From the DW:
“Germany and Israel: A rocky road
to friendship”
Sixty years ago, two men, Konrad
Adenauer and David Ben-Gurion, met at New York's Astoria Hotel. There, they
laid the foundation for a highly unlikely relationship between Germany and
Israel. The historic first meeting between West German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer and Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion seemed almost
coincidental. Both men were traveling in the US when they decided to meet one
another in New York on March 14, 1960. Just 15 years after the Holocaust, they
achieved the unthinkable when they, as representatives of the historical
perpetrator and victim states of one of the worst atrocities in history, sat
down together at the same table. German-Israeli relations were strained from
the very start, and the horror of six million Jews murdered during the
Holocaust made a mutual exchange of ideas in the 1950s seemingly impossible.
Israeli passports at the time bore the note: "Valid to any country except
Germany," and trade with Germany was prohibited. Even today, the post of
ambassador to Germany is the only position that Israeli diplomats can turn
down. Yet, there was also little interest in the fledgling state of Israel from
the German side. A poll by the Allensbach Institute (IfD) found that only 11%
of West Germans supported financial compensation for Israel in the early 1950s.
The renowned Israeli author Amos Oz summed up the relationship between the two
countries with an anecdote from his mother: "If the Germans don't forgive
themselves, we might forgive them a little. But if they forgive themselves, we
will never forgive them." In that regard, it is truly remarkable that
today some 10,000 Israelis live in Berlin, and that the countries maintain
close ties in science as well as hosting a number of exchange programs. Yet,
the course of that rocky road to friendship, with all its ups and downs, is
perhaps best illustrated by the relationships of the countries' leaders. Just
how those men and women got along with one another says much about overall
relations between the nations.
The foundation: The foundation for those relations was
quite literally laid by Konrad Adenauer and David Ben-Gurion. Both men,
advanced in age, respectively led their young countries with pragmatism and a
sense of realpolitik — and that is what finally brought them together in New
York. In 1952, and in the face of massive opposition, Adenauer and Ben-Gurion
signed an agreement of reparations in which Germany committed itself to
recompense the state of Israel with goods and services worth 3.45 billion
deutsche marks (€1.75 billion, $1.95 billion). Adenauer personally saw to it
that installments were paid exactly according to schedule, and in doing so, he
fostered the trust that made his meeting with Ben-Gurion possible. In his book
An Unlikely Friendship: David Ben-Gurion and Konrad Adenauer, Michael Borchard,
the former director of the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Israel, described the
German chancellor as a "Rhenish-Catholic Zionist." Borchard writes
that Adenauer had already developed a deep interest in and affinity for Judaism
in the 1920s, and for his part, Ben-Gurion knew full well that he needed German
cash to create his fledgling state. "Had it not been for the combination
of these two forceful politicians it would certainly have taken far longer for
Germany and Israel to come to terms with one another. It was anything but
self-evident," as Borchard told DW.
Ray of hope: Save for one year's difference, Adenauer and
Ben-Gurion held office at exactly the same time. And that was also the case
with another duo of leaders: Willy Brandt and Golda Meir, both of whom led
their respective countries from 1969 to 1974. But that was not the only thing
the two new leaders had in common. Meir, Israel's only female prime minister to
date, also put great faith in Brandt, as she, too, had begun her political
career in the socialist movement. Moreover, Brandt enjoyed great respect in
Israel after famously kneeling before a monument for murdered Jews in Poland's
Warsaw Ghetto.
The crisis:
Despite the bond between Adenauer and Ben-Gurion, the decision to
initiate diplomatic relations between Germany and Israel was not taken up while
either was in office. It was not until 1965 that Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and
Prime Minister Levi Eshkol established official diplomatic ties. Since then, a
stable foundation has been consistently expanded upon — though that foundation
has also exhibited fragility at times. That was most clearly evident during
Helmut Schmidt's chancellorship, especially when Menachem Begin became Israeli
prime minister in 1977. To put it mildly, Schmidt and Begin were not
well-disposed toward one another. Begin, whose parents were murdered during the
Holocaust, famously maligned German reparations as "blood money." He
also accused Schmidt, who had served as an officer in the German Wehrmacht
during the Second World War, of being personally involved in Nazi war crimes. Schmidt
vehemently rejected the accusation and refused to visit Israel in an official
capacity. He would not travel to Israel until he and Begin were both out of
office. Thus, under the leadership of the two the rifts between Germany and
Israel were magnified, and a freeze in relations set in until a new chancellor,
Helmut Kohl, came to power.
A friend of Israel: Four Israeli prime ministers came and went
during Kohl's long stint as chancellor. Although the first phase of Kohl's
chancellorship was rocky and plagued with misunderstandings, he is respected in
Israel today. In 2017, former Israeli Ambassador Avi Primor told DW that the
fact that Israel has closer ties to Germany than to the US in scientific and
research cooperation was a direct result of Kohl's efforts. But Kohl was also
the chancellor of German reunification, something that Israel was extremely
wary of. At the time, Yitzhak Shamir, then prime minister, publicly voiced
concerns that the Holocaust could well be repeated in a reunified and
strengthened Germany. Kohl wrote a personal letter to Shamir, denying the
possibility by noting that Germany had learned from history, and calling such
concerns unfounded. Nevertheless, German reunification came, and bilateral
relations continued.
And today?: Angela Merkel and Benjamin Netanyahu have
each led their respective countries for more than a decade. Yet, although
Merkel won fans for her declaration that Israeli security is a national
priority for Germany, she and Netanyahu have never enjoyed a friendship. And,
says Michael Borchard, now head of the research department at the Konrad
Adenauer Foundation's Archive for Christian Democratic Policy (ACDP),
individual national leaders play less of a role than they did in the past. "Relations
between the two countries have become so well-established that they continue
progressing independent of leaders. There are still friendly pairings in
German-Israeli relations, but they tend to be among those outside the
spotlight, like parliamentary presidents or cabinet members," says
Borchard. Despite many ups and downs, diplomatic relations between the two
countries have settled into a balance. Still, the relationship is always
influenced by events from the past. As Susanne Wasum-Rainer, Germany's current
ambassador to Israel, says: "The Shoa is always on my mind. And it is
something I am acutely aware of whenever I speak with our partners." She
says her most important role is to make the case for German foreign policy
decisions while in Israel, as well as sometimes explaining the Israeli point of
view when addressing Germans. Thus, she stands in the long tradition that
Adenauer and Ben-Gurion started away from the spotlight 60 years ago in New
York City.
^ It must have been extremely
hard and difficult for the Israelis to even consider dealing with the Germans
much less to establish diplomatic relations with them (especially knowing that
the Germans themselves didn’t feel any real sorrow for the War or the Holocaust
– a fact showed by the way they allowed Nazis to live and work freely in West
Germany and that the Nazis could be found at every level of German society from
the top-down.) It took a lot for the Israelis to work with the Germans over
these past decades and that needs to me commended. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-and-israel-a-rocky-road-to-friendship/a-52765871
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