Conrad Ahlers

West German journalist
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Quick Facts
Born:
November 8, 1922, Hamburg, Germany
Died:
December 18, 1980, Bonn, West Germany (aged 58)

Conrad Ahlers (born November 8, 1922, Hamburg, Germany—died December 18, 1980, Bonn, West Germany) was a West German journalist who in 1962 precipitated a political crisis (known as the Spiegel affair) in West Germany with an article he wrote as an editor of the weekly newsmagazine Der Spiegel.

The piece—which reported that, in one NATO commander’s opinion, West German forces were only partially ready to defend the country—allegedly revealed military secrets, and Ahlers and other staff members were arrested. After various irregularities in the judicial procedures, all charges were dropped. Defense minister Franz Josef Strauss, who had Ahlers arrested before a warrant was issued, was forced to resign, and public confidence in the Christian DemocraticFree Democratic coalition headed by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was severely shaken.

When Willy Brandt became chancellor in 1969, he appointed Ahlers government spokesman, a post that he held until 1972, when he was elected to the Bundestag (lower house of Parliament) as a Social Democrat. In 1980 Ahlers, who had begun his journalistic career with the German service of the BBC in London, became head of Deutsche Welle, West Germany’s foreign broadcasting service.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.