H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-German@msu.edu (May, 1996)
Norman M. Naimark. "The Russians in Germany: A History of the
Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949".
Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press, 1995. xv + 586 pp. $39.00.
(cloth) ISBN 0-674-78405-7.
Reviewed by Steven P. Remy, Ohio University
Norman Naimark's "The Russians in Germany" is the first history
of the occupation of Germany to draw extensively on Soviet and East
German archives, including the now-inaccessible records of the Soviet
Military Administration in Germany (SVAG). The author, the Robert and
Florence McDonnell Professor of East European Studies and Director of
the Center for Russian and East European Studies at Stanford University,
also made extensive use of American, British, and West German sources,
some memoirs, interviews, and a variety of newspapers. The result is
a richly detailed and fascinating account of the four and one half year
occupation.
The author argues that the Soviets did not occupy Germany with "specific
long-range goals" in mind (465), let alone a detailed plan of action.
Rather, the occupation was shaped largely by a complex mixture of opportunism,
principle, "Bolshevik predisposition," (468) and conflict with the West.
The Soviets wanted to edge out the Americans and the British for hegemony
over the entire country, eliminate all traces of Nazism, guarantee the
creation of a "democratic" and "antifascist" German state, and collect
reparations. Perhaps most important, Moscow wanted to build popular
support among ordinary Germans for its policies and those of the German
Communists (KPD, after April 1946 the Socialist Unity Party, or SED).
But the behavior of the Red Army, the activities of several powerful
Soviet institutions active in Germany, and the unwillingness of the
occupiers and their German clients to tolerate spontaneity made this
impossible. As a result, the German Democratic Republic (GDR) was born
in 1949 with feet of clay; it was a hollow structure propped up by Moscow's
might and by one of the most sophisticated secret police establishments
ever created. When these two supports began to disintegrate in 1989,
the GDR collapsed virtually overnight.
Naimark begins with the creation of SVAG in the summer of 1945. Assuming
that Stalin had no elaborate plan for postwar Germany and given the
immediate problems facing the Red Army on the ground, Moscow's first
priority was to create an apparatus to administer their zone. With the
capture of Berlin, the Soviets also brought in several groups (the _Initiativgruppen_)
of KPD leaders to begin rebuilding German administrations. From the
start, however, Soviet efforts proved far from efficient. In the month
before SVAG's founding, local Red Army commanders, without the benefit
of clear lines of authority or special training, ruled the zone more
or less arbitrarily. Even after the creation of SVAG, administrative
efficiency in the zone was hindered by tensions between Moscow and SVAG
headquarters in Karlshorst and between Soviet administrators in Germany.
Even as the Soviets turned administrative functions over to their German
clients, they tried to maintain control over even minute details of
day-to-day administration. This practice improved neither zonal administration
nor Soviet-German relations.
Of particular importance to these relations was the behavior of Red
Army soldiers during the initial period of occupation. Naimark's research
supports the estimate made by German historians Barbara Johr and Helke
Sander that Soviet soldiers raped as many as two million German women
between the time their counteroffensive reached German territory and
well past the formal end of hostilities (see Johr and Sander, eds.,
_Befreier und Befreite, Krieg, Vergewaltigungen, Kinder_, Munich: Verlag
Antje Kunstmann, 1992). While Berlin was hardest hit, the problem was
endemic in the Soviet zone. Though aware of the mass rapes, SVAG officers
in Germany, KPD/SED leaders, and high-level Soviet officials remained
unable or unwilling to do much to stop them. The extent to which Stalin
was aware of the situation is unclear, but there is evidence he condoned
the practice in general. Without question, the implications for Soviet
and German Communist rule in the zone (or SBZ) were very serious: "...the
Germans resisted rape...by turning it back against the Soviets. So long
as Russians ruled in the Eastern zone, there could be no legitimacy
for the Communist Party of Germany, which initially might have been
counted on to be one of the most promising in Europe" (121).
Other depredations plagued German women and men throughout the occupation
period. The Soviets fundamentally altered the economy of eastern Germany
by forcibly redistributing land and expropriating factories and production.
Meanwhile, soldiers and occupation officials took an enormous quantity
of loot -- everything from wristwatches to priceless artwork. After
the failure of the Allies to settle the reparations question, the Soviets
went ahead with large-scale removals from their zone. No central records
appear to have been kept of the often unplanned and haphazard "take"
from Germany, but Naimark estimates that the Soviets achieved their
goal of ten billion dollars in reparations through removals and ongoing
(or current) production by 1950 (168-9). The costs to the German economy
were enormous -- Moscow's "insatiable" demand for reparations resulted
in the loss of perhaps one third of eastern Germany's industrial base.
The SED, increasingly identified by the German public as a tool of the
Kremlin, was unable to convince the Soviets to take a more rational
approach to securing reparations until a good deal more damage had been
done to Soviet-German relations.
The author also provides much new information on the Soviet drive
to capture German military and atomic technologies. On this issue in
particular, the Cold War began in Germany at the onset of the occupation.
American, British, and Soviet officials raced to capture scientists
and industrial technology, partly to benefit their own economies, but
also with an eye to future East-West military competition. Regarding
nuclear science, Naimark's findings comport with those of David Holloway,
the historian of the Soviet atomic bomb project. The German contribution
here was small but not insignificant: "The Germans' experience in wartime
laboratories, backed by modern chemical, optics, and electric energy
industries, proved to be a welcome addition to the Soviets' theoretical
sophistication, espionage success, and ability to muster the vast resources
of the country for building the bomb" (214). Like rape, plunder, and
reparations removals, however, "the Soviet desire to acquire German
science, technology, and material, especially uranium, brought the Stalinist
terror very close to home for the Germans....As a result, the Soviets
seriously undermined their ability to rule the Eastern zone of Germany"
(250).
Also critical to the history of the occupation and the GDR was the
creation of an extensive secret police apparatus that would become the
_Staatssicherheitsdienst_ (or "Stasi") in 1950. While noting that only
part of the East German secret police story can be told without access
to KGB archives, Naimark provides us with the fullest account yet of
the Stasi's birth. Beginning in the summer of 1945, "the Soviets constructed
an impressive police system in the zone in a very short time indeed"
(374). The German Communists were determined, of course, to dominate
the new system, and built into it several branches designed "`to know
everything and to report everything worth knowing'" (366). At the same
time, the NKVD/MVD "led an almost completely independent Soviet secret
policy operation in the zone" (379) by rounding up a total of 122,671
suspected Nazis and anti-Soviet elements (particularly young people,
members of the Social Democratic Party [SPD], and former POWs) and depositing
them in "special camps" where as many as 43,889 perished (376). SVAG
and SED officials protested to Moscow about the NKVD/MVD's activities,
but, again, much damage was done to Soviet-German relations before the
Kremlin moved to alleviate the problem.
Naimark devotes two chapters to the relationship between the Soviets
and the German Left and the question of who made policy in the SBZ.
The author reveals that a great deal of political "spontaneity" and
diversity existed among the German Left immediately after the war. Yet
SVAG and German Communist chief Walter Ulbricht, both reflecting the
"Stalinist distrust of spontaneous institutions," (271) would tolerate
neither moderate socialists nor groups of hard-line communists eager
to Sovietize Germany. SVAG and the SED's abandonment of "a German road
to socialism" in favor of a "Sovietized" SBZ in 1947 and 1948, however,
was also the direct result of continued economic hardship in the zone,
the unpopularity of the Russians and the SED, and the deepening East-West
split.
The author provides many new details about Colonel Sergei Tiul'panov,
head of SVAG's Propaganda Administration and the foremost Russian advocate
of a Sovietized Germany in the SBZ. By 1946, Naimark argues, Tiul'panov's
office "was running politics in the Soviet zone" (322). Despite deep
displeasure with his performance among some members of the CPSU's Central
Committee, the Colonel survived long enough to shape the SED as "a party
of a new type" (346). Tiul'panov probably survived as long as he did
not because Soviet Politburo member Andrei Zhdanov protected him (Naimark
found no evidence to support this claim), but because "there were no
senior officials who could operate in the German environment with the
ease that he did" (351). That he was so influential was probably due
to his willingness to make hard decisions other SVAG officials wished
to avoid. These decisions pointed eastern Germany in the direction of
Sovietization. Given Moscow's intense desire for reparations and a demilitarized,
neutral Germany, Naimark seems to sympathize with those members of the
Soviet Central Committee who sought to replace the hard-line propaganda
chief. Perhaps greater "flexibility," he suggests, would have helped
prevent the division of Germany. Given the widespread unpopularity of
SVAG and the SED by 1947, however, it seems "Sovietization" was about
the only choice available to Moscow were it not to leave the SED's fate
to the masses.
The Soviet occupation of Germany was a failure for the Soviets and
a disaster for the Germans. Moscow obtained extensive reparations only
at the cost of nearly crippling the East German economy. Heavy-handed
Soviet and German Communist tactics in the zone encouraged the Western
allies (and Western Germans) to accept Germany's division. Terrorized
and often deprived of their livelihoods, Germans in the east came to
despise SVAG and the SED. The life and death of the GDR, then, can be
understood only with reference to its difficult birth.
Despite the book's scope, the relationship among SVAG, the German
Communists, and the Church goes largely unexamined. The same may be
said for trade unions. Repetitiveness and a few mistaken dates are minor
distractions. It is tempting to criticize the author for not providing
more extensive speculation as to the Kremlin's intentions in postwar
Germany, but Naimark pointedly avoids such speculation for the sound
reason that important Soviet records (particularly those held in the
Presidential and KGB archives) remain closed. Naimark's book is most
valuable for its analysis of Soviet-German relations "on the ground"
in the SBZ, and he provides readers with a necessary companion to recent
works by Wilfried Loth, R.C. Raack, and Vladislav Zubok and Constantine
Pleshakov, among others. In short, _The Russians in Germany_ will remain
the standard source on the Soviet occupation until scholars gain greater
access to Soviet archives.
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