Willy Brandt’s knee and Middle East politics



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The famous kneeling in Warsaw by German Chancellor Willy Brandt on December 7, 1970 was a gesture of humility that still shapes the image of post-war German history today. But how closely were Brandt’s politics connected to Middle East politics?

Then-Federal Chancellor Willy Brandt (center) in conversation with Polish Prime Minister Cyrankiewicz on December 7, 1970 (on the left is German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel).

Then-Federal Chancellor Willy Brandt (center) in conversation with Polish Prime Minister Cyrankiewicz on December 7, 1970 (on the left is German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel).

Ben Martin / Stock Photos

The fact that Willy Brandt knelt on December 7, 1970 at the Warsaw Ghetto Monument has more than a real political side. From the beginning of their coalition in October 1969, the German Chancellor (SPD) and the then Foreign Minister Walter Scheel (FDP) faced this alternative: “New Ostpolitik” or the traditional Bonn policy on Jews and Israel. Not both and. On the altar of Willy Brandt’s “new Ostpolitik”, the traditional pro-Jewish raison d’être of the Federal Republic of Germany and, derived from it, pro-Israel policy in the Middle East were sacrificed. Why?

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