Arab Times

Ex-German FM Genscher dies

‘Great European’

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Hans-Dietrich Genscher, the long-serving German foreign minister who was one of the key architects of the country’s 1990 reunificat­ion between east and west, has died at 89.

His personal assistant, Nicola Maier, confirmed Friday that Genscher died Thursday evening at his home outside Bonn surrounded by family.

“He was a statesman who influenced the fate of Germany like few others. He was a great European and a great German,” German gove rnment spokesman Georg Streiter told reporters in Berlin.

Genscher served as foreign minister, first of West Germany and then of the reunited nation, for 18 years under chancellor­s Helmut Schmidt and Helmut Kohl. He remained active and well-connected long after his retirement, working behind the scenes in his mid-80s to help secure the release of former Russian oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky.

Genscher championed detente with the Soviet bloc in the 1970s and 1980s, and was at the vanguard of those who took Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at his word when he declared Soviet aggression a thing of the past.

That trust, and West German insistence on reaching out to help Moscow, helped hasten the end of the Cold War. It also ultimately brought about German reunificat­ion at the heart of an increasing­ly integrated Europe.

Unity

“European unity is the answer to the mistakes of the Germans and of European history,” Genscher said as he announced his retirement from Parliament in 1998. “It is the answer to a terrible world war. These reasons stand even today.”

Genscher was center stage as cracks in the Iron Curtain opened up in 1989.

In September 1989, thousands of East Germans had packed into the West German embassy in Czechoslov­akia’s capital, Prague, seeking to escape to the West at a time when East German soldiers shot those who tried to flee across the Berlin Wall. After weeks of diplomatic maneuverin­g, Genscher on Sept 30 told the East Germans they could do so.

“I call you fellow citizens, and express a hearty welcome,” Genscher said from an embassy balcony. He told reporters outside it was “the most moving point of my political career.”

After the Berlin Wall fell on Nov 9, Genscher was at the forefront of efforts to bring together East and West Germany. The two were unified on Oct 3, 1990.

Treaty

Genscher was close to former US President George Bush’s secretary of state, James A Baker III, awakening him the night before a six-nation treaty approving German unificatio­n was to be signed in Moscow to help resolve a last-minute hitch.

Still, Genscher sometimes rankled his allies. He angered President Ronald Reagan’s skeptical US administra­tion by insisting on cooperatin­g with Moscow early in Gorbachev’s tenure. His insistence in 1989 on linking the reduction of short-range nuclear weapons in Europe with cuts in convention­al arms also initially provoked tensions with Washington.

After German reunificat­ion, the veteran politician raised eyebrows in 1991 when he virtually pushed the European Community into recognizin­g Croatia — which had been a part of Yugoslavia — by indicating that Germany planned to take the step by itself.

The push deeply angered Serb-led Yugoslavia, which broke up amid wars from 1991-99 that took up to 200,000 lives.

Germany’s assertiven­ess on the Croatia issue also raised worries that it could use its might, anchored in its powerful currency at the time, the German mark, to get its own way on other European matters.

During his long tenure, Genscher became a political cult figure. His ceaseless travel to foreign capitals earned him the nickname “Genschman” — an allusion to Superman — and the yellow sweater vest he wore under his suit became his trademark. Referring to that heavy travel schedule, then-Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnad­ze once quipped that whenever two airliners pass each over the Atlantic, “Genscher is on both of them.”

Genscher was born March 21, 1927, in Reideburg, near the eastern city of Halle.

Drafted into the regular German army in the final months of World War II, he was captured by American forces in 1945 and imprisoned in Britain. After the war, he studied law at Leipzig University, but became disenchant­ed with communist East Germany and escaped to the West in 1952.

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