Political atmosphere The
Spiegel affair of 1962, in which journalists were arrested and detained for reporting on the strength of the West German military, worried some in West Germany that there was a return of authoritarian government. In the fallout of the affair, the suddenly-unpopular Christian Democratic Union formed a political coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD), known as the
grand coalition. Critics were disappointed with the parliament's appointment of
Kurt Georg Kiesinger as chancellor of West Germany, as he had participated in the
Nazi Party during the Nazi regime.
New political movements Social movements grew as younger people became disillusioned with the political establishment, worrying it was reminiscent of Germany's Nazi past. West Berlin became a center for these movements since many left leaning people would take residence in West Berlin to avoid the military draft that was in effect in the rest of West Germany. All these various social movements and the non-parliamentary organizations that hoped to spearhead them, grouped together as the
Außerparlamentarische Opposition. The more
leftist wing of the SDP in the
Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (SDS; Socialist German Students' Union) split from the party line and joined the Außerparlamentarische Opposition. In 1965,
Rudi Dutschke was elected to the political council of the West Berlin SDS. With Michael Vester, SDS vice-president and international secretary, Dutschke imported ideas from the American SDS (
Students for a Democratic Society) and
New Left, such as
direct action and
civil disobedience. Drawing inspiration from
Herbert Marcuse, Dutschke sought to build a coalition of marginalized identity groups to be a vanguard for
socialism in Europe. Finding that Germany had no population group with revolutionary potential comparable to America's
Black power movement, Dutschke sought to mold Germany's student movements into seeing themselves as an oppressed
minority. His plan for accomplishing this was to provoke violent confrontations with government authorities. He wrote in 1965, "Authorized demonstrations must be guided into illegality. Confrontation with state power is essential and must be sought out."
1966–1968 protests The West German parliament had proposed to expand government powers in the
Emergency Laws, as well as to reform universities. On 22 June 1966, 3,000 students from the
Free University of Berlin staged a sit-in to demand involvement in the reform process of universities, included democratic management of colleges. Echoing Marcuse, Rudi Dutschke considered the politically complacent working classes to be a lost cause when it came to revolutionary agitation. Instead, he hoped to build a coalition between Western
intelligentsia and
third world communist revolutionaries. To that end, Dutschke organized the event "Vietnam – Analysis of an Example" ('''') at the
University of Frankfurt Institute for Social Research with Marcuse as the headline speaker. SDS president Walmot Falkenburg privately requested that Marcuse emphasize solidarity with the Vietnamese on the basis of traditional Marxist concerns with labor and material interests, which would have been a rebuke of Dutschke and his associates in the West Berlin SDS chapter. Unsurprisingly, Marcuse did the opposite in a speech emphasizing "solidarity of sentiment". The event was followed by street demonstrations which led to the arrests of Dutschke, his wife, and 84 others. In June 1967, during a state visit by the Shah of Iran
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the SDS organized a protest of his visit, criticizing him as a brutal
dictator that should not have been welcome in West Germany. The protest was repressed by police and Iranian agents who beat protesters and resulted in
the fatal shooting of Benno Ohnesorg. The police officer involved,
Karl-Heinz Kurras, was acquitted on the grounds of self-defense. Protests against
police brutality erupted across the country and led the mayor of Berlin and the police chief to resign. In the fall of 1967 students established "Critical Universities"; students occupied classrooms and gave critiques of university structure as well as educating other students in New Left thought. On the occasion of Ohnesorg's
funeral, a conference was held which is most remembered for a debate between Rudi Dutschke and
Jürgen Habermas. Dutschke argued that the time was ripe for students to engage in direct action. Habermas, although generally sympathetic to the student movements, criticized Dutschke's plan as action for its own sake without regard for consequences. When Dutschke would not clarify his stance on employing violence, Habermas accused him of
Linksfaschismus ("Left fascism"). Later, during the
German Autumn of 1977, Habermas said the charge of
fascism had been an overreaction. At the congress, Dutschke and his Chilean friend
Gaston Salvatore presented their translation of
Che Guevara's letter to the
Tricontinental Conference, which called for bloody guerrilla warfare against the United States.
Holger Meins presented an instructional film on making
Molotov cocktails.
Emergency Acts protests In May the West German government considered using the Emergency Acts in response, allowing the Cabinet to suspend
parliamentary rule and enact laws in times of crisis. On May 11 protesters gathered in the West German capital
Bonn to demand that the laws not be used. The government agreed with protesting labor unions to only use limited concessions, passing the laws on May 30. This agreement dealt a blow to the growing student movement and signaled its demise. The SDS formally dissolved on March 21, 1970. File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.0011 (16910985309).jpg|Protest against the Vietnam War File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.0009 (16889769787).jpg|Conference to protest the Vietnam War File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.4261 (16898781670).jpg|Protest march in West Berlin File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.4267 (16898782560).jpg|Demonstrators in West Berlin File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.4252 (16466146463).jpg|Vandalized
Bild-Zeitung delivery cars File:Ludwig Binder Haus der Geschichte Studentenrevolte 1968 2001 03 0275.4264 (16900118449).jpg|Protesters with signs == Aftermath ==