Power was lying on the street
The most iconic moment in
the collapse of Stalinism was when the Berlin wall was pulled down. What
the capitalist media largely ignore, however, are the events taking
place behind that wall in the weeks before its dramatic fall. INGMAR
MEINECKE, of
Sozialistische Alternative (SAV – CWI Germany) provides a graphic
blow-by-blow account of the East German revolution and counter
revolution.
"DEAR FRIENDS, fellow
citizens. It is like someone opened a window after all these years of
spiritual, economic and political stagnation, dullness and bad smell,
phrase-mongering and bureaucratic arbitrariness. What a change! Less
than four weeks ago: a nice wooden tribune right here around the corner,
the ordered and illustrious parade! And today! You have gathered here,
today, out of your own free will, for freedom and democracy and for a
socialism worth the name". With these words the author, Stefan Heym,
began his speech on Berlin Alexanderplatz in front of more than half a
million people on 4 November 1989.
A revolutionary wave had
engulfed the German Democratic Republic (GDR – East Germany’s Stalinist
state). On 9 October, 70,000 people took to the streets of Leipzig,
300,000 on the 23rd. Between those dates, state leader, Erich Honecker,
and other politburo members of the ruling SED party, resigned. Egon
Krenz took over on 18 October and was the first to use the word ‘Wende’
(change). But he too faced distrust and rejection. On 4 November,
placards read: ‘Socialism yes - Ego(n)ism – no’. On 8 November, the
whole politburo resigned, while 50,000 SED members demonstrated outside
for the renewal of their party.
One day later the Berlin wall
falls – the wall that Honecker said in January would "still be standing
in 50 or 100 years". In 1987, Kurt Hager said of perestroika and
glasnost: "You know, if your neighbour redecorates his home would you
feel compelled to redecorate yours, too?" By 1989 it was not just about
redecorating, the whole flat was unfit for human habitation. But, as we
know, in the end, the flat got privatised, and the names of the new
landlords were the West German Kohl & Co.
The conservative Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) and its allies won the Volkskammer (parliament)
elections on 18 March 1990. On 1 July, the Deutschmark (DM) became the
official currency. On 3 October, the GDR was attached to West Germany.
Just a year after the beginning of the protests, the GDR had vanished
from the map. How was it possible to divert the revolutionary train onto
the tracks of capitalist reunification?
Growing anger
DEVELOPMENTS IN other Eastern
Bloc countries had fanned the flames of unrest in the GDR. Elections in
the Soviet Union in March 1989 included multi-candidates for the first
time. Mass strikes in Poland in the summer of 1988 had led to round
table talks involving the government, the Solidarnosc movement and
Catholic church. Solidarnosc won the partial elections for the Polish
parliament in June 1989, forming the government in September. This was
in marked contrast to the GDR. The state reacted with over 200 arrests
when opposition groups appeared on the Luxemburg-Liebknecht memorial
demonstration in 1988 with a banner citing Rosa Luxemburg: ‘Freedom is
always the freedom of those who think differently’.
Three events in 1989 inflamed
the situation further. SED endorsement of the Tiananmen Square massacre
in Beijing on 4 June, a thinly disguised threat against opposition, only
undermined the regime. The same with the rigged local elections on 7
May. Officially, the National Front List (the ‘unity list’ of SED and
other organisations) gained 98.77%. Election observers said there were
at least 10-20% non-voters or ‘No’ votes. This time, public protests
began to involve hundreds of people, 1,500 in Leipzig on election night,
and continued for months.
The final impetus was the
wave of people leaving the GDR. Hungary opened its borders to Austria
and GDR citizens begin to use this route to the west – 25,000 by the end
of September. West German diplomatic missions in Prague, Budapest and
east Berlin are flooded by people wanting to leave. This triggered a
debate: why are so many leaving? What kind of a country is it where
people feel the urge to run away, leaving property, friends and family
behind? Official reactions that we ‘should not shed a single tear over
these people’ sickened many.
On Monday 4 September, 1,200
people demonstrated after the peace prayer in the Leipzig Nikolai
church. They chant: ‘We want out’. Security forces intervene. This is
repeated every Monday. On 25 September, 8,000 people come out to
protest. The chant changes to: ‘We stay here’, a clear statement of
intent against the regime, indicating a will to finally change things in
the country itself.
The first opposition groups
are founded, New Forum on 9 September. Its statement is signed by 4,500
people in 14 days. By November, 200,000 have signed. It starts with the
words: "Within our country, the communication between state and society
is obviously disrupted. This is proven by mass resignations and retreat
into the private sphere, as well as mass emigration". It mentions
numerous problems, including environmental destruction and shortages of
goods, and concludes: "In order to recognise all of these contradictions
and to listen to and analyse opinions and arguments… there is a need for
a democratic dialogue… Therefore we unite to build a political platform
for the whole of the GDR, bringing together people from all occupations,
backgrounds, parties and groups… to discuss and work on these vital
problems of society in our country".
Although this is vague, it
hits the spot. Many people think that a call for dialogue is a good
thing. Surely no one, including Honecker, can oppose that? But Honecker
and the SED leadership don’t want dialogue, especially not with a
platform that is working on a national level. On 21 September, the
motion to get New Forum registered is ruled out. This only increases its
popularity.
The founding statements of
most opposition groups are pro-socialist. Democracy Now writes (12
September): "Socialism has to now find its proper democratic form, if it
is not to be lost for history". Democratic Departure writes: "We want to
learn anew what socialism can mean for us". The United Left, founded on
4 September, proposes a conference bringing together left-wing
opposition groups: "This conference should be about working out minimal
demands for the realisation of a fundamental reform of society towards
free socialism".
The only organisation not
supporting this is the Social Democratic Party (SDP). Its founding
statement (12 September) does not mention socialism but formulates the
aim of a "social market economy, with a strict ban on the monopolies for
the prevention of undemocratic concentrations of economic power". It is
the first organisation to pave the way for the re-establishment of
capitalism, euphemised as a social market economy.
The masses on the street
OCTOBER BEGINS with the 40th
anniversary of the GDR’s existence. Shortly before 7 October, sealed
trains drive through the GDR with refugees travelling from West German
embassies in Prague and Warsaw to the west. In Dresden people try to
jump on board. Volkspolizei (‘people’s police’) react brutally, with
water cannons, previously unknown to the GDR population, put in
position.
On 6 October, Mikhail
Gorbachev arrives in Berlin. His presence encourages the demonstrators.
On the morning of the 7th there is the official military parade on
Berlin Alexanderplatz. At 5pm, a few hundred youthful protestors protest
against the earlier rigged elections. By 5:20, 2-3,000 march on the
Palace of the Republic, shouting ‘Gorby, Gorby’ and ‘We are the people!’
At 6pm a demonstration heads towards Prenzlauer Berg. Special units of
the police and Stasi surround the Schönhauser Allee train station at
9pm. Five hundred are arrested, but 10,000 are on the street.
More march in Leipzig
(20,000) and Dresden (40,000). The local Leipziger Volkszeitung
newspaper rants (9 October): "Rowdies disrupt normal life". All eyes are
on Leipzig. Will the GDR have its own Tiananmen? It becomes known that
hospitals have been cleared and extra blood made available. Three days
earlier, under the headline, Workers in the Area Demand: Don’t Tolerate
Opposition to the State Any Longer, the Leipziger Volkszeitung
threatened: "We are ready and prepared to stop these
counter-revolutionary actions once and for all. If necessary, gun in
hand".
But the first splits show in
the state apparatus: hit hard or try to mollify the protests through
reforms? A call for de-escalation from three local SED leaders, Kurt
Meier, Jochen Pommert and Roland Wötzel, conductor Kurt Masur and
others, is broadcast locally. After that, Leipzig experiences the
largest demonstration so far with 70,000 people. The powerful slogan,
‘We are the people’, rings all over the Georgiring. The Internationale
is sung. In Berlin, 7,000 demonstrate, another 60,000 around the
country. The pace quickens. The seemingly monolithic state and party
bloc shows ever larger splits. The politburo sits in permanent session.
Parts of the ruling elite try
to engage with opposition representatives locally. On 10 October,
Wolfgang Berghofer, mayor of Dresden, orders the release of 500 people
arrested the previous weekend. The demonstrations keep growing. The
following weekend there are 20,000 in Halle and Plauen, 10,000 in
Magdeburg, 4,000 in Berlin. Next Monday, the 16th, brings a new record
number: 120,000 protesters in Leipzig, 10,000 in Dresden and Magdeburg,
5,000 in Halle, 3,000 in Berlin.
For the first time, on 17
October, newspapers print brief, factual reports about the Leipzig
demonstrators, who had only a week before been described as rioters and
counter-revolutionaries. On the same day, workers at the machine factory
in Teltow leave the FDGB, the official trade union federation, and form
the independent factory group, Reform, calling for new independent trade
unions, "the right to strike, demonstrate, a free press, an end to
travel restrictions and of official privileges".
Sensational news on the 18th:
Honecker resigns. His successor is Krenz. Other leading politburo
members also have to go. But this does not calm the masses. On the
contrary, more and more people feel encouraged to take to the streets.
Krenz’s appointment is met with distrust. He was seen as Honecker’s
crown prince for a long time. The slogans on the Leipzig Monday
demonstration on 23 October, 250,000-strong, are: ‘Egon, who has asked
us?’; ‘Free elections’; ‘Without visa to Hawaii’; ‘The people should
play the leading role’. By the end of the month, protests have reached
the entire country.
There are not only
demonstrations. In Magdeburg, conscripted police officers elect a
council and collect signatures for everyday demands: the right to go out
in civilian clothes and to have access to the company club. Demands to
shorten conscription and for a civilian alternative are added later. The
revolutionary wave reaches school students. Their first victory is the
ending of marks for discipline, and of Saturday lessons.
The breakthrough
IN LEIPZIG THE protests rise
from 20,000 on 2 October, 70,000 on the 9th, 120,000 on the 16th,
250,000 on the 23rd, 300,000 on the 30th, to 400,000 on 6 November!
Meanwhile, there are 500,000 (some say a million) in east Berlin on 4
November. On the 8th, the whole politburo resigns. On the evening of the
9th, politburo member, Günter Schabowski, reports to the press from the
SED central committee that the borders have been opened and anyone can
collect a visa from 8am the following day. People do not wait and
besiege the border crossings to west Berlin, taking the border guards by
surprise. At midnight, some commanders, forced by the mass pressure,
open the borders. The wall falls.
During the following weeks a
whole country goes travelling. Trains are crammed full. People are
euphoric but not blind. West German chancellor, Helmut Kohl, is booed
during a rally outside Schöneberg town hall. At the same time, the new
travel opportunities enable GDR citizens to compare the goods on offer
east and west. They note that the GDR Mark is not worth much in the
golden west.
After the initial euphoria,
an impatient mood develops. A banner on the 4 November demo reads: ‘We
need new deeds, not new phrases!’ The masses feel the bureaucracy’s
resistance, that it is playing for time. The Neubrandenburg SED chief,
Chemnitzer, threatened 20,000 booing demonstrators on 25 October: ‘If
you don’t shut up we can do it differently!’ The SED bureaucracy is
confused and hangs in the air. But it has not gone. On 17 November, Hans
Modrow, who is seen as a reformer, takes over. He attempts to involve
the opposition to stabilise the situation. On 22 November, he agrees to
round table discussions.
But the former ruling elite
is less and less able to govern. The state apparatus starts to dissolve.
The fire is fanned by ever new discoveries of the old ruling clique’s
privileges, especially the fat cat housing developments in Wandlitz and
other ‘paradises’. ADN reports (28 November) on the hunting area of
former premier, Willi Stoph: "After some pressure we are let into the
house with its five baths, the many living- and bedrooms, the video room
and cellar bar. There are more than five fridges, not only full of
apples and meat but also expensive sweets and delicacies – all of
western production".
The question, not really
posed by anyone but which hovers above everything, is: who has got
power? The state and party apparatus has increasingly lost it, but the
opposition has not got it either. The power was lying on the streets
where the masses demonstrated. No one could get past them. But who would
pick it up? Who would gain the trust of the people? In the beginning,
the masses looked towards the opposition leaders who had come into this
position overnight, often by accident. They also looked towards some SED
reformers. And towards the artists and intellectuals, many of whom had
appeared at the 4 November demonstration.
The internal renewal of the
SED is too slow for most. As the extent of corruption becomes apparent,
workers are more determined than ever to get rid of the whole
leadership. The New Forum in Karl-Marx Stadt demands a general strike
for 6 December. This is condemned by the FDGB, bloc parties and Bärbel
Bohley, a co-founder of New Forum. Everyone fears the situation could
spiral out of control. The demand is withdrawn. Nevertheless, there is a
two-hour political warning strike at workplaces in Plauen on that date.
There are strikes elsewhere, too.
The mood is now so heated
that the bureaucracy has to withdraw even further. The Volkskammer
deletes Article One and, thereby, the leading role of the SED. On 3
December, the whole politburo and central committee resign, after
Honecker, Stoph (ex-prime minister), Tisch (ex-trade union leader),
Sindermann (ex-Volkskammer president) and Mielke (ex-Stasi minister) are
expelled from the party.
Hesitant opposition
KRENZ GOES ON 6 December and
the SED’s special congress starts on the 8th. It renames itself SED-PDS
(Party of Democratic Socialism). The lawyer, Gregor Gysi, becomes party
leader. But too much credit has been spent, too big the entanglement
with the state, the disappointment and anger over privileges. This step
alone could not calm the situation.
The round table starts
meeting on the 7th. The weaknesses of the new opposition groups
increasingly come out. Surprised by the speed of events they want to
carry on talking with the SED rather than taking power. Rolf Henrich,
co-founder of the New Forum, had stated in Der Morgen newspaper (28
October) that they want to carry on without a worked out programme for
now: "We have to learn to accept how pathetic this beginning is". The
United Left gets bogged down in working groups, a discussion forum,
coordination and documentation ‘centres’.
This indecisiveness has real
foundations. How is it possible to really get rid of the old leaders and
bureaucracy? What could the new society look like, especially the
economic system? What role should capitalist West Germany play? These
questions are permanently on the agenda, and are interwoven. The economy
becomes central, with pressure building on the GDR’s currency since the
wall came down. The government introduces tougher customs controls as an
emergency measure and limits the availability of subsidised goods.
More important is the
discovery of how desperate the East German economic situation is.
Capitalist commentators paint an even bleaker picture, claiming that the
GDR faces immediate state bankruptcy. They do this to cover up the
consequences of future currency union, when the DM becomes the official
currency in the east. But the situation was serious. The productivity of
a GDR worker was estimated to be around half that of a West German
worker. Subsidies for basic food and other everyday goods were
increasingly financed through the accumulation of debt.
Attempts to decrease debt by
reducing imports and increasing exports further cut the amount of goods
on offer. In November, finance minister, Höfner, admitted that exports
were not exchanged at one GDR Mark to DM1, but at 4.1 to one. On 3
January 1990, the new SED-PDS finance minister, Christa Luft, provides
new data: the balance of payments deficit was $2.4 billion in 1989;
financial debt is $20.6 billion; GDR currency reserves are $7-9 billion.
GDP had fallen by 3.1% annually from 1986 to 1989. The Modrow government
cuts subsidies immediately, massively increasing the cost of flour,
children’s clothes and shoes.
Up to November, the GDR
revolution had been pro-socialist. All the opposition statements
(excepting the SDP), banners, demo chants, speeches, and singing of the
Internationale are evidence of that. The writer Christa Wolf said,
followed by incredible applause: "Imagine there is socialism and no one
runs away!" Bohley talked about a "better socialism". The formation of
councils (soviets) was discussed: ‘All power to the councils’ read a
banner on 4 November. But there was not much about how this ‘better
socialism’ or rule of the councils could be achieved. The suggestions of
opposition leaders and intellectuals remained abstract.
Pro-market, pro-unification
IN THE BEGINNING, the workers
were reluctant to take strike action because they did not want to drive
the economy further over the edge. So most actions took place on the
streets. Although strikes increased in December, workplaces were not
taken over, showing the lack of a tradition of workers’ independent
organisation. Even where workers’ committees were formed, they did not
necessarily get rid of the management. Bernd Reissmann, a programmer at
Robotron in Dresden, describes what happened there: "We listened to the
director for one last time… And this boss put forward his views in such
a way that the others were convinced by it… So he stayed".
Parts of the bureaucracy and
intelligentsia begin very early to argue for a market economy. On 30
November, the Dresden based scientist, Manfred von Ardenne, bluntly
demands more independence for companies, the eradication of the state
monopoly of foreign trade, and a transition towards a market economy.
The new opposition also steers in this direction. At the founding
congress of Democratic New Beginning on 16 December, a delegate stated
to loud applause: "The planned economy is dead. We do not want to
resurrect a corpse. No more socialist experiments".
This wing wins the majority.
The wave reaches the New Forum. Joachim Gauck answers a question of the
Taz newspaper (13 January 1990), regarding socialist principles: "We
will revise all these aspects of our programme… At the moment the
question posed is the one of unification and the market economy". Even
more left-wing forces do not have a clear position. One SED split-off,
Die Nelken, defining itself as Marxist, stated that it would support a
market economy because "Marx had only been against the capitalist chaos
of his time". Others talk about a ‘third way’ (Gysi), or a ‘socialist
market economy’ (Luft).
An independent capitalist GDR
was pointless. Thus, reunification was not just a national but, mainly,
a social question. The speed of reunification can only be understood as
an answer to the demands of the GDR revolution – a reactionary answer.
The issue of reunification played next to no role in the beginning.
Freedom to travel was far more important. On a larger scale, different
voices were first heard at the Monday demonstration in Leipzig on 20
November. A New Forum speaker said: "We do not want to be the poor house
of greater Germany". But another speaker said he had endured 40 years of
socialism and had no interest in any new versions. Reunification and the
market economy were the only options. This got long applause and chants
of ‘Germany, unified fatherland’.
It was not the main mood, but
the demand gains ground. The mood is split. A survey on 17 December
shows 73% for a sovereign GDR, 71% for socialism as an idea, 39% in
favour of the West German economic system, 61% for a "thoroughly
reformed socialist economic system". While Kohl is celebrated in Dresden
by 20-30,000 people on 19 December, 50,000 demonstrate in Berlin on the
same day, "for a sovereign GDR, against reunification and the sell-out
of the country".
Previously, on 16 November,
Heym had presented the following alternative: "We can either insist on
the independence of our country and attempt… to develop a society based
on solidarity, in which peace, social justice, freedom of the
individual, freedom to travel for all and the preservation of the
environment are guaranteed. Or, because of strong economic necessities
and intolerable conditions on which influential big-business and
political circles from the federal republic base their offers of help
for the GDR, we will have to endure the start of a sell-out of our
material and moral values, leading sooner or later to a takeover of the
German Democratic Republic by the Federal Republic of Germany. Let us
choose the first option". Up to 23 January 1990, 1,167,048 people had
signed this declaration. But among them was Krenz – the declaration had
not distanced itself sufficiently from the old SED bureaucracy.
This was a dilemma for those
who wanted the GDR to go in a socialist direction. They did not develop
an independent position but remained interwoven with the SED reformers.
However, the masses did not trust them, despite the popularity of
individuals like Modrow. Because there did not seem to be a credible
socialist solution many started to look towards reunification. There
were huge illusions in the market economy which, according to everyone,
would have to be a ‘social’ one which certainly would not lead to
hundreds of thousands unemployed.
Initially, West German
leaders did not want reunification. Its ruling class was surprised at
the pace of developments. But the steady wave of people leaving the GDR
and the collapse of the state apparatus force the West German government
to move. They have to decide on which organisation in the GDR they want
to build on. They finally pick the former CDU bloc party, which at least
has a functioning apparatus. This is later joined by the Alliance for
Germany, Democratic Beginning and the German Social Union.
Endgame
BY THE END of January the
situation becomes critical. The Modrow government wants a new security
service, the Verfassungsschutz. This meets determined opposition. Also,
facts show that the Stasi is only being dissolved very slowly. Strikes
increase. The Stasi HQ in Berlin is stormed. There are demands for a
national strike on 26 January. The government and opposition try
everything to regain control. A new ‘government of national
responsibility’ is formed on 5 February in which eight ministers without
portfolio are members of opposition groups. The Volkskammer elections
are moved forward to 18 March. Faced with radicalising mass protests,
the bureaucracy moves towards an ‘ordered unification’ with the west.
Only the United Left does not
participate in the government after that. All other groups favour
unification and the introduction of a market economy, capitalism. The
major differences are about how. Kohl and the CDU/FDP government in Bonn
hesitate about how quickly they should act. At first, they argue for a
step-by-step process. But the East German CDU, under Lothar de Maiziere,
argues that only the immediate introduction of the DM as the official
currency will stop further mass migration. The next day, Kohl announces
that negotiations with the GDR will start immediately. The West German
government decides to take over the GDR. Kohl ruthlessly puts this into
action. He refuses to give a financial aid package worth DM10-15 billion
to the Modrow government.
The round table had decided
that no western politicians should be allowed to participate in the
election campaign. This is ignored. The Alliance for Germany (CDU, DA,
DSU), above all, is merely a western puppet. But the same goes for the
SPD and Liberals. FDP leader, Otto Graf Lambsdorf, guilty of tax
evasion, celebrates in Werningerode on 9 March: "The world witnesses the
final collapse of socialism". The clear victory for the Alliance for
Germany on 18 March comes as a surprise to many. But, once the political
path had been chosen, the majority voted for those who seemed most
likely to realise it in the quickest and safest way. The CDU wins 40.6%,
SPD 21.8%, PDS 16.3%, with civil rights groups standing as Bündnis 90 on
a catastrophic 2.9%.
There is one final round of
mass protests on the issue of exchange rates. After the DM becomes the
currency on 1 July 1990, the GDR witnesses the fastest and most drastic
de-industrialisation ever in an industrial country. In June, industrial
production was 86.5%. In August it had fallen to 48.1%. Unemployment
went up to 7.2% in July. On 3 October 1990, one year after the beginning
of the revolution, the country which it was meant to revolutionise
vanishes from the map.
The missed opportunity
STEFAN HEYM LATER gave this
honest assessment of his 4 November speech: "I remember the storming
applause I got. But I also knew that a lot of Stasi people stood around
the truck which served as the platform. I ended my speech saying that
democracy was a Greek word meaning the rule of the people, and I said
‘let us build this rule of the people’. But I also wondered: should I
not act now and call on people to start walking towards the government
building which was only two streets away. Let us go in there and occupy
the TV tower and, in other words, let us do a revolution. But I also
wondered if this would be possible without bloodshed and whether the
police had orders to shoot if that was the case. I did not know and so I
ended my speech with the theoretical meaning of democracy and not with a
practical creation of democracy. There was no organised group which
wanted to take power. There was no conspiracy to unseat the government.
There was only a forum of individuals but nothing that would be needed
in order to carry out a revolution. This is why everything imploded.
There was no one who could have taken power apart from the west… Imagine
we would have had the time and opportunity to build a new socialism in
the GDR, a socialism with a human face. This could have been an example
for West Germany and things could have been different".
From September to November
1989, even afterwards, there existed many features of a political
revolution which the Russian revolutionary, Leon Trotsky, considered
necessary in order to overthrow Stalinism, the bureaucratic deformation
of socialism. In the end, the other option which Trotsky saw as a
possibility became the reality: capitalist restoration. The most
important reason for this was that there was no force which could
develop a realisable way towards a true socialist society. This force
did not exist in the GDR and did not form in the short period available.
It did not exist in West Germany either. There was no impulse for
Germany to take a socialist path. Once again, a revolution was betrayed
by social democrats. The power was lying on the street. But the
opposition of autumn 1989 left it lying there until Kohl & Co eventually
picked it up.