In the chaos of Iraq, there are some interesting lessons we might extract from our occupation of post world war II Germany. The historian David Stafford has carefully shown where the similarities and differences between these cases. With the collapse of the Wehrmacht in Germany, the Allies began a de Nazi program--dissolve the party, put war criminals behind bars awaiting trial and retribution, and abolish the Prussian state-often seen as the site of much militarism in that nation. With all their problems, the Germans had a long tradition of law, order, and constitutional government that is very different from the Iraqi state. It took over a decade of occupation before the Allies gave over full power to the new German government.
General Dwight Eisenhower spent two years planning the occupation, and it was clearly left in the hands of the military. The armed forces specifically trained military men of promise who would run the regional governments over the next several years. After the war was declared over, a wave of violence broke out, especially from the slave laborers recently freed from Nazi atrocities. Museums were looted, just as in Baghdad after Saddam fell. Faced with some Nazis who wanted to continue the struggle, the Allies acted ruthlessly and either executed or imprisoned the opponents. Eisenhower made it clear that "We come as conquerors, but not as oppressors." The military rules not as social workers or as those pledged to Wilsonian liberation.
In their de Nazification program, the Allies had to back off since they needed some of the expertise of the older officials. They had the Germans make those decisions as to who should be pardoned or not. Still, self government did not come until 1949 and only then with the huge boost of the Marshall plan. We can learn much about the problems of nation building, even from the problems of our successes.
Michael P. Riccards is Executive Director of the Hall Institute of Public Policy – New Jersey.
Annette Quijano will resign her post as Assistant Counsel to Gov. Jon Corzine to take her seat in the State Assembly. She won a special election ... >
One hesitates to quote Shakespeare to the Editors of The Record. The thought of all that dust rising from their library shelves is enough to make me ... >
A Post columnist contends that New Jersey offers a cautionary tale to New York. He's right. >
Despite all the recent downsizing news at The Record and Star Ledger, similar economic pressures at New Jersey's only statewide television ... >
Tibet – the broad, high plateau between India and China – is bigger than Western Europe and the source of the great rivers of Asia: the Indus, ... >
For the past few weeks, I've watched with fascination as politician after politician have appeared on a beach or a boardwalk and declared their ... >
Some time ago, I analyzed the Catholic vote and noted in passing how some members of the Church hierarchy, in places such as St. Louis and Colorado ... >
As labor is burning, our National union leaders are fiddling. Some of them are simply arsonists. While the labor movement has made tremendous ... >
Last Thursday around 1 p.m., I began my dissertation defense -- a 45-minute talk for the final stage of the Ph.D. process. At almost exactly the ... >