The Economist - UK (2022-03-19)

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The Economist March 19th 2022 Europe 29

use, we have spent it on one we don’t want
to use,” says an exasperated official.
Priorities must be identified and trade­
offs accepted. Should Germany worry less
about joining French adventures in Africa
and  more  about  supporting  allies  in  east­
ern  Europe?  How  should  it  hedge  for  the
prospect  of  a  return  of  Donald  Trump  in
2025? More broadly, can it embrace the idea
of force as a tool of statecraft? A proposed
national­security  strategy  offers  a  chance
for  ideas,  but  the  debate  will  matter  as
much as the answers. “Our passive foreign
policy,  waiting  for  partners  to  decide  and
then taking a stance, is not appropriate for
a country the size of Germany,” says Carlo
Masala  at  the  Bundeswehr  University  in
Munich. “It comes close to cowardice.”
Polls  find  majorities  for  all  of  Mr
Scholz’s proposals, and then some: 61% be­
lieve Germany should cut off Russian ener­
gy imports, and nearly half want to reintro­
duce  conscription.  But  Mr  Putin’s  brutal
war  has  shocked  Germans,  and  the  mo­
ment will surely fade.  For the Zeitenwende
to fulfil its “transformative potential”, says
Sergey  Lagodinsky,  a  Green  mep,  a  sus­
tained debate must be led from the top. 


Persuade, and then persuade again
German  politicians  have  long  been  ner­
vous  about  leading  such  discussions.  Yet
Sönke  Neitzel,  a  military  historian,  says
they drew the wrong lesson from Afghani­
stan  in  2011,  after  the  Bundeswehr  had
been  drawn  away  from  peacekeeping  into
messy  shooting  battles.  The  problem,  he
says,  is  not  that  voters  disliked  German
troops  being  sent  into  combat.  It  is  that
politicians had not prepared them for it. 
Analysis  of  polling  data  by  the  Global
Public  Policy  Institute,  a  research  outfit,
provides  tentative  support.  Since  2016  a
growing  share  of  Germans,  especially
younger ones, have said the country must
take  a  greater  leadership  role  rather  than
hew  to  the  status  quo  (see  chart  3).  And
support  for  more  military  spending  has
long belied Germany’s reputation for paci­
fism. There is political space here, should
the country’s leaders choose to occupy it.
For now, such is the unifying power of
Mr Putin’s war that few expect Mr Scholz’s
immediate plans to unravel. Indeed, some
spy  a  Nixon­to­China  effect  of  a  left­lean­
ing  government  telling  Germany  it  must
rearm. “It needed a war, and it needed the
spdand the Greens in power,” says Claudia
Major  at  swp,  a  think­tank  in  Berlin.  Big­
wigs  such  as  Lars  Klingbeil,  the  spd’s  co­
leader, have conducted discreet talks with
security experts on how to establish a more
enduring revision to foreign policy. 
But  there  is  unease  in  both  parties.
Sceptical  mps  will  seek  compensation  in
favoured areas in the coming budget nego­
tiations.  Some  Greens  insist  the  new  de­
fence  fund  must  not  be  spent  exclusively


on  military  hardware.  “Our  members  are
certainly not falling into a state of eupho­
ria over the Zeitenwende,” says Kevin Kühn­
ert,  the  spd’s  general  secretary  and  a  hero
of  the  party’s  left.  “But  Putin’s  brutal  ag­
gression  is  forcing  us  to  make  decisions
that I personally rejected a few weeks ago.” 
Certain  shibboleths  are  gone.  They  in­
clude the old Ostpolitikidea that establish­
ing energy interdependence—Russia as es­
sential  supplier,  Germany  as  indispens­
able  customer—helps  build  peace.  Now
politicians  see  how  hard  it  has  become  to
stop  financing  Mr  Putin’s  war  with  gas
money. Nor can Germany’s remaining Pu-
tinversteher (Putin apologists) expect much
of  an  audience  for  their  pleas  to  respect
Russia’s “legitimate” security interests. In­
deed, most have publicly recanted.
Germany’s Zeitenwendewill have appli­
cation  beyond  Russia.  In  the  eu the  gov­
ernment has no time for what officials dis­
miss  as  Franco­Italian  wheezes  on  debt­
funded  investment  pools  for  defence  or
energy or rewriting fiscal rules. But as the
world’s third­biggest military spender Ger­
many  will  have  a  crucial  role  in  shaping

Europe’snascentcommondefenceandin­
dustrialpolicy.Itwillenjoyaddedheftin
discussions, now mademuch more ur­
gent,overnato’s direction—includingthe
“StrategicConcept”tobeadoptedata sum­
mitinJune.AndGermany’sbelatedcon­
versiontothe2%targethasremovedanal­
ibi for other European penny­pinchers,
severalofwhichhavedeclaredtheirown
planstorampupmilitaryspending.
ThenthereisGermany’slargesttrading
partner.Partsofthebusinessandpolitical
elitehavebeengrowingcoldonChinafor
years.Now,asXiJinpingcosiesuptoMr
Putin,thewindhasturnedicier.Chemical
andcarcompanieswithlong­terminvest­
mentsinChinahavebeennervouslyeye­
ingthealacritywithwhichRussiahasbe­
come  an  economic  pariah.  One  test  of
whether Germany’s Zeitenwendeis worthy
of  the  name,  argues  an  official,  will  be  if
German exporters begin to tap markets in
developing countries beyond China; and if
politicians encourage them to do so in ser­
vice  of  a  geopolitically  savvy  trade  policy.
Another is German alertness to the owner­
ship of its critical infrastructure, from tele­
coms networks to gas­storage units.
For  many  Germans,  all  this  requires  a
painful  rejection  of  recent  history.  After
the end of the cold war enabled its reunifi­
cation,  Germany  aspired  to  build  a  free,
whole and secure Europe with space for its
historic Russian adversary. Diplomatic re­
lations  were  buttressed  by  a  thicket  of
commercial,  cultural and  academic  links
that penetrated deep into German society.
Mr  Putin’s  growing  aggression  dampened
but  did  not  kill  those  hopes.  Now  those
bonds are shattered, and an era of confron­
tation  looms.  Accepting  that  is  a  step  to­
wards  ensuring,  as  Mr  Scholz  put  it,  that
the peace and security enjoyedbyGermany
in  the  past  three  decadesremain  “more
than a historical exception”.n

Scholz the transformer

The young are more gung-ho
“Do you think Germany is doing enough in global
politics, or should it do more?” % polled by age

Source:GPPi/GESIS

3

60

50

40

30

20

2016 17 18 19

Aged 30+
Coulddo more

Doing enough

18-to2-year-olds
Coulddo more

Doing enough
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