Putin Recalls Fall of Berlin Wall in New Documentary
By Nikolaus von Twickel
The St. Petersburg Times
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First Person
Vladimir Putin in 1985
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MOSCOW
— Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin has publicly recalled how he personally contributed to
this turn in history as a Soviet spy in East Germany.
Putin
told veteran NTV reporter Vladimir Kondratyev in a half-hour interview
how he managed to calm down an angry crowd of East German protesters
outside the KGB headquarters in Dresden in late 1989.
Putin
rose from obscurity to the country’s most popular politician in 1999,
serving as president from 2000 to 2008 and subsequently becoming prime
minister.
Kondratyev
said Wednesday that Putin had gladly recalled fond memories from his
days in Cold War Germany and acknowledged the inevitability of the
German Democratic Republic’s demise.
“He
was very relaxed and smiled a lot, yet he expressed a very clear
opinion about the fall of the wall — that what happened was bound to
happen,” Kondratyev told The Moscow Times.
Kondratyev
would not reveal how many minutes of his upcoming documentary film
“Stena” (“The Wall”) would be devoted to Putin, but he denied that the
prime minister was its main theme. “It is about the fall of the wall.
Putin is just one of many characters who will appear,” he said.
He said, however, that he would travel to Dresden later this week to shoot the introduction.
Putin’s
interview will be aired as part of the 50-minute film at 7:25 p.m on
NTV on Sunday, Nov. 8 — one day before the 20th anniversary of the fall
of the wall.
Putin
served as a KGB officer in Dresden, which was then a provincial outpost
so remote that locals could not receive West German television, from
1985 to 1990. His only brush with history there occurred on Dec. 5,
1989, almost a month after the wall fell.
After
storming the nearby local headquarters of the East German Secret
Police, or Stasi, protesters gathered outside his office building.
Public
information about Putin’s service in East Germany is scarce, and the
only reliable account is in “First Person,” a series of
autobiographical interviews published in 2000. Here, Putin recalled
how he met the crowd personally and told them in German that this was a
Soviet military organization. When people replied suspiciously that he
spoke German too well, “I told them I was a translator,” he said.
Kondratyev
said Putin gave no new account of those events, but the prime minister
made it clear that he understood at the time that the Soviet-inspired
division of Germany had no future.
“He said that the wall was all unnatural and that he thought that its fall meant the end of the GDR,” Kondratyev said.
In
“First Person,” Putin expressed his deep frustration about Moscow’s
waning power when he called Soviet military headquarters for help
against the protesters. “I was told that nothing could be done without
orders from Moscow. And Moscow is silent,” he said.
Eventually,
he said, military personnel did come and the crowd dispersed, but the
words “Moscow is silent” remained with him. Putin said he got the
feeling then that the Soviet Union had disappeared.
German
media have reported that one Soviet official threatened to shoot at
protesters, saying he was “a soldier until death,” and the quote was
later ascribed to Putin, although Putin never mentioned it and it was
never verified.
In
the NTV interview, Kondratyev said Putin suggested that the protesters
understood that the Stasi and not the Soviet Union should be the prime
target of their anger.
“He
spoke very positively about these events and stressed that
German-Russian relations subsequently achieved a new quality and
included a feeling of gratitude,” he said.
Under
Putin’s eight years as president, relations with Berlin flourished,
with Germany becoming both a key foreign investor and foreign policy
ally. That privileged partnership, as dubbed by the Kremlin, was
conceived under the close personal friendship between President Putin
and German Chancellor Gerhard Schr?der, and continues under their
successors, Dmitry Medvedev and Angela Merkel.
However, Putin’s record as a democratic leader has been debated in Dresden just as much as anywhere else in the West.
Wolfgang
Sch?like, head of the city’s German-Russian Culture Institute, said
Putin’s KGB background makes relations with him more complicated for
East Germans than for West Germans.
Since
the democratic upheaval of 1989, any record of employment or
cooperation with Communist security services is seen as an utter
disgrace, Sch?like said by telephone from Dresden. “The Stasi here is
the ultimate whipping boy,” he said.
He
noted that in today’s Germany it is unthinkable for people who once
worked for the secret police to take public office like Putin has done
in Russia. “Even kindergarten workers lost their jobs after it was
revealed that they had links to the Stasi,” he said.
Sch?like
said he credited Stanislav Tillich, prime minister of the local state
of Saxony, for striving to improve local relations with Moscow.
But
there was considerable outrage in local and national media when Tillich
handed a medal of honor to Putin in Dresden in January, at the height
of the gas war with Ukraine.
“And next year the medal will go to Colonel Gaddafi,” Antje Hermenau, a local leader of the Green party, said at the time.
n?Nearly
a quarter of Russians believe that there is a personality cult of Putin
in the country, according to a new poll by the independent Levada
Center. A total of 23 percent of respondents said they saw evidence for
this, an increase from 22 percent last year.
In
a sign that such tendencies can spill over as far as the United States’
West Coast, a media report said the Russian Bodybuilding Federation was
planning to present a bust of Putin to Californian Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
Alexander
Chernoshchyokov, a St. Petersburg-based sculptor, told Agence-France
Press that the bust was being created as a gift for the former
Hollywood bodybuilder and would be delivered in March. “Putin is such a
complex personality. He’s left no one indifferent,” Chernoshchyokov
told AFP.