Title: Tensions in Berlin involving The Berlin Wall
1Tensions in Berlin involving The Berlin Wall
- Morgan Anthony
- Maximilian Amendy
http//news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/a
ugust/13/newsid_3054000/3054060.stm (Couple)
http//www.berlin.de/mauergedenken/luftbild/checkp
oint_charlie.de.html (Check. Charlie)
2The Divided City
- After the war, Germany was split into 4 sectors,
among France, Britain, the United States, and the
Soviet Union. - Germany was divided in two major parts when the
western nations joined together. These parts were
called the German Democratic Republic, or East
Germany, and the Federal Republic of Germany, or
West Germany. - Berlin was also split into four and became
divided in two when the western nations joined
together to create West Berlin. The Soviet Union
occupied East Berlin. - Berlin was in the middle of the Soviet sector of
Germany, so it was easy for Stalin to cut off
West Berlin from West Germany.
3The Economic Tensions leading to the Berlin Wall
- 1952-1953
- New quotas were put in place and workers' wages
were lowered - As demonstrations, some supervisory workers were
put on trial for sabotage for failing to meet the
new production goals - There was also pressure exerted in order to bring
private farmers to turn their land over to
collective farms - These methods were viewed as very harsh by the
citizens, and caused an accerlerated exodus to
the West further methods include - withdrew ration cards from those who earned their
living independently - the prices were greatly increased, so this caused
much suffering - raised prices of goods and increased a number of
taxes - new secret police and purges of jews from the
police ranks - pressure was exerted in on to farmers in order to
bring private farmers to turn their land over to
collective farms - the loss of farmers left 13 percent of arable
land unattended causing food shortages to develop - The number of East Germans leaving to go to the
West grew to nearly 2 percent of the total
population because of the hard line the
government took - the loss of manpower led to a decline in tax
(adding to "the woes of the economy") - the regime fell behind its schedule for
industrial growth
http//www.17juni53.de/chronik/530617.html Germany
from Partition to Reunification by Henry Ashby
Turner Jr.
4The Economic Tensions leading to the Berlin Wall
- The Uprising of June
- The hard-line policy was hardened after Stalin's
death, and the plight of the economy was blamed
on certain classes - the government's method of fixing the economy was
by raising the already high work quota by 10
percent and a wage cut of the same extent - workers went on strike on June 16th when the
realization that the work quotas were not going
to be changed hit - a general stike and protests took place on June
17th - the numbers grew and people from all over
East Germany went on stike in protest of the
policies - the demands grew from abolishing the harsh
economic policies to the stepping down of the
government - The Soviet troops and tanks were called in
because of the lack of capability of the East
Berlin police to controlt the protestors - live
ammunition was used - 50 were killed and hundreds were injured
5The Economic Tensions leading to the Berlin Wall
- 1954-1956
- a new course was put in place
- more attention was given to consumer goods
- measured of forced collectivization of farms was
supressed - many goals of the five year plan were abandoned
- 1956-1960
- a new five year plan was put in place and the new
course was abandoned - the economic priorites
were placed back on rapid industrialization - pressure was again placed on collective farming
and independent artizens were forced to join with
the government or abandoned their businesses to
leave for the West - In late 1959, there was a massive drive to
collectivize the remainder of privately owned
farmland - By mid-1960, at least 15,000 independent farmers
had deserted their farms. - they fled to the West rather than submit to
collectivization - led to further food shortage
Picture http//www.siebzehnter-juni.de/ausstellun
g/mv/index.html http//libcom.org/history/1953-the
-east-german-uprising http//www.dw-world.de/dw/ar
ticle/0,,894998,00.html Germany from Partition to
Reunification by Henry Ashby Turner Jr.
6The Economy resulting from the Berlin Wall
- the government of east germany could now make any
labor allocations and work quotas without the
risk of loss of the work force - the new economic system caused East Germany to
have the strongest industrial productivity in the
Eastern Bloc - the goals set in the plans set up for the economy
by the government were mostly not met, but with
the entrapment of the work force, a reasonable
industrial economy was set up - the economy was not as advanced as West Germany,
but it was better than before
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/de/thumb/5/5
a/DDR_Mark_Rueckseite_1Mark.jpg/200px-DDR_Mark_Rue
ckseite_1Mark.jpg
7Political tensions
- - In June 1961, Kennedy met with Chairman Nikita
Khrushchev in Vienna. - - The Soviets articulated their fears over the
continued political cooperation of the German
Democratic Republic (DDR) as it was their own
occupation zone in Germany. - - The Soviets were concerned that the GDR would
become belligerent, and that through capitalist
influence, it would present an ideological threat
to the Soviet Union. - - The Soviet Union gave the West an ultimatum
entailing - The establishment of a peace treaty between East
and West Germany. - A free city or politically neutral status of
the city of West Berlin. - The compliance with the above 2 points by
December. - - Tensions heated up as Krushchev Ultimatum gave
the allies 6 months to get out of Berlin. - - When the Soviet Union built a wall between East
and West Berlin in August 1961, East-West
tensions rose further. - - The Americans wanted to avoid a military
confrontation under all circumstances. - http//www.gwu.edu/nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB56/
- http//usa.usembassy.de/etexts/ga5-hemsing.htm
8In Berlin
- On June 15th, 1961, the East German Head of Party
and State declared to his citizens that No one
intends to erect a wall. - At dawn, on August 13th, 1961, East German troops
begin erecting a wall along the border of the
East and West Berlin. - The walls erection violated the four-power
agreements over Berlin. - The East German government justified the building
of the wall for the purpose of stopping the
hostile activities of the revanchist and
militaristic forces of West Germany. - For 1 week, Kennedy made no public comments on
this violation, much to the anger of the West
German chancellor, Willy Brandt who exclaimed
Berlin expects more than words. Berlin expects
political action! - 1 http//www.die-berliner-mauer.de/en/61.html
1 http//homepages.stmartin.edu/Fac_Staff/rlang
ill/PLS20310/The20Wall,201958-1963.htm
http//www.hanisauland.de/zoom/berlinermauer
9Checkpoint Charlie
- The following period saw an increase in travel
restrictions for both East and West Berliners. - Public transit was shut down between the two
sectors. - Only one train station at the Friedrichstrasse
(Checkpoint Charlie) remained open. As its
entrance hall was often filled with Western
visitors returning to West Berlin, it became
known as the Palace of Tears. - The US military also opened two additional
checkpoints at Helmstedt and Dreilinden. - Together, the three checkpoints were known as
phonetic letters of the alphabet Alpha, Bravo
and Charlie. - The checkpoints main purpose was to register
members of the Western Military Forces before
entering East Berlin. - http//www.die-berliner-mauer.de/en/61.html,
http//www.dailysoft.com/berlinwall/history/checkp
oint-charlie.htm
10Diplomatic Incident
- In October 1961, an American diplomat and his
wife had to show their passports, against all
diplomatic regulations, to go to a theatre in
East Berlin. - The American General Clay sent a military escort
with the diplomat in his car. - The following days witnessed a culmination in
pointless excursions by Western civilians, all
escorted by heavily-armed military. - 10 American M-48 tanks were stationed at
Checkpoint Charlie. - On October 27th, 1961, 33 Soviet tanks entered
East Berlin and stationed themselves at the
Brandenburg gate. - This was significant, as there had been no such
military presence in East Berlin since the
uprising of 1953. - Soon later, 10 tanks moved towards Checkpoint
Charlie facing the American tanks several yards
away. - The American tanks loaded their guns and awaited
orders. For the first time in the Cold War,
Soviet and American military stood opposite each
other on a hostile basis.
11Diplomatic Incident (contd)
- The tension became unbearable, as Clay was on the
phone to the White House, and the Soviet Military
commander had a direct line to the Kremlin. - The leaders both instructed their military to
fire, but only in response to the opponents
eliciting a reaction. - Naturally, commanders were sweating, while
dreading that, given all the tension, some
soldier would lose his composure and fire. - All leaders realized that the Cold War had got
out of hand. - Luckily, after an agonizing 16 hour wait, the
first Soviet tank began to withdraw. - The US. Advised its citizens not to unnecessarily
go into East Berlin for the time being. - Kennedy said, "It's not a very nice solution, but
a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war." - http//homepages.stmartin.edu/Fac_Staff/rlangill/P
LS20310/The20Wall,201958-1963.htm
http//mcadams.posc.mu.edu/jfkberlin.jpg