Walther Rathenau (* September 29 1867, + June 24 1922, assassinated) was a Jewish German industrialist and politician. He introduced pro-Soviet policies after World War I, and his assassination may have significantly influenced the long-term political and economic development in Europe.
In spite of his desire for economic and political cooperation between Germany and the Soviet Union, Rathenau remained skeptical of the Soviet methods. In his Kritik der dreifachen Revolution ("Critique of the triple revolution"), he noted:
"We cannot use Russia's methods, as they only and at best prove that the economy of an agrarian nation can be leveled to the ground; Russia's thoughts are not our thoughts. They are, as it is in the spirit of the Russian city intelligence, unphilosophical and highly dialectic; they are passionate logic based on unverified suppositions. They assume that a single good, the destruction of the capitalist class, weighs more than all other goods, and that poverty, dictatorship, terror and the fall of civilization must be accepted to secure this one good. If ten million people must die to free ten million people from the bourgeoisie, then this is a harsh but necessary consequence. The Russian idea is compulsury happiness, in the same sense and with the same logic as the compulsory introduction of Christianity and the Inquisition." (p. 345 c.)
1922 Appointment as Foreign Minister. As the German delegate he negotiated the Treaty of Rapallo[?]. Nationalist and national-socialist groups claimed he served communists.
On June 24, 1922, a group of extreme right-wing youths shot Rathenau in his car, near his house in Berlin, on the way to the ministry, by. A memorial stone in the Königsallee in Berlin-Grunewald reminds of the crime.