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21 October 2022

Carnegie's Dempsey: Germany’s Continued Illusions About China and Russia


Berlin’s pursuit of economic and political ties with Beijing and Moscow has created dangerous dependencies. A change in strategy would benefit both Germany and the EU.

As if the German government needed to be reminded of the high price of its dependence on Russia and China.

Over the years, these two authoritarian regimes embedded themselves in the German economy and ingratiated themselves with the elites. Such developments prevented the EU from forging a coherent, critical strategy toward both Moscow and Beijing.

Judy Dempsey
Dempsey is a nonresident senior fellow at Carnegie Europe and editor in chief of Strategic Europe.

The union is now conducting major political and economic reassessments of its relations with Russia and China. But what about Germany, Europe’s biggest economy?

Over the decades, regardless of whether the Social Democrats or the Christian Democrats were in government, both parties consistently pursued economic and political relationships with Russia and China. This pursuit was based on national, not European interests. It was motivated by profit, not values or principles. These policies were also naively based on the idea that closer trade and economic ties would lead to stability, even trust.

The big question is whether Russia’s brutal war against Ukraine that began in February 2022 and China’s relentless authoritarian drive under Xi Jinping, expected to be confirmed this week at the Communist Party’s congress, will fundamentally change the view from Berlin.

It should, for anyone reading an account of a German parliamentary hearing that took place on October 17 with the presidents of the Federal Intelligence Service (BND), the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) and the Military Counterintelligence Service (MAD).

The three agencies had warned, even before Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, of President Vladimir Putin’s use of violence and force to achieve his goals.

MAD President Martina Rosenberg said she warned about Russia’s cyber attacks, about drones repeatedly flying over Bundeswehr sites where military trainings were taking place, about spying on the defense industry, about disinformation campaigns inside the armed forces. China, she added, was extremely active in these areas too.

So why didn’t the government react to such potential destabilizing interferences?

BND President Bruno Kahl said his reports on Putin’s propensity for violence had always been “quite unreserved.” But, he added, there was the tendency of “politicians and the public to prefer to trust a positive spin.”

Thomas Haldenwang, BfV president, described how Russia uses all channels of spreading false news, attributed to “democracy-destroying relevance.” And in Germany, Russia is helped by pro-Russian “influencers” and “active politicians with particular closeness to Russia, some of whom spread Russian propaganda in the German Bundestag – out of deep conviction or because there’s money in it.”

Indeed, on October 16, the interior minister sacked Arne Schönbohm, who since 2016 was head of the Federal Office for Information Security, the cybersecurity agency. Allegedly he had links with Russian intelligence services.

The top three security and intelligence officials didn’t pull any punches over China either.

Kahl warned about a considerable threat from an “autocratic China rising to become a global power.” He said business, society, and politics in Germany have also been too trusting and “painfully dependent” on a power that “suddenly no longer seems well-disposed.”

All three officials said they had been trying to “raise awareness in the business community” about China’s intentions. The influential Federation of German Industries broke ground in 2019 by writing a critical report on China and how German industry had to understand the consequences of becoming so dependent on China for exports and certain commodities. However, Kahl said, there is still “a lot of trust and naivete… that is not appropriate.”...

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