Amid global unrest, Germany rethinks its security 鈥 and its place in the world
There is a growing acceptance among Germans about increasing spending on defense, greater surveillance, or tougher policing 鈥 and even a confidence about Germany鈥檚 stepping into a leadership role in its own.
There is a growing acceptance among Germans about increasing spending on defense, greater surveillance, or tougher policing 鈥 and even a confidence about Germany鈥檚 stepping into a leadership role in its own.
At the high-powered聽Munich Security Conference in 2014, German officials made news by acknowledging their nation鈥檚 new responsibility in foreign and security affairs. At the time, it still seemed more like rhetoric for tomorrow than a willful resolution.
Less than two months later, Russia annexed Crimea, bringing a security crisis to Germany鈥檚 front yard. Less than a year after that, Islamic radicals shot their way into the offices of Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris, setting off a series of deadly terror attacks across Europe, including in Germany. Populism, fueled by hostility to Europe's refugee crisis, spread across the continent in 2016.
Now, President Trump has threatened to rip up the entire liberal world order. Former foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier declared after Mr. Trump鈥檚 inauguration: 鈥淭he old world of the 20th century is finally over.鈥
Now the world is looking to Germany to see what it brings to the 21st.
Indeed, as this year's Munich conference starts Friday, Germany is no longer in a state of existential pondering of its global role. It has to respond. Germans have been forced into new thinking about some of the values they hold dearest: military restraint that feels reflexive, privacy that they cherish, and a rigorous political correctness.
鈥淕ermans, as a core trait, want to have structure and order,鈥 says Erich Vad, a former security adviser to the German government. 鈥淣ow they need to redefine what security means to them.鈥
Becoming a 'normal country'
John Deni, a former senior political adviser to US military in Europe, says he saw a shift this summer when Germany released its 鈥渨hite paper鈥 outlining its defense capabilities and goals. In 2006, its 鈥渨hite paper鈥 was explicit that 鈥淕erman security policy was tied to its interests but driven by its values,鈥 says Mr. Deni, an analyst at the US Strategic Studies Institute.
鈥淚n the 2016 German 鈥榳hite paper,鈥 that relationship is flipped. And so now it says very explicitly that German security policy is driven by interests but tied to values鈥 鈥 in other words, he says, Germany is becoming 鈥渁 normal country.鈥
It is also spending more on defense now, as much of Europe is doing. That鈥檚 not to say it seeks any kind of military domination. It has neither the military prowess, money, nor sensibility for that. Michael Brzoska, a researcher at the Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy in Hamburg, points out that German military involvement so far, though increasing, has been indirect, like arming and training Kurds in Iraq fighting the self-declared Islamic State. 鈥淭he German government knows it would not be very popular if there were more direct involvement,鈥 he says.
At home, Germany is also striking a new center ground on security. When Anis Amri, the Tunisian asylum seeker awaiting deportation in Germany, drove a truck into a German Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12, a host of tougher security measures were floated. Germans have debated plans to deport rejected asylum seekers faster and monitor potential terrorists with ankle bracelets, proposals that are likely to grow as federal elections near this fall. Even the Green Party, long reluctant to call for more police, issued a statement for stricter security, including more officers on the street 鈥 a sign of how central safety has become to the populace.
Some of it has pushed Germans out of their comfort zone. Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere penned a piece at the start of the year calling for an overhaul of security policy, including moving the federalized domestic intelligence operations from the states to centralized government control, almost like a German FBI.
With a history of fascism and monitoring by the Stasi, communist East Germany's secret police, it鈥檚 a recommendation not taken lightly, and many dismissed Mr. de Maiziere鈥檚 proposal as politicking. But 鈥渨hat鈥檚 happening, as we don鈥檛 live in an island anymore 鈥 we are losing these strict rules and kind of becoming more average,鈥 says Rafael Laguna, who was born in the former East Germany and is the CEO of the Germany-headquartered software company Open-XChange. 鈥淲hat people who haven鈥檛 lived under such a regime don鈥檛 get is that, just by the very fact that it鈥檚 there, you鈥檙e losing freedom because you start behaving differently when you know you鈥檙e watched.鈥
Security vs. values
Germans are also concerned about a culture of tolerance giving way to fear. Cologne is an open, vibrant city on the banks of the Rhine. But the New Year鈥檚 Eve assault last year against women, who identified their attackers as of foreign descent, has hardened the mood, says Claus-Ulrich Proelss, director of the Cologne聽Refugee聽Council in Cologne.
This year, police, determined not to have a repeat, inadvertently made public they had stopped 鈥淣afris,鈥 or men of 鈥淣orth African鈥 descent, leading to accusations of racial profiling. Just a few weeks ago, they circulated a letter to some refugee homes telling staff not to bring asylum seekers to the Carnival celebrations later this month.
Mr. Proelss says he was aghast. 鈥淲e took it to the media,鈥 he says. He says many people have supported the police for being tough and doing their jobs. 鈥淏ut they forget that we are living in a democratic republic and forget that we live within a system of laws. Maybe they forget what Mr. Trump forgets, that there are checks and balances, and they forget that we have a special history.鈥
Still, many Germans say they feel confident about the balance being struck between freedom and security. Antonia Rauch, a young German student in Cologne who was at this year鈥檚 New Year鈥檚 Eve celebration, defends the police, and the necessity of tougher action. She says that what she witnessed was not racial profiling in an overtly aggressive way. But given the risks, it鈥檚 important that police carry check out their suspicions, so 鈥渢hat people are safe too.鈥
Max Beckmann, who owns a business building skate parks around the country, compares Germany post-attack to France, which issued a state of emergency that is still in effect after the Nov. 13, 2015 attacks. 鈥淚 feel good that we aren鈥檛 going over the top,鈥 he says.
A poll this month by Infratest Dimap showed 75 percent of respondents in Germany say they feel safe or very secure in public spaces.
Ms. Rauch says she sometimes gets scared when she watches the news about the rise of populism and intolerance on both sides of the Atlantic. But she says she has faith that Germany, and allies, will safeguard an open and liberal society. 鈥淚 think Germany is the right role model for the times,鈥 she says.
So does Mr. Steinmeier, who was elected Germany鈥檚 new president Sunday night: 鈥淚sn鈥檛 it actually wonderful, that this Germany, our difficult fatherland, that this country has become an anchor of hope in the world for many?鈥