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Former West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt dies

The politician, who served as chancellor from 1974 to 1982, was 96

Helmut Schmidt, the chancellor who guided West Germany through economic turbulence and Cold War tensions, stood firm against a wave of homegrown terrorism and became a respected elder statesman, died Tuesday. He was 96.

German weekly Die Zeit, of which he was a co-publisher, confirmed in a statement that he died at his house in Hamburg.

Schmidt, a center-left Social Democrat, led West Germany from 1974 to 1982. He was elected chancellor by lawmakers in May 1974 after the resignation of fellow Social Democrat Willy Brandt — triggered when a top aide to Brandt was unmasked as an East German agent.

The new leader brought a sometimes abrasive self-confidence and his experience as a defense, finance and economy minister to the job, which he took during the economic downturn that followed the 1973 oil crisis.

Schmidt's chancellorship coincided with a relatively tense period in the Cold War, including the Soviet Union's 1979 invasion of Afghanistan.

He went along the following year with the U.S.-led boycott of the Moscow Olympics, although he later said that it "brought nothing." He later said he had disputes with the United States under President Jimmy Carter over financial and defense issues at the time and concluded "that we Germans could not afford an extra conflict with America," West Germany's protector against the Soviets.

Amid efforts to ward off a global recession, Schmidt was among the movers behind the first economic summit of leading industrial powers at Rambouillet, France, in 1975, which later turned into the annual Group of Seven meeting.

He and then–French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing played leading roles organizing the European Monetary System, aimed at protecting European currencies from wild fluctuations, which ultimately paved the way for the common European currency, the euro.

Born Dec. 23, 1918, the son of a half-Jewish school teacher in the northern city of Hamburg, Schmidt joined the Hitler Youth when his rowing team was included in the Nazi youth organization but was suspended at age 17 — "probably because my griping got on their nerves," he said.

Drafted as a soldier during World War II, his unit was deployed in the Soviet Union in 1941. He was sent to the western front at the end of the war and taken as prisoner by British forces in April 1945. He was released that August. Schmidt later said that, as a young soldier, he recognized the Nazi regime's lunacy but not its criminal nature at first.

He entered West Germany's parliament in 1953, where he earned the nickname Schmidt the Lip, a tribute to his sharp-tongued debating skills. He gained prominence in his native Hamburg with his decisive 1962 management of severe flooding.

As chancellor, his confidence served him well in facing down the homegrown terrorism of the Red Army Faction, which grew out of the leftist student movement in the 1960s. In a 1977 campaign of violence that became known as the German Autumn, the group murdered, among others, West Germany's chief federal prosecutor and the chief executive of Dresdner Bank.

Schmidt stood firm, refusing to release jailed Red Army Faction leaders even after the group kidnapped Hanns-Martin Schleyer, the head of the country's industry federation.

"The state must react with all the necessary toughness," Schmidt declared.

While Schleyer was being held in 1977, hijackers commandeered a Lufthansa plane to the Somali capital, Mogadishu, to force the release of the Red Army Faction leaders. Schmidt ordered West German anti-terrorist commandos to storm the jet, successfully rescuing 86 hostages. Shortly afterward, three of the terrorist group's leaders killed themselves in prison, and Schleyer was found murdered.

Schmidt later said he "was prepared to resign" if the Mogadishu operation went wrong. Although convinced he took the right action, he conceded that he felt guilty about Schleyer's slaying.

It was not easy for Schmidt being between the world's two superpowers — the United States and the Soviet Union — and his support for NATO's 1979 double track deploy-and-negotiate move to counter the deployments of Soviet SS-20 missiles proved divisive at home.

NATO gave the go-ahead for the modernization of its nuclear force in West Germany and elsewhere in Western Europe by deploying cruise and Pershing 2 missiles while seeking a joint limitation of the nuclear buildup through negotiations with the Soviet Union.

Backing the NATO policy helped estrange Schmidt from his own party. Missile deployment in West Germany was fiercely opposed by many younger, more left-wing Social Democrats, and in 1983, an upstart leftist rival, the Greens, entered parliament for the first time.

His chancellorship ended with his ouster in a parliamentary vote in October 1982, when his party's coalition partner, the pro-business Free Democrats, switched its allegiance to Helmut Kohl's conservative Christian Democrats because of disputes over economic policy and the squabbling within Schmidt's party.

He did not run for chancellor again, citing health concerns.

He was fitted with a heart pacemaker and also suffered from a thyroid condition. In August 2002 he underwent an emergency bypass operation after suffering a heart attack. Two years later, he had cataract surgery.

After stepping down as a lawmaker in 1987, Schmidt devoted himself to working as a co-publisher of the weekly newspaper Die Zeit.

He continued to weigh in on Germany's political debates, rarely shying from controversy — which gave him a reputation for plain speaking that won him favorable comparisons with other German politicians.

"To this day, he ranks among the personalities in our nation who can give direction to their own country and are listened to internationally," Hans-Dietrich Genscher, his former foreign minister, wrote on Schmidt's 90th birthday in 2008.

His lasting influence was underlined by the huge success of his 1987 memoir, "Menschen und Maechte" ("People and Powers"), a best-seller for more than a year.

Schmidt argued in a 2002 book that Germany had taken in too many immigrants in an idealistic attempt to overcome its Nazi past, saying his countrymen were "for the most part xenophobic deep down."

In 2003 he drew criticism for complaining about the "whininess" of people in the former East Germany, an area that struggled economically for years after Germany's 1990 reunification. "People complain about some things that they should not complain about," he declared.

Schmidt never abandoned his politically incorrect habit of chain-smoking. That earned him and his wife, Hannelore, better known as Loki, the honor of being parodied on German television as "Loki and Smoki."

In 2008, Hamburg prosecutors threw out an anti-smoking group's complaint against the couple after they lit up in a theater, flouting a newly introduced smoking ban.

Schmidt and Loki, the childhood sweetheart he married in 1942, had one daughter, Susanne. Their first child, Helmut Walter, died in 1945 when he was only a few months old. Loki Schmidt died at 91 in 2010.

Helmut Schmidt in 2012 introduced longtime acquaintance Ruth Loah, a former employee at Die Zeit, as his new partner.

The Associated Press

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