Former German President Horst Köhler dies at 81
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[February 01, 2025]
By GEIR MOULSON
BERLIN (AP) — Horst Köhler, a onetime head of the International Monetary
Fund who became a popular German president before stunning the country
by resigning abruptly in a flap over comments about the country's
military, has died. He was 81.
Köhler, who was head of state from 2004 to 2010, died Saturday morning
in Berlin after a short illness, surrounded by his family, the office of
current German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in a statement.
Köhler was little known to most Germans and a stranger to front-line
politics before he won the presidency. His nomination was greeted by the
mass-circulation daily Bild with the headline "Horst Who?"
However, he built up high popularity ratings once in the job, something
that he achieved in part by positioning himself as an outsider to the
country's political elite.
He occasionally refused to sign bills into law due to constitutional
concerns and didn't always make himself popular with the government of
Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose choice he was for the presidency — a
largely ceremonial job but often seen as a source of moral authority.
Köhler was elected before Merkel came to power, at a time when Germany
was struggling to come to terms with labor market reforms and welfare
state cuts. He said Germans must not rest on past achievements, and said
he was "deeply convinced Germany has the strength for change."

In July 2005, Köhler agreed to dissolve parliament and grant struggling
then-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder an unusual early election. He declared
that Germany faced "giant challenges" and that "our future and the
future of our children is at stake."
Merkel won power, but nearly blew a huge poll lead after her talk of
deeper reform turned off voters. Köhler also talked less of economic
change in later years and was strongly critical of financial markets
during the banking and economic crisis — describing them as a "monster"
that hadn't yet been tamed.
Amid criticism that he appeared to have little to say after winning a
second term, Köhler resigned in dramatically abrupt fashion on May 31,
2010. He cited criticism over a radio interview he gave following a
visit to German troops in Afghanistan.
In that broadcast, he said that for a country with Germany's dependency
on exports, military deployments could be "necessary ... in order to
defend our interests, for example free trade routes."
That was taken by many as relating to Germany's unpopular mission in
Afghanistan, although his office later said he was referring to
anti-piracy patrols off the coast of Somalia.
Many wondered whether that was the real reason for the sometimes
thin-skinned Koehler's resignation, with critics speculating that he had
simply become fed up with a lack of backing from Merkel — for whom his
resignation was an embarrassment.
In foreign policy, Köhler won praise for trying to draw attention to the
needs of Africa. He became the second German president to address
Israel's parliament, telling the Knesset: "I bow my head in shame and
humility before the victims" of the Holocaust.
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Horst Koehler, Personal Envoy of the Secretary General of the United
Nations to the parties to the conflict in Western Sahara, arrives
for a round table on Western Sahara at the European headquarters of
the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Dec. 05, 2018.
(Martial Trezzini/Keystone via AP, File)

Köhler also paid attention to relations with eastern neighbor
Poland, making it the first foreign destination of both of his two
terms and saying he would like the country to become as important a
partner for Germany as France.
Köhler, the son of ethnic German farmers from Romania, was born on
Feb. 22, 1943, in Skierbieszow, in Nazi-occupied Poland. His family
fled to Germany after the war — first to Leipzig in what became
communist East Germany, then to West Germany in 1954.
Before rising to the presidency, Köhler had a long record as an
efficient behind-the-scenes official.
Starting in the early 1980s, he worked for more than a decade in the
Finance Ministry under Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who once called him
"a treasure" and relied on him in economic diplomacy.
He helped draft the legal framework for Europe's single currency,
the euro, and played a role in negotiating German reunification in
1990.
He later served as president of the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development.
In 2000, Köhler emerged as Schröder's backup choice for the IMF
leadership. He won American support after Berlin's first candidate,
Deputy Finance Minister Caio Koch-Weser, was rejected by the United
States as too lightweight.
U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow later praised Köhler's tenure,
saying that “he transformed the institution in terms of its
transparency ... and worked to develop better crisis prevention
tools and more effective crisis management."
Merkel, then Germany's opposition leader, brought him back to
Germany as her surprise choice for the presidency four years later,
securing his election by a parliamentary assembly.
In a letter of condolence to Köhler’s wife, Eva Louise, President
Steinmeier wrote Saturday that “many people in our country will
mourn with you. For in Horst Köhler we have lost a highly esteemed
and extremely popular person who achieved great things — for our
country and in the world.”
“It was above all his approachability, his infectious laughter and
his optimism, his belief in the strength of our country and in the
energy and creativity of its people that won him so many hearts. But
it was also his often clear and by no means always comfortable
admonitions and speeches that won him recognition,” Steinmeier
wrote.
Köhler is survived by his wife, daughter Ulrike and son Jochen.
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