Berlin: Europe’s Flashpoint, History 337 / February 15, 2012
Khrushchev with Ulbricht at the SED’s Fifth Party Congress, July 1958
The Bundeswehr as “Europe’s fastest growing army,” 1960
Khrushchev and Mao in 1959, as the Sino-Soviet split was widening
November 1958: Khrushchev’s Berlin ultimatum
Foreign ministers’ conference, Geneva, May 1959 (four WW II victors at the main table; two German states at side tables)
The “Kitchen Debate”: Nixon and Khrushchev in Moscow, July 1959
Khrushchev welcomed in the United States, September 1959
Waiting for Khrushchev: Eden, Eisenhower, de Gaulle, and Adenauer in Paris, May 1960
Francis Gary Powers and a U-2 spy plane
Khrushchev’s response to the “U-2 incident”
Khrushchev and Kennedy in Vienna, June 1961
Refugees stream into West Berlin, summer 1961
Ulbricht press conference, June 15, 1961: “No one intends to build a wall.”
Kennedy TV address, July 25, 1961 [text of speech]text of speech “Three essentials”: 1. Allied occupation rights in Berlin 2. Free access to West Berlin 3. Freedom for West Berliners
Sealing the border, Aug. 13, 1961: a military operation
The wall… surrounding West Berlin
Freshly erected barriers, August 1961
Barbed wire at the Brandenburg Gate
An East German army recruit makes a run for it
The wall at Potsdamer Platz
The wall at the Brandenburg Gate
Vice-President Lyndon Johnson and American commanders on the scene in Berlin
General Lucius Clay (hero of the Airlift) inspects West Berlin police units
Standpoint at Checkpoint Charlie, October 1961
Peter Fechter’s death at the wall, August 1962
JFK at the Berlin Wall, June 1963 (with Chancellor Adenauer and Berlin mayor Willy Brandt)
“Ich bin ein Berliner” (June 26, 1963)