Title: The Cold War
1The Cold War
- Rivalry For Global Supremacy
- 1945-1962
2Background
The Cold War was the period of protracted
conflict and competition between the United
States and the Soviet Union and their allies from
the late 1940s until the late 1980s. The main
U.S. allies were Western Europe, Japan and
Canada. The main Soviet allies were Eastern
Europe and China. In 1947 the term "Cold War" was
introduced to describe emerging tensions between
the two former wartime allies. There never was a
major battle between the U.S. and the Soviet
Union. But there was a half-century of military
buildup, and political battles for support around
the world, including major proxy wars. Although
the U.S. and the Soviet Union had been wartime
allies against Nazi Germany, the two sides
differed on how to reconstruct the postwar world
even before the end of the Second World War. Over
the next 4 decades, the Cold War spread outside
Europe to every region of the world, as the U.S.
sought the "containment" of communism and forged
numerous alliances to this end, particularly in
Western Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast
Asia.
3Critical Moments
- There were repeated crises that threatened to
escalate into world wars but never did, notably
the Korean War (1950-1953), the Cuban Missile
Crisis (1962), and the Vietnam War (1964-1975).
There were also periods when tension was reduced
as both sides sought détente. The Cold War ended
in the late 1980s following the launching of
Mikhail Gorbachev's reform programs, perestroika
and glasnost. The Soviet Union consequently ceded
power over Eastern Europe and dissolved in 1991.
4Yalta Conference
- At the Yalta Conference in February 1945, the
Allies attempted to define the framework for a
postwar settlement in Europe, but could not reach
firm agreements on the crucial questions the
occupation of Germany, postwar reparations from
Germany, and loans. No final consensus was
reached on Germany, other than to agree to a
Soviet request for reparations totaling 10
billion. Debates over the composition of Poland's
postwar government were also held.
- Following the Allied victory, the Soviets
effectively occupied the countries of Eastern
Europe and the U.S. occupied much of Western
Europe. In occupied Germany the U.S. and the
Soviet Unionthe world's two superpowers, along
with France and Britain, established zones of
occupation and a loose framework for four-power
control.
5Potsdam
- At the Potsdam Conference in July 1945, serious
differences emerged over the future development
of Germany and Eastern Europe. The U.S. was
represented by a new president, Harry S. Truman,
succeeded to the office upon Roosevelt's death.
Truman was unaware of Roosevelt's plans for
postwar engagement with Soviet Union, and
generally uninformed about foreign policy and
military matters. Therefore, the new president
was initially reliant upon a set of advisers,
including Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson. This
group tended to take a harder line toward Moscow
than had Roosevelt. - One week after the Potsdam Conference ended, the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki added
to Soviet distrust of the United States. Shortly
following the attacks, Stalin protested to U.S.
officials when Truman offered the Soviets little
real influence in occupied Japan.
6Polish Question
- Of all the countries involved in the war,
Poland lost the highest percentage of its
citizens over 6 million perished, half of them
Polish Jews. At the war's conclusion, Poland's
borders were shifted westwards. The new Poland
emerged 20 smaller by 77,500 square km . The
shift forced the migration of millions of people
Poles, Germans, Ukrainians, and Jews.
As a result of these events, Poland became, for
the first time in its multicultural history, an
ethnically unified country. A Polish minority is
still present in neighbouring countries of
Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania, as well as in
other countries. The Soviet Union instituted a
new Communist government in Poland, analogous to
much of the rest of the Eastern Bloc. Military
alignment within the Warsaw Pact throughout the
Cold War was also part of this change.
7Communism in Czechoslovakia
- The Third Republic came into being in April 1945.
Its government installed and moved to Prague in
May, was a National Front coalition in which
three socialist partiesKSC, Czechoslovak Social
Democratic Party, and Czechoslovak National
Socialist Partypredominated. Certain
non-socialist parties were included in the
coalition among them were the Catholic People's
Party (in Moravia) and the Democratic Party
(Slovakia). - Following Nazi Germany's surrender, some 2.9
million ethnic Germans were expelled from
Czechoslovakia with Allied approval.
Czechoslovakia fell within the Soviet sphere of
influence. - Although the communist-led government initially
intended to participate in the Marshall Plan, it
was forced by Moscow to back out.
8The Iron Curtain
- The "Iron Curtain" was the boundary which
symbolically, ideologically, and physically
divided Europe into two separate areas from the
end of World War II until the end of the Cold
War, roughly 1945 to 1991. The term was coined by
Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and made
famous by Winston Churchill.
From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the
Adriatic, an Iron Curtain has descended across
the continent. Behind that line lie all the
capitals of the ancient states of Central and
Eastern Europe. Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna,
Budapest, Belgrade, Bucharest and Sofia, all
these famous cities and the populations around
them lie in what I must call the Soviet sphere.
9Truman Doctrine
- The Truman Doctrine was a United States foreign
policy designed to contain Communism by stopping
its spread to Greece and Turkey. Gaining the
support of the Republicans who controlled
Congress, President Harry S. Truman proclaimed
the Doctrine on March 12, 1947. It stated that
the U.S. would support Greece and Turkey with
economic and military aid to prevent their
falling into the Soviet orbit. The Doctrine
shifted American foreign policy towards the
Soviet Union from détente to, as George F. Kennan
phrased it, a policy of containment of Soviet
expansion. It is often used by historians as the
starting date of the Cold War.
10Marshall Plan
- The Marshall Plan (European Recovery Program was
the primary plan of the United States for
rebuilding the allied countries of Europe and
repelling communism after World War II. The
initiative was named for United States Secretary
of State George Marshall. - The reconstruction plan was developed at a
meeting of the participating European states in
July 12 1947. The Marshall Plan offered the same
aid to the Soviet Union and its allies, if they
would make political reforms and accept certain
outside controls. In fact, America worried that
the Soviet Union would take advantage of the plan
and therefore made the terms deliberately hard
for the USSR to accept. The plan was in operation
for four fiscal years beginning in July 1947.
During that period some 13 billion of economic
and technical assistanceequivalent to around
130 billion in 2006was given to help the
recovery of the European countries that had
joined in the Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development.
11Marshall Plan Success
- By the time the plan had come to completion, the
economy of every participant state, with the
exception of Germany, had grown well past pre-war
levels. Over the next two decades, Western Europe
as a whole would enjoy unprecedented growth and
prosperity. The Marshall Plan has also long been
seen as one of the first elements of European
integration, as it erased tariff trade barriers
and set up institutions to coordinate the economy
on a continental level. An intended consequence
was the systematic adoption of American
managerial techniques. - In recent years historians have questioned both
the underlying motivation and the overall
effectiveness of the Marshall Plan. Some
historians contend that the benefits of the
Marshall Plan actually were also resulted from
new laissez faire policies that allowed for
markets to stabilize through economic growth. It
is now acknowledged that the United Nations
Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, which
helped millions of refugees from 1944 to 1947,
also laid the foundation for European postwar
recovery without ideological motivation.
12Division of Germany
- The war resulted in the death of several million
German soldiers and civilians, in total nearly
ten million, large territorial losses, the
expulsion of about 15 million Germans and the
destruction of multiple major cities. Germany and
Berlin were partitioned by the Allies into four
military occupation zones. The sectors controlled
by France, the United Kingdom, the United States
were merged in May, 1949, to form the democratic
nation of the Federal Republic of Germany and in
October, 1949 the Soviet Zone established the
German Democratic Republic. The two states were
known informally as "West Germany" and "East
Germany". - West Germany, established as a liberal
parliamentary republic with a "social market
economy", was allied with the United States, the
UK and France. The country eventually came to
enjoy prolonged economic growth beginning in the
early 1950's. The recovery was largely because of
U.S. assistance through the Marshall Plan aid.
13Berlin Blockade
- On June 24, 1948, the Soviet Union blocked access
to the three Western-held sectors of Berlin,
which lay deep within the Soviet-controlled zone
of Germany, by cutting off all rail and road
routes going through Soviet-controlled territory
in Germany. The Western powers had never
negotiated a pact with the Soviets guaranteeing
these rights. Amid the fallout of the London
Conference, the Soviets now rejected arguments
that occupation rights in Berlin and the use of
the routes during the previous three years had
given the West legal claim to unimpeded use of
the highways and railroads. As a further means of
applying pressure, the Western sectors of Berlin
were isolated from the city power grid, depriving
the inhabitants of domestic and industrial
electricity supplies.
14Plan A Too Risky!
- The commander of the American occupation zone in
Germany, General Lucius D. Clay, proposed sending
a large armoured column driving peacefully, as a
moral right, down the Autobahn from West Germany
to West Berlin, but prepared to defend itself if
it were stopped or attacked. President Harry S.
Truman, however, following the consensus in
Washington, believed this entailed an
unacceptable risk of war. - Truman stated, "It is too risky to engage in this
due to the consequence of war". Clay was told to
take advice from General Curtis LeMay, commander
of United States Air Forces in Europe, to see if
an airlift was possible.
15Operation Vittles
- On June 25 Clay gave the order to launch a
massive airlift using both civil and military
aircraft (ultimately lasting 462 days) that flew
supplies into the Western-held sectors of Berlin
over the blockade during. - This aerial supplying of West Berlin became known
as the Berlin Airlift. Military confrontation
loomed while Truman embarked on a highly visible
move which would publicly humiliate the Soviets. - Hundreds of aircraft, nicknamed "raisin bombers"
by the local population, were used to fly in a
wide variety of cargo, ranging from large
containers to small packets of candy with tiny
individual parachutes intended for the children
of Berlin. Sick children were evacuated on
return flights. The aircraft were supplied and
flown by the United States, United Kingdom and
France, but pilots and crew also came from
Australia, Canada, South Africa and New Zealand
in order to assist the supply of Berlin.
Ultimately 278,228 flights were made and
2,326,406 tons of food and supplies, including
more than 1.5 million tons of coal, were
delivered to Berlin.
16Allied Victory
- At the height of the operation, on April 16,
1949, an allied aircraft landed in Berlin every
minute, with 1,398 flights in 24 hours carrying
12,940 tons (13,160 t) of goods, coal and
machinery, beating the record of 8,246 (8,385 t)
set only days earlier. - The USSR lifted its blockade at 0001, on May 12,
1949. However, the airlift did not end until
September 30, as the Western nations wanted to
build up sufficient amounts of supplies in West
Berlin in case the Soviets blockaded it again.
Berlin Airlift Monument in Berlin-Tempelhof,
displaying the names of the 39 British and 31
U.S.-American pilots who lost their lives during
the operation.
17NATO
- The Treaty of Brussels, signed on 17 March 1948
by Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, France,
and the United Kingdom, is considered the
precursor to the NATO agreement. This treaty
established a military alliance, later to become
the Western European Union. However, American
participation was thought necessary in order to
counter the military power of the Soviet Union,
and therefore talks for a new military alliance
began almost immediately. - These talks resulted in the North Atlantic
Treaty, which was signed in Washington, DC on 4
April 1949 (during the Berlin Blockade),
declaring that an attack on any one would be
considered an attack against them all. It
included the five Treaty of Brussels states,
United States, Canada, Portugal, Italy, Norway,
Denmark and Iceland. Three years later, Greece
and Turkey also joined. Because of geography,
Australia and New Zealand missed out on
membership. In place of this, the ANZUS agreement
was made by the United States with these nations.
18NATO Cont.
- Its headquarters are located in Brussels,
Belgium. It is one of the strongest military
forces in the world and unites the largest, most
modern and efficient military capabilities and
resources. - The core of NATO is Article V of the North
Atlantic Treaty, which states
- The Parties agree that an armed attack against
one or more of them in Europe or North America
shall be considered an attack against them all.
Consequently they agree that, if such an armed
attack occurs, each of them, in exercise of the
right of individual or collective self-defense
recognized by Article 51 of the Charter of the
United Nations, will assist the Party or Parties
so attacked by taking forthwith, individually and
in concert with the other Parties, such action as
it deems necessary, including the use of armed
force, to restore and maintain the security of
the North Atlantic area.
The Treaty was invoked for the first time in its
history on 12 September 2001, in response to the
previous day's attacks on the United States.
19Soviet Response
- The incorporation of West Germany into the
organisation on 9 May 1955 was described as "a
decisive turning point in the history of our
continent" by Halvard Lange, Foreign Minister of
Norway at the time. Indeed, one of its immediate
results was the creation of the Warsaw Pact,
signed on 14 May 1955 by the Soviet Union and its
satellite states as a formal response to this
event, firmly establishing the two opposing sides
of the Cold War.
20Josip Broz Tito
- After the elections in November 1945, Tito became
the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign
Affairs. It was at this time that Tito's forces,
in loose conjunction with the Red Army, were
involved in killings and deportations to Yugoslav
and Soviet labor camps of many ethnic Germans
from Yugoslavia, as well as those Yugoslavs who
objected. In November 1945, a new constitution
was proclaimed and Tito organized a strong army
and a strong secret police force (the UDBA) loyal
to him. The UDBA methodically found, imprisoned
and even executed a large number of Nazi
collaborators, Catholic priests, those who had
opposed the communist-led dictatorship, and even
communists who did not agree with Tito. He
established labour and concentration camps
thousands of people were killed within a few
months after the war. Tito's rule had the
character of a dictatorship. The Communist Party
won the first post-war elections under unfair
conditions, and it conducted espionage and
assassinations with the secret police and
security agency, as well as politically motivated
trials and imprisonment. It did, however, unite a
country that had been severely affected by the
war and successfully suppressed the nationalist
sentiments of the peoples of Yugoslavia in favor
of the common Yugoslav goal.
21Tito and Stalin
- In 1948, Tito became the first Communist leader
to defy Stalin's leadership of the Cominform he
was one of the few people to stand up to Stalin's
demands for absolute loyalty. Stalin took it
personallyfor once, to no avail. The Yugoslav
Communist Party was expelled from the association
on June 28, 1948. Tito's form of communism was
labelled Titoism by Moscow, which encouraged
purges against suspected "Titoites'" throughout
the Communist bloc.
"Stop sending people to kill me If you don't
stop sending killers, I'll send one to Moscow,
and I won't have to send a second."
22Nikita Khrushchev De-Stalinization
- After Stalin's death in March 1953, there was a
power struggle between different factions within
the party. - Becoming party leader on September 7 of that
year, and eventually rising above his rivals,
Khrushchev's leadership marked a crucial
transition for the Soviet Union. He pursued a
course of reform and shocked delegates by making
his famous Secret Speech denouncing the "cult of
personality" that surrounded Stalin (although he
himself had no small part in cultivating it), and
accusing Stalin of crimes committed during the
Great Purges. - This effectively alienated Khrushchev from the
more conservative elements of the Party, but he
managed to defeat what he termed the Anti-Party
Group after they failed in a bid to oust him from
the party leadership in 1957. - In 1958, Khrushchev became prime minister and
established himself as the undisputed leader of
both state and party. He became Premier of the
Soviet Union on March 27, 1958. Khruschev
promoted reform of the Soviet system and began to
place an emphasis on the production of consumer
goods rather than on heavy industry.
23The Kitchen Debate
- In 1959, during Richard Nixon's journey to the
Soviet Union, he took part in what was later
known as the Kitchen Debate. Khrushchev
reciprocated the visit that September, spending
thirteen days in the United States. His new
attitude towards the West as a rival instead of
as an evil entity alienated Mao Zedong's China.
The Soviet Union and the People's Republic of
China, too, would later be involved in a similar
"cold war" triggered by the Sino-Soviet Split in
1960.
The debate is not only called "The Kitchen
Debate" because it took place in a kitchen, but
also because Nixon tried to steer the focus of
the conversation to household appliances such as
the washing machine, rather than bombs or
weapons, to prevent showing any potential
shortfalls of the United States military in
comparison to the Soviet Union.
24Key Political Actions
- In his Secret Speech, Khrushchev denounced Stalin
for his - personality cult and his regime for
"violation of Leninist norms of - legality", marking the onset of the
Khrushchev Thaw. - Dissolved the Cominform organization and
reconciled with Josip - Broz Tito, which ended the Informbiro
period in the history of - Yugoslavia.
- Established the Warsaw Pact in 1955 in response
to the - formation of NATO.
- Ordered the 1956 Soviet military intervention in
Hungary - Provided support for Egypt against the West
during the 1956 Suez Crisis. - Promoted the doctrine of "Peaceful co-existence"
in the foreign policy, accompanied by the slogan
"To catch up and overtake the West" in internal
policy. - Triggered Sino-Soviet Split by talks with the
U.S. and refusing to support the Chinese nuclear
program. - Initiated the Soviet space program that launched
Sputnik I and Yuri Gagarin, getting a head start
in the space race. - Participated in negotiations with U.S. President
John F. Kennedy for a joint moon program,
negotiations that ended when Kennedy was
assassinated in 1963. - Cancelled a summit meeting over the Gary Powers
U-2 incident. - Met with Eisenhower in Iowa.
- Initiated the deployment of nuclear missiles in
Cuba, which led to the Cuban missile crisis. - Approved East Germany's construction of the
Berlin Wall in 1961, after the West ignored his
ultimatum that West Berlin be incorporated into a
neutral, demilitarized "free city".
25Khrushchev the Good
- He was admired for his efficiency and for
maintaining an economy which, during the 1950s
and 1960s, had growth rates higher than most
Western countries, contrasted with the stagnation
beginning with his successors. He is also
renowned for his liberalisation policies, whose
results began with the widespread exoneration of
political sentences. - With Khrushchev's amnesty program, former
political prisoners and their surviving relatives
could now live a normal life without the infamous
"wolf ticket". 'Wolf Ticket' is also a
translation of a Polish term used at the end of
World War II. It was used to refer to those who
headed for the forests and hills to act as
partisan fighters against first the Nazis and, as
the Soviet Army swept through, the Communists. If
you took the wolf ticket, you went where every
man's hand was against you, into the wilds, to
both avoid and fight domination and enslavement. - His policies also increased the importance of the
consumer, since Khrushchev himself placed more
resources in the production of consumer goods and
housing instead of heavy industry, precipitating
a rapid rise in living standards. - He allowed Eastern Europe to have a greater
freedom of action in their domestic and external
affairs, without the intervention of the Soviet
Union. - His de-Stalinization caused a huge impact on
young Communists of the day. He encouraged more
liberal communist leaders to replace hard-line
Stalinists throughout the Eastern bloc. Alexander
Dubcek, who became the leader of Czechoslovakia
in January 1968, accelerated the process of
liberalisation in his own country with his Prague
Spring programme. Mikhail Gorbachev, who became
the Soviet Union's leader in 1985, was inspired
by it and it became evident with his policies of
glasnost and perestroika. Khrushchev is sometimes
cited as "the last great reformer" among Soviet
leaders before Gorbachev.
26Khrushchev the Bad
- He was criticized for his ruthless crackdown of
the 1956 revolution in Hungary, and also for
encouraging the East German authorities to set up
the notorious Berlin Wall in August 1961. He also
had very poor diplomatic skills, giving him the
reputation of being a rude, uncivilised peasant
in the West and as an irresponsible clown in his
own country. He had also renewed persecutions
against the Russian Orthodox Church, publicly
promising to show the "last priest" on Soviet
television. Between 1960 and 1962, up to 30
percent of churches were destroyed, with the
number of monasteries falling by a quarter. - His methods of administration, although
efficient, were also erratic since they
threatened to disband a large number of
Stalinist-era agencies. He made a dangerous
gamble in 1962 over Cuba, which almost made a
Third World War inevitable. Agriculture barely
kept up with population growth, as bad harvests
mixed with good ones, culminating with a
disastrous one in 1963 that was triggered by bad
weather. All this damaged his prestige after 1962
and was enough for the Central Committee,
Khrushchev's critical base for support, to take
action against him. They used his right-hand man
Leonid Brezhnev to lead the bloodless coup. - Due to the results of his policies, as well as
the increasingly regressive attitude of his
successors, he became more popular after he gave
up power, which led many dissidents to view his
era with nostalgia as his successors began
discrediting or slowing down his reforms.
27East vs. West
- From 1948 onwards, West Germany developed into a
western capitalist country with a social market
economy and a democratic parliamentary
government. Prolonged economic growth starting in
the 1950s fuelled a 30-year "economic miracle".
Across the inner-German border, East Germany
established an authoritarian government with a
Soviet-style command economy. While East Germany
became one of the richest, most advanced
countries in the Eastern bloc, many of its
citizens still looked to the West for political
freedoms and economic prosperity.
28Massive emigration
- From 1949 through to 1961, huge numbers of
professionals and skilled workers migrated daily
from East to West Berlin earning the name
"Grenzgänger" frequently because of lucrative
opportunities connected with rebuilding Western
Europe funded by the Marshall Plan (one day the
entire Mathematics Department of the University
of Leipzig defected). Furthermore, many West
Berliners travelled into East Berlin to do their
shopping at state-subsidized stores, where prices
were much lower than in West Berlin. This drain
of labour and economic output threatened East
Germany with economic collapse. This had
ramifications for the whole Communist bloc and
particularly the Soviet Union, because East
Germany's economy was being subsidised by the
Soviet government, and simultaneously, the
now-threatened East German production was
responsible for all war reparations to Poland and
the Soviet Union.
29Proposed Barrier
- The impetus for the creation of the Berlin Wall
came from East German leader Walter Ulbricht,
approved by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, but
with conditions imposed. Ulbricht's proposal for
a second air blockade was refused and the
construction of a barrier was permitted provided
that it was composed at first of barbed wire. If
the Allies challenged the barrier, the East
Germans were to fall back and were not to fire
first under any circumstances.
30Construction Begins, 1961
- Construction of 45 km (28 miles) around the three
western sectors began early on Sunday 13 August
1961 in East Berlin. That morning the zonal
boundary had been sealed by East German troops.
The barrier was built by East German troops and
workers, not directly involving the Soviets. It
was built slightly inside East German territory
to ensure that it did not encroach on West Berlin
at any point if one stood next to the West
Berlin side of the barrier (and later the Wall),
one was actually standing on East Berlin soil.
Some streets running alongside the barrier were
torn up to make them impassable to most vehicles,
and a barbed-wire fence was erected, which was
later built up into the full-scale Wall. It
physically divided the city and completely
surrounded West Berlin. During the construction
of the Wall, NVA and KdA soldiers stood in front
of it with orders to shoot anyone who attempted
to defect. Additionally, the whole length of the
border between East and West Germany was closed
with chain-fences, walls, minefields, and other
installations (see wikipedia GDR border system).
31Immediate Effects
- Many families were split. Many East Berliners
were cut off from their jobs and from chances for
financial improvement West Berlin became an
isolated enclave in a hostile land. West
Berliners demonstrated against the wall, led by
their mayor Willy Brandt, who strongly criticised
the United States for failing to respond. Allied
intelligence agencies had hypothesized about a
wall to stop the flood of refugees but the main
candidate for its location was around the
perimeter of the city.
32- John F. Kennedy had acknowledged in a speech on
25 July 1961, that the United States could hope
to defend only West Berliners and West Germans
to attempt to stand up for East Germans would
result only in an embarrassing climbdown.
Accordingly, the administration made polite
protests at length via the usual channels, but
without fervour, even though it was a violation
of the postwar Four Powers Agreements, which gave
the United Kingdom, France and the United States
a say over the administration of the whole of
Berlin. Indeed, a few months after the barbed
wire went up, the U.S. government informed the
Soviet government that it accepted the Wall as "a
fact of international life" and would not
challenge it by force. - The East German government claimed that the Wall
was an "anti-fascist protection barrier"
("antifaschistischer Schutzwall") intended to
dissuade aggression from the West, despite the
fact that all of the wall's defenses pointed
inward to East German territory. - Thus, this position was viewed with skepticism
even in East Germany its construction had caused
considerable hardship to families divided by the
Wall and the Western view that the Wall was a
means of preventing the citizens of East Germany
from entering West Berlin was widely seen as
being the truth.
33The Wall 1961-1989
- The Wall was over 155 km (96 miles) long. In June
1962, work started on a second parallel fence up
to 91 meters (100 yards) further in, with houses
in between the fences torn down and their
inhabitants relocated. A no man's land was
created between the two barriers, which became
widely known as the "death strip". It was paved
with raked gravel, making it easy to spot
footprints left by escapees it offered no cover
it was mined and booby-trapped with tripwires
and, most importantly, it offered a clear field
of fire to the watching guards. - Over the years, the Wall went through four
distinct phases - Basic wire fence (1961)
- Improved wire fence (1962-1965)
- Concrete wall (1965-1975)
- Grenzmauer 75 (Border Wall 75) (1975-1989)
Position and course of the Berlin Wall and its
border control checkpoints (1989)
34The Wall Cont.
- The "fourth generation wall", known officially as
"Stützwandelement UL 12.11"(Retaining wall
element UL 12.11), was the final and most
sophisticated version of the Wall. Begun in 1975
and completed about 1980, it was constructed from
45,000 separate sections of reinforced concrete,
each 3.6 m (12 ft) high and 1.2 m (4 ft) wide,
and cost 16,155,000 East German Marks. The top of
the wall was lined with a smooth pipe, intended
to make it more difficult for escapers to scale
it. It was reinforced by mesh fencing, signal
fencing, anti-vehicle trenches, barbed wire, over
116 watchtowers, and twenty bunkers. This version
of the Wall is the one most commonly seen in
photographs.
35Official crossings and usage
- There were eight border crossings between East
and West Berlin, allowing visits by West
Berliners, West Germans, western foreigners and
Allied personnel into East Berlin, as well as
visits of East German citizens into West Berlin,
provided they held the necessary permit. Those
crossings were restricted according to which
nationality was allowed to use it (East Germans,
West Germans, West Berliners, other countries).
The most famous was Friedrichstraße (Checkpoint
Charlie), which was restricted to Allied
personnel and non-German citizens. - Several other border crossings existed between
West Berlin and surrounding East Germany. These
could be used for transit between West Germany
and West Berlin, for visits by West Berliners
into East Germany, for transit into countries
neighbouring East Germany (Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Denmark), and for visits by East
Germans into West Berlin carrying a permit. After
the 1972 agreements, new crossings were opened to
allow West Berlin waste be transported into East
German dumps, as well as some crossings for
access to West Berlin's exclaves.
36Illegal Emigration
- During the Wall's existence there were around
5,000 successful escapes (a form of illegal
emigration) into West Berlin. Varying reports
claim either 192 or 239 people were killed trying
to cross and many more injured. - Early successful escapes involved people jumping
the initial barbed wire or leaping out of
apartment windows along the line but these ended
as the wall improved. On August 15, 1961, Conrad
Schumann was the first East German border guard
to escape by jumping the barbed wire to West
Berlin.
37Escaping the Wall
Later successful escape attempts included long
tunnels, sliding along aerial wires, flying ultra
lights, and even one man who drove a very low
sports car underneath a barricade at Checkpoint
Charlie. The most notorious failed attempt was
that of Peter Fechter who was shot and left to
bleed to death in full view of the western media,
on August 17, 1962. The last person to be shot
dead while trying to cross the border was Chris
Gueffroy on February 6, 1989.
- Peter Fechter lies dying after being shot by East
German border guards. This photo achieved
international notoriety, 1962. - Both the eastern and western networks convered
event
38Sources