

Assassination Attempt

On 27 March 1952, a package addressed to Chancellor Adenauer exploded in the Munich Police Headquarters, killing one Bavarian police officer, Karl Reichert.[72] Investigations revealed the mastermind behind the assassination attempt was Menachem Begin, who would later become the Prime Minister of Israel.[73] Begin had been the commander of Irgun and at that time headed Herut and was a member of the Knesset. His goal was to put pressure on the German government and prevent the signing of the Reparations Agreement between Israel and West Germany, which he vehemently opposed.[74] The West German government kept all proof under seal in order to prevent antisemitic responses from the German public.

Second government

 
Man of the Year: Adenauer on the cover of Time (4 January 1954)

When the East German uprising of 1953 was harshly suppressed by the Red Army in June 1953, Adenauer took political advantage of the situation and was handily re-elected to a second term as Chancellor.[75] The CDU/CSU came up one seat short of an outright majority. Adenauer could thus have governed in a coalition with only one other party, but retained/gained the support of nearly all of the parties in the Bundestag that were to the right of the SPD. For all of his efforts as West Germany's leader, Adenauer was named Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1953. In 1954, he received the Karlspreis (English: Charlemagne Award), an award by the German city of Aachen to people who contributed to the European idea, European cooperation and European peace.

The German Restitution Laws (Bundesentschädigungsgesetz) were passed in 1953 that allowed some victims of Nazi prosecution to claim restitution.[76] Under the 1953 restitution law, those who had suffered for "racial, religious or political reasons" could collect compensation, which were defined in such a way as to sharply limit the number of people entitled to collect compensation.[77]

In the spring of 1954, opposition to the Pleven plan grew within the French National Assembly.[78] The British Prime Minister Winston Churchill told Adenauer that Britain would ensure that West German rearmament would happen, regardless if the National Assembly ratified the EDC treaty or not.[79] In August 1954, the Pleven plan died when an alliance of conservatives and Communists in the National Assembly joined forces to reject the EDC treaty under the grounds that West German rearmament in any form was an unacceptable danger to France.[80]

 
Signing the North Atlantic Treaty in Paris, 1954 (Adenauer at the left)

British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden used the failure of the EDC to argue for independent West German rearmament and West German NATO membership.[80] Thanks in part to Adenauer's success in rebuilding West Germany's image, the British proposal met with considerable approval.[80] In the ensuing London conference, Eden assisted Adenauer by promising the French that Britain would always maintain at least four divisions in the British Army of the Rhine as long as there was a Soviet threat, with the strengthened British forces also aimed implicitly against any German revanchism.[81] Adenauer then promised that Germany would never seek to have nuclear, chemical and biological weapons as well as capital ships, strategic bombers, long-range artillery, and guided missiles, although these promises were non-binding.[81] The French had been assuaged that West German rearmament would be no threat to France. Additionally, Adenauer promised that the West German military would be under the operational control of NATO general staff, though ultimate control would rest with the West German government; and that above all he would never violate the strictly defensive NATO charter and invade East Germany to achieve German reunification.[82]

 
Minister Blank and Adenauer with General Speidel inspect formations of the newly created Bundeswehr on 20 January 1955

In May 1955, West Germany joined NATO and in November a West German military, the Bundeswehr, was founded.[80] Though Adenauer made use of a number of former Wehrmacht generals and admirals in the Bundeswehr, he saw the Bundeswehr as a new force with no links to the past, and wanted it to be kept under civilian control at all times.[83] To achieve these aims, Adenauer gave a great deal of power to the military reformer Wolf Graf von Baudissin.[84]

In November 1954, Adenauer's lobbying efforts on behalf of the "Spandau Seven" finally bore fruit with the release of Konstantin von Neurath.[85] Adenauer congratulated Neurath on his release, sparking controversy all over the world.[86] At the same time, Adenauer's efforts to win freedom for Admiral Karl Dönitz ran into staunch opposition from the British Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office, Ivone Kirkpatrick, who argued Dönitz would be an active danger to German democracy.[87] Adenauer then traded with Kirkpatrick no early release for Admiral Dönitz with an early release for Admiral Erich Raeder on medical grounds.[88]

 
Konrad Adenauer with minister of economics Ludwig Erhard, 1956. Adenauer acted more leniently towards the trade unions and employers' associations than Erhard.

Adenauer's achievements include the establishment of a stable democracy in West Germany and a lasting reconciliation with France, culminating in the Élysée Treaty. His political commitment to the Western powers achieved full sovereignty for West Germany, which was formally laid down in the General Treaty, although there remained Allied restrictions concerning the status of a potentially reunited Germany and the state of emergency in West Germany. Adenauer firmly integrated the country with the emerging Euro-Atlantic community (NATO and the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation). Adenauer is closely linked to the implementation of an enhanced pension system, which ensured unparalleled prosperity for retired people. Along with his Minister for Economic Affairs and successor Ludwig Erhard, the West German model of a "social market economy" (a mixed economy with capitalism moderated by elements of social welfare and Catholic social teaching) allowed for the boom period known as the Wirtschaftswunder ('economic miracle') that produced broad prosperity. The Adenauer era witnessed a dramatic rise in the standard of living of average Germans, with real wages doubling between 1950 and 1963. This rising affluence was accompanied by a 20% fall in working hours during that same period, together with a fall in the unemployment rate from 8% in 1950 to 0.4% in 1965.[89] in addition, an advanced welfare state was established.[90]

 
Nikita Khrushchev and other Soviet leaders greeting Adenauer in Moscow in September 1955

In return for the release of the last German prisoners of war in 1955, the Federal Republic established diplomatic relations with the USSR, but refused to recognize East Germany and broke off diplomatic relations with countries (e.g., Yugoslavia) that established relations with the East German régime.[91] Adenauer was also ready to consider the Oder–Neisse line as the German border in order to pursue a more flexible policy with Poland but he did not command sufficient domestic support for this, and opposition to the Oder–Neisse line continued, causing considerable disappointment among Adenauer's Western allies.[92]

In 1956, during the Suez Crisis, Adenauer fully supported the Anglo-French-Israeli attack on Egypt, arguing to his Cabinet that Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser was a pro-Soviet force that needed to be cut down to size.[93] Adenauer was appalled that the Americans had come out against the attack on Egypt alongside the Soviets, which led Adenauer to fear that the United States and Soviet Union would "carve up the world" with no thought for European interests.[94]

 
Adenauer with the mother of a German POW brought home in 1955 from the Soviet Union, due to Adenauer's visit to Moscow

At the height of the Suez crisis, Adenauer visited Paris to meet the French Premier Guy Mollet in a show of moral support for France.[95] The day before Adenauer arrived in Paris, the Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin sent the so-called "Bulganin letters" to the leaders of Britain, France, and Israel threatening nuclear strikes if they did not end the war against Egypt.[95] The news of the "Bulganin letters" reached Adenauer mid-way on the train trip to Paris. The threat of a Soviet nuclear strike that could destroy Paris at any moment added considerably to the tension of the summit.[96] The Paris summit helped to strengthen the bond between Adenauer and the French, who saw themselves as fellow European powers living in a world dominated by Washington and Moscow.[97]

Adenauer was deeply shocked by the Soviet threat of nuclear strikes against Britain and France, and even more so by the apparent quiescent American response to the Soviet threat of nuclear annihilation against two of NATO's key members.[98] As a result, Adenauer became more interested in the French idea of a European "Third Force" in the Cold War as an alternative security policy.[99] This helped to lead to the formation of the European Economic Community in 1957, which was intended to be the foundation stone of the European "Third Force".[100]

Adenauer reached an agreement for his "nuclear ambitions" with a NATO Military Committee in December 1956 that stipulated West German forces were to be "equipped for nuclear warfare".[101] Concluding that the United States would eventually pull out of Western Europe, Adenauer pursued nuclear cooperation with other countries. The French government then proposed that France, West Germany and Italy jointly develop and produce nuclear weapons and delivery systems, and an agreement was signed in April 1958. With the ascendancy of Charles de Gaulle, the agreement for joint production and control was shelved indefinitely.[102] President John F. Kennedy, an ardent foe of nuclear proliferation, considered sales of such weapons moot since "in the event of war the United States would, from the outset, be prepared to defend the Federal Republic."[103] The physicists of the Max Planck Institute for Theoretical Physics at Göttingen and other renowned universities would have had the scientific capability for in-house development, but the will was absent,[104] nor was there public support. With Adenauer's fourth-term election in November 1961 and the end of his chancellorship in sight, his "nuclear ambitions" began to taper off.

Third government

 
Adenauer with French president Charles de Gaulle at the Cologne Bonn Airport in 1961

In 1957 the Saarland was reintegrated into Germany as a federal state of the Federal Republic. The election of 1957 essentially dealt with national matters.[104] His re-election campaign centered around the slogan "No Experiments".[34] Riding a wave of popularity from the return of the last POWs from Soviet labor camps, as well as an extensive pension reform, Adenauer led the CDU/CSU to an outright majority in a free German election.[105] In 1957, the Federal Republic signed the Treaty of Rome and became a founding member of the European Economic Community. In September 1958, Adenauer first met President Charles de Gaulle of France, who was to become a close friend and ally in pursuing Franco-German rapprochement.[106] Adenauer saw de Gaulle as a "rock" and the only foreign leader whom he could completely trust.[107]

In response to the Ulm Einsatzkommando trial in 1958, Adenauer set up the Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes.[108]

On 27 November 1958 another Berlin crisis broke out when Khrushchev submitted an ultimatum with a six-month expiry date to Washington, London and Paris, where he demanded that the Allies pull all their forces out of West Berlin and agree that West Berlin become a "free city", or else he would sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany.[109] Adenauer was opposed to any sort of negotiations with the Soviets, arguing if only the West were to hang tough long enough, Khrushchev would back down.[110] As the 27 May deadline approached, the crisis was defused by the British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, who visited Moscow to meet with Khrushchev and managed to extend the deadline while not committing himself or the other Western powers to concessions.[111] Adenauer believed Macmillan to be a spineless "appeaser", who had made a secret deal with Khrushchev at the expense of the Federal Republic.[112][113]

 
Adenauer visiting a refugee kindergarten in Berlin in 1958
 
Adenauer and Italian Prime Minister Antonio Segni in August 1959

Adenauer tarnished his image when he announced he would run for the office of federal president in 1959, only to pull out when he discovered that under the Basic Law, the president had far less power than he did in the Weimar Republic. After his reversal he supported the nomination of Heinrich Lübke as the CDU presidential candidate whom he believed weak enough not to interfere with his actions as Federal Chancellor. One of Adenauer's reasons for not pursuing the presidency was his fear that Ludwig Erhard, whom Adenauer thought little of, would become the new chancellor.

By early 1959, Adenauer came under renewed pressure from his Western allies to recognize the Oder–Neisse line, with the Americans being especially insistent.[114] Adenauer gave his "explicit and unconditional approval" to the idea of non-aggression pacts in late January 1959, which effectively meant recognising the Oder–Neisse line, since realistically speaking Germany could only regain the lost territories through force. After Adenauer's intention to sign non-aggression pacts with Poland and Czechoslovakia became clear, the German expellee lobby swung into action and organized protests all over the Federal Republic while bombarding the offices of Adenauer and other members of the cabinet with thousands of letters, telegrams and telephone calls promising never to vote CDU again if the non-aggression pacts were signed.[115] Faced with this pressure, Adenauer promptly capitulated to the expellee lobby.[115]

In late 1959, a controversy broke out when it emerged that Theodor Oberländer, the Minister of Refugees since 1953 and one of the most powerful leaders of the expellee lobby, had committed war crimes against Jews and Poles during World War II.[116] Despite his past, on 10 December 1959, a statement was released to the press declaring that "Dr. Oberländer has the full confidence of the Adenauer cabinet".[117] Other Christian Democrats made it clear to Adenauer that they would like to see Oberländer out of the cabinet, and finally in May 1960 Oberländer resigned.[118]

Fourth government

 
U.S. president John F. Kennedy visiting Adenauer at the Hammerschmidt Villa

In 1961, Adenauer had his concerns about both the status of Berlin and US leadership confirmed, as the Soviets and East Germans built the Berlin Wall. Adenauer had come into the year distrusting the new US president, John F. Kennedy. He doubted Kennedy's commitment to a free Berlin and a unified Germany and considered him undisciplined and naïve.[119] For his part, Kennedy thought that Adenauer was a relic of the past. Their strained relationship impeded effective Western action on Berlin during 1961.[120]

The construction of the Berlin Wall in August 1961 and the sealing of borders by the East Germans made Adenauer's government look weak. Adenauer chose to remain on the campaign trail, and made a disastrous misjudgement in a speech on 14 August 1961 in Regensburg when he engaged in a personal attack on the SPD Mayor of West Berlin, Willy Brandt, saying that Brandt's illegitimate birth had disqualified him from holding any sort of office.[121] After failing to keep their majority in the general election on 17 September, the CDU/CSU again needed to include the FDP in a coalition government. Adenauer was forced to make two concessions: to relinquish the chancellorship before the end of the new term, his fourth, and to replace his foreign minister.[122] In his last years in office, Adenauer used to take a nap after lunch and, when he was traveling abroad and had a public function to attend, he sometimes asked for a bed in a room close to where he was supposed to be speaking, so that he could rest briefly before he appeared.[123]

 
Berlin plaque commemorating restoration of relations between Germany and France, showing Adenauer and Charles de Gaulle

During this time, Adenauer came into conflict with the Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard over the depth of German integration to the West. Erhard was in favor of allowing Britain to join to create a trans-Atlantic free trade zone, while Adenauer was for strengthening ties amongst the original founding six nations of West Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and Italy.[124] In Adenauer's viewpoint, the Cold War meant that the NATO alliance with the United States and Britain was essential, but there could be no deeper integration into a trans-Atlantic community beyond the existing military ties as that would lead to a "mishmash" between different cultural systems that would be doomed to failure.[125] Though Adenauer had tried to get Britain to join the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951–52, by the early 1960s Adenauer had come to share General de Gaulle's belief that Britain simply did not belong in the EEC.[126] The Élysée Treaty was signed in January 1963 to solidify relations with France.

In October 1962, a scandal erupted when police arrested five Der Spiegel journalists, charging them with espionage for publishing a memo detailing weaknesses in the West German armed forces. Adenauer had not initiated the arrests, but initially defended the person responsible, Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss, and called the Spiegel memo "abyss of treason". After public outrage and heavy protests from the coalition partner FDP he dismissed Strauss, but the reputation of Adenauer and his party had already suffered.[127][128]

 
Adenauer delivering a speech at the March 1966 CDU party rally, one year before his death

Adenauer managed to remain in office for almost another year, but the scandal increased the pressure already on him to fulfill his promise to resign before the end of the term. Adenauer was not on good terms in his last years of power with his economics minister Ludwig Erhard and tried to block him from the chancellorship. In January 1963, Adenauer privately supported General Charles de Gaulle's veto of Britain's attempt to join the European Economic Community, and was only prevented from saying so openly by the need to preserve unity in his cabinet as most of his ministers led by Erhard supported Britain's application.[129] A Francophile, Adenauer saw a Franco-German partnership as the key for European peace and prosperity and shared de Gaulle's view that Britain would be a disputative force in the EEC.[130] Adenauer failed in his efforts to block Erhard as his successor, and in October 1963 he turned the office over to Erhard. He remained chairman of the CDU until his resignation in December 1966.[131]

Adenauer ensured a generally free and democratic society, except the banning of the communist party and the BND spying on SPD on behalf of the CDU (see § Intelligence services and spying), and laid the groundwork for Germany to re-enter the community of nations and to evolve as a dependable member of the Western world. It can be argued that because of Adenauer's policies, a later reunification of both German states was possible, and unified Germany has remained a solid partner in the European Union and NATO. The British historian Frederick Taylor argued that in many ways the Adenauer era was a transition period in values and viewpoints from the authoritarianism that characterized Germany in the first half of the 20th century to the more democratic values that characterized the western half of Germany in the second half of the 20th century.[132]

Social policies

Adenauer's years in the Chancellorship saw the realization of a number of important initiatives in the domestic field, such as in housing, pension rights, and unemployment provision. A major housebuilding programme was launched, while measures introduced to assist war victims[133] and expellees.[134] A savings scheme for homeownership was set up in 1952,[135] while the Housebuilding Act of 1956 reinforced incentives for owner-occupation. Employer-funded child allowances for three or more children were established in 1954, and in 1957 the indexation of pension schemes was introduced, together with an old age assistance scheme for agricultural workers.[136] The 1952 Maternity Leave Law foresaw 12 weeks of paid leave for working mothers, who were also safeguarded from unfair dismissal,[137] and improvements in unemployment benefits were carried out.[138] The Soldiers' Law of 1956 laid down that soldiers had the same rights as other citizens, "limited only by the demands of military service."[139] Following a Federal Act of 1961, social assistance provided a safety net of minimum income "for those not adequately catered for by social insurance."[140] Controversially, however, a school lunch programme was abolished in 1950.[141]

Intelligence services and spying

By the early 1960s, connections between the CDU under Adenauer and the intelligence services ("Bundesnachrichtendienst" / BND) had become significantly closer than would be generally known until more than 50 years later. Thanks to the BND, information on the internal machinations of the opposition SPD party were available to the entire CDU leadership, and not merely to Adenauer in his capacity as chancellor. It was Adenauer himself who personally instructed the BND to spy on his SPD rival, the future chancellor Willy Brandt.[142]

Death and legacy

 
Funeral service for Adenauer in Cologne Cathedral
 
Crowds look on as Adenauer's remains are conveyed along the Rhine
 
Adenauer's grave in Rhöndorf
 
The monument "Homage to the Founding Fathers of Europe" in front of Robert Schuman's house in Scy-Chazelles by Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli, unveiled 20 October 2012. The statues represent the four founders of the European Communities – Alcide De Gasperi, Robert Schuman, Jean Monnet and Konrad Adenauer.

Adenauer died on 19 April 1967 in his family home at Rhöndorf. According to his daughter, his last words were "Da jitt et nix zo kriesche!" (pronounced [dɔ² ˈjɪdət nɪks tsə ˈkʁiːʃə],[what does "²" mean?] Cologne dialect for "There's nothin' to weep about!").[143]

Adenauer's state funeral in Cologne Cathedral was attended by a large number of international guests. One hundred countries were represented,[144] they included:[145]

The funeral marked the first meeting between LBJ and de Gaulle since the state funeral of John F. Kennedy in Washington.[145] After the Requiem Mass and service, his remains were taken upstream to Rhöndorf on the Rhine aboard the Seeadler-class fast attack craft Kondor of the German Navy, with two more, Seeadler and Sperber, as escorts, "past the thousands who stood in silence on both banks of the river".[146] He is interred at the Waldfriedhof ("Forest Cemetery") at Rhöndorf.[147]

When, in 1967, after his death at the age of 91, Germans were asked what they admired most about Adenauer, the majority responded that he had brought home the last German prisoners of war from the USSR, which had become known as the "Return of the 10,000".[c]

In 2003, Adenauer was voted the 'greatest German of all time' in a contest called Unsere Besten ("Our Best") run on German public-service television broadcaster ZDF in which more than three million votes were cast.[149]

Adenauer was the main motive for one of the most recent and famous gold commemorative coins: the Belgian 3 pioneers of the European unification commemorative coin, minted in 2002. The obverse side shows a portrait with the names Robert Schuman, Paul-Henri Spaak, and Konrad Adenauer; the three most important figures of the founding fathers of the European Union.[150][better source needed]

Distinctions

National orders

Foreign orders

Awards

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Due to the division of Germany, Konrad Adenauer was not an all-German Chancellor, despite his legal title. The term West Germany is the common English name for the Federal Republic of Germany in the period between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany on 3 October 1990.
  2. ^ E.g. Beji Caid Essebsi was Tunisian president (2014–2019) from age 88 to 92, and Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad (2018–2020) was in office aged 92 to 94; Italian president Giorgio Napolitano who turned 88 in 2013 and remained in office until 2015, age 89, was merely a titular leader and did not run the government of Italy).
  3. ^ The 10,000 returnees were Wehrmacht personnel and some civilians convicted by Soviet Military Tribunals of war crimes. Among those returned in 1955 were Luftwaffe fighter ace Erich Hartmann, Generals Leopold von Babenhausen, Friedrich Foertsch, Walther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach and Hitler's personal pilot Hans Baur.[148]

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Further reading

  • Bark, Dennis L., and David R. Gress. A History of West Germany. Vol. 1: From Shadow to Substance, 1945–1963. Vol. 2: Democracy and Its Discontents, 1963–1991 (1993), a standard scholarly history
  • Brady, Steven J. Eisenhower and Adenauer: Alliance maintenance under pressure, 1953–1960 (Rowman & Littlefield, 2009).
  • Craig, Gordon. From Bismarck to Adenauer: aspects of German statecraft (1958) pp 124–148 online.
  • Craig, Gordon A. "Konrad Adenauer and His Diplomats." in The Diplomats, 1939-1979 (Princeton University Press, 2019) pp. 201–227. online
  • Cudlipp, E. Adenauer (1985) online. for middle schools.
  • Daugherty III, Leo J. "'Tip of the Spear': The Formation and Expansion of the Bundeswehr, 1949–1963." Journal of Slavic Military Studies 24.1 (2011): 147–177.
  • Dönhoff, Marion. Foe into friend: the makers of the new Germany from Konrad Adenauer to Helmut Schmidt (1982) online
  • Dülffer, Jost. "'No more Potsdam!' Konrad Adenauer's Nightmare and the Basis of his International Orientation." German Politics and Society 25.2 (2007): 19–42.
  • Epstein, Klaus (October 1967). "Adenauer and Rhenish Separatism". The Review of Politics. 29 (4): 536–545. doi:10.1017/s0034670500040614. S2CID 143511307.
  • Feldman, Lily Gardner. Germany's Foreign Policy of Reconciliation: From Enmity to Amity (Rowman & Littlefield; 2012) 393 pages; on German relations with France, Israel, Poland, and Czechoslovakia/the Czech Republic. excerpt
  • Frei, Norbert (2002). Adenauer's Germany and the Nazi Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-11882-1.
  • Gaddis, John Lewis (1998). We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-878070-0.
  • Goda, Norman J. W. (2007). Tales from Spandau: Nazi Criminals and the Cold War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86720-7.
  • Granieri, Ronald J. (2004). The Ambivalent Alliance: Konrad Adenauer, the CDU/CSU, and the West, 1949–1966. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-57181-492-0.
  • Hanrieder, Wolfram F. Germany, America, Europe: Forty Years of German Foreign Policy (1989)
  • Heidenheimer, Arnold J. Adenauer and the CDU: the Rise of the Leader and the Integration of the Party (1960)
  • Herf, Jeffrey (1997). Divided Memory: The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-21303-3.
  • Hiscocks, Richard. The Adenauer Era (1966) online
  • Kleuters, Joost. "Adenauer’s Long Shadow." in Reunification in West German Party Politics from Westbindung to Ostpolitik (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2012) pp. 107–122.
  • Large, David Clay (1996). Germans to the Front: West German Rearmament in the Adenauer Era. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4539-6.
  • Maulucci Jr., Thomas W. Adenauer's Foreign Office: West German Diplomacy in the Shadow of the Third Reich (2012) excerpt
  • Merk, Dorothea, and Rüdiger Ahrens. "'Suspicious Federal Chancellor' Versus 'Weak Prime Minister': Konrad Adenauer and Harold Macmillan in the British and West German Quality Press during the Berlin Crisis (1958 to 1962). A Critical Discourse Analysis." in Europe in Discourse: Identity, Diversity, Borders (2016) pp 101–116 online[dead link]
  • Mitchell, Maria (2012). The Origins of Christian Democracy: Politics and Confession in Modern Germany. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11841-0.
  • Rovan, Joseph. Konrad Adenauer (1987) 182 pages excerpt and text search
  • Schwarz, Hans-Peter. "Adenauer’s Ostpolitik." in West German Foreign Policy: 1949-1979 (Routledge, 2020) pp. 127–143.
  • Schwarz, Hans-Peter (1995). Konrad Adenauer: A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War, Revolution and Reconstruction. Vol. 1: From the German Empire to the Federal Republic, 1876–1952. Oxford: Berghahn Books. ISBN 1-57181-870-7. online
  • — (1997). Konrad Adenauer: A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War, Revolution and Reconstruction. Vol. 2: The Statesman: 1952–1967. Providence: Berghahn Books. ISBN 1-57181-960-6.
  • Schoenborn, Benedikt. "Bargaining with the bear: Chancellor Erhard's bid to buy German reunification, 1963–64." Cold War History 8.1 (2008): 23–53. online[dead link]
  • Schoenborn, Benedikt. "Chancellor Erhard's silent rejection of de Gaulle's plans: the example of monetary union." Cold War History 14.3 (2014): 377-402 online[dead link]
  • Williams, Charles (2001). Konrad Adenauer: The Father of the New Germany. Wiley. ISBN 978-0471407379.
  • Witzthum, David. "David Ben-Gurion and Konrad Adenauer: Building a Bridge across the Abyss." Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs 13.2 (2019): 223–237.

Primary sources

  • Adenauer, Konrad. Memoirs, (4 vols. English edition 1966–70)
  • McGhee, George C. At the creation of a new Germany: from Adenauer to Brandt : an ambassador's account (1989) online
  • Kreikamp, Hans-Dieter, ed. (2003). Die Ära Adenauer 1949 – 1963 (in German). Darmstadt: wbg Academic. ISBN 978-3-534-12335-3.

External links

  •   Media related to Konrad Adenauer at Wikimedia Commons
  • The short film A Defeated People (1946) is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
  • The short film Interview with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer (1957) is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
  • Newspaper clippings about Konrad Adenauer in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

konrad, adenauer, other, uses, disambiguation, konrad, hermann, joseph, adenauer, german, ˈkɔnʁaːt, ˈʔaːdənaʊɐ, listen, january, 1876, april, 1967, german, statesman, served, first, chancellor, federal, republic, germany, from, 1949, 1963, from, 1946, 1966, fi. For other uses see Konrad Adenauer disambiguation Konrad Hermann Joseph Adenauer German ˈkɔnʁaːt ˈʔaːdenaʊɐ listen 5 January 1876 19 April 1967 was a German statesman who served as the first chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1949 to 1963 From 1946 to 1966 he was the first leader of the Christian Democratic Union CDU a Christian democratic party he co founded which became the dominant force in the country under his leadership Konrad AdenauerAdenauer in 1952Chancellor of Germany West Germany only a In office 15 September 1949 11 October 1963 1 PresidentTheodor HeussHeinrich LubkeVice ChancellorFranz BlucherLudwig ErhardPreceded byLutz von Krosigk 1945 as leading minister of Germany Succeeded byLudwig ErhardMinister for Foreign AffairsIn office 15 March 1951 6 June 1955ChancellorHimselfPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byHeinrich von BrentanoLeader of the Christian Democratic UnionIn office 1 March 1946 23 March 1966Bundestag LeaderHeinrich von BrentanoHeinrich KroneRainer BarzelPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byLudwig ErhardPresident of the Parliamentary CouncilIn office 1 September 1948 23 May 1949Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice abolishedLord Mayor of CologneIn office 4 May 1945 6 October 1945Preceded byWilli SuthSucceeded byWilli SuthIn office 13 October 1917 13 March 1933Preceded byMax WallrafSucceeded byGunter RiesenPresident of the Prussian State CouncilIn office 7 May 1921 26 April 1933Preceded byFriedrich Carl von Savigny 1847 Succeeded byRobert LeyMember of the Bundestag for BonnIn office 7 September 1949 19 April 1967Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byAlo HauserPersonal detailsBornKonrad Hermann Joseph Adenauer 1876 01 05 5 January 1876Cologne Kingdom of Prussia German EmpireDied19 April 1967 1967 04 19 aged 91 Rhondorf West GermanyResting placeWaldfriedhof Rhondorf Bad HonnefPolitical partyCentre Party 1906 1933 CDU 1945 1967 SpousesEmma Weyer m 1904 died 1916 wbr Auguste Zinsser m 1919 died 1948 wbr Children8Alma materUniversity of FreiburgUniversity of MunichUniversity of BonnSignatureA devout Roman Catholic and member of the Catholic Centre Party Adenauer was a leading politician in the Weimar Republic serving as Mayor of Cologne 1917 1933 and as president of the Prussian State Council 1922 1933 In the early years of the Federal Republic he switched focus from denazification to recovery and led his country from the ruins of World War II to becoming a productive and prosperous nation that forged close relations with France the United Kingdom and the United States 2 During his years in power West Germany achieved democracy stability international respect and economic prosperity undergoing the Wirtschaftswunder German for economic miracle 3 Adenauer belied his age by his intense work habits and his uncanny political instinct He displayed a strong dedication to a broad vision of market based liberal democracy and anti communism A shrewd and strategic politician Adenauer was deeply committed to an Atlanticist foreign policy and restoring the position of West Germany on the world stage He worked to restore the West German economy from the destruction of World War II to a central position in Europe presiding over the German economic miracle together with his Minister of Economics Ludwig Erhard and was a driving force in re establishing national military forces the Bundeswehr and intelligence services the Bundesnachrichtendienst in West Germany in 1955 and 1956 Adenauer opposed recognition of the rival German Democratic Republic or the Oder Neisse line He skillfully used these points in electoral campaigns against the SPD which was more sympathetic to co existence with the GDR and the post war borders Adenauer made West Germany a member of NATO A proponent of European unity Adenauer was one of the founders of the European Union and a key signatory of the Treaty of Rome he also pursued Atlanticist links with the United States as a counterbalance Adenauer who resigned as Chancellor at the age of 87 and remained head of the governing CDU until his retirement at 90 was often dubbed Der Alte the old one He also remained a Member of the Bundestag for Bonn until his death in 1967 at the age of 91 According to British politician Roy Jenkins he was the oldest statesman ever to function in elected office and the oldest head of government of a major country in modern European history 4 As of 2021 Adenauer remains the oldest ever European head of government and one of the oldest elected European statesmen paralleled only by Sandro Pertini and Giorgio Napolitano however the governments of Tunisia and Malaysia had older heads of government during the 2010s b Contents 1 Cologne years 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Leader in Cologne 1 3 Years under the Nazi government 1 4 After World War II and the founding of the CDU 2 Chancellor of West Germany 2 1 First government 2 1 1 Ending Denazification 2 1 2 Opposition to the Oder Neisse Line 2 1 3 Advocacy for European Coal and Steel Community 2 1 4 German Rearmament 2 1 5 Amnesty and Employment of Nazis 2 1 6 Rejecting the Reunification Offer 2 1 7 Reparation to victims of Nazi Germany 2 1 8 Assassination Attempt 2 2 Second government 2 3 Third government 2 4 Fourth government 2 5 Social policies 2 6 Intelligence services and spying 3 Death and legacy 4 Distinctions 4 1 National orders 4 2 Foreign orders 4 3 Awards 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksCologne years EditEarly life and education Edit Adenauer in 1896 Konrad Adenauer was born as the third of five children of Johann Konrad Adenauer 1833 1906 and his wife Helene nee Scharfenberg 1849 1919 in Cologne Rhenish Prussia on 5 January 1876 5 His siblings were August 1872 1952 Johannes 1873 1937 Lilli 1879 1950 and Elisabeth who died shortly after birth c 1880 One of the formative influences of Adenauer s youth was the Kulturkampf an experience that as related to him by his parents left him with a lifelong dislike for Prussianism and led him like many other Catholic Rhinelanders of the 19th century to deeply resent the Rhineland s inclusion in Prussia 6 In 1894 he completed his Abitur and began studying law and politics at the universities of Freiburg Munich and Bonn In 1896 at the age of 20 he was mustered for the Prussian army but did not pass the physical exam due to chronic respiratory problems he had experienced since childhood He was a member of several Roman Catholic students associations under the K St V Arminia Bonn in Bonn He graduated in 1900 5 and afterwards worked as a lawyer at the court in Cologne 7 Leader in Cologne Edit Bond of the City of Cologne issued 1 October 1928 Faksimile signature of Adenauer In Wilhelmshaven in 1928 when a new cruiser was given the name of Koln Cologne home city of Adenauer centre with left hand visible next to him Lieutenant General Wilhelm Groener and Gustav Noske Heinrich Hoerle Zeitgenossen contemporaries A 1931 modernist painting with mayor Adenauer in grey together with artists and a boxer As a devout Catholic he joined the Centre Party German Deutsche Zentrumspartei or just Zentrum in 1906 and was elected to Cologne s city council in the same year In 1909 he became Vice Mayor of Cologne an industrial metropolis with a population of 635 000 in 1914 Avoiding the extreme political movements that attracted so many of his generation Adenauer was committed to bourgeois decency diligence order Christian morals and values and was dedicated to rooting out disorder inefficiency irrationality and political immorality 8 From 1917 to 1933 he served as Mayor of Cologne and became a member of the Prussian House of Lords Adenauer headed Cologne during World War I working closely with the army to maximize the city s role as a rear base of supply and transportation for the Western Front He paid special attention to the civilian food supply enabling the residents to avoid the worst of the severe shortages that beset most German cities during 1918 19 9 In 1918 he invented a soy based sausage called the Cologne sausage to help feed the city 10 11 In the face of the collapse of the old regime and the threat of revolution and widespread disorder in late 1918 Adenauer maintained control in Cologne using his good working relationship with the Social Democrats In a speech on 1 February 1919 Adenauer called for the dissolution of Prussia and for the Prussian Rhineland to become a new autonomous Land state in the Reich 12 Adenauer claimed this was the only way to prevent France from annexing the Rhineland 12 Both the Reich and Prussian governments were completely against Adenauer s plans for breaking up Prussia 13 When the terms of the Treaty of Versailles were presented to Germany in June 1919 Adenauer again suggested to Berlin his plan for an autonomous Rhineland state and again his plans were rejected by the Reich government 14 He was mayor during the postwar British occupation He established a good working relationship with the British military authorities using them to neutralize the workers and soldiers council that had become an alternative base of power for the city s left wing 15 During the Weimar Republic he was president of the Prussian State Council German Preussischer Staatsrat from 1921 to 1933 which was the representation of the provinces of Prussia in its legislature A major debate had occurred within the Zentrum since 1906 regarding the question of whether the Zentrum should leave the tower i e allow Protestants to join to become a multi faith party or stay in the tower i e continue to be a Catholic only party Adenauer was one of the leading advocates of leaving the tower which led to a dramatic clash between him and Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber at the 1922 Katholikentag the annual meeting of German Catholics where the Cardinal publicly admonished Adenauer for wanting to take the Zentrum out of the tower 16 In mid October 1923 the Chancellor Gustav Stresemann announced that Berlin would cease all financial payments to the Rhineland and that the new Rentenmark which had replaced the now worthless Mark would not circulate in the Rhineland 17 To save the Rhineland economy Adenauer opened talks with the French High Commissioner Paul Tirard in late October 1923 for a Rhenish republic in a sort of economic union with France which would achieve Franco German reconciliation which Adenauer called a grand design 18 At the same time Adenauer clung to the hope that the Rentenmark might still circulate in the Rhineland Adenauer s plans came to naught when Stresemann who was resolutely opposed to Adenauer s grand design which he viewed as borderline treason was able to negotiate an end to the crisis on his own 18 In 1926 the Zentrum suggested that Adenauer become Chancellor an offer that he was interested in but ultimately rejected when the German People s Party insisted that one of the conditions for entering into a coalition under Adenauer s leadership was that Gustav Stresemann stay on as Foreign Minister 19 Adenauer who disliked Stresemann as too Prussian rejected that condition which marked the end of his chance of becoming Chancellor in 1926 20 Years under the Nazi government Edit Nazi Party candidates made significant electoral gains in municipal state and national elections in 1930 and 1932 Adenauer as mayor of Cologne and president of the Prussian State Council still believed that improvements in the national economy would make his strategy work ignore the Nazis and concentrate on the Communist threat Adenauer thought that based on election returns the Nazis should become part of the Prussian and Reich governments even when he was already the target of intense personal attacks 21 Political manoeuvrings around the aging President Hindenburg then brought the Nazis to power on 30 January 1933 By early February Adenauer finally realized the futility of all discussions and any attempts at compromise with the Nazis Cologne s city council and the Prussian parliament had been dissolved on 4 April 1933 he was officially dismissed as mayor and his bank accounts were frozen He had no money no home and no job 22 After arranging for the safety of his family he appealed to the abbot of the Benedictine monastery at Maria Laach for a stay of several months According to Albert Speer in his book Spandau The Secret Diaries Hitler expressed admiration for Adenauer noting his civic projects the building of a road circling the city as a bypass and a green belt of parks However both Hitler and Speer concluded that Adenauer s political views and principles made it impossible for him to play any role in Nazi Germany Adenauer was imprisoned for two days after the Night of the Long Knives on 30 June 1934 however on 10 August 1934 maneuvering for his pension he wrote a ten page letter to Hermann Goring the Prussian interior minister He stated that as Mayor he had violated Prussian laws in order to allow NSDAP events in public buildings and Nazi flags to be flown from city flagpoles and that in 1932 he had declared publicly that the Nazis should join the Reich government in a leading role 23 24 At the end of 1932 Adenauer had indeed demanded a joint government by his Zentrum party and the Nazis for Prussia 25 During the next two years Adenauer changed residences often for fear of reprisals against him while living on the benevolence of friends With the help of lawyers in August 1937 he was successful in claiming a pension he received a cash settlement for his house which had been taken over by the city of Cologne his unpaid mortgage penalties and taxes were waived With reasonable financial security he managed to live in seclusion for some years After the failed assassination attempt on Hitler of July 1944 he was imprisoned for a second time as an opponent of the regime He fell ill and credited Eugen Zander a former municipal worker in Cologne and a communist with saving his life Zander then a section Kapo of a labor camp near Bonn discovered Adenauer s name on a deportation list to the East and managed to get him admitted to a hospital Adenauer was subsequently rearrested as was his wife but in the absence of any evidence against him was released from prison at Brauweiler in November 1944 After World War II and the founding of the CDU Edit Adenauer in 1951 reading in his house in Rhondorf he had built in 1937 It is now a museum Shortly after the war ended the American occupation forces once again installed him as Mayor of Cologne which had been heavily bombed After the city was transferred into the British zone of occupation however the Director of its military government General Gerald Templer dismissed Adenauer for incompetence in December 1945 Adenauer considered the Germans the political equals of the occupying Allies a view that angered Templer 26 Adenauer s dismissal by the British contributed much to his subsequent political success and allowed him to pursue a policy of alliance with the occupying Allies in the 1950s without facing charges of being a sell out After being dismissed Adenauer devoted himself to building a new political party the Christian Democratic Union CDU which he hoped would embrace both Protestants and Catholics in a single party According to Adenauer a Catholic only party would lead to German politics being dominated by anti democratic parties yet again 27 In January 1946 Adenauer initiated a political meeting of the future CDU in the British zone in his role as doyen the oldest man in attendance Altersprasident and was informally confirmed as its leader During the Weimar Republic Adenauer had often been considered a future Chancellor and after 1945 his claims for leadership were even stronger The other surviving Zentrum leaders were considered unsuitable for the tasks that lay ahead 28 Reflecting his background as a Catholic Rhinelander who had long chafed under Prussian rule Adenauer believed that Prussianism was the root cause of National Socialism and that only by driving out Prussianism could Germany become a democracy In a December 1946 letter Adenauer wrote that the Prussian state in the early 19th century had become an almost God like entity that valued state power over the rights of individuals Adenauer s dislike of Prussia even led him to oppose Berlin as a future capital 29 Adenauer viewed the most important battle in the postwar world as between the forces of Christianity and Marxism especially Communism 30 Marxism meant both the Communists and the Social Democrats as the latter were officially a Marxist party until the Bad Godesberg conference of 1959 The same anti Marxist viewpoints led Adenauer to denounce the Social Democrats as the heirs to Prussianism and National Socialism 31 Adenauer s ideology was at odds with many in the CDU who wished to unite socialism and Christianity 32 Adenauer worked diligently at building up contacts and support in the CDU over the following years and he sought with varying success to impose his particular ideology on the party Adenauer s leading role in the CDU of the British zone won him a position at the Parliamentary Council of 1948 which had been called into existence by the Western Allies to draft a constitution for the three western zones of Germany He was the chairman of this constitutional convention and vaulted from this position to being chosen as the first head of government once the new Basic Law had been promulgated in May 1949 Chancellor of West Germany EditFurther information History of Germany 1945 1990 First government Edit Election poster 1949 With Adenauer for peace freedom and unity of Germany therefore CDU The first election to the Bundestag of West Germany was held on 15 August 1949 with the Christian Democrats emerging as the strongest party There were two clashing visions of a future Germany held by Adenauer and his main rival the Social Democrat Kurt Schumacher Adenauer favored integrating the Federal Republic with other Western states especially France and the United States in order to fight the Cold War even if the price of this was the continued division of Germany Schumacher by contrast though an anti communist wanted to see a united socialist and neutral Germany As such Adenauer was in favor of joining NATO something that Schumacher was strongly opposed to The Free Democrat Theodor Heuss was elected the first President of the Republic and Adenauer was elected Chancellor head of government on 15 September 1949 with the support of his own CDU the Christian Social Union the liberal Free Democratic Party and the right wing German Party It was said that Adenauer was elected Chancellor by the new German parliament by a majority of one vote his own 33 At age 73 it was thought that Adenauer would only be a caretaker Chancellor 34 However he would go on to hold this post for 14 years a period spanning most of the preliminary phase of the Cold War During this period the post war division of Germany was consolidated with the establishment of two separate German states the Federal Republic of Germany West Germany and the German Democratic Republic East Germany In the controversial selection for a provisional capital of the Federal Republic of Germany Adenauer championed Bonn over Frankfurt am Main The British had agreed to detach Bonn from their zone of occupation and convert the area to an autonomous region wholly under German sovereignty the Americans were not prepared to grant the same for Frankfurt 35 He also resisted the claims of Heidelberg which had better communications and had survived the war in better condition partly because the Nazis had been popular there before they came to power and partly as he said because the world would not take them seriously if they set up their state in a city that was the setting for The Student Prince at the time a popular American operetta based on the drinking culture of German student fraternities As chancellor Adenauer tended to make most major decisions himself treating his ministers as mere extensions of his authority While this tendency decreased under his successors it established the image of West Germany and later reunified Germany as a chancellor democracy Ending Denazification Edit In a speech on 20 September 1949 Adenauer denounced the entire denazification process pursued by the Allied military governments announcing in the same speech that he was planning to bring in an amnesty law for the Nazi war criminals and he planned to apply to the High Commissioners for a corresponding amnesty for punishments imposed by the Allied military courts 36 Adenauer argued the continuation of denazification would foster a growing and extreme nationalism as the millions who supported the Nazi regime would find themselves excluded from German life forever 37 He also demanded an end to this sniffing out of Nazis 38 By 31 January 1951 the amnesty legislation had benefited 792 176 people They included 3 000 functionaries of the SA the SS and the Nazi Party who participated in dragging victims to jails and camps 20 000 Nazis sentenced for deeds against life presumably murder 30 000 sentenced for causing bodily injury and about 5 200 charged with crimes and misdemeanors in office 39 Opposition to the Oder Neisse Line Edit The Adenauer government refused to accept the Oder Neisse line as Germany s eastern frontier 40 This refusal was in large part motivated by his desire to win the votes of expellees and right wing nationalists to the CDU which is why he supported Heimatrecht i e the right of expellees to return to their former homes 41 It was also intended to be a deal breaker if negotiations ever began to reunite Germany on terms that Adenauer considered unfavorable such as the neutralization of Germany as Adenauer knew well that the Soviets would never revise the Oder Neisse line 41 Privately Adenauer considered Germany s eastern provinces to be lost forever 42 Adenauer speaking in the Bundestag 1955 Advocacy for European Coal and Steel Community Edit At the Petersberg Agreement in November 1949 he achieved some of the first concessions granted by the Allies such as a decrease in the number of factories to be dismantled but in particular his agreement to join the International Authority for the Ruhr led to heavy criticism In the following debate in parliament Adenauer stated The Allies have told me that dismantling would be stopped only if I satisfy the Allied desire for security does the Socialist Party want dismantling to go on to the bitter end 43 44 The opposition leader Kurt Schumacher responded by labeling Adenauer Chancellor of the Allies accusing Adenauer of putting good relations with the West for the sake of the Cold War ahead of German national interests After a year of negotiations the Treaty of Paris was signed on 18 April 1951 establishing the European Coal and Steel Community The treaty was unpopular in Germany where it was seen as a French attempt to take over German industry 45 The treaty conditions were favorable to the French but for Adenauer the only thing that mattered was European integration 46 Adenauer was keen to see Britain join the European Coal and Steel Community as he believed the more free market British would counterbalance the influence of the more dirigiste French and to achieve that purpose he visited London in November 1951 to meet with Prime Minister Winston Churchill 47 Churchill said Britain would not join the European Coal and Steel Community because doing so would mean sacrificing relations with the U S and Commonwealth 48 German Rearmament Edit From the beginning of his Chancellorship Adenauer had been pressing for German rearmament After the outbreak of the Korean War on 25 June 1950 the U S and Britain agreed that West Germany had to be rearmed to strengthen the defenses of Western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion Further contributing to the crisis atmosphere of 1950 was the bellicose rhetoric of the East German leader Walter Ulbricht who proclaimed the reunification of Germany under communist rule to be imminent 49 50 To soothe French fears of German rearmament the French Premier Rene Pleven suggested the so called Pleven plan in October 1950 under which the Federal Republic would have its military forces function as part of the armed wing of the multinational European Defense Community EDC 51 Adenauer deeply disliked the Pleven plan but was forced to support it when it became clear that this plan was the only way the French would agree to German rearmament 52 Adenauer in 1950 at the Ermekeil barracks in Bonn with Adolf Heusinger right one of the authors of the Himmerod memorandum Amnesty and Employment of Nazis Edit In 1950 a major controversy broke out when it emerged that Adenauer s State Secretary Hans Globke had played a major role in drafting anti semitic Nuremberg Race Laws in Nazi Germany 53 Adenauer kept Globke on as State Secretary as part of his strategy of integration 54 Starting in August 1950 Adenauer began to pressure the Western Allies to free all of the war criminals in their custody especially those from the Wehrmacht whose continued imprisonment he claimed made West German rearmament impossible 55 Adenauer had been opposed to the Nuremberg Trials in 1945 46 and after becoming Chancellor he demanded the release of the so called Spandau Seven as the seven war criminals convicted at Nuremberg and imprisoned at Spandau Prison were known 56 In October 1950 Adenauer received the so called Himmerod memorandum drafted by four former Wehrmacht generals at the Himmerod Abbey that linked freedom for German war criminals as the price of German rearmament along with public statements from the Allies that the Wehrmacht committed no war crimes in World War II 57 The Allies were willing to do whatever necessary to get the much needed German rearmament underway and in January 1951 General Dwight Eisenhower commander of NATO forces issued a statement which declared the great majority of the Wehrmacht had acted honorably 58 On 2 January 1951 Adenauer met with the American High Commissioner John J McCloy to argue that executing the Landsberg prisoners would ruin forever any effort at having the Federal Republic play its role in the Cold War 59 At the time American occupation authorities had 28 Nazi war criminals left on death row in their custody In response to Adenauer s demands and pressure from the German public McCloy and Thomas T Handy on 31 January 1951 reduced the death sentences of all but the 7 worst offenders 60 By 1951 laws were passed by the Bundestag ending denazification Denazification was viewed by the United States as counterproductive and ineffective and its demise was not opposed 61 Adenauer s intention was to switch government policy to reparations and compensation for the victims of Nazi rule Wiedergutmachung 62 63 Officials were allowed to retake jobs in civil service with the exception of people assigned to Group I Major Offenders and II Offenders during the denazification review process 63 64 Adenauer pressured his rehabilitated ex Nazis by threatening that stepping out of line could trigger the reopening of individual de Nazification prosecutions The construction of a competent Federal Government effectively from a standing start was one of the greatest of Adenauer s formidable achievements 65 Contemporary critics accused Adenauer of cementing the division of Germany sacrificing reunification and the recovery of territories lost in the westward shift of Poland and the Soviet Union with his determination to secure the Federal Republic to the West Adenauer s German policy was based upon Politik der Starke Policy of Strength and upon the so called magnet theory in which a prosperous democratic West Germany integrated with the West would act as a magnet that would eventually bring down the East German regime 66 Rejecting the Reunification Offer Edit In 1952 the Stalin Note as it became known caught everybody in the West by surprise 67 It offered to unify the two German entities into a single neutral state with its own non aligned national army to effect superpower disengagement from Central Europe Adenauer and his cabinet were unanimous in their rejection of the Stalin overture they shared the Western Allies suspicion about the genuineness of that offer and supported the Allies in their cautious replies Adenauer s flat rejection was however still out of step with public opinion he then realized his mistake and he started to ask questions Critics denounced him for having missed an opportunity for German reunification The Soviets sent a second note courteous in tone Adenauer by then understood that all opportunity for initiative had passed out of his hands 68 and the matter was put to rest by the Allies Given the realities of the Cold War German reunification and recovery of lost territories in the east were not realistic goals as both of Stalin s notes specified the retention of the existing Potsdam decreed boundaries of Germany Adenauer with Israeli President Zalman Shazar 1966 Reparation to victims of Nazi Germany Edit Adenauer recognized the obligation of the West German government to compensate Israel as the main representative of the Jewish people for The Holocaust failed verification West Germany started negotiations with Israel for restitution of lost property and the payment of damages to victims of Nazi persecution In the Luxemburger Abkommen West Germany agreed to pay compensation to Israel Jewish claims were bundled in the Jewish Claims Conference which represented the Jewish victims of Nazi Germany West Germany then initially paid about 3 billion Mark to Israel and about 450 million to the Claims Conference although payments continued after that as new claims were made 69 In the face of severe opposition both from the public and from his own cabinet Adenauer was only able to get the reparations agreement ratified by the Bundestag with the support of the SPD 70 Israeli public opinion was divided over accepting the money but ultimately the fledgling state under David Ben Gurion agreed to take it opposed by more radical groups like Irgun who were against such treaties Those treaties were cited as a main reason for the assassination attempt by the radical Jewish groups against Adenauer 71 Assassination Attempt Edit On 27 March 1952 a package addressed to Chancellor Adenauer exploded in the Munich Police Headquarters killing one Bavarian police officer Karl Reichert 72 Investigations revealed the mastermind behind the assassination attempt was Menachem Begin who would later become the Prime Minister of Israel 73 Begin had been the commander of Irgun and at that time headed Herut and was a member of the Knesset His goal was to put pressure on the German government and prevent the signing of the Reparations Agreement between Israel and West Germany which he vehemently opposed 74 The West German government kept all proof under seal in order to prevent antisemitic responses from the German public Second government Edit Man of the Year Adenauer on the cover of Time 4 January 1954 When the East German uprising of 1953 was harshly suppressed by the Red Army in June 1953 Adenauer took political advantage of the situation and was handily re elected to a second term as Chancellor 75 The CDU CSU came up one seat short of an outright majority Adenauer could thus have governed in a coalition with only one other party but retained gained the support of nearly all of the parties in the Bundestag that were to the right of the SPD For all of his efforts as West Germany s leader Adenauer was named Time magazine s Man of the Year in 1953 In 1954 he received the Karlspreis English Charlemagne Award an award by the German city of Aachen to people who contributed to the European idea European cooperation and European peace The German Restitution Laws Bundesentschadigungsgesetz were passed in 1953 that allowed some victims of Nazi prosecution to claim restitution 76 Under the 1953 restitution law those who had suffered for racial religious or political reasons could collect compensation which were defined in such a way as to sharply limit the number of people entitled to collect compensation 77 In the spring of 1954 opposition to the Pleven plan grew within the French National Assembly 78 The British Prime Minister Winston Churchill told Adenauer that Britain would ensure that West German rearmament would happen regardless if the National Assembly ratified the EDC treaty or not 79 In August 1954 the Pleven plan died when an alliance of conservatives and Communists in the National Assembly joined forces to reject the EDC treaty under the grounds that West German rearmament in any form was an unacceptable danger to France 80 Signing the North Atlantic Treaty in Paris 1954 Adenauer at the left British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden used the failure of the EDC to argue for independent West German rearmament and West German NATO membership 80 Thanks in part to Adenauer s success in rebuilding West Germany s image the British proposal met with considerable approval 80 In the ensuing London conference Eden assisted Adenauer by promising the French that Britain would always maintain at least four divisions in the British Army of the Rhine as long as there was a Soviet threat with the strengthened British forces also aimed implicitly against any German revanchism 81 Adenauer then promised that Germany would never seek to have nuclear chemical and biological weapons as well as capital ships strategic bombers long range artillery and guided missiles although these promises were non binding 81 The French had been assuaged that West German rearmament would be no threat to France Additionally Adenauer promised that the West German military would be under the operational control of NATO general staff though ultimate control would rest with the West German government and that above all he would never violate the strictly defensive NATO charter and invade East Germany to achieve German reunification 82 Minister Blank and Adenauer with General Speidel inspect formations of the newly created Bundeswehr on 20 January 1955 In May 1955 West Germany joined NATO and in November a West German military the Bundeswehr was founded 80 Though Adenauer made use of a number of former Wehrmacht generals and admirals in the Bundeswehr he saw the Bundeswehr as a new force with no links to the past and wanted it to be kept under civilian control at all times 83 To achieve these aims Adenauer gave a great deal of power to the military reformer Wolf Graf von Baudissin 84 In November 1954 Adenauer s lobbying efforts on behalf of the Spandau Seven finally bore fruit with the release of Konstantin von Neurath 85 Adenauer congratulated Neurath on his release sparking controversy all over the world 86 At the same time Adenauer s efforts to win freedom for Admiral Karl Donitz ran into staunch opposition from the British Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office Ivone Kirkpatrick who argued Donitz would be an active danger to German democracy 87 Adenauer then traded with Kirkpatrick no early release for Admiral Donitz with an early release for Admiral Erich Raeder on medical grounds 88 Konrad Adenauer with minister of economics Ludwig Erhard 1956 Adenauer acted more leniently towards the trade unions and employers associations than Erhard Adenauer s achievements include the establishment of a stable democracy in West Germany and a lasting reconciliation with France culminating in the Elysee Treaty His political commitment to the Western powers achieved full sovereignty for West Germany which was formally laid down in the General Treaty although there remained Allied restrictions concerning the status of a potentially reunited Germany and the state of emergency in West Germany Adenauer firmly integrated the country with the emerging Euro Atlantic community NATO and the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation Adenauer is closely linked to the implementation of an enhanced pension system which ensured unparalleled prosperity for retired people Along with his Minister for Economic Affairs and successor Ludwig Erhard the West German model of a social market economy a mixed economy with capitalism moderated by elements of social welfare and Catholic social teaching allowed for the boom period known as the Wirtschaftswunder economic miracle that produced broad prosperity The Adenauer era witnessed a dramatic rise in the standard of living of average Germans with real wages doubling between 1950 and 1963 This rising affluence was accompanied by a 20 fall in working hours during that same period together with a fall in the unemployment rate from 8 in 1950 to 0 4 in 1965 89 in addition an advanced welfare state was established 90 Nikita Khrushchev and other Soviet leaders greeting Adenauer in Moscow in September 1955 In return for the release of the last German prisoners of war in 1955 the Federal Republic established diplomatic relations with the USSR but refused to recognize East Germany and broke off diplomatic relations with countries e g Yugoslavia that established relations with the East German regime 91 Adenauer was also ready to consider the Oder Neisse line as the German border in order to pursue a more flexible policy with Poland but he did not command sufficient domestic support for this and opposition to the Oder Neisse line continued causing considerable disappointment among Adenauer s Western allies 92 In 1956 during the Suez Crisis Adenauer fully supported the Anglo French Israeli attack on Egypt arguing to his Cabinet that Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser was a pro Soviet force that needed to be cut down to size 93 Adenauer was appalled that the Americans had come out against the attack on Egypt alongside the Soviets which led Adenauer to fear that the United States and Soviet Union would carve up the world with no thought for European interests 94 Adenauer with the mother of a German POW brought home in 1955 from the Soviet Union due to Adenauer s visit to Moscow At the height of the Suez crisis Adenauer visited Paris to meet the French Premier Guy Mollet in a show of moral support for France 95 The day before Adenauer arrived in Paris the Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin sent the so called Bulganin letters to the leaders of Britain France and Israel threatening nuclear strikes if they did not end the war against Egypt 95 The news of the Bulganin letters reached Adenauer mid way on the train trip to Paris The threat of a Soviet nuclear strike that could destroy Paris at any moment added considerably to the tension of the summit 96 The Paris summit helped to strengthen the bond between Adenauer and the French who saw themselves as fellow European powers living in a world dominated by Washington and Moscow 97 Adenauer was deeply shocked by the Soviet threat of nuclear strikes against Britain and France and even more so by the apparent quiescent American response to the Soviet threat of nuclear annihilation against two of NATO s key members 98 As a result Adenauer became more interested in the French idea of a European Third Force in the Cold War as an alternative security policy 99 This helped to lead to the formation of the European Economic Community in 1957 which was intended to be the foundation stone of the European Third Force 100 Adenauer reached an agreement for his nuclear ambitions with a NATO Military Committee in December 1956 that stipulated West German forces were to be equipped for nuclear warfare 101 Concluding that the United States would eventually pull out of Western Europe Adenauer pursued nuclear cooperation with other countries The French government then proposed that France West Germany and Italy jointly develop and produce nuclear weapons and delivery systems and an agreement was signed in April 1958 With the ascendancy of Charles de Gaulle the agreement for joint production and control was shelved indefinitely 102 President John F Kennedy an ardent foe of nuclear proliferation considered sales of such weapons moot since in the event of war the United States would from the outset be prepared to defend the Federal Republic 103 The physicists of the Max Planck Institute for Theoretical Physics at Gottingen and other renowned universities would have had the scientific capability for in house development but the will was absent 104 nor was there public support With Adenauer s fourth term election in November 1961 and the end of his chancellorship in sight his nuclear ambitions began to taper off Third government Edit Adenauer with French president Charles de Gaulle at the Cologne Bonn Airport in 1961 In 1957 the Saarland was reintegrated into Germany as a federal state of the Federal Republic The election of 1957 essentially dealt with national matters 104 His re election campaign centered around the slogan No Experiments 34 Riding a wave of popularity from the return of the last POWs from Soviet labor camps as well as an extensive pension reform Adenauer led the CDU CSU to an outright majority in a free German election 105 In 1957 the Federal Republic signed the Treaty of Rome and became a founding member of the European Economic Community In September 1958 Adenauer first met President Charles de Gaulle of France who was to become a close friend and ally in pursuing Franco German rapprochement 106 Adenauer saw de Gaulle as a rock and the only foreign leader whom he could completely trust 107 In response to the Ulm Einsatzkommando trial in 1958 Adenauer set up the Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes 108 On 27 November 1958 another Berlin crisis broke out when Khrushchev submitted an ultimatum with a six month expiry date to Washington London and Paris where he demanded that the Allies pull all their forces out of West Berlin and agree that West Berlin become a free city or else he would sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany 109 Adenauer was opposed to any sort of negotiations with the Soviets arguing if only the West were to hang tough long enough Khrushchev would back down 110 As the 27 May deadline approached the crisis was defused by the British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan who visited Moscow to meet with Khrushchev and managed to extend the deadline while not committing himself or the other Western powers to concessions 111 Adenauer believed Macmillan to be a spineless appeaser who had made a secret deal with Khrushchev at the expense of the Federal Republic 112 113 Adenauer visiting a refugee kindergarten in Berlin in 1958 Adenauer and Italian Prime Minister Antonio Segni in August 1959 Adenauer tarnished his image when he announced he would run for the office of federal president in 1959 only to pull out when he discovered that under the Basic Law the president had far less power than he did in the Weimar Republic After his reversal he supported the nomination of Heinrich Lubke as the CDU presidential candidate whom he believed weak enough not to interfere with his actions as Federal Chancellor One of Adenauer s reasons for not pursuing the presidency was his fear that Ludwig Erhard whom Adenauer thought little of would become the new chancellor By early 1959 Adenauer came under renewed pressure from his Western allies to recognize the Oder Neisse line with the Americans being especially insistent 114 Adenauer gave his explicit and unconditional approval to the idea of non aggression pacts in late January 1959 which effectively meant recognising the Oder Neisse line since realistically speaking Germany could only regain the lost territories through force After Adenauer s intention to sign non aggression pacts with Poland and Czechoslovakia became clear the German expellee lobby swung into action and organized protests all over the Federal Republic while bombarding the offices of Adenauer and other members of the cabinet with thousands of letters telegrams and telephone calls promising never to vote CDU again if the non aggression pacts were signed 115 Faced with this pressure Adenauer promptly capitulated to the expellee lobby 115 In late 1959 a controversy broke out when it emerged that Theodor Oberlander the Minister of Refugees since 1953 and one of the most powerful leaders of the expellee lobby had committed war crimes against Jews and Poles during World War II 116 Despite his past on 10 December 1959 a statement was released to the press declaring that Dr Oberlander has the full confidence of the Adenauer cabinet 117 Other Christian Democrats made it clear to Adenauer that they would like to see Oberlander out of the cabinet and finally in May 1960 Oberlander resigned 118 Fourth government Edit U S president John F Kennedy visiting Adenauer at the Hammerschmidt Villa In 1961 Adenauer had his concerns about both the status of Berlin and US leadership confirmed as the Soviets and East Germans built the Berlin Wall Adenauer had come into the year distrusting the new US president John F Kennedy He doubted Kennedy s commitment to a free Berlin and a unified Germany and considered him undisciplined and naive 119 For his part Kennedy thought that Adenauer was a relic of the past Their strained relationship impeded effective Western action on Berlin during 1961 120 The construction of the Berlin Wall in August 1961 and the sealing of borders by the East Germans made Adenauer s government look weak Adenauer chose to remain on the campaign trail and made a disastrous misjudgement in a speech on 14 August 1961 in Regensburg when he engaged in a personal attack on the SPD Mayor of West Berlin Willy Brandt saying that Brandt s illegitimate birth had disqualified him from holding any sort of office 121 After failing to keep their majority in the general election on 17 September the CDU CSU again needed to include the FDP in a coalition government Adenauer was forced to make two concessions to relinquish the chancellorship before the end of the new term his fourth and to replace his foreign minister 122 In his last years in office Adenauer used to take a nap after lunch and when he was traveling abroad and had a public function to attend he sometimes asked for a bed in a room close to where he was supposed to be speaking so that he could rest briefly before he appeared 123 Berlin plaque commemorating restoration of relations between Germany and France showing Adenauer and Charles de Gaulle During this time Adenauer came into conflict with the Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard over the depth of German integration to the West Erhard was in favor of allowing Britain to join to create a trans Atlantic free trade zone while Adenauer was for strengthening ties amongst the original founding six nations of West Germany France the Netherlands Belgium Luxembourg and Italy 124 In Adenauer s viewpoint the Cold War meant that the NATO alliance with the United States and Britain was essential but there could be no deeper integration into a trans Atlantic community beyond the existing military ties as that would lead to a mishmash between different cultural systems that would be doomed to failure 125 Though Adenauer had tried to get Britain to join the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951 52 by the early 1960s Adenauer had come to share General de Gaulle s belief that Britain simply did not belong in the EEC 126 The Elysee Treaty was signed in January 1963 to solidify relations with France In October 1962 a scandal erupted when police arrested five Der Spiegel journalists charging them with espionage for publishing a memo detailing weaknesses in the West German armed forces Adenauer had not initiated the arrests but initially defended the person responsible Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss and called the Spiegel memo abyss of treason After public outrage and heavy protests from the coalition partner FDP he dismissed Strauss but the reputation of Adenauer and his party had already suffered 127 128 Adenauer delivering a speech at the March 1966 CDU party rally one year before his death Adenauer managed to remain in office for almost another year but the scandal increased the pressure already on him to fulfill his promise to resign before the end of the term Adenauer was not on good terms in his last years of power with his economics minister Ludwig Erhard and tried to block him from the chancellorship In January 1963 Adenauer privately supported General Charles de Gaulle s veto of Britain s attempt to join the European Economic Community and was only prevented from saying so openly by the need to preserve unity in his cabinet as most of his ministers led by Erhard supported Britain s application 129 A Francophile Adenauer saw a Franco German partnership as the key for European peace and prosperity and shared de Gaulle s view that Britain would be a disputative force in the EEC 130 Adenauer failed in his efforts to block Erhard as his successor and in October 1963 he turned the office over to Erhard He remained chairman of the CDU until his resignation in December 1966 131 Adenauer ensured a generally free and democratic society except the banning of the communist party and the BND spying on SPD on behalf of the CDU see Intelligence services and spying and laid the groundwork for Germany to re enter the community of nations and to evolve as a dependable member of the Western world It can be argued that because of Adenauer s policies a later reunification of both German states was possible and unified Germany has remained a solid partner in the European Union and NATO The British historian Frederick Taylor argued that in many ways the Adenauer era was a transition period in values and viewpoints from the authoritarianism that characterized Germany in the first half of the 20th century to the more democratic values that characterized the western half of Germany in the second half of the 20th century 132 Social policies Edit Adenauer s years in the Chancellorship saw the realization of a number of important initiatives in the domestic field such as in housing pension rights and unemployment provision A major housebuilding programme was launched while measures introduced to assist war victims 133 and expellees 134 A savings scheme for homeownership was set up in 1952 135 while the Housebuilding Act of 1956 reinforced incentives for owner occupation Employer funded child allowances for three or more children were established in 1954 and in 1957 the indexation of pension schemes was introduced together with an old age assistance scheme for agricultural workers 136 The 1952 Maternity Leave Law foresaw 12 weeks of paid leave for working mothers who were also safeguarded from unfair dismissal 137 and improvements in unemployment benefits were carried out 138 The Soldiers Law of 1956 laid down that soldiers had the same rights as other citizens limited only by the demands of military service 139 Following a Federal Act of 1961 social assistance provided a safety net of minimum income for those not adequately catered for by social insurance 140 Controversially however a school lunch programme was abolished in 1950 141 Intelligence services and spying Edit By the early 1960s connections between the CDU under Adenauer and the intelligence services Bundesnachrichtendienst BND had become significantly closer than would be generally known until more than 50 years later Thanks to the BND information on the internal machinations of the opposition SPD party were available to the entire CDU leadership and not merely to Adenauer in his capacity as chancellor It was Adenauer himself who personally instructed the BND to spy on his SPD rival the future chancellor Willy Brandt 142 Death and legacy Edit Funeral service for Adenauer in Cologne Cathedral Crowds look on as Adenauer s remains are conveyed along the Rhine Adenauer s grave in Rhondorf The monument Homage to the Founding Fathers of Europe in front of Robert Schuman s house in Scy Chazelles by Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli unveiled 20 October 2012 The statues represent the four founders of the European Communities Alcide De Gasperi Robert Schuman Jean Monnet and Konrad Adenauer Adenauer died on 19 April 1967 in his family home at Rhondorf According to his daughter his last words were Da jitt et nix zo kriesche pronounced dɔ ˈjɪdet nɪks tse ˈkʁiːʃe what does mean Cologne dialect for There s nothin to weep about 143 Adenauer s state funeral in Cologne Cathedral was attended by a large number of international guests One hundred countries were represented 144 they included 145 NATO Secretary General Manlio Brosio President Walter Hallstein from the European Commission President Lyndon B Johnson from the United States 145 President Charles de Gaulle from France Prime Minister Aldo Moro from Italy Prime Minister Pierre Werner from Luxembourg President Heinrich Lubke Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger from West Germany Prime Minister Jens Otto Krag from Denmark Prime Minister Tage Erlander from Sweden Chancellor Josef Klaus from Austria Prime Minister Harold Wilson former prime minister Harold Macmillan from the United Kingdom High Commissioner Vijaya Pandit from IndiaThe funeral marked the first meeting between LBJ and de Gaulle since the state funeral of John F Kennedy in Washington 145 After the Requiem Mass and service his remains were taken upstream to Rhondorf on the Rhine aboard the Seeadler class fast attack craft Kondor of the German Navy with two more Seeadler and Sperber as escorts past the thousands who stood in silence on both banks of the river 146 He is interred at the Waldfriedhof Forest Cemetery at Rhondorf 147 When in 1967 after his death at the age of 91 Germans were asked what they admired most about Adenauer the majority responded that he had brought home the last German prisoners of war from the USSR which had become known as the Return of the 10 000 c In 2003 Adenauer was voted the greatest German of all time in a contest called Unsere Besten Our Best run on German public service television broadcaster ZDF in which more than three million votes were cast 149 Adenauer was the main motive for one of the most recent and famous gold commemorative coins the Belgian 3 pioneers of the European unification commemorative coin minted in 2002 The obverse side shows a portrait with the names Robert Schuman Paul Henri Spaak and Konrad Adenauer the three most important figures of the founding fathers of the European Union 150 better source needed Distinctions EditThis is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources National orders Edit West Germany Grand Cross Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany January 1954 Prussia 4th class of the Order of the Red Eagle 1918 Bavaria Bavarian Order of Merit May 1958 Foreign orders Edit Holy See Supreme Order of Christ September 1963 151 Order of the Golden Spur December 1955 Honorary Knight of the Teutonic Order 1958 Grand Cross of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre 1964 France Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 1962 152 Spain Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic 1967 153 Austria Grand Decoration of Honour of the Order for Services to the Republic of Austria first Austrian republic 1927 Grand Decoration of Honour in Gold with Sash for Services to the Republic of Austria 1956 154 Italy Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic 1953 United Kingdom Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George 1956 153 155 Netherlands Order of the Netherlands Lion 1960 Sovereign Military Order of Malta Knight of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta 1951 Brazil Order of the Southern Cross July 1953 Argentina Order of the Liberator General San Martin Peru Order of the Sun 1953 153 Bolivia Order of the Condor of the Andes 1955 153 Japan Order of the Rising Sun Grand Cordon 1960 153 because of his long standing commitment to an understanding of the Japanese German friendship and for the peace and prosperity in the world Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flowers Grand Cordon 1963 153 Portugal Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Christ 24 January 1956 156 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Tower and Sword 1 October 1963 157 Awards Edit Charlemagne Prize Aachen May 1954 as a powerful promoter of a united Europe Man of the Year by the Time magazine 1953 See also EditList of German inventors and discoverersNotes Edit Due to the division of Germany Konrad Adenauer was not an all German Chancellor despite his legal title The term West Germany is the common English name for the Federal Republic of Germany in the period between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany on 3 October 1990 E g Beji Caid Essebsi was Tunisian president 2014 2019 from age 88 to 92 and Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad 2018 2020 was in office aged 92 to 94 Italian president Giorgio Napolitano who turned 88 in 2013 and remained in office until 2015 age 89 was merely a titular leader and did not run the government of Italy The 10 000 returnees were Wehrmacht personnel and some civilians convicted by Soviet Military Tribunals of war crimes Among those returned in 1955 were Luftwaffe fighter ace Erich Hartmann Generals Leopold von Babenhausen Friedrich Foertsch Walther von Seydlitz Kurzbach and Hitler s personal pilot Hans Baur 148 References Edit 11 10 63 10 45 Herr Bundeskanzler zu Herrn Bundesprasident Ubergabe des Rucktrittsschreibens Adenauer surrenders his letter of resignation to the head of state Konrad Adenauer Stiftung in German Archived from the original on 13 July 2018 Retrieved 19 April 2017 Konrad Adenauer 1876 1967 Richard Hiscocks The Adenauer era 1975 p 290 Jenkins Roy 1993 Portraits and Miniatures A amp C Black p 56 ISBN 9781448202881 a b David W Del Testa ed 2001 Adenauer Konrad Government Leaders Military Rulers and Political Activists Westport CT Oryx Press p 4 Archived from the original on 13 March 2020 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Jenkins Roy Portraits and Miniatures London Bloomsbury Reader 2012 p 81 Lebenslauf Ein kurzer Uberblick in German Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Archived from the original on 3 August 2017 Retrieved 28 December 2017 Schwarz 1995 p 94 Schwarz 1995 pp 97 99 Rene Schlott 5 January 2015 Konrad das Brot GB patent 131402 Improvements in the Composition and Manufacture of Sausage Meat and the like published 1918 06 26 a b Epstein 1967 p 539 Epstein 1967 pp 539 540 Epstein 1967 pp 540 541 Schwarz 1995 pp 128 131 Mitchell 2012 p 20 Epstein 1967 pp 541 542 a b Epstein 1967 p 542 Jenkins Roy Portraits and Miniatures London Bloomsbury Reader 2012 p 88 Jenkins Roy Portraits and Miniatures London Bloomsbury Reader 2012 pp 81 88 Williams 2001 p 201 Williams 2001 p 212 Cited by Peter Koch Adenauer Reinbek 1985 Letter to the Prussian Interior Minister of 10 August 1934 after his firing available online in http www konrad adenauer de index php msg 10045 Additional letter of 18 September 1962 that confirms the content of the 1934 letter both reproduced in Delmer Sefton Die Deutschen und ich Hamburg 1963 S 751 1962 Faksimilie 752 60 1934 Augstein Rudolf 29 September 1986 Ein Hohenzoller oder meinetwegen auch Hitler Der Spiegel in German Schwarz 1995 pp 321 323 Schwarz 1995 pp 335 337 Schwarz 1995 pp 344 346 Mitchell 2012 pp 96 97 Mitchell 2012 p 132 Mitchell 2012 p 133 Williams 2001 p 307 Kellen Konrad January 1966 Adenauer at 90 Foreign Affairs 44 2 275 290 doi 10 2307 20039164 JSTOR 20039164 Retrieved 6 July 2014 a b Frum David 2000 How We Got Here The 1970s New York New York Basic Books p 8 ISBN 0 465 04195 7 Williams 2001 p 340 Frei 2002 p 3 Herf 1997 p 217 Beste Ralf Bonisch Georg Darnstaedt Thomas Friedmann Jan Frohlingsdorf Michael Wiegrefe Klaus 6 March 2012 From Dictatorship to Democracy The Role Ex Nazis Played in Early West Germany Der Spiegel Amnesty and Amnesia By Jeffrey Herf March 10 2003 Adenauer s Germany Nazi Past The Politics of Amnesty and Integration By Norbert Frei Duffy Christopher Red Storm on the Reich Routledge London 1991 page 302 a b Schwarz 1995 p 638 Ahonen 1998 p 48 sfn error no target CITEREFAhonen1998 help A Good European Time 5 December 1949 Schwarz 1995 p 450 Schwarz 1995 p 608 Schwarz 1995 p 612 Schwarz 1995 pp 612 613 Schwarz 1995 p 613 Gaddis 1998 p 124 Large 1996 p 66 Gaddis 1998 p 125 Schwarz 1995 pp 592 594 Tetens T H The New Germany and the Old Nazis New York Random House 1961 pages 37 40 Herf 1997 pp 289 290 Goda 2007 pp 101 149 Goda 2007 p 149 Large 1996 pp 97 98 Bickford Andrew Fallen Elites The Military Other in Post Unification Germany Stanford 2011 pages 116 117 Frei 2002 p 157 Frei 2002 pp 164 165 The Nazi ferreting questionnaire cited 136 mandatory reasons for exclusion from employment and created red tape nightmares for both the hapless and the guilty see The New York Times 22 February 2003 p A7 Steinweis Alan E Rogers Daniel E The Impact of Nazism New Perspectives on the Third Reich and Its Legacy Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 2003 p 235 a b Art David The politics of the Nazi past in Germany and Austria Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2005 pp 53 55 Gesetz zur Regelung der Rechtsverhaltnisse der unter Artikel 131 des Grundgesetzes fallenden Personen Bundesgesetzblatt I 22 1951 p 307 ff in German 11 May 1951 Williams 2001 p 391 Large 1996 p 70 Williams 2001 p 376 Williams 2001 p 378 Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung Wiedergutmachung Moeller Robert War Stories The Search for a Usable Past in the Federal Republic of Germany Los Angeles University of California Press 2001 pages 26 27 Harding Luke 15 June 2006 Menachem Begin plotted to kill German chancellor The Guardian London Gehler Michael 1 October 2010 Three Germanies West Germany East Germany and the Berlin Republic Illustrated paperback ed Reaktion Books p 62 ISBN 978 1861897787 Interview with H Sietz investigator German Archived from the original on 20 June 2006 Retrieved 15 June 2006 Harding Luke 15 June 2006 Menachem Begin plotted to kill German chancellor The Guardian London Williams 2001 p 406 Bundesgesetz zur Entschadigung fur Opfer der nationalsozialistischen Verfolgung Ludtke Alf Coming to Terms with the Past Illusions of Remembering Ways of Forgetting Nazism in West Germany pages 542 572 from The Journal of Modern History Volume 65 1993 pages 564 Large 1996 p 209 Large 1996 p 211 a b c d Gaddis 1998 p 134 a b Large 1996 p 217 Large 1996 p 220 Fritz Erler Politik und nicht Prestige in Erler and Jaeger Sicherheit und Rustung 1962 p 82 3 cited in Julian Lider Origins and Development of West German Military Thought Vol I 1949 1966 Gower Publishing Company Ltd Aldershot Brookfield VT 1986 p 125 Large 1996 pp 177 178 Goda 2007 pp 129 131 Goda 2007 pp 130 131 Goda 2007 pp 149 151 Goda 2007 pp 152 155 Contemporary World History by William J Duiker The Emergence of the Welfare State in Britain and Germany edited by Wolfgang Mommsen Williams 2001 p 450 this principle became known as the Hallstein Doctrine Ahonen 1998 pp 44 46 sfn error no target CITEREFAhonen1998 help Schwarz 1997 pp 241 242 Schwarz 1997 p 242 a b Schwarz 1997 p 243 Schwarz 1997 p 244 Schwarz 1997 p 245 Dietl Ralph Suez 1956 A European Intervention pp 259 273 from Journal of Contemporary History Volume 43 Issue 2 April 2008 p 273 Dietl Ralph Suez 1956 A European Intervention pp 259 273 from Journal of Contemporary History Volume 43 Issue 2 April 2008 pp 273 274 Dietl Ralph Suez 1956 A European Intervention pp 259 273 from Journal of Contemporary History Volume 43 Issue 2 April 2008 p 274 Williams 2001 p 442 Williams 2001 p 458 Williams 2001 p 490 a b Williams 2001 p 444 Williams 2001 p 445 Schwarz 1997 pp 365 366 Schwarz 1997 pp 402 403 Taylor Frederick Exorcising Hitler London Bloomsbury Press 2011 page 373 Gaddis 1998 p 140 Schwarz 1997 p 399 Gaddis 1998 p 141 Thorpe D R Supermac London Chatto amp Windus 2010 page 428 Schwarz 1997 p 396 Ahonen 1998 p 56 sfn error no target CITEREFAhonen1998 help a b Ahonen 1998 p 59 sfn error no target CITEREFAhonen1998 help Tetens T H The New Germany and the Old Nazis New York Random House 1961 pages 191 192 Tetens T H The New Germany and the Old Nazis New York Random House 1961 page 192 Tetens T H The New Germany and the Old Nazis New York Random House 1961 pages 192 193 Kempe Frederick 2011 Berlin 1961 Penguin Group USA p 98 ISBN 978 0 399 15729 5 Kempe Frederick 2011 Berlin 1961 Penguin Group USA p 101 ISBN 978 0 399 15729 5 Granieri 2004 p 135 Williams 2001 p 494 Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano was considered too subservient to the Chancellor and Gerhard Schroder became foreign minister Williams p 495 John Gunther Inside Europe Today Harper and Brothers New York 1961 Library of Congress catalog card number 61 9706 Granieri 2004 p 153 Granieri 2004 pp 154 155 Granieri 2004 p 155 Eleanor L Turk The history of Germany 1999 p 154 Ronald F Bunn German politics and the Spiegel affair a case study of the Bonn system 1968 pp 159 60 Jenkins Roy Portraits and Miniatures London Bloomsbury Reader 2012 p 83 Jenkins Roy Portraits and Miniatures London Bloomsbury Reader 2012 p 97 Granieri 2004 p 191 Taylor Frederick Exorcising Hitler London Bloomsbury Press 2011 page 371 Shouldering the Burdens of Defeat West Germany and the Reconstruction of Social Justice The University of North Carolina Press 1999 p 87 ISBN 9780807824948 Germans as Victims Remembering the Past in Contemporary Germany Palgrave Macmillan 2006 ISBN 9781137138729 permanent dead link Bridging the Gap Between Social and Market Rented Housing in Six European countries Delft University Press 2009 p 154 ISBN 9781607500353 The Federal Republic of Germany The End of an era edited by Eva Kolinsky The Politics of Parental Leave Policies Children Parenting Gender and the labour market The Policy Press 2009 p 121 ISBN 9781847429032 Politics of Segmentation Party Competition and Social Protection in Europe Routledge 2012 ISBN 9781136476815 Childs David Johnson Jeffrey 1981 West Germany RLE German Politics Politics and Society p 195 ISBN 9781317537601 Hill Malcolm 1996 Social Work and the European Community The Social Policy and Practice Contexts p 184 ISBN 9781853020919 Matters of taste The Politics of Food in Divided Germany 1945 1971 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 klw 29 April 2017 Spionage fur die CDU Zeitgeschichte Der Spiegel 18 2017 reference is also made to a more detailed article in volume 15 2017 23 Da jitt et nix zo kriesche Der Spiegel 14 May 2009 Foreign Guests Archived 1 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine a b c Head of State Visits LBJ Presidential Library Retrieved 8 November 2022 permanent dead link Williams 2001 p 537 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More than 14000 Famous Persons Scott Wilson Germany and Eastern Europe Since 1945 1973 p 114 Kroeger Alix 29 November 2003 Adenauer voted Germany s greatest BBC News Online Retrieved 31 July 2015 50 Years of the European Coal and Steel 100 Euro 2002 Coinville Konrad Adenauer Orden und Ehrenzeichen Archived 5 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Konrad Adenauer Stiftung de Ehrenlegion a b c d e f Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Archived 18 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Biographie Orden und Ehrenzeichen Archived 5 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Reply to a parliamentary question PDF in German p 26 Retrieved 2 October 2012 Dr Adenauer Grand Cross Catholic Herald 11 January 1957 Retrieved 2 October 2012 ENTIDADES ESTRANGEIRAS AGRACIADAS COM ORDENS PORTUGUESAS Pagina Oficial das Ordens Honorificas Portuguesas Ordem Militar da Torre e Espada Processos de Estrangeiros Konrad Adenauer Chanceler da Republica Federal da Alemanha in Portuguese Arquivo Historico da Presidencia da Republica Retrieved 29 August 2020 Further reading EditBark Dennis L and David R Gress A History of West Germany Vol 1 From Shadow to Substance 1945 1963 Vol 2 Democracy and Its Discontents 1963 1991 1993 a standard scholarly history Brady Steven J Eisenhower and Adenauer Alliance maintenance under pressure 1953 1960 Rowman amp Littlefield 2009 Craig Gordon From Bismarck to Adenauer aspects of German statecraft 1958 pp 124 148 online Craig Gordon A Konrad Adenauer and His Diplomats in The Diplomats 1939 1979 Princeton University Press 2019 pp 201 227 online Cudlipp E Adenauer 1985 online for middle schools Daugherty III Leo J Tip of the Spear The Formation and Expansion of the Bundeswehr 1949 1963 Journal of Slavic Military Studies 24 1 2011 147 177 Donhoff Marion Foe into friend the makers of the new Germany from Konrad Adenauer to Helmut Schmidt 1982 online Dulffer Jost No more Potsdam Konrad Adenauer s Nightmare and the Basis of his International Orientation German Politics and Society 25 2 2007 19 42 Epstein Klaus October 1967 Adenauer and Rhenish Separatism The Review of Politics 29 4 536 545 doi 10 1017 s0034670500040614 S2CID 143511307 Feldman Lily Gardner Germany s Foreign Policy of Reconciliation From Enmity to Amity Rowman amp Littlefield 2012 393 pages on German relations with France Israel Poland and Czechoslovakia the Czech Republic excerpt Frei Norbert 2002 Adenauer s Germany and the Nazi Past The Politics of Amnesty and Integration New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 11882 1 Gaddis John Lewis 1998 We Now Know Rethinking Cold War History New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 878070 0 Goda Norman J W 2007 Tales from Spandau Nazi Criminals and the Cold War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86720 7 Granieri Ronald J 2004 The Ambivalent Alliance Konrad Adenauer the CDU CSU and the West 1949 1966 New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 57181 492 0 Hanrieder Wolfram F Germany America Europe Forty Years of German Foreign Policy 1989 Heidenheimer Arnold J Adenauer and the CDU the Rise of the Leader and the Integration of the Party 1960 Herf Jeffrey 1997 Divided Memory The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 21303 3 Hiscocks Richard The Adenauer Era 1966 online Kleuters Joost Adenauer s Long Shadow in Reunification in West German Party Politics from Westbindung to Ostpolitik Palgrave Macmillan London 2012 pp 107 122 Large David Clay 1996 Germans to the Front West German Rearmament in the Adenauer Era Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4539 6 Maulucci Jr Thomas W Adenauer s Foreign Office West German Diplomacy in the Shadow of the Third Reich 2012 excerpt Merk Dorothea and Rudiger Ahrens Suspicious Federal Chancellor Versus Weak Prime Minister Konrad Adenauer and Harold Macmillan in the British and West German Quality Press during the Berlin Crisis 1958 to 1962 A Critical Discourse Analysis in Europe in Discourse Identity Diversity Borders 2016 pp 101 116 online dead link Mitchell Maria 2012 The Origins of Christian Democracy Politics and Confession in Modern Germany Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 11841 0 Rovan Joseph Konrad Adenauer 1987 182 pages excerpt and text search Schwarz Hans Peter Adenauer s Ostpolitik in West German Foreign Policy 1949 1979 Routledge 2020 pp 127 143 Schwarz Hans Peter 1995 Konrad Adenauer A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War Revolution and Reconstruction Vol 1 From the German Empire to the Federal Republic 1876 1952 Oxford Berghahn Books ISBN 1 57181 870 7 online 1997 Konrad Adenauer A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War Revolution and Reconstruction Vol 2 The Statesman 1952 1967 Providence Berghahn Books ISBN 1 57181 960 6 Schoenborn Benedikt Bargaining with the bear Chancellor Erhard s bid to buy German reunification 1963 64 Cold War History 8 1 2008 23 53 online dead link Schoenborn Benedikt Chancellor Erhard s silent rejection of de Gaulle s plans the example of monetary union Cold War History 14 3 2014 377 402 online dead link Williams Charles 2001 Konrad Adenauer The Father of the New Germany Wiley ISBN 978 0471407379 Witzthum David David Ben Gurion and Konrad Adenauer Building a Bridge across the Abyss Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs 13 2 2019 223 237 Primary sources Edit Adenauer Konrad Memoirs 4 vols English edition 1966 70 McGhee George C At the creation of a new Germany from Adenauer to Brandt an ambassador s account 1989 online Kreikamp Hans Dieter ed 2003 Die Ara Adenauer 1949 1963 in German Darmstadt wbg Academic ISBN 978 3 534 12335 3 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Konrad Adenauer Media related to Konrad Adenauer at Wikimedia Commons The short film A Defeated People 1946 is available for free download at the Internet Archive The short film Interview with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer 1957 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Newspaper clippings about Konrad Adenauer in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Konrad Adenauer amp oldid 1144432582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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