NID: GERMANYS: EARLY ELECTION FORCING PACE OF UNITY DEBATE

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
06826861
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RIPPUB
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U
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
November 26, 2019
Document Release Date: 
December 10, 2019
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Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 30, 1990
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PDF icon NID GERMANYS EARLY ELEC[15743430].pdf76.84 KB
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Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826861 I I�I LI 3 C. GERMANYS: Early Election Forcing Pace of Unity Debate The advancement of the East German election is already forcing the pace of decisionmaking in Bonn and East Berlin as the unity question increasingly dominates both Germanys' agendas. East German Communist leader Gysi canceled today's scheduled trip to Washington. citing the nccd to prepare his collapsing party for the March election. Gysi has called unification "unstoppable" but cautioned against hasty movemcnt.I he will fly to Moscow soon. following Premier Modrow o caves today to meet with President Gorbachev and Premier Ryzhkov. Meanwhile�barely a day after a non-Communist caretaker government was announced�some 100,000 demonstrators in Leipzig called for German unity and an end to Communist rule. Also citing the new East German election date, West German Chancellor Kohl has canceled a t � March. Bonn IS stowing efforts toward a "treaty community" het wren the Germanys Comment: The continuing rounific Isuggest a widespread German belief that the unification is being telescoped. Inew German initiatives, such as a proposal for a demilitarized Eas Germany. may be announced soon. Modrow and Gysi may try to use their Soviet visits to show their influence with Moscow: they probably will coordinate policy on managing the unification process, including responses to popular demands for reducing the Soviet troop presence in East Germany. Modrow may urge Moscow not to cut oil. shipments or Soviet orders for East German goods during the election campaign even though Moscow will be hard pressed to avoid temporary cutbacks. Gysi probably hopes Gorbachev's popularity in East Germany will help slow the Communists' eroding electoral prospects. 2 -TeirrberrigL TCS 2724/90 30 January 1990 6.2(d) 6.2(d) 3.3(b)(1) 6.2(d) 3.3(b)(1) 3.3(b)(1) 3.3(b)(1) 6.2(d) 3.3(b)(1) 3.3(b)(1) 6.2(d; 6.2(d Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826861 � Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826861 I, 'U] U -Tra-Seczet The East German Election and Soviet Troop Withdranals A freely elected East German government is likely to call for Soviet troop reductions, although Bonn and East Berlin would prefer that any withdrawals occur at a measured pace and be accompanied by some US withdrawals from %Vest Germany. The presence of about 380,000 Soviet troops and their extensive training needs have been a constant burden on East Germans. A sharp reduction in Soviet troops would give a strong impetus toward German unification, which most political parties in East Germany endorse in some form. East German officials are signaling they have no desire to be the sole East European country retaining large Soviet forces. West German officials will try to facilitate Soviet reductions and may even be forced by domestic political pressures to echo East German calls for a partial withdrawal of Allied forces from West Germany. In a matter of weeks, Foreign Minister Genscher is likely to flesh out his ideas of how Germany fits into collective European security arrangements in order to provide the basis for agreed steps toward unity. In talks with Moscow, Bonn will reject any formula that legitimizes a continued Soviet presence in East Germany. Bonn would be angered by any indication the US and the Soviets were trying to strike a bilateral deal that indefinitely perpetuated the presence of foreign forces in either German state and will try to block moves in this direction. Kohl government officials nonetheless are sensitive to Soviet security concerns and probably would lobby the US for early reductions in US forces below the 275,000 ceiling in NATO's current CFE proposal. Bonn might also try to reassure the Soviets by suggesting that NATO forces not be deployed in what is now East Germany once unification occurs. Kohl's chief foreign policy adviser stated publicly that East Germany could be "demilitarized." The NATO Allies would be in a weak position to block a request by Bonn to remove stationed forces from West Germany. London and Paris, in particular, probably would caution against US troop reductions and would link the withdrawal of their own forces in Germany to a formal peace treaty. Stronger resistance, however, probably would be interpreted in Bonn as a threat to its sovereignty and to the spirit of the NATO Alliance. -TO-SOW& TCS 2724/90 30 January 1990 Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826861