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Historic Phone Call Between Friends at a Culminating
Moment
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Party: Citizens and leaders celebrate unification
in front of the Reichstag in Berlin in the early morning hours of
October 3, 1990. |
On the afternoon of October 3, 1990, after a night of joyous celebrating
across Germany ushered in the day on which East and West Germany officially
became one, Chancellor Helmut Kohl in Berlin received a phone call from
his friend and fellow statesman President George H. W. Bush in Washington.
Since the Fall of the Wall on November 9, 1989 had pleasantly caught most
world leaders off guard, the two heads of government had met numerous
times in Bonn, Washington, and even Camp David and been in regular contact
via phone and letter, to discuss the delicate international balancing
act required to usher in reunification and peacefully secure a united
Germany’s place in Europe and within the North Atlantic Alliance.
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Moscow: Chancellor Kohl met with Soviet leader
Gorbachev on February 10, 1990. |
Chancellor Kohl was especially grateful to President Bush for a letter
Bush had written him in February 1990 on the eve of Kohl’s fateful
meeting with Soviet President Mikail Gorbachev in Moscow, a meeting at
which Kohl received assurances that the USSR would not stand in the way
of the reunification of Germany.
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*White House memorandum |
Now Bush was calling to congratulate Kohl on the achievement of unification.
“Helmut!” Bush called into the phone. “I am sitting
in a meeting with members of our Congress and am calling at the end of
this historic day to wish you well.”
“Words can’t describe the feeling,” said Kohl, noting
that the night before, one million people had come to celebrate on the
very spot at the Brandenburg Gate where Ronald Reagan in 1987 had called
on Gorbachev to “open this gate.”
“A short time ago there was enormous applause when our President
said that our gratitude was owed especially to our Allied friends and
above all our American friends. I share that view,” Kohl said. “When
the parliamentary declaration is made, it will say that all American Presidents
from Harry Truman all the way up to our friend George Bush made this possible.
I would like to thank you again for all your support for us.”
Bush said he had to run, “but I wanted you to know what pride we
have in standing by the German people.”
The call lasted only three minutes, but it spoke volumes about the warm
relationship that had grown between the two leaders and about the permanent
bond of gratitude forged between their countries that would not end with
the Cold War.
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| Leaders:
In September 1991, Chancellor Kohl, left, President Bush and Angela
Merkel, then Minister for Family and Youth, at the White House. bpa
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George H.W. Bush and Helmut Kohl have remained friends-Kohl was the first
recipient of the George Bush Award—and have come together over the
years to mark the Day of German Unity. In 1999, ten years after the Fall
of the Wall, the two leaders and Mikhail Gorbachev came together in Berlin
for the national Day of German Unity celebration.
*Source: George Bush Presidential Library (document in the public
domain)
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 German Unity 2006: Celebrating with Statesmen
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Historic Phone Call Between Friends
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