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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHistory Will Judge the Complicit
Why have Republican leaders abandoned their principles in support of an immoral and dangerous president?https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/07/trumps-collaborators/612250/
On a cold march afternoon in 1949, Wolfgang Leonhard slipped out of the East German Communist Party Secretariat, hurried home, packed what few warm clothes he could fit into a small briefcase, and then walked to a telephone box to call his mother. My article will be finished this evening, he told her. That was the code they had agreed on in advance. It meant that he was escaping the country, at great risk to his life. Though only 28 years old at the time, Leonhard stood at the pinnacle of the new East German elite. The son of German Communists, he had been educated in the Soviet Union, trained in special schools during the war, and brought back to Berlin from Moscow in May 1945, on the same airplane that carried Walter Ulbricht, the leader of what would soon become the East German Communist Party. Leonhard was put on a team charged with re‑creating Berlins city government.
He had one central task: to ensure that any local leaders who emerged from the postwar chaos were assigned deputies loyal to the party. Its got to look democratic, Ulbricht told him, but we must have everything in our control. Leonhard had lived through a great deal by that time. While he was still a teenager in Moscow, his mother had been arrested as an enemy of the people and sent to Vorkuta, a labor camp in the far north. He had witnessed the terrible poverty and inequality of the Soviet Union, he had despaired of the Soviet alliance with Nazi Germany between 1939 and 1941, and he knew about the Red Armys mass rapes of women following the occupation. Yet he and his ideologically committed friends instinctively recoiled from the thought that any of these events were in diametrical opposition to our Socialist ideals. Steadfastly, he clung to the belief system he had grown up with.
The turning point, when it came, was trivial. While walking down the hall of the Central Committee building, he was stopped by a pleasant-looking middle-aged man, a comrade recently arrived from the West, who asked where to find the dining room. Leonhard told him that the answer depended on what sort of meal ticket he haddifferent ranks of officials had access to different dining rooms. The comrade was astonished: But arent they all members of the Party? Leonhard walked away and entered his own, top-category dining room, where white cloths covered the tables and high-ranking functionaries received three-course meals. He felt ashamed. Curious, I thought, that this had never struck me before! That was when he began to have the doubts that inexorably led him to plot his escape.
At exactly that same moment, in exactly the same city, another high-ranking East German was coming to precisely the opposite set of conclusions. Markus Wolf was also the son of a prominent German Communist family. He also spent his childhood in the Soviet Union, attending the same elite schools for children of foreign Communists as Leonhard did, as well as the same wartime training camp; the two had shared a bedroom there, solemnly calling each other by their aliasesthese were the rules of deep conspiracyalthough they knew each others real names perfectly well. Wolf also witnessed the mass arrests, the purges, and the poverty of the Soviet Unionand he also kept faith with the cause. He arrived in Berlin just a few days after Leonhard, on another plane full of trusted comrades, and immediately began hosting a program on the new Soviet-backed radio station. For many months he ran the popular You Ask, We Answer. He gave on-air answers to listeners letters, often concluding with some form of These difficulties are being overcome with the help of the Red Army.
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