West Germany and West Berlin were centers of east–west conflict during the Cold War, and numerous Communist fronts were established. For example, the
Society for German–Soviet Friendship (GfDSF) had 13,000 members in West Germany, but it was banned in 1953 by some Länder as a Communist front. The
Democratic Cultural League of Germany started off as a series of genuinely pluralistic bodies, but in 1950–51 came under the control of Communists. By 1952 the U.S. Embassy counted 54 'infiltrated organizations', which started independently, as well as 155 'front organizations', which had been Communist inspired from their start. The
German Peace Union, DFU) the
German Communist Party (DKP) was close and was also financed by the
Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), which was however denied. The SED saw in the BdD a chance, similar to the concept of the
National Front in the GDR, bourgeois and "national-minded" forces as a coalition partner to win. The core program of the BdD was a neutrality policy, which turned against the rearmament and the Westintegration of Germany. In contrast to the Federal Government, an agreement was reached with the Soviet Union. With the founding of the German Peace Union in 1961, in which numerous BdD politicians were involved, the BdD no longer existed as an independent political force, but was essentially limited to the publication of the German Volkszeitung. He also ran no longer in elections but sent candidates to the list of the DFU. Double memberships in BdD and DFU were expressly permitted. The constitutional protection of North Rhine-Westphalia, which observes the BdD, classified the BdD as a front-run cadre organization of the DFU in 1964. On 2 November 1968, the DKP, DFU, BdD and other left-wing groups decided to join the (ADF) on the
1969 West German federal election. The membership stock, which Helmut Bausch had estimated to be around 12,000 for the years 1953 to 1955, according to a note to the
Ulbricht office in 1965, have amounted to only 2,000 to 3,000. In the peak of the Cold War in 1960, the chairman of the German wing of the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) referred to the
Internationale Frauenliga für Frieden und Freiheit (IFFF) (and hundreds of other members of the IFFF), headed by the CDU politician
Rainer Barzel together with
Franz Josef Strauss (CSU) and headed by Barzel, as "communist-controlled". On the other hand, the IFFF successfully filed a complaint and Barzel had to withdraw his allegation. However, numerous women left the organization, only local groups remained in West Berlin, Hamburg, Bremen, Munich and Duisburg. The (RC) was put up, among others, by Hubertus Knabe in his book
Die Unterhanderte Republik, that the RC as a whole was influenced by the GDR or even controlled. Actually, however, the relationship between the RC and the GDR was rather disincentive, in particular one refused an approach to the
SEW, the West Berlin offshoot of the SED. They and the GDR were seen as an obstacle to the new beginning of a left movement. Recent research on files from the
Stasi Records Agency as well as from the estates of prominent members confirms that state security was active in West Berlin and also in the RC. It did not, however, aim at countervailing assumptions, but on a moderation of the extra-parliamentary opposition in order to be able to control them in the form of a party formation under the influence of SEW. This strategy failed, however, and the attempts to influence remained unaffected. The (SDA), later Socialist Action, had been an opposition party in the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), controlled by the SED since 1948. The work of the SDA started first in the SPD, which was authorized by the Occupying Council to build the walls throughout the city. The SDA was active both in the east and in the west of the city. In
East Berlin, she temporarily appointed magistrates, mayors and other functionaries, and was even represented in the
Volkskammer until 1954 with deputies. Since 1950, the organization also tried to gain a foothold in the Federal Republic of Germany, but remained a splinter group. Membership in it was declared incompatible with employment in the public service in 1950 by the Federal Government. In 1956, it was banned in the course of the
KPD ban in the Federal Republic. After the erection of Berlin Wall in 1961 it also dissolved itself in the GDR. In East Germany front operations were not directly controlled by Moscow. They were instead operated by The
German Communist Party (DKP), which was in power after 1945. It took political and financial support from the SED and worked closely with the
Socialist Unity Party of West Berlin (SEW), which was controlled and financed by the SED. After the ban of KPD a few parties ran as replacement for they like the "Voter Association against Nuclear Arming" in Bremen or the in Ueberau. The which ran in the
1987 Bremen state election was founded by the DKP to appeal green voters. On suspicion of being close to the DKP, members of the
German Peace Society were temporarily observed in the Federal Republic of Germany by the
Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution. Some of them were denied access to public service professions as a result of the radical decree of the early 1970s. From 10 November 1959 to 8 April 1960 were the pastor , the former KPD official and former pastor
Erwin Eckert, the interpreter Walter Diehl, the publisher Gerhard Wohlrath, the worker Gustav Tiefes, the insurance clerk Erich Kompalla and the former SPD Councilor accused by the Attorney General of their role in the the ringleadership in an anti-constitutional organization. This was justified in particular by the fact that some of the defendants had belonged to the now banned KPD. Their activities are therefore camouflage for the assumed by the Attorney General real goal of "establishing a communist regime in the Federal Republic". == Austria ==