Putin’s
next coup
Elections in
three eastern German states are likely to usher in Russia-friendly parties,
giving Vladimir Putin a foothold in the country’s politics.
August 29,
2024 4:00 am CET
By Matthew
Karnitschnig
https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-next-coup/
BERLIN —
Vladimir Putin may be smarting over Ukraine’s surprise incursion into Russia’s
Kursk region this month, but this weekend he’ll likely be celebrating
territorial gains farther west — in Germany.
Russia-friendly
parties across three eastern German states — Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia
— are poised to score substantial gains in regional elections in September, two
of which are set for Sunday.
The
pro-Russian Alternative for Germany (AfD) has a strong chance of finishing
first in all three states, and the recently formed leftist Sahra Wagenknecht
Alliance (BSW) surging, Moscow stands to reestablish a strong foothold across a
broad swathe of the former East Germany, a region it dominated for decades
during the Cold War.
If the
forecasts are borne out at the ballot box, the results are bound to stir deep
anxiety across Germany. An extremist landslide would both expose the degree to
which the efforts of Germany’s political establishment to repair the country’s
East-West divide have failed and shake Berlin’s already-wobbly tripartite
coalition to its core.
A sweep
would also mark a personal victory for Putin: The Russian leader cut his teeth
as a KGB spy in the 1980s in Dresden, an experience that left him with an
enduring fascination for all things German. A biographer even once dubbed him
“the German in the Kremlin.”
All told,
the Moscow-friendly parties, which straddle the far right and left of the
political spectrum, are expected to capture at least 50 percent of the vote
across the regions, according to the latest polls. In one state, Thuringia, the
parties are forecast to fetch as much as 65 percent, with the AfD finishing
first at about 30 percent.
Though not
all of the parties are as overtly pro-Russian as the AfD, they share in common
two narratives pushed by far right: that NATO shares blame for the war in
Ukraine and that a peaceful solution would have been possible if only the West
were serious about diplomacy.
Germany’s
mainstream governing parties at the national level — the Social Democrats
(SPD), Greens and Free Democrats (FDP) — have been relegated to also-ran
status, with polls forecasting a cumulative result of about 12 percent in
Saxony and Thuringia, and 27 percent in Brandenburg. Even when including
Germany’s largest centrist force, the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU),
the combined polling of the mainstream parties doesn’t exceed 50 percent.
That’s an
extraordinary decline for the centrist parties that have shaped eastern
Germany’s political life since reunification. In the early 1990s, West German
establishment forces effectively colonized the East, dispatching their own
political veterans to run Saxony and other states. Even today, more than 40
percent of the top-tier political class in Germany’s eastern states hail from
the West.
The rapid
rise of the AfD and other populist parties in the East suggests that approach
has backfired. Both the Greens and the FDP, the smallest of the three parties
in Germany’s national coalition, face the possibility of being shut out of all
three state parliaments, according to the recent polling. To gain seats,
parties have to garner at least five percent of the vote.
“The
democratic parties — the SPD, CDU and even the Greens — never really managed to
establish themselves in the East in the same way they did in the West and that
makes it a lot easier of course for a party like the AfD to slip in an take
advantage of a more volatile electorate,” said Johannes Kieß, a sociologist at
the University of Leipzig.
Even though
reunification fundamentally transformed the economy of the former East Germany,
raising living standards to a level unfathomable under communism, resentment
over the West’s de-facto takeover of the country remains palpable in many
corners. Since reunification, the region
has lost 15 percent of its population as many former East Germans, in
particular women, moved west.
Frustration
over such developments is often amplified by national politicians who treat the
region, which is today only one-fifth the size of the former West Germany in
terms of population, as “the other.”
“One has to
explain things a bit more in the East than in the West, but I’m happy to do so
and like going there,” CDU leader Friedrich Merz told an interviewer in May,
referring to his party’s hard stance on Russia.
At the time,
Merz said he was aiming for first place in all three states, but that’s now
likely out of reach. Even in Saxony, where the CDU appears to be leading by a
thin margin, the AfD is ahead in some recent polls.
Though
Merz’s party remains competitive there, it may only have managed to do so
because the CDU state premier, Michael Kretschmer, opposes spending billions on
military aid for Ukraine and has made advocating for peace talks between Moscow
and Kyiv a centerpiece of his campaign.
Kretschmer
also paid a visit to Moscow in 2021, inviting Putin to visit Dresden, where the
Russian leader was stationed when the Berlin Wall fell.
“It would be
a great honor, your excellency, to greet you in Saxony,” Kretschmer told Putin
at the time.
Decades of
anti-Western propaganda
That even a
top mainstream German conservative from the East was willing to kowtow to Putin
underscores the degree to which Russian narratives have taken hold in the
region. Even if most Germans in the East have no illusions about Putin, the
population has yet to overcome decades of anti-Western propaganda. For many,
Moscow is no worse than Washington, which populist politicians accuse of
working behind the scenes to pursue its own objectives in Ukraine.
“The USA is
a superpower in decline that is fighting to preserve its global hegemony,”
Sahra Wagenknecht, the leftist firebrand who leads the eponymous BSW said last
month.
For the most
part, leftist politicians in the East are concentrated in the BSW and the Left
party, the successor to the former East German communist party, and are less
pro-Putin than they are pro-peace.
“We need a
European peace order that includes Russia,” Bodo Ramelow, the current premier
of Thuringia and one of the more critical voices towards Russia in the Left
party, said this month. “All of the participating countries should agree on a
non-aggression pact and establish a community of defense.”
Critics
dismiss such calls from the left as naïve. Pushing for the West to end arms
shipments while telling Ukraine to suspend its fight and cede territory
ultimately plays into Moscow’s hands and legitimizes its invasion of Ukraine,
they say.
The bigger
threat, however, remains the AfD, which would trigger a political earthquake
that would reverberate well beyond Germany’s borders if the party wins in all
three states, a prospect some say is more likely following last week’s knife
attack in Solingen allegedly perpetrated by Syrian man with suspected links to
the Islamic State.
The AfD’s
links to Moscow are well documented. Ahead of the European election in June,
German authorities exposed what they allege was a Russian influence operation
involving one the AfD’s lead candidates. Even so, the party finished second
with 16 percent and performed particularly well in the East.
Many senior
AfD figures don’t hide their affinity for Putin’s authoritarian regime.
Björn Höcke,
the AfD leader in Thuringia who many regard as the party’s spiritual godfather,
has said that if he ever becomes German chancellor, his first trip would be to
Moscow.
Should that
ever happen, which remains more than a long shot, it’s more likely Putin would
visit him first.
Before
relations between Moscow and Berlin turned sour, Putin was a frequent visitor
to Germany — including to his former hometown in the East.
“I’ll be
honest, I come to Dresden with a special feeling,” he told an audience during a
2009 visit to the city to receive the Order of St. George, an award to honor
prominent figures who “fight for good in the world.”
“This is
without question one of the centers of European culture, a city rich in history
with its own special charm,” Putin said.
Nette
Nöstlinger contributed reporting.
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