You can argue along those lines, but I think you're mistaken.
The people of Eastern Europe, including parts of the USSR, were well and truely tired of the police states they lived in. The pressure for change predated Tiananmen by a fair margin.
The people of Eastern Europe, including parts of the USSR, were well and truely tired of the police states they lived in. The pressure for change predated Tiananmen by a fair margin.
I agree with everything in this quotation. I don't agree that Tiananmen had nothing to do with the method of the East Germans and the way things turned out.
I say this, because the German protesters have said it.

Many were worried that any such revolt would be violently repressed. One way of getting around that is to do it the way the Chinese did (although it didn't work for them, which shows that it only lowers the risk).
Honecker wanted to deal with them violently, but was ousted for that very reason. The East Germans correctly identified that their own overlords had less will than the Chinese, and the Chinese thing nearly worked (although it would have been a disaster if it had obtained for them everything they wanted - a truth about most student protests).
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