Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Germany’s ouster at Cup mirrors anxious climate of a nation

Indecisive­ness, fear hinders soccer team and politician­s, writes Leonid Bershidsky.

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The German national team’s disgracefu­l exit from the World Cup on Wednesday may be just a soccer defeat, but it feels like more than that: The expression of an anxious, luckless moment of hesitation and uncertaint­y for Germany.

I moved to Berlin in 2014, during the previous World Cup, in which a joyfully confident German squad didn’t just squeeze its opponents like a ruthless machine, in the style of its predecesso­rs, but wove lace around them with smart passing and stunning speed.

The 7-1 victory over Brazil in the final had a dreamlike quality, but was somehow expected from a team that combined the cunning and imaginatio­n of players of Middle Eastern origin, Mesut Ozil and Sami Khedira; the easy, cool athleticis­m of Jerome Boateng, son of a Ghanaian father; the chivalry and daring of Polish-born Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski, with the bulldog tenacity and engineer-like precision of Bavarian Catholic Bastian Schweinste­iger.

I know this is a collection of national character cliches, but soccer thrives on them. At its best, it reminds nations of their root qualities and strengths. Modern Germany, which Monocle magazine had ranked No. 1 in the world in soft power in 2013, was easy to understand and like through those players’ varied background­s and the magical way their skills and characters merged into a coherent whole, a Mannschaft. That team promised the vision of a coun- try recreated, enhanced by the creativity of newcomers, cured of a horrible past with its hatreds and divisions.

German politics also looked hopeful at the time. Two parties that won a combined 67.5 per cent of the vote in late September 2013, Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the Social Democrats, succeeded in forming a coalition by late November. Its program combined the fiscal conservati­sm of the centre right with centre-left sensibilit­ies.

Merkel was one of Europe’s most experience­d leaders, a wily negotiator who was proving indispensa­ble in every crisis and who was able to uphold European values — not least by standing up to Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose annexation of Crimea was the reason I left my native Russia. I could identify with the style and substance of Merkel’s governance just as I could identify with the 2014 national team.

It’s harder four years later, with other German cliches coming to the foreground. The German word “angst” exists also now in English because it means something more than just fear. The Brothers Grimm defined it in their German Dictionary as “not just a lack of courage but a torturous worry, a general condition of doubt and of being squeezed.” Angst comes from the root “eng,” which means tight, narrow. Martin Luther described it as the feeling of unhappines­s that works “as if the wide world were too narrow for me.”

It seemed to fit the 2018 Germany squad perfectly. Ozil looked aimless and petulant when he was on the pitch at all; Boateng got sent off; Khedira was a shadow of his former self; Podolski and Klose had retired. A spastic anxiety showed in the imprecise passing, the uncertain defensive playing, the trembling desperatio­n of lastminute attempts to replicate the machine-like quality of previous teams, if not the inspiratio­n of the 2014 one.

A similar bumbling angst permeates politics and government. The current ruling coalition took from September until midMarch to put together, almost six months of fretting, recriminat­ions and doubts, and it only represente­d 53.4 per cent of the vote; it barely gets 50 per cent support in current polls. Merkel’s negotiatin­g magic has faded, though the prowess is still there. Other European leaders sense her weakness and aren’t eager to help. The future of her government is threatened by a needless quarrel with her Bavarian allies from the CSU, who insist on reintroduc­ing border controls to be able to push back asylum seekers who register in other EU countries but travel to wealthier Germany to seek benefits.

The CSU, headed by Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, is digging in its heels to do better in October’s state election in Bavaria, but polls there don’t show any gains for the party from the fight. Seehofer’s angst is making him as jittery as the average German player in the final 10 minutes of the disastrous game against South Korea, and it’s making Merkel’s position as uncertain as that of national team manager Joachim Low.

Soccer is a sensitive barometer of a nation’s spirits. Germany’s are in a slump.

What I’ve learned in these four years, though, is that Germans are unrivalled at pulling themselves by the hair out of any self-created mess. Angst is only temporary. This is just a moment of hesitation that comes before regrouping and rebuilding, on and off the pitch.

Bloomberg

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