With this crackdown, it appears, the Germans disrupted plans for a full-bore putsch. Fittingly, putsch is a German word that migrated into English. The Weimar Republic survived several attempted coups until it succumbed in 1933.
Can this really be happening? Are our democracies really under such existential threat from loonies, extremists and domestic terrorists?
Yes, the danger is real.
The QAnon subculture of mad ravings certainly formed part of the mental backdrop of the suspected plotters. But its various figments and narratives had merged, as such poppycock tends to do, with an older and homegrown genre of German extremism.
This is the movement of so-called Reichsbuerger, or "Imperial Citizens." Distinct from Neo-Nazis, these Reichsbuerger — estimated to number in the tens of thousands — believe that the Federal Republic of Germany does not actually exist. Some think the FRG is a limited-liability company set up by the Allied victors of World War II and controlled by Jews. Others have different theories. But all deny that the republic has any legitimacy.
Instead, they're convinced that the Reich, the German Empire, has never ceased to exist in both law and spirit — and within the borders of either 1871 or 1937 — and that it is theirs to liberate from the "deep state" of compromised bureaucrats.
In the past, these phantasms were usually cause for amusement or bafflement more than concern. At traffic stops, for example, Reichsbuerger will produce driver's licenses issued by the Reich — that is, by their own network. When hauled into court, they'll theatrically disdain the authority of the judge. They'll publicly pledge allegiance to their true leaders, a changing cast of imperial chancellors, princes and kings.
What's come to light this week, however, is that the movement is — or was, if you're optimistic — well-armed, prepared and determined to seize power, with Heinrich XIII slated to take over. The Reichsbuerger apparently had plans to kidnap Germany's health minister — known for his hawkish Covid policies — and to execute his secret service detail, among other public figures. They also appear to have intended to attack the Bundestag. Moreover, the network seems to have contacts with, if not support from, Russia.
As so often in recent years, I am once again shocked but not surprised. Did we really think that the spread of conspiracy theories, the dumbing down of public discourse, the radicalization of the political fringes and the constant infiltration of our societies with disinformation from the Kremlin and other propaganda organs would have no lasting effects on our democracies?
With the first person plural I do mean all of us, from the U.S. to Brazil, Hungary, the Philippines and beyond. Democracy is under threat not just geopolitically but also domestically. Another thing the Germans showed this week is that they've understood this reality, and have learned the lessons from their own past. Since World War II, they've built what they called a wehrhaft — or fortified — democracy. Let that word join putsch as an export into English.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Andreas Kluth is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. He was previously editor in chief of Handelsblatt Global and a writer for the Economist. He's the author of "Hannibal and Me."
Previously:
• 11/28/22: Russia's mass abductions are genocide
• 10/21/22: If Putin orders a nuke, will his generals obey?
• 09/23/22: A decision tree for Biden if Putin goes nuclear
• 08/25/22: Putin wouldn't shrink from starting Chernobyl 2.0 in Ukraine
• 07/08/22: Ukraine has better heroes than this friend of fascism
• 06/10/22: Merkel will enter history as the Neville Chamberlain of our time
• 04/29/22: NATO needs to seal the deal with Sweden and Finland fast
• 01/24/22: Vladimir Putin has no time for your reality
• 01/06/22:Bombast, distance and distrust: Your guide to Ukraine talks
• 01/06/22: An international court decision forces all of us to debate who should get medical care if it must be rationed
• 12/08/21: A crisis of masculinity as robots replace men
• 11/03/21: In post — Merkel Europe, what is 'conservatism'?
• 11/03/21: In this nuclear arms race, China's hypersonic gliders are a wake — up call
• 07/16/21: By doggedly backing a Russian gas link, Angela Merkel has let down the U.S. and Europe — — — and left her successor only bad options
• 06/08/21:Will you have fewer friends after lockdown?
• 07/29/20: OK, boomer, we're gonna socialize you
• 07/09/20: The fight over a coronavirus vaccine will get ugly
• 05/26/20: The EU is entering a constitutional crisis