The web
still amazes, information that might never have accessed or would have taken
months to discover and beg or borrow a copy can just pop up or there is someone
that knows.
The date is
Thursday 5th May 1955 when in Europe the Federal Republic of Germany,
the West, formed in 1949 under Allied tutelage became a sovereign state, member
of NATO and was admitted, more or less, to the family of nations, although with
strictly limited military capacity.
In July
1945 units from the 7th Armoured Division, shoulder flash the Desert
Rat had paraded in Berlin
as the representatives of the British Army before the Allied leaders, Churchill
personally commended them. In May 1955
because of Berlin ’s
different status surrounded by the Soviet controlled Eastern Zone there was no
parading.
In fact the
ending of the British Army of Occupation and the others was all quite low key
and officially little was made of it.
The 7th Armoured Division General Staff had other ideas and
paraded at their own headquarters in Verden with detachments from the various
units if the Division.
This was
not quite as low key as it seems, not only was The Royal Dragoons, now part of
the Blues and Royals Household Cavalry there but also the Fourth Hussars, whose
Colonel in Chief was Sir Winston Churchill who had been Prime Minister until 7th
April 1955.
Just after
1945 there had been some debate about what was to be done about Germany . One extreme idea from some in the USA
was that it should be “pastoralised”, meaning that it more or less should be
all farmland.
Another was
that it should revert to the pre 1871 collection of separate small states and
forbidden to reunite. Each of these
states would have a foreign supervisor to control it.
These ideas
were scuppered by the Cold War, the Iron Curtain and the hostility between the
West and the Soviet Union and its client
states. Something of a united Germany was
necessary as a bulwark although dependent on NATO forces.
But from 5th
May 1955 day Western Germany was free to purse its own economic policies and
was not involved to any great extent in all the world affairs that demanded
that the UK
and others commit huge efforts and military involvement, all at a cost.
After all,
it was politics and power around the world that matters, not economics. So by nearly twenty years later the UK was
scrambling to be admitted to the newly developed European Common Market on
almost any terms because of the disastrous state of its economy and its consequential
inability to govern.
As the
Common Market developed with France
and Germany at the centre,
despite all our claims and posturing to be at “the heart of Europe” the growth
and capability of the newly founded German economy, largely free of the
international burdens and any of the fall out from Empire endured by France and the UK .
This led to
the foundation of the European Monetary System (EMS) in 1979 and as far as
money matters were concerned the Germans were very much at the centre and if
not in control could not be controlled.
The
politicians wanted to drive on to a Federal Europe. After the reuniting of East and West Germany stresses developed, notably because
Italy in particular and
others had not been minding their monetary affairs wisely, the EMS blew fuses in 1992.
One effect was to cause long term damage to the credibility of the UK
Conservative party.
The upshot
of this was the political decision to create a single money system. So the Euro came into being on 1st
January 1999 with German and the European Central Bank very much at the helm. Whilst the Goldilocks economy, pumped up by
vast credit expansion, lasted, all was well.
Germany
only needed to have a light hand on the tiller and the EU could go on with the
charade of ever increasing spending and commitments and mutual back scratching
because the money always flowed according to the whims of the governments.
Now there
is another breakdown and all is uncertain.
But if any state in Europe is to have the final say and assume control
of the economies of the Euro Zone then it will be Germany . Possibly the first Target For Tonight will be
the financial sector notably the problems perceived by the failures of control
and laxity of the City of London .
Meanwhile
the remnants of the British Army will soon be repatriated from Germany . Amongst them will be the 7th
Armoured Brigade who retained the right to use of the Desert Rat after the
disbandment of the Division in the late 1950’s.
Will they
parade when they leave or will they just skulk off to the ferries? Will they then be disbanded because there is
nowhere for them to go in the UK ?
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