German unification occupies a significant place in the history of this great European power. Otto Von Bismarck, once the prime minister of Prussia, is responsible for single-handedly engineering this unification through clever strategies and creative tactics. The paper sheds light on the role of this German Chancellor in the unification of Germany.
ROLE OF BISMARCK IN GERMAN UNIFICATION
Germany has seen and experienced more than its fair share of troubles, wars and turbulence. The country has been divided and unified twice and on both occasions, German population made huge sacrifices. But compared to reunification of 1989, the first unification was a gory affair because it was largely sponsored and supported by German military. Whenever military gets involved in any event, possibility of bloodshed looms large and that is exactly what happened in Germany in the decade of 1860-1870. It was the time when Otto Von Bismarck had come to power and was acting as the president of Prussia under the orders of King Wilhelm I. Bismarck was a highly controversial figure and to this day, people are unable to classify him as either a true statesman or a rigid dictator (Pflanze 1987). He was one of those leaders who led Germany to glory but at the same time displayed some cruel traits, which many believe gave birth to the likes of Adolf Hitler (Fn 1). Bismarck will however be remembered as the man who engineered the unification of his country and was fearless and courageous in many respects.
The three signs of great men are -- generosity in the design, humanity in the execution, moderation in success."- Bismarck
Footnotes
1. See Pflanze's book's Bismarck: the man and the statesman, which sheds light on various achievements and blunders of Bismarck's regime
ANNE MCELVOY (1998) writes, "Bismarck is too contradictory and complex a figure to be elevated as a model of statesmanship, or caricatured as the force of pure conservative reaction. He was the fiercest opponent of the Liberals, yet produced the most innovative welfare and insurance schemes in Europe; he was an arch- Prussian who founded the German nation state, and a foe to democracy who introduced the first universal male suffrage. But the system he left was inherently unstable. It functioned during his lifetime, but no one else could run it without him." (4)
Whether we admire or despise this leader, one thing cannot change: he was the man solely responsible for first unification of Germany. Very few leaders have been able to attach such glorious victories and achievements to their name. He almost single-handedly devised a clever plan to crush his enemies in two vital wars, which resulted in unification of Northern and Southern German states and turned Germany into a mighty force. Though Bismarck certainly led to the unification of Germany, he cannot be considered a perfect ruler as he believed immensely in the powers of aristocracy and monarchy and thus wanted to rule Germany with an iron hand. While people still see him as a major force behind the unification of Germany, we must ignore the fact that he never made use of diplomatic means or channels for his end. He believed that the only way Germany could be unified under one confederation was through iron and blood policies, which would certainly involve the military. He was the man behind major conflicts that surfaced during his reign. This was because once he came to power; he never consulted the parliament that led to bitterness among Liberals.
Stephan Gallagher (1981) writes, "In 1862 the Prussian King William (Wilhelm) I chose Otto von Bismarck as his prime minister. Of Junker ancestry, Bismarck favored absolutism less than he championed aristocratic hegemony; he was particularly fond of the Junker-dominated Prussian army. Bismarck had been elected to the new Prussian parliament in 1848 and from 1851 served as Prussian delegate to the German Confederation's diet (composed of monarchical representatives). As Prussian prime minister his main task became that of resolving the conflict between crown and parliament on the issue of military reform. Bismarck's solution consisted of a synthesis of Hohenzollern authoritarianism and the liberal program of national unification as the means to win liberal support in parliament. Bismarck's method was the "politics of power." (1)
Politics is the art of the possible, the attainable... The art of the next best."-Bismarck
That Bismarck wanted German unification more than anything was clear from his various actions that he took during that important decade, but to say...
For the period of the late 1960s and early 1970s, West Germany strived to assist the dollar. The United States and many other nations pushed West Germany to reassess so as to make up for the dollar excess. (Germany in the World Economy) At last, after escalating waves of conjectures, the Bretton Woods system had a collapse in August 1971. All through the post-Bretton Woods period, the deutsche mark stayed
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