A colorful personal account of the Ulbricht group’s work in Berlin is contained in the memoirs of Wolfgang Leonhard, who at twenty-three was the youngest member of the team. Raised in the USSR and educated at the Comintern School, Leonhard spoke fluent Russian and understood Moscow’s ways better than most of the older exiles. He knew what Berlin meant to the Soviet leaders, and he was honored to be part of their mission to make this former Social Democratic bastion a truly Red—
Our cars made their way slowly through Friedrichsfelde in the direction of Lichtenberg. The scene was like a picture of hell—flaming ruins and starving people shambling about in tattered clothing; dazed German soldiers who seemed to have lost all idea of what was going on; Red Army soldiers singing exultandy, and often drunk; groups of women clearing the streets under the supervision of Red Army soldiers; long queues standing patiently waiting to get a bucketful of water from the pumps; and all of them looking terribly tired, hungry, tense and demoralized.
Undeterred by the desolation around them, Leonhard and the other members of Ulbricht’s group set about finding reliable “antifascists” to serve the Soviet military occupation. Needing local lackeys to pass on their orders, Russian commanders had already appointed some native administrators, but their choices had been hurried and often ill advised. Leonhard discovered that one district commander had simply gone into the street and grabbed a passerby whose face he liked, saying “Come here! You now mayor!” In staffing the native administration, Ulbricht and company did not take the stance that only known Communists need apply. On the contrary, in traditional working-class areas like Wedding and Prenzlauer Berg they chose Social Democrats as borough mayors; and in bourgeois districts like Wilmersdorf, Zehlendorf, and Charlottenburg they found veterans of the centrist and liberal parties for these posts. They could afford to appear so evenhanded because the figures they were appointing had no substantive power; real authority was wielded by the borough mayors’ deputies and by the holders of key offices like chief of police and head of personnel.
Berlin’s new municipal government was in place by May 17. The incoming lord mayor and de facto head of the seventeen-man
Revealingly, few of the men around Ulbricht were native Berliners. They brought to their mission in the ruined German capital much of the provincialism and distrust of metropolitan life that had attended the Nazi administration of the city. For the Communists, too, the town’s cosmopolitanism, though now much reduced, represented a challenge to ideological conformity and to their prospects for political domination. Talk as they might about making Berlin open to “progress,” what they really had in mind was closing the place off to influences that they could not control.
The Beginnings of Four-Power Control