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Fall of the Berlin wall – good thing or catastrophe?

Jonathan Rugman

Author: Jonathan Rugman|Posted: 5:08 pm on 09/11/09

Category: World News Blog | Tags: / / / /

It is the anniversary of the most important political event in most of our lifetimes, and yet so accustomed have we become to budget airline flights connecting us with central and eastern Europe in an hour or two, for a matter of a few quid, that the tumult of 1989 seems rather more than a lifetime ago.

The fall of the Berlin wall heralded Communism’s collapse in eastern Europe and, indeed, the collapse of the Soviet Union itself two years later.

Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel calls it the “happiest day in post-war German history”. Vladimir Putin, now Russia’s prime minister but back then a KGB agent in Dresden, East Germany, calls the USSR’s demise the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe”.

So clearly not every barrier between east and west was felled that night when President Mikhail Gorbachev refused to countenance sending Soviet troops, allowing an almost bloodless revolution to occur.

The Chinese must look upon tonight’s anniversary with some dread. 1989 was, after all, the year of the Tiananmen Square massacre, when Communist China’s democratic urge was, unlike that of East Germany, brutally suppressed.

The Chinese state is reportedly blocking access to Berlin wall anniversary websites, so clearly the fear of that year of revolution lingers. And the Germans themselves may have mixed feelings about this anniversary, given the Nazi-led killing of hundreds of Jews and the torching of their synagogues on 9 November 1938 – infamously known as “Kristallnacht”.

So what happened next? In the positive column, the end of the cold war, of course, and with it the EU’s enlargement (10 new members), democracy’s advance and the advance of market freedoms eastwards – whatever globalisation’s critics have to say about globalisation’s excesses.

In the negative column, the 140 000 – yes 140 000 – believed killed in the former Yugoslavia, in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo, as ethnic hatred was unleashed.

Since 1989, another 9/11 anniversary – that’s 11 September 2001 – has opened a new ideological gulf between east and west.

But though British soldiers and civilians have died in the fallout from the war Osama Bin Laden first declared, it is surely worth remembering tonight that a tiny minority of radical Muslims is now hell bent on our destruction – rather than a Communist superpower with its nuclear missiles aimed at the west.

 

Commentsoldest first

  1. At 5:55 pm on November 9, 2009 Tel wrote:

    Blimey. That’s a bit strong. I don’t recall the Soviet Union being “hell bent on our destruction”.

    • At 10:49 pm on November 9, 2009 Michael Connelly wrote:

      The Soviet Union took over from Nazi Germany as our enemy. We were even warned by Winston Churchill of the threat .The Cuban missile crisis starring Kennedy and Krushchev nearly ended up as World War Three over the Soviet Union deploying nuclear missiles to Fidel Castro’s communist Cuba .
      Remember Cuba is practically next door to the USA bar the Caribbean Sea .
      It was Mikhail Gorbachev who through his reforming policies ended both the Cold Warand even the Soviet Union itself.

  2. At 9:34 am on November 10, 2009 Ray Turner wrote:

    Of course its a good thing the wall came down. The catastrophe is the way that Europe has subsequently been managed…

  3. At 11:42 am on November 10, 2009 adrian clarke wrote:

    i believe the wall coming down was a godsend for many german families, split by the differing cultures and regimes. Though many East Germans regret the loss of their communist masters and the difficulties freedom brings.
    The problem with freedom is that every little religion and ethnicity wants its rights and finds difficulty surviving alongside others .No wonder that China is worried,but i believe the European Union should be even more worried as each state will start to want regain their independence

  4. At 5:59 pm on November 10, 2009 World News Blog - Is the Berlin wall’s significance understood? wrote:

    [...] I have just had my version of a “senior moment”. Reporting yesterday on the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall, I discovered that the lovely producer working alongside me was [...]

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