OPINION
It’ll take more than tanks to ease Germany’s
guilt
Since 1945, Germans have been taught only one option —
surrender to the Russians.
The tanks Germany is sending will be welcome, but they
will not be enough | Pool photo by Clemens Bilan
BY VASYL
CHEREPANYN
April 27,
2022 4:00 am
Vasyl
Cherepanyn is head of the Visual Culture Research Center in Kyiv.
https://www.politico.eu/article/itll-take-more-than-tanks-to-ease-germanys-guilt/
Like most
of the West, Germany, one of the leading economic and political global powers,
gave up on the war in Ukraine long before it even started.
It would
have been a hidden relief to many across the Continent if President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy had chosen to respond to the Russian invasion by asking not for
ammunition but for a ride — becoming instead of a war-time leader, a national
politician in exile, like Svetlana Tikhanovskaya of Belarus.
Western
Europe then wouldn’t have had to deal with the mess of war. It could have been
able to simply host refugees, provide humanitarian aid and feel pretty
self-satisfied. But Ukraine’s willingness to resist and fight has complicated
all foregone conclusions.
Germany has
finally, and begrudgingly, been dragged to agree to deliver tanks to Ukraine as
it battles against its oppressor. But that doesn’t eliminate the elephant in
the room — that despite its historical background, Germany has not only
overlooked the new fascism breeding under Russian President Vladimir Putin, it
has been feeding the aggressor from its own hands. And as soon as Germany’s
beloved Mutti left, the Kremlin leader unleashed his beastliness.
With
Russia’s invasion on February 24, a new catastrophic reality, one that
reenacted past genocidal fantasies anew, challenged the very integration
principle of post-World War II Europe. The very foundations of the
institutional order, as well as the political and ideological practices the
European continent had since been based on, appeared under direct existential
threat from the Russian state totalitarianism, which threatened the Ukrainian
people with mass physical and political extermination.
But it was
not only Ukraine but also German Geschichtspolitik, its politics of memory,
that was forced to go to war. Germans are well-known as the world champions in
acknowledging collective guilt and the burden of nationality it entails. It’s
an idea that has long been pondered by the nation’s writers and thinkers, from
Thomas Mann to Karl Jaspers, who insisted that no one could escape collective
guilt and responsibility — that it is, unavoidably, always a personal one. It’s
also a lesson to be learned by the Russians too, sometime soon.
However,
Germany drew the wrong conclusion from its historical experience, having
confused the causes and consequences of its famous pacifist stance, which was
inscribed in modern Germany’s DNA. Pacifism and the pursuit of peace, the
defining policy of Germany and other Western European governments, have become
an international norm not because of the “dialogue” approach and appeasement
attempts, but only thanks to the military defeat of aggressors on the
battlefield. There would be no pacifism whatsoever if the Nazis won the war.
Germany’s
“economy first” approach has also been considered part of its collective
working through the past, simultaneously enabling the German people to
transform their society and make their country the powerhouse of Europe. But
this now appears to have been an Ersatzpolitik — a compensatory politics
covering up historical traumas, substituting moral responsibility with
business-as-usual.
Since the
Soviet Union’s collapse, Germany has been imposing neocolonial optics on its
Eastern European “peripheries,” and on the post-Soviet space in particular,
where Ukraine was long considered a gray buffer zone about which the EU was
“deeply concerned.” Germany didn’t bother itself much with differentiating
between former Soviet countries’ pasts. Even until recently, any Ukrainian
agenda in Germany was often “balanced” with a Russian perspective, so as to not
exclude the latter by any means.
But Wandel
durch Handel, Germany’s change through trade, has simply been a maskirovka, a
deception that has allowed German corporations to maintain ties with their
Russian oligarch counterparts all this time. It has helped fend off efforts to
counter Russia’s international crimes and its aggression against Ukraine.
The tanks
Germany is sending will be welcome, but they will not be enough. Historical
responsibility today requires doing everything possible to make Putin lose.
United Europe and the free world came to being on the basis of anti-Nazism. If
the political and economic foundations of the current variation of fascism remains
intact, we soon won’t have a common world to live in.


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