Spiegel scandal
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The ''Spiegel'' affair of 1962 (german: link=no, Spiegel-Affäre) was a
political scandal In politics, a political scandal is an action or event regarded as morally or legally wrong and causing general public outrage. Politicians, government officials, party officials and lobbyists can be accused of various illegal, corrupt, uneth ...
in
West Germany West Germany is the colloquial term used to indicate the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG; german: Bundesrepublik Deutschland , BRD) between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany on 3 O ...
. It stemmed from the publication of an article in '' Der Spiegel,'' West Germany's weekly political magazine, about the nation's defense forces.. Several ''Spiegel'' staffers were detained on charges of
treason Treason is the crime of attacking a state authority to which one owes allegiance. This typically includes acts such as participating in a war against one's native country, attempting to overthrow its government, spying on its military, its diplo ...
, but were ultimately released without trial. The scandal stemmed from a conflict between Franz Josef Strauss, federal minister of defense, and Rudolf Augstein, owner and editor-in-chief of ''Der Spiegel''. The affair cost Strauss his office and, according to some commentators, put the Post-war Germany, post-war West German democracy to its first successful test of press freedom.


Cause

Strauss and Augstein had clashed in 1961, when ''Der Spiegel'' raised accusations of bribery in favor of the Fibag scandal, FIBAG construction company, which had received a contract for building military facilities. A parliamentary enquiry, however, found no evidence against Strauss. The quarrel escalated when the 10 October 1962 issue of ''Der Spiegel'' presented an article by Conrad Ahlers, ''"Bedingt abwehrbereit"'' ("Conditionally Ready to Defend"), about a NATO exercise called "Fallex 62". The piece "included details about the performance of West Germany’s defense forces" and "a NATO commander’s assessment that found the West German forces to be only partially ready to defend the country." The magazine was accused of Treason#Germany, treason (''Landesverrat'') "by publishing details that a hastily compiled Defense Ministry document claimed were state secrets". At 9 p.m. on 26 October, its offices in Hamburg, as well as the homes of several journalists, were raided and searched by 36 policemen, who confiscated thousands of documents. Augstein and editors-in-chief Claus Jacobi and Johannes Engel were arrested. The author of the article, Ahlers, who was vacationing in Spain, was arrested in his hotel during the night. Augstein was in custody for 103 days. The offices remained under police occupation for four weeks, while the magazine continued to appear each week, produced not without some difficulty, elsewhere. Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic), Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was informed of Strauss' actions. However, Wolfgang Stammberger, the Minister of Justice, belonging to the smaller coalition Free Democratic Party (Germany), FDP, was deliberately left out of all decisions. News of the arrests caused riots and protest throughout West Germany. Strauss initially denied all involvement, even before the ''Bundestag''; Adenauer, in another speech, complained about an "abyss of treason" ''("Abgrund von Landesverrat")''. Strauss was finally forced to admit that he had phoned the military attaché of the West German embassy to Spain in Madrid and urged the attaché to have Ahlers arrested. This was clearly illegal – as Minister of the Interior Hermann Höcherl paraphrased, ''"etwas außerhalb der Legalität"'' ("somewhat outside of legality"). Since Strauss had lied to the parliament, on 19 November the five FDP ministers of the cabinet resigned, demanding that Strauss be fired. This put Adenauer himself at risk. He found himself publicly accused of backing the suppression of a critical press with the resources of the state.


Conclusion

On 26 November, the police ended their occupation of the ''Der Spiegel'' offices, while Augstein, Ahlers and three others remained under arrest – Augstein until 7 February 1963. In December 1962, Adenauer formed a new coalition with the Free Democratic Party but Strauss and Stammberger were left out of power. On 13 May 1965, the ''Federal Court of Justice of Germany, Bundesgerichtshof'' (highest German court of appeals) refused to commence trial proceedings against Augstein and Ahlers, ruling that during the affair Strauss had exceeded his competencies and committed ''Freiheitsberaubung'' (deprivation of personal freedom); however, because of his belief of acting lawfully (''"Verbotsirrtum"''), he was exempt from punishment. The case also came before the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, which issued a groundbreaking ruling in August 1966 that laid down the basics of the freedom of the press for decades to come.


Aftermath

The scandal temporarily halted Strauss' political career and was remembered by many when Strauss ran for ''Chancellor of Germany, Bundeskanzler'' in 1980, clearly losing against his Social Democratic Party of Germany, SPD opponent (and incumbent) Helmut Schmidt. However, it is mostly remembered for altering the political culture of post-war West Germany and – with the first mass demonstrations and public protests – being a turning point from the old ''Obrigkeitsstaat'' (authoritarian state) to a modern democracy. The British historian Frederick Taylor (historian), Frederick Taylor argued that the Federal Republic under Adenauer retained many of the characteristics of the authoritarian "deep state" that existed under the Weimar Republic, and that the ''Spiegel'' affair marked an important turning point in German values as ordinary people rejected the old authoritarian outlook in favour of the more democratic values that came to be seen as the bedrock of the Federal Republic. Augstein became one of International Press Institute's 50 ''Hero of World Press Freedom'' laureates in 2000 for his role in the Spiegel scandal.. The scandal was the closure of a reactionary period and the Parochialism, parochial culture in West Germany.


Movie adaptation

The ''Spiegel'' affair was adapted into a German television film, ''Die Spiegelaffäre: Das Duell'', which was broadcast in May 2014 on Arte and ARD (broadcaster), ARD. The film was criticized by Rudolf Augstein's daughter, Franziska Augstein for containing many historical inaccuracies, in particular for inappropriately focusing on personal conflicts between Strauss and Augstein to the detriment of covering the actual political and judicial conflict in the society..


See also

* Fibag scandal


References


Further reading

* Birkner, Thomas, and Sebastian Mallek. "The Spiegel Affair, 1962: The incident that changed German journalism history and mediatized politics." in ''Critical Incidents in Journalism'' (Routledge, 2020) pp. 203-215. * . * (reviews at JSTOR
The American Historical ReviewThe Western Political Quarterly
. * . * . * Ridley, Hugh. "The Spiegel Affair." in ''Law in West German Democracy'' ( Brill, 2019) pp. 130-145. * (reviews at JSTOR
International Journal
* .


External links

* . Translation of the West German supreme court's (Bundesverfassungsgericht) legal decision. {{Authority control Political scandals in Germany 1962 in Germany Freedom of expression Der Spiegel