Paul Goble
Staunton, July 14 – It is often forgotten that in the 1920s, Germany was divided between those who favored breaking it up into a number of separate states and those who favored a united and indivisible Russia. Konrad Adenauer, the mayor of Cologne and later chancellor of West Germany, was one of the former; Hitler, one of the latter.
In a comment on his telegram channel, Igor Eidman says that had Adenauer succeeded in his plan for a separate Rhenist Republic, the world would have been spared the horrors of Nazism and the tragedy of World War II (t.me/igoreidman/3116 reposted at echofm.online/opinions/raschlenitel-adenauer-ili-raspad-kak-spasenie).
That is because had those like Adenauer won out, something that did not happen because they were accused by many Germans, including the Nazis, for seeking to “dismember” Germany, “Hitler simply would not have had a unified Germany he could seize power and World War II in all likelihood would never have occurred.”
After that conflict, Eidman continues, Adenauer “operated within the framework of the Allied decision to create a unified Western Germany,” but “he did so reluctantly and did not favor a rapid reunification with East Germany, a territory that notably included the greater part of historical Prussia,” fearing that such a combination would be militarist and imperialist.
“By the time Germany reunified under Kohl, that threat no longer existed: the country had traveled a long path from imperial militarism and systemic nationalism to a stable democracy.” And Adenauer, denounced in the 1920s as a “dismemberer of Germany” is now a hero while his opponents then are “reviled as Nazi collaborators.”
Russians today should remember this history because “present-day Russia, much like Germany in the first half of the 20th century poses an existential threat to the outside world and to itself,” Eidman says, “The collapse of its empire is inevitable;” and the sooner it happens, the better and safer it will be for the world, for Europe, and for Russians as well.”
Both those Russians now being denounced as dismemberers of Russia and those other Russians engaging in such denunciations need to remember that, Eidman suggests, as do others who may think that this conflict has nothing to do with them and thus they should favor temporary stability above all else.