Examining the Berlin Wall and the Berlin Airlift

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Berlin: It’s got problems Objective: Analyze America’s response to the Berlin Blockade Std c.
Advertisements

3/25 Focus: Important Terms: Do Now:
THE COLD WAR Struggle between the World’s Superpowers.
THE BERLIN WALL Another Cold War crisis Background East – West rivalry Berlin divided – contrast the two halves. WEST: Prosperous, helped by US, attracted.
The Cold War – Post-war Europe After World War II, western Europe and America are alarmed by Soviet advances in Eastern Europe. Many.
THE COLD WAR THE BERLIN AIRLIFT AND THE FORMATION OF NATO.
THE BERLIN WALL By Mr Crowe
The Cold War Begins What can happen when powerful friends become enemies? Pgs
The Cold War A war that is fought with ideas and money instead of soldiers and weapons.
Marshall Plan Much of Europe was in bad shape after WWII Many major cities were destroyed, industrial facilities in ruins, shortages on food, millions.
Knowledge Connections
Examining the Berlin Wall and the Berlin Airlift
THE BERLIN WALL Another Cold War crisis  Background  East – West rivalry  Berlin divided – contrast the two halves. WEST: Prosperous, helped by US,
What is the Berlin Blockade?. Introduction The Berlin Blockade was… a symbol of the Cold War started in 1948 and ended in 1949 carried out by the USSR.
THE BERLIN WALL. The Berlin Wall was a barrier constructed by the German Democratic Republic starting on 13 August 1961, that completely cut off West.
Conflicting beliefs lead to a “Cold War”
The Cold War – Post-war Europe After World War II, western Europe and America are alarmed by Soviet advances in Eastern Europe. Many.
1 The Cold War Begins. 2 New Superpowers The United States and the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) Each nation was strong enough to greatly.
Communism Communism is a type of government and philosophy. Its goal is to form a society where everything is shared equally. All people are treated equally.
Origins of the Cold War Origins of the Cold War A Difference In Opinion 1945—the beginning of a long period of distrust & misunderstanding between the.
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
THE BERLIN WALL Another Cold War Crisis East – West rivalry Berlin divided – contrast the two halves: WEST: Prosperous, helped by US, attracted people.
The Cold War Standards & A Growing Threat A. The political and economic ideologies of the United States and the Soviet Union were polar.
Conflicts After WWII What effects did the outcomes of WWII have on relationships between opposing governments?
REBUILDING EUROPE. The Iron Curtain Winston Churchill coined this term. Famous speech on March 5, 1946 at Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri.
The Cold War Social Political Economic.
The Cold War Standards &
Superpowers Face-Off.
Examining the Berlin Wall and the Berlin Airlift
Origins of Cold War Superpowers struggle over Germany
Objective~ Understand
Communism & Totalitarianism
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
Objective To learn about the events that led to the building and, eventually, the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The Cold War Heats Up Chapter 19 Section 2.
Eastern Europe & Russia
The Cold War.
The Cold War
Cold war: a war fought using words or ideas
The beginning of the Cold War
Iron Curtain: symbolized the ideological and physical boundary dividing Europe on the boarder of Russia and Germany from 1945 until the end of the Cold.
U.S. Goal: Containment.
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
Shayna Fisher, Allen Williams, Sandra Withrow, Augie Straub
Cold War Crises Analyze how the Kennedy administration responded to the Cold War crises in Berlin.
Berlin Airlift
The Berlin Airlift & Iron Curtain
The Cold War Standards &
Berlin Wall and Airlift
Cold War Gallery # 4 Division in Germany Berlin Airlift
The Cold War Begins.
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
Lecture~ 2 THE BERLIN WALL Lecture 2 Standard
First Crisis of the Cold War
U.S. Goal: Containment.
The Cold War 1.
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
Beginning June 18, 1948, Soviet guards began stopping and searching all passenger and supply trains, traffic and freight shipments that were required to.
Origins of the Cold War
The Division of Germany
Wednesday, March 27th HW: No homework.
Berlin Airlift
Communism Communism is a type of government and philosophy. Its goal is to form a society where everything is shared equally. All people are.
The Cold War Continues Stephanie Fuhrmannek.
What is a superpower? When World War II ended, the United States and the Soviet Union became the world’s superpowers No other country could match their.
OGT bell ringer.
Stalin continued being an oppressive dictator until his death in 1953
Answer the following question in two – four sentences:
By Mr Crowe THE BERLIN WALL.
Presentation transcript:

Examining the Berlin Wall and the Berlin Airlift Conflict in Berlin Examining the Berlin Wall and the Berlin Airlift

CAUTION: DO NOT TRY TO CROSS OVER THE WALL TO EAST BERLIN! Welcome to West Berlin Welcome to West Berlin. While you are here be sure to check out the history of Post-WWII Berlin and explore the many images of the city. CAUTION: DO NOT TRY TO CROSS OVER THE WALL TO EAST BERLIN! THE WALL

Life in the City of Berlin Berlin was devastated after WWII and much of the city had to be rebuilt. Basic supplies, like food and water, were scarce as well as supplies needed to rebuild the city.

Berlin- 1948 Stalin and the Soviet Union wanted complete control of Berlin. In an effort to force the United States, Britain, and France out, he blockaded the whole city. By blocking the US, France, and the UK from sending troops and supplies, Stalin felt that West Berlin would fall to his control. On June 24th, 1948, the Berlin Blockade began. CITY LIFE BLOCKADE

Blockade of Berlin Berlin ‘48 BLOCKADE The blockade of Berlin was the first serious crisis of the Cold War. By 1948, the Western allies began moving towards uniting their occupation zones in Western Germany into a single independent German state. Stalin feared this Western German State and wanted to prevent it. The USSR, which had been invaded twice by Germany, was alarmed at the prospect of a strong Germany. They forced a blockade on West Berlin, cutting off all land and rail routes into the Western sectors.

We Are Starving! Western Response BLOCKADE "When the order of the Soviet Military Administration to close all rail traffic from the western zones went into effect at 6:00AM on the morning of June 24, 1948, the three western sectors of Berlin, with a civilian population of about 2,500,000 people, became dependent on reserve stocks. It was one of the most ruthless efforts in modern times to use mass starvation for political intimidation... “ – American Sector Commander, Lucius Clay For nearly a year, two million civilians and twenty thousand allied soldiers in the city's western sector were fed and fueled entirely from the air.

“We Shall Stay” BLOCKADE AIRLIFT The democratic nations that controlled West Berlin made the declaration of not leaving. Truman, President of the United States, was firm on not giving into the Blockade. However, he did not want to use military force, so a new method of re-supplying those trapped in West Berlin had to be developed.

The Berlin Airlift Response Airlift The Allies would supply their sectors of Berlin from the air. Allied cargo planes would use open air corridors over the Soviet occupation zone to deliver food, fuel and other goods to the people who lived in the western part of the city. This was the first action of Containment. This project, code-named “Operation VITTLES” by the American military, was known as the “Berlin airlift.” (West Berliners called it the “Air Bridge.”)

Airlift Against Communism End The Berlin airlift was supposed to be a short-term measure, but it settled in for the long haul as the Soviets refused to lift the blockade. For more than a year, hundreds of American, British and French C-54 cargo planes ferried provisions from Western Europe to three of the remaining airfields in West Berlin. At the beginning of the operation, the planes delivered about 5,000 tons of supplies to West Berlin every day; by the end, those loads had increased to about 8,000 tons of supplies per day. (450 flights per day) The Allies carried about 2.3 million tons of cargo in all over the course of the airlift. (Go to Website to see Berlin Airlift Video)

The Blockade Ends Airlift By spring 1949, it was clear that the Soviet blockade of West Berlin had failed. It had not persuaded West Berliners to reject their allies in the West and it did not prevent the formation of a Unified Western German State. (The Federal Republic of Germany was established in May 1949.) On May 12, 1949, the Soviets lifted the blockade and reopened the roads, canals and railway routes into the western half of the city.

YOU ARE NOW LEAVING DEMOCRATIC WEST BERLIN WARNING: NO FREEDOM ALLOWED NO RE-ENTRY TO WEST BERLIN NO ESCAPE OVER THE WALL WELCOME TO THE COMMUNIST EAST BERLIN ENJOY YOUR STAY ENTER HERE

WELCOME TO EAST BERLIN NO ENTRY Berlin Wall Life in East Berlin was very hard. Life under the communist rule of new Premier Khrushchev and the Soviets was tough on everyone living in war torn East Berlin. West: Prosperous, helped by the U.S., attracted people from the East. Seen by the Soviet Union as an “infection” in the heart of Communist East Germany. East: Much less prosperous and under Communist control.

The East Berliners Are Leaving! NO ENTRY Berlin Wall Look at the numbers of people leaving before the construction of the Berlin Wall. Number of Refugees If communism is so amazing, why are people fleeing East Berlin with such speed?

The Heart of Conflict The Democratic West Wanted: NO ENTRY Construction The Democratic West Wanted: Stop the USSR from gaining control of Berlin Unify Germany under a unified democratic state The Communist East Wanted: Maintain control of E. Germany Make the West give up Berlin Stop the flow of refugees from the East to the West

The Wall Goes Up NO ENTRY Berlin Wall On August 12, 1961, Soviet Union Premier, Nikita Khrushchev, gave the East German government permission to stop the flow of emigrants by closing its border for good. In just two weeks, the East German army, police force and volunteer construction workers had completed a makeshift barbed wire and concrete block wall–the Berlin Wall–that divided one side of the city from the other.

The Berlin Wall NO ENTRY Berlin Wall Before the wall was built, Berliners on both sides of the city could move around fairly freely: They crossed the East-West border to work, to shop, to go to the theater and the movies. Trains and subway lines carried passengers back and forth. After the wall was built, it became impossible to get from East to West Berlin except through one of three checkpoints. Except for special circumstances, travelers were never allowed to move from East to West.

NO ESCAPE! NO ENTRY Berlin Wall The construction of the Berlin Wall did stop the flood of refugees from East to West. Over time, East German officials replaced the makeshift wall with one that was sturdier and more difficult to scale. A 12-foot-tall, 4-foot-wide mass of reinforced concrete was topped with an enormous pipe that made climbing over nearly impossible. Behind the wall on the East German side was a so-called “Death Strip”: a gauntlet of soft sand (to show footprints), floodlights, vicious dogs, trip-wire machine guns and patrolling soldiers with orders to shoot escapees on sight.

NO ENTRY "Ich bin ein Berliner“ “ I am a Berliner”- Speech In 1961, President Kennedy attempts to boost morale in West Berlin. Berlin Wall

The Berlin Wall NO ENTRY In all, at least 171 people were killed trying to get over, under or around the Berlin Wall. Escape from East Germany was not impossible, however: From 1961 until the wall came down in 1989, more than 5,000 East Germans (including some 600 border guards) managed to cross the border by jumping out of windows adjacent to the wall, climbing over the barbed wire, flying in hot air balloons, crawling through the sewers and driving through unfortified parts of the wall at high speeds. The Wall itself became a symbol for the Cold War and the battle between Democracy and Communism. It was the real life “Iron Curtain”.