The Berlin Wall: 20 Years Later
Author: Mosaiko EditorPosted on: Nov 12th 2009
The Berlin Wall — symbol of a divided city within a divided nation within a divided continent.
Germany could only be subdued by the combined power of many nations, led by the democratic capitalist Anglo-Americans and the communist Soviets. Their joint liberation of Axis-occupied Europe
The Second World War did not end with a definitive peace treaty. Instead, and this simplifies greatly, the powers whose armed forces liberated a nation from the Nazis ultimately shaped that nation’s subsequent political character and geopolitical alignment. Western Europe thus emerged free, democratic, and generally aligned with the United States. Eastern European nations were ruled by communist regimes acceptable to Moscow, their foreign and military policies also subject to Soviet diktat.
Germany was a special case, Berlin even more so. The British, Soviets, and Americans each would defeat the Wehrmacht in parts of Germany. At the Yalta Conference of February 4-11, 1945, the “Big Three” agreed that Germany would be divided into four temporary occupation zones, France being the fourth occupying power. Berlin, Germany’s capital and leading city, lies 110 miles inside the Soviet occupation zone. At the Potsdam Conference (July 17–August 2, 1945) the Allies agreed to a similar four-power division of Berlin.
Germany had invaded Russia twice in forty years; the Soviets were determined that postwar Germany be either Communist dominated or else permanently weak, neutral, and disarmed. The western allies soon concluded that unless Germany and the other nations of Europe were both democratic and prosperous, Soviet power might expand throughout the rest of the continent. Over $13 billion in Marshall Plan aid from the U.S. helped to secure this prosperity. The Soviet Union and the east European nations under its sway rejected Marshall aid.
Later, in 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev likened West Berlin to “the testicles of the West. Every time I want to make the West scream, I squeeze on Berlin.” His predecessors might not have phrased it quite the same way, but they also viewed West Berlin, a dangerously exposed western enclave within the emerging Soviet bloc, as a place they could exert pressure. In June 1948, as the western Allies and the Soviets failed to agree on whether Germany should be rehabilitated economically, the Red Army blockaded West Berlin. In response, the British- and American-led Berlin Airlift ferried by air some 13,000 tons of food daily, until Stalin lifted the blockade in May 1949. A few days later, the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) was proclaimed in the western occupation zones. The German Democratic Republic (East Germany) was founded in the Soviet occupation zone that October.
For the next twelve years, Berliners possessed an opportunity afforded few Cold War Europeans: the chance to vote with their feet. Between September 1949 and August 1961, some 2.7 million East Germans, the young and educated overrepresented among them, crossed into West Berlin and thence by plane to the Federal Republic.
In August 1961, the GDR began to construct the Berlin Wall. At first it was barbed wire, but soon it expanded into a 5-meter high, 165-kilometer long network of concrete walls topped with barbed wire, and guarded with gun emplacements, watchtowers, and mines. Willy Brandt, then the mayor of West Berlin, feared the wall would turn his city into “a concentration camp.” He warned U.S. President John F. Kennedy that West Berliners’ morale might collapse. Kennedy was sympathetic, but insisted that “a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war.” But Kennedy also flew to West Berlin, delivering there in June 1963 a moving address, and insisting to at least a quarter million Berliners (one-fifth of the city’s population) gathered that day “Ich bin ein Berliner.”
At one level, the Berlin Wall afforded Europe stability. The periodic international crises over the city eased. As the French man of letters Francois Mauriac quipped, “I love Germany so much I’m glad there are two of them.”
But the communist bloc was not as stable as it appeared. East Berliners continued to seek freedom in the west. As the historian David Reynolds observes: “the fugitives kept on coming — jumping from windows, cutting the wire, tunneling beneath the wall, even ballooning above it.” Nearly 200 died trying to cross. And within the Soviet bloc, communism was failing. East European nations fell further behind their western peers and knew it. New technologies proved more compatible with the western models of personal autonomy and economic entrepreneurialism. By 1989, the contradictions within the Soviet bloc, as an earlier generation of communists might have put it, had been heightened — higher even than the Berlin Wall itself.


















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