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{{Infobox bilateral relations|East German-Soviet|East Germany|Soviet Union}}
Throuout their existence '''East Germany''' and the '''Soviet Union''' maintained close diplomatic relations. The Soviet Union was the chief economic and political sponsor of East Germany.
Throughout their existence '''East Germany''' and the '''Soviet Union''' maintained close diplomatic relations. The [[Soviet Union]] was the chief economic and political sponsor of [[East Germany]] (German Democratic Republic, GDR).


== Country comparison ==
==History==
{| class="wikitable"
In 1964, Mikoyan's 10-12 March trip to East Berlin, ostensibly to celebrate the 70th birthday of inacaive Premier [[Otto Grotewohl]], was particularly curious in light of the fact- that no other bloc dignitaries of Mikoyan's rank attended. [[Mikoyan]]'s appearance seemed to represent a Soviet effort to assuage East German fears on certain economic and military points of disagreement.<ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>
|+
!Common Name
![[East Germany]]
![[Soviet Union]]
|-
!Official Name
!German Democratic Republic
!Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
|-
|Emblem
|[[File:Coat of arms of East Germany (1955–1990).svg|center|frameless|133x133px]]
|[[File:Coat of arms of the Soviet Union (1956–1991).svg|center|frameless|134x134px]]
|-
|Flag
|[[File:Flag of East Germany.svg|center|frameless|130x130px]]
|[[File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg|center|frameless|130x130px]]
|-
|Capital
|[[East Berlin]]
|[[Moscow]]
|-
|Largest city
|[[East Berlin]]
|[[Moscow]]
|-
|Population
|16,111,000 (1990)
|286,730,819 (1989)
|-
|Government
|[[Socialist state]]
|See [[Government of the Soviet Union]]
|-
|First Leader
|[[Otto Grotewohl]]
|[[Vladimir Lenin]]
|-
|Last Leader
|[[Lothar de Maizière]]
|[[Mikhail Gorbachev]]
|-
|Religion
|[[State atheism]]
|[[Secular state|State secularism]] ([[de jure]]), [[state atheism]] ([[de facto]])
|-
|Official languages
|[[Germany|German]]
|[[Russian language|Russian]]
|}


==The rise of the GDR economy==
In 1963 the 13 June Soviet-GDR joint [[communique]] recorded Ulbricht's praise for Khrushchev's policy of "mutual example" in a manner that could be read as giving approval in principal to further Soviet efforts in that vein, including a reduction in the Soviet forces in East Germany.<ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>

=== Stalin era ===
[[File:Mao,_Bulganin,_Stalin,_Ulbricht_Tsedenbal.jpeg|thumb|[[Mao Zedong|Mao]], [[Nikolai Bulganin|Bulganin]], [[Joseph Stalin|Stalin]], [[Walter Ulbricht|Ulbricht]] and [[Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal|Tsedenbal]] 1949]]East Germany emerged from the [[Soviet occupation zone in Germany|Soviet occupation zone]] as a legacy of the [[World War II|Second World War]]. As early as 1946, the Soviets founded a border police to secure the emerging border. The Soviets appointed the German communist [[Walter Ulbricht]], who returned from Soviet exile in 1945, and whose [[Ulbricht Group|Ulbricht group]] was tasked with building new state structures. The [[Merger of the KPD and SPD|forced unification]] of the [[Communist Party of Germany|KPD]] with the [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] to form the [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany]] (SED) was carried out in April 1946 under the influence of Soviet power.<ref>{{Cite web |last=mdr.de |title=Warum die SPD von der KPD zur Vereinigung gezwungen wurde {{!}} MDR.DE |url=https://www.mdr.de/geschichte/zeitgeschichte-gegenwart/politik-gesellschaft/vereinigung-spd-kpd-sed-sowjetische-besatzungszone-102.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.mdr.de |language=de}}</ref>

After the founding of the SED, Ulbricht was initially pushed to the margins, but in 1948 he was given the task by [[Stalin]] to ideologically “purge” the new party. A campaign to purge the SED of the influences of [[Titoism]] and [[social democracy]] took place and the SED was aligned with the [[Stalinism|Stalinist]] party model. As a reward, Ulbricht became the leading politician of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), founded on October 7, 1949.<ref>{{Cite web |last=mdr.de |title=Walter Ulbricht: Kopf der "Gruppe Ulbricht" und SED-Parteichef {{!}} MDR.DE |url=https://www.mdr.de/geschichte/ns-zeit/zweiter-weltkrieg/nachkriegszeit/walter-ulbricht-ddr-gruppe-ulbricht-100.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.mdr.de |language=de}}</ref>

After [[Konrad Adenauer|Adenauer]] rejected the offers of the [[Stalin Note|Stalin notes]], the East German integration into the [[Eastern Bloc]] was strengthened and the SED announced the building of socialism ("Aufbau des Sozialismus") in July 1952. After an “intensification of the [[Class conflict|class struggle]] “ was announced, the economic situation worsened. An increase in labor standards shortly after [[Stalin's death]] sparked the [[East German uprising of 1953|uprising of June 17, 1953]], which was crushed with the help of Soviet tanks, leaving at least 50 dead. Up to 1,500 people were sentenced to prison and the [[Red Army]] handed down five death sentences. The state security apparatus was then strengthened and migration westward increased.<ref>{{Cite web |last=mdr.de |title=17. Juni 1953: Volksaufstand in der DDR {{!}} MDR.DE |url=https://www.mdr.de/geschichte/ddr/politik-gesellschaft/protest-siebzehnter-juni-ddr-aufstand-100.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.mdr.de |language=de}}</ref>
=== De-stalinization and Khrushchev era ===
[[File:1959 CPA 2365.jpg|thumb|Soviet Union stamp of 1959, marking the tenth anniversary of the [[German Democratic Republic]] (East Germany)]]
As part of [[de-Stalinization]], Ulbricht now announced a “German path to socialism,” which he had previously rejected.<ref>{{Cite web |last=mdr.de |title=Walter Ulbricht: Kopf der "Gruppe Ulbricht" und SED-Parteichef {{!}} MDR.DE |url=https://www.mdr.de/geschichte/ns-zeit/zweiter-weltkrieg/nachkriegszeit/walter-ulbricht-ddr-gruppe-ulbricht-100.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.mdr.de |language=de}}</ref> However, the ties to the Soviet Union remained close and the East Germany joined the [[Warsaw Pact]] in 1955 with the “Treaty on Relations between the GDR and the USSR”.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Außen- und Deutschlandpolitik der DDR 1949-1961 - Das war die DDR |url=https://d-d-r.de/ddr-geschichte-aussenpolitik-und-deutschlandpolitik-1949-1961.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=d-d-r.de}}</ref>

The [[Berlin Crisis of 1958–1959]] began in November 1958 when [[Nikita Khrushchev]] called for a revision of the [[Potsdam Agreement]]. As a result, the Soviets stationed nuclear missiles on the territory of the GDR for the first time that could reach Western Europe.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Außen- und Deutschlandpolitik der DDR 1949-1961 - Das war die DDR |url=https://d-d-r.de/ddr-geschichte-aussenpolitik-und-deutschlandpolitik-1949-1961.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=d-d-r.de}}</ref> Meanwhile, a second wave of [[socialisation of production]] led to extensive [[collectivization]] of agriculture and increased population emigration. In response to this, the GDR began building the [[Berlin Wall]] in 1961 and sealing off the border with the West Germany to prevent the population from emigrating, which was referred to in the GDR as the construction of an “Anti-Fascist Protection Rampart”. The border was closed at the initiative of Khrushchev in the [[Berlin Crisis of 1961]], who feared for the survival of the GDR if emigration continued. He told [[Hans Kroll]]: “Of course, we closed the border, that was at our instigation. Technically, the GDR carried out this because it is a German question.” However, he publicly distanced himself from it and instead let Ulbricht speak, as the construction of the wall was a clear admission of weakness.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wettig |first=Gerhard |date=2011-06-10 |title=DA 6/2011 – Wettig: Die UdSSR und die Berliner Mauer |url=https://www.bpb.de/themen/deutschlandarchiv/53708/die-udssr-und-die-berliner-mauer/ |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=bpb.de |language=de}}</ref>

In 13 June 1963, Soviet-GDR joint [[communique]] recorded Ulbricht's praise for Khrushchev's policy of "mutual example" in a manner that could be read as giving approval in principle to further Soviet efforts in that vein, including a reduction in the [[Group of Soviet Forces in Germany|Soviet forces in East Germany]].<ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>

In 1964, [[Anastas Mikoyan]]'s 10–12 March trip to [[East Berlin]], ostensibly to celebrate the 70th birthday of inactive and ailing Premier [[Otto Grotewohl]], was particularly curious in light of the fact- that no other bloc dignitaries of Mikoyan's rank attended. Mikoyan's appearance seemed to represent a Soviet effort to assuage East German fears on certain economic and military points of disagreement.<ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>


===Brezhnev era===
===Brezhnev era===
On the day Khrushchev left for his vacation, GDR Prime Minister [[Willi Stoph]] made a sudden visit to Moscow and commenced an intensive three-day series of talks with Kosygin and other high-level Kremlin leaders. The timing of Stoph's visit, ostensibly for the purpose of opening an exhibit devoted to the 15th anniversary of the GDR.
On the day Khrushchev left for his vacation, [[Premier of East Germany|East German Premier]] [[Willi Stoph]] made a sudden visit to Moscow and commenced an intensive three-day series of talks with Kosygin and other high-level Kremlin leaders. The timing of Stoph's visit was ostensibly for the purpose of opening an exhibit devoted to the 15th anniversary of the GDR.


Then in rapid succession, Suslov and Brezhnev came forward with strong statements reassuring the East German leaders about Soviet intentions toward East Germany. Suslov made a flat no-sell-out pledge in Moscow on the same day (5 October) that Brezhnev was welcomed in East Berlin by Ulbricht, who had refused to greet Khrushchev's son-in law two months earlier. Ulbricht on 6 October responded with a rather defiant [[lecture]] on the limits of Soviet interference in GDR sovereignty. And at the same [[podium]] Brezhnev promised that there would be no "behind-the-back" deals detrimental to GDR interests.<Ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>
Then in rapid succession, Suslov and Brezhnev came forward with strong statements reassuring the East German leaders about Soviet intentions toward East Germany. Suslov made a flat no-sell-out pledge in Moscow on the same day (5 October) that Brezhnev was welcomed in East Berlin by Ulbricht, who had refused to greet Khrushchev's son-in law two months earlier. Ulbricht on 6 October responded with a rather defiant [[lecture]] on the limits of Soviet interference in GDR sovereignty. And at the same [[podium]] Brezhnev promised that there would be no "behind-the-back" deals detrimental to GDR interests.<ref>Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967</ref>


[[Mikhail Suslov]], in his 5 October speech at a Kremlin meeting devoted to the GDR anniversary went out of his way to deny the possibility of a Bonn-Moscow deal at the expense of the GDR's "sovereignty". Suslov voiced the flat "guarantee" that "even if all the gold in the world were offered, the relations between [[Moscow]] and [[East Berlin]] would still not be for sale.
[[Mikhail Suslov]], in his 5 October speech at a Kremlin meeting devoted to the GDR anniversary, went out of his way to deny the possibility of a Bonn-Moscow deal at the expense of the GDR's "sovereignty". Suslov voiced the flat "guarantee" that "even if all the gold in the world were offered, the relations between [[Moscow]] and [[East Berlin]] would still not be for sale.
[[File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-U1007-0005,_Berlin,_30._Jahrestag_DDR-Gründung,_Parade.jpg|thumb|[[Leonid Brezhnev]] with [[Erich Honecker]] on the 30th anniversary of the founding of the GDR (1979)]]
The initial GDR reaction to Khrushchev's ouster and its treatment of the sell-out question was ambivalent. On the one hand, there was evidence to suggest that Khruschev's removal brought quick relief to the leaders in East Berlin about the fate of East Germany's future. The GDR's first official reaction to the Kremlin coup, which was registered in the 17 October communique of the [[Central Committee]] of the [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany]]—the first Eastern European party statement on the Khrushchev ouster—was that the friendship treaty of June 1964 will be carried out "honorably" implying, perhaps, that there was some question among the East German leaders as to whether it would have been honorably implemented prior to Khrushchev's ouster.


The new leadership may have felt that other more pressing domestic and foreign matters demanded their initial concentration and that any major diplomatic action such as the Bonn visit—on the German question should be postponed. Concentration on other foreign and domestic matters may also explain, in part, Moscow's dropping of any element of urgency in the new Soviet peace treaty line.
The initial GDR reaction to Khrushchev's ouster and its treatment of the sell-out question was ambivalent. On the one hand, there was evidence to suggest that Khruschev's removal brought quick relief to the leaders in East Berlin about the fate of East Germany's future. The GDR's first official reaction to the Kremlin coup, which was registered in the 17 October communique of the [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany]] [[Central Committee]]--the first Eastern European party statement on the Khrushchev ouster--was that the friendship treaty of June 1964 will be carried out "honorably" implying, perhaps, that there was some question among the East German leaders as to whether it would have been honorably implemented prior to Khrushchev's ouster.


In April 1971, [[Erich Honecker]] took power in the GDR, who was able to win the support of Leonid Brezhnev during his power struggle with Ulbricht. Honecker followed the Soviet model very closely, which enabled him to improve relations with the USSR. In 1974 he proclaimed that “there is virtually no crucial area of daily life in which friendship with the Soviet Union is not reflected.”<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bildung |first=Bundeszentrale für politische |date=2014-02-28 |title=Die DDR in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren: Suche nach einer eigenen Außenpolitik im Schatten Moskaus |url=https://www.bpb.de/themen/deutschlandarchiv/179837/die-ddr-in-den-1970er-und-1980er-jahren-suche-nach-einer-eigenen-aussenpolitik-im-schatten-moskaus/ |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=bpb.de |language=de}}</ref>
The new leadership may have felt that other more pressing domestic and foreign matters demanded their initial concentration and that any major diplomatic action such as the Bonn visit--on the German question should be postponed. Concentration on other foreign and domestic matters may also explain, in part, Moscow's dropping of any element of urgency in the new Soviet peace treaty line .
East German displeasure over the Soviet shelving of the peace treaty-West Berlin Issues may have accounted, in part, for the surprisingly low-key treatgent given by the GDR to Kosygin's 27 February-2 March 1965 visit to East Germany to take in the annual [[Leipzig trade fair]].


On October 5th 1979 while Brezhnev was visiting East Germany in the 30 years celebration to the foundation of the East German state, the two countries signed a ten year agreement of mutual support under which East Germany would provide [[ship]]s, [[machinery]] and [[chemical]] equipment to the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union would provide [[fuel]] and [[nuclear equipment]] to East Germany.<ref>{{cite news |title= Soviet and East Germans Sign an Economic Pact|author= |first= John|last= Vinocur|authorlink= |authorlink2= |author2= |author3= |author4= |author5= |author6= |author7= |url= http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40F16FA3F5C11728DDDAF0894D8415B898BF1D3&scp=29&sq=|format= |agency= |newspaper= [[The New York Times]]|publisher= [[The New York Times Company]]|location= East Berlin|isbn= |issn= 0362-4331|oclc= 1645522|pmid= |pmd= |bibcode= |doi= |id= |date= October 6, 1979|page= 30|pages= |at= |accessdate= |language= |trans_title= |quote= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |ref=}}</ref>
On 5 October 1979, while Brezhnev was visiting East Germany in the 30th anniversary of the foundation of the East German state, the two countries signed a ten-year agreement of mutual support under which East Germany would provide [[ship]]s, [[machinery]] and [[chemical]] equipment to the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union would provide [[fuel]] and [[nuclear equipment]] to East Germany.<ref>{{cite news |title= Soviet and East Germans Sign an Economic Pact|first= John|last= Vinocur|url= http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40F16FA3F5C11728DDDAF0894D8415B898BF1D3&scp=29&sq=|newspaper= [[The New York Times]]|location= East Berlin|issn= 0362-4331|oclc= 1645522|date= October 6, 1979|page= 30}}</ref>


=== 1980s and Gorbachev era ===
==Military relations==
[[File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-1986-0421-009,_Berlin,_XI._SED-Parteitag,_Gorbatschow,_Honecker.jpg|thumb|Mikhail Gorbachev with Erich Honecker in 1986]]
The East German political and military leaders had never come to terms with the arrangement from the 1950s of an army without a General Staff (Generalstab) but a Main Staff instead (Hauptstab). With international recognition in the 1970s, the GDR expected to be treated like the other national Warsaw Pact armies and to be granted a Generalstab. Even the Soviet Union had imported this traditional German term into Russian language as a designation for its own army’s General Staff. Twice the GDR leadership approached the USSR in this respect, and twice it was rebuffed with the Soviet argument that the West German army also lacked a Generalstab.<ref>PHP Archive, unpublished interview with General Fritz Streletz, Strausberg, 27 January 2003</ref>
In 1981, the Soviets reduced their oil deliveries, whereupon the West Germany offered aid payments in return for travel relief for GDR citizens. Due to the poor economic situation, the GDR was forced to accept the offer, which Moscow disliked.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bildung |first=Bundeszentrale für politische |date=2014-02-28 |title=Die DDR in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren: Suche nach einer eigenen Außenpolitik im Schatten Moskaus |url=https://www.bpb.de/themen/deutschlandarchiv/179837/die-ddr-in-den-1970er-und-1980er-jahren-suche-nach-einer-eigenen-aussenpolitik-im-schatten-moskaus/ |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=bpb.de |language=de}}</ref>


After reforms were introduced under [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] in the mid-1980s, Honecker refused to make any changes and became increasingly distanced from reality. The hardliner Honecker had already wanted the [[National People's Army]] invade the [[Polish People's Republic|People's Republic of Poland]] in 1981 in order to suppress [[Solidarity (Polish trade union)|Solidarity]]<ref>{{Cite news |date=1992-10-11 |title=»Wir Bruderländer stehen fest« |language=de |work=Der Spiegel |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/wir-bruderlaender-stehen-fest-a-a33acc50-0002-0001-0000-000013679453 |access-date=2023-12-29 |issn=2195-1349}}</ref> and in 1988 he announced "socialism in the colors of the GDR" in order to distance himself from the reformers in the Kremlin. Gorbachev visited the GDR in October 1989 on the last and 40th anniversary of its existence, although the process of [[Dissolution of the Soviet Union|dissolution of the Eastern Bloc]] had already begun. He warned the GDR leadership to pursue reforms with the words: “If we stay behind, life will punish us immediately.” A reporter used this to construct the well-known saying: “life punishes those who come too late".<ref>{{Cite web |last=SWR2 |date=2023-10-06 |title=Gorbatschow in der DDR – Kein "Wer zu spät kommt ..." {{!}} 6.10.1989 |url=https://www.swr.de/swr2/wissen/archivradio/gorbatschow-in-der-ddr-kein-wer-zu-spaet-kommt-102.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=swr.online |language=de}}</ref>
By 1963, a moderate expansion of the NVA after a period of relative contraction culminated in the participation of the NVA in the joint Soviet-East German-Polish-Czechoslovak exercise "Quartet" which had for the first time an East German general as its commander.<ref>Soviet-East German Military Alliance</ref> On November 13, 1964 the first long range plan was reportedly developed for "consolidation" of cooperation and "comradeship-in-arms" between the Nva and the [[Group of Soviet Forces in Germany]].<ref>Soviet-East German Military Alliance</ref> Due to the fact that border units were also assigned the critical mission of protecting important areas from breakthrough attacks by the enemy into East Germany territory, the cooperation between the border forces in East Germany and the [[Group of Soviet Forces in Germany]] significantly expanded. Of the thirty-two major installations which were erected along the inter-German border as part of the East German zonal complex for air space surveillance and early warning, the majority were placed under the permanent control of the [[Group of Soviet Forces in Germany]] for use in electronic disruption and deception measures.<ref>Soviet-East German Military Alliance</ref>

Before [[German reunification]], there were intensive negotiations between Gorbachev, [[Helmut Kohl|Kohl]] and the major Western powers. The [[Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany]] was negotiated in September 1990, paving the way for the reunification of Germany on [[German Unity Day|3 October 1990]].

== Economic relations ==
The GDR had close economic ties to the Soviet Union through the [[Comecon|Council for Mutual Economic Assistance]] and was supplied with oil from the [[Friendship Pipeline]], which was built in 1959. The Soviets were the most important trade and economic partner, with which almost 38 percent of the GDR's foreign trade was transacted in 1981.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web |last=Deutschland |first=Stiftung Deutsches Historisches Museum, Stiftung Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik |title=Gerade auf LeMO gesehen: LeMO Kapitel: Vernetzung der Weltwirtschaft |url=https://www.hdg.de/lemo/kapitel/geteiltes-deutschland-krisenmanagement/bundesrepublik-im-umbruch/vernetzung-der-weltwirtschaft.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.hdg.de |language=de}}</ref> The Soviets supplied petroleum and other raw materials to the GDR, while [[uranium]] from the GDR was very important for the Soviet nuclear industry.<ref name=":4" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=mdr.de |title=Uranbergbau in der DDR: Das war die Wismut {{!}} MDR.DE |url=https://www.mdr.de/geschichte/ddr/wirtschaft/wismut/fragen-uran-bergbau-sowjetunion-atomindustrie-100.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=www.mdr.de |language=de}}</ref>

== Cultural relations ==
The GDR emerged under the influence of the Soviet Union and remained tied to it throughout its existence. The influence of the USSR as a role model and socialist brother state was not only limited to politics and economics, but also to culture. Erich Honecker summed this up when he announced in 1974 that “there is practically no crucial area of everyday life in which friendship with the Soviet Union is not reflected.”<ref>{{Cite web |title=Stabilität und Krise in der DDR 1971-1980 - Das war die DDR |url=https://d-d-r.de/ddr-geschichte-stabilitaet-und-krise-1971-1980.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=d-d-r.de}}</ref> [[Russian language|Russian]] was taught as the first foreign language in school and the [[Society for German–Soviet Friendship|Society for German-Soviet Friendship]] was the second largest mass organization in the GDR with six million members. Soviet-Russian culture, music, cuisine and media products were widespread in the GDR.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Adam-Tkalec |first=Maritta |date=2022-05-08 |title=Millionen Freunde sollt ihr sein: Leben in deutsch-sowjetischer Freundschaft |url=https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/politik-gesellschaft/millionen-freunde-sollt-ihr-sein-leben-in-deutsch-sowjetischer-freundschaft-li.226157 |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=Berliner Zeitung |language=de}}</ref>

[[Glasnost]] and [[Perestroika]] were rejected by the GDR in the 1980s. In the final phase of the GDR, the government even had Soviet media such as [[Sputnik (news agency)|Sputnik]] censored because they began to report critically as part of Gorbachev's reforms.


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

{{USGovernment|url=http://www.foia.cia.gov/sites/default/files/document_conversions/14/caesar-42.pdf}}
{{Foreign relations of East Germany}}
{{Foreign relations of East Germany}}
{{Foreign relations of the Soviet Union}}
{{Foreign relations of the Soviet Union}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:East Germany-Soviet Union relations}}
[[Category:Bilateral relations of the Soviet Union|East Germany]]
[[Category:East Germany–Soviet Union relations| ]]
[[Category:Bilateral relations of East Germany|Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Bilateral relations of the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Germany–Soviet Union relations]]
[[Category:Germany–Soviet Union relations]]
[[Category:Foreign relations of East Germany]]

Latest revision as of 02:34, 25 November 2024

East German-Soviet relations
Map indicating locations of East Germany and Soviet Union

East Germany

Soviet Union

Throughout their existence East Germany and the Soviet Union maintained close diplomatic relations. The Soviet Union was the chief economic and political sponsor of East Germany (German Democratic Republic, GDR).

Country comparison

[edit]
Common Name East Germany Soviet Union
Official Name German Democratic Republic Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Emblem
Flag
Capital East Berlin Moscow
Largest city East Berlin Moscow
Population 16,111,000 (1990) 286,730,819 (1989)
Government Socialist state See Government of the Soviet Union
First Leader Otto Grotewohl Vladimir Lenin
Last Leader Lothar de Maizière Mikhail Gorbachev
Religion State atheism State secularism (de jure), state atheism (de facto)
Official languages German Russian

The rise of the GDR economy

[edit]

Stalin era

[edit]
Mao, Bulganin, Stalin, Ulbricht and Tsedenbal 1949

East Germany emerged from the Soviet occupation zone as a legacy of the Second World War. As early as 1946, the Soviets founded a border police to secure the emerging border. The Soviets appointed the German communist Walter Ulbricht, who returned from Soviet exile in 1945, and whose Ulbricht group was tasked with building new state structures. The forced unification of the KPD with the SPD to form the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) was carried out in April 1946 under the influence of Soviet power.[1]

After the founding of the SED, Ulbricht was initially pushed to the margins, but in 1948 he was given the task by Stalin to ideologically “purge” the new party. A campaign to purge the SED of the influences of Titoism and social democracy took place and the SED was aligned with the Stalinist party model. As a reward, Ulbricht became the leading politician of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), founded on October 7, 1949.[2]

After Adenauer rejected the offers of the Stalin notes, the East German integration into the Eastern Bloc was strengthened and the SED announced the building of socialism ("Aufbau des Sozialismus") in July 1952. After an “intensification of the class struggle “ was announced, the economic situation worsened. An increase in labor standards shortly after Stalin's death sparked the uprising of June 17, 1953, which was crushed with the help of Soviet tanks, leaving at least 50 dead. Up to 1,500 people were sentenced to prison and the Red Army handed down five death sentences. The state security apparatus was then strengthened and migration westward increased.[3]

De-stalinization and Khrushchev era

[edit]
Soviet Union stamp of 1959, marking the tenth anniversary of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany)

As part of de-Stalinization, Ulbricht now announced a “German path to socialism,” which he had previously rejected.[4] However, the ties to the Soviet Union remained close and the East Germany joined the Warsaw Pact in 1955 with the “Treaty on Relations between the GDR and the USSR”.[5]

The Berlin Crisis of 1958–1959 began in November 1958 when Nikita Khrushchev called for a revision of the Potsdam Agreement. As a result, the Soviets stationed nuclear missiles on the territory of the GDR for the first time that could reach Western Europe.[6] Meanwhile, a second wave of socialisation of production led to extensive collectivization of agriculture and increased population emigration. In response to this, the GDR began building the Berlin Wall in 1961 and sealing off the border with the West Germany to prevent the population from emigrating, which was referred to in the GDR as the construction of an “Anti-Fascist Protection Rampart”. The border was closed at the initiative of Khrushchev in the Berlin Crisis of 1961, who feared for the survival of the GDR if emigration continued. He told Hans Kroll: “Of course, we closed the border, that was at our instigation. Technically, the GDR carried out this because it is a German question.” However, he publicly distanced himself from it and instead let Ulbricht speak, as the construction of the wall was a clear admission of weakness.[7]

In 13 June 1963, Soviet-GDR joint communique recorded Ulbricht's praise for Khrushchev's policy of "mutual example" in a manner that could be read as giving approval in principle to further Soviet efforts in that vein, including a reduction in the Soviet forces in East Germany.[8]

In 1964, Anastas Mikoyan's 10–12 March trip to East Berlin, ostensibly to celebrate the 70th birthday of inactive and ailing Premier Otto Grotewohl, was particularly curious in light of the fact- that no other bloc dignitaries of Mikoyan's rank attended. Mikoyan's appearance seemed to represent a Soviet effort to assuage East German fears on certain economic and military points of disagreement.[9]

Brezhnev era

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On the day Khrushchev left for his vacation, East German Premier Willi Stoph made a sudden visit to Moscow and commenced an intensive three-day series of talks with Kosygin and other high-level Kremlin leaders. The timing of Stoph's visit was ostensibly for the purpose of opening an exhibit devoted to the 15th anniversary of the GDR.

Then in rapid succession, Suslov and Brezhnev came forward with strong statements reassuring the East German leaders about Soviet intentions toward East Germany. Suslov made a flat no-sell-out pledge in Moscow on the same day (5 October) that Brezhnev was welcomed in East Berlin by Ulbricht, who had refused to greet Khrushchev's son-in law two months earlier. Ulbricht on 6 October responded with a rather defiant lecture on the limits of Soviet interference in GDR sovereignty. And at the same podium Brezhnev promised that there would be no "behind-the-back" deals detrimental to GDR interests.[10]

Mikhail Suslov, in his 5 October speech at a Kremlin meeting devoted to the GDR anniversary, went out of his way to deny the possibility of a Bonn-Moscow deal at the expense of the GDR's "sovereignty". Suslov voiced the flat "guarantee" that "even if all the gold in the world were offered, the relations between Moscow and East Berlin would still not be for sale.

Leonid Brezhnev with Erich Honecker on the 30th anniversary of the founding of the GDR (1979)

The initial GDR reaction to Khrushchev's ouster and its treatment of the sell-out question was ambivalent. On the one hand, there was evidence to suggest that Khruschev's removal brought quick relief to the leaders in East Berlin about the fate of East Germany's future. The GDR's first official reaction to the Kremlin coup, which was registered in the 17 October communique of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany—the first Eastern European party statement on the Khrushchev ouster—was that the friendship treaty of June 1964 will be carried out "honorably" implying, perhaps, that there was some question among the East German leaders as to whether it would have been honorably implemented prior to Khrushchev's ouster.

The new leadership may have felt that other more pressing domestic and foreign matters demanded their initial concentration and that any major diplomatic action such as the Bonn visit—on the German question should be postponed. Concentration on other foreign and domestic matters may also explain, in part, Moscow's dropping of any element of urgency in the new Soviet peace treaty line.

In April 1971, Erich Honecker took power in the GDR, who was able to win the support of Leonid Brezhnev during his power struggle with Ulbricht. Honecker followed the Soviet model very closely, which enabled him to improve relations with the USSR. In 1974 he proclaimed that “there is virtually no crucial area of daily life in which friendship with the Soviet Union is not reflected.”[11]

On 5 October 1979, while Brezhnev was visiting East Germany in the 30th anniversary of the foundation of the East German state, the two countries signed a ten-year agreement of mutual support under which East Germany would provide ships, machinery and chemical equipment to the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union would provide fuel and nuclear equipment to East Germany.[12]

1980s and Gorbachev era

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Mikhail Gorbachev with Erich Honecker in 1986

In 1981, the Soviets reduced their oil deliveries, whereupon the West Germany offered aid payments in return for travel relief for GDR citizens. Due to the poor economic situation, the GDR was forced to accept the offer, which Moscow disliked.[13]

After reforms were introduced under Mikhail Gorbachev in the mid-1980s, Honecker refused to make any changes and became increasingly distanced from reality. The hardliner Honecker had already wanted the National People's Army invade the People's Republic of Poland in 1981 in order to suppress Solidarity[14] and in 1988 he announced "socialism in the colors of the GDR" in order to distance himself from the reformers in the Kremlin. Gorbachev visited the GDR in October 1989 on the last and 40th anniversary of its existence, although the process of dissolution of the Eastern Bloc had already begun. He warned the GDR leadership to pursue reforms with the words: “If we stay behind, life will punish us immediately.” A reporter used this to construct the well-known saying: “life punishes those who come too late".[15]

Before German reunification, there were intensive negotiations between Gorbachev, Kohl and the major Western powers. The Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany was negotiated in September 1990, paving the way for the reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990.

Economic relations

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The GDR had close economic ties to the Soviet Union through the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance and was supplied with oil from the Friendship Pipeline, which was built in 1959. The Soviets were the most important trade and economic partner, with which almost 38 percent of the GDR's foreign trade was transacted in 1981.[16] The Soviets supplied petroleum and other raw materials to the GDR, while uranium from the GDR was very important for the Soviet nuclear industry.[16][17]

Cultural relations

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The GDR emerged under the influence of the Soviet Union and remained tied to it throughout its existence. The influence of the USSR as a role model and socialist brother state was not only limited to politics and economics, but also to culture. Erich Honecker summed this up when he announced in 1974 that “there is practically no crucial area of everyday life in which friendship with the Soviet Union is not reflected.”[18] Russian was taught as the first foreign language in school and the Society for German-Soviet Friendship was the second largest mass organization in the GDR with six million members. Soviet-Russian culture, music, cuisine and media products were widespread in the GDR.[19]

Glasnost and Perestroika were rejected by the GDR in the 1980s. In the final phase of the GDR, the government even had Soviet media such as Sputnik censored because they began to report critically as part of Gorbachev's reforms.

References

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  1. ^ mdr.de. "Warum die SPD von der KPD zur Vereinigung gezwungen wurde | MDR.DE". www.mdr.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  2. ^ mdr.de. "Walter Ulbricht: Kopf der "Gruppe Ulbricht" und SED-Parteichef | MDR.DE". www.mdr.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  3. ^ mdr.de. "17. Juni 1953: Volksaufstand in der DDR | MDR.DE". www.mdr.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  4. ^ mdr.de. "Walter Ulbricht: Kopf der "Gruppe Ulbricht" und SED-Parteichef | MDR.DE". www.mdr.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  5. ^ "Außen- und Deutschlandpolitik der DDR 1949-1961 - Das war die DDR". d-d-r.de. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  6. ^ "Außen- und Deutschlandpolitik der DDR 1949-1961 - Das war die DDR". d-d-r.de. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  7. ^ Wettig, Gerhard (2011-06-10). "DA 6/2011 – Wettig: Die UdSSR und die Berliner Mauer". bpb.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  8. ^ Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967
  9. ^ Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967
  10. ^ Strains in Soviet-East German relations: 1962-1967
  11. ^ Bildung, Bundeszentrale für politische (2014-02-28). "Die DDR in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren: Suche nach einer eigenen Außenpolitik im Schatten Moskaus". bpb.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  12. ^ Vinocur, John (October 6, 1979). "Soviet and East Germans Sign an Economic Pact". The New York Times. East Berlin. p. 30. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
  13. ^ Bildung, Bundeszentrale für politische (2014-02-28). "Die DDR in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren: Suche nach einer eigenen Außenpolitik im Schatten Moskaus". bpb.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  14. ^ "»Wir Bruderländer stehen fest«". Der Spiegel (in German). 1992-10-11. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  15. ^ SWR2 (2023-10-06). "Gorbatschow in der DDR – Kein "Wer zu spät kommt ..." | 6.10.1989". swr.online (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ a b Deutschland, Stiftung Deutsches Historisches Museum, Stiftung Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik. "Gerade auf LeMO gesehen: LeMO Kapitel: Vernetzung der Weltwirtschaft". www.hdg.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ mdr.de. "Uranbergbau in der DDR: Das war die Wismut | MDR.DE". www.mdr.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  18. ^ "Stabilität und Krise in der DDR 1971-1980 - Das war die DDR". d-d-r.de. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  19. ^ Adam-Tkalec, Maritta (2022-05-08). "Millionen Freunde sollt ihr sein: Leben in deutsch-sowjetischer Freundschaft". Berliner Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-29.

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