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Divided Berlin

The first major crisis of the was over the city of Berlin.

Berlin had been divided into four sectors (French, British, American and Russian) following the war and each country was responsible for their own sector.

Berlin however, was 100 miles inside of the Russian zone.

This meant that the Allies had to travel through the Russian zone of Germany to get to their section of Berlin.

The actions of the USSR in Eastern Europe and the impact

By 1948, the Western zones of Germany were recovering mainly as a result of .

However, the Russians had removed a large amount of resources from their zone.

As a result, living conditions in the Russian zone were much worse than in the other zones.

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What caused the Berlin blockade?

Image caption,
Portrait of Joseph Stalin
  • Using money from , the Allies were helping the Germans to rebuild their economy.
  • Stalin was worried that the West would take advantage of their stronger position to unite all their zones and eventually take over the eastern part.
  • The Allies introduced a new currency, the Deutschmark, that would be used throughout their zones in Germany.
  • Britain, France and the USA joined their zones together to create Trizonia. Stalin was angry at being left out of this.
Image caption,
Portrait of Joseph Stalin

Events of the Berlin blockade

On 24 June 1948, Stalin cut all land access to Berlin for the Allies, citing 鈥榯echnical difficulties'.

This became known as the Berlin blockade.

Stalin did not intend to risk war over Berlin, he likely wanted to show that the Soviets also had power in Germany which could match the demonstrations of economic power and unity that the West had just shown.

He was using the blockade to prevent any further Western moves in Germany and hoped that they would abandon the Western zones of Berlin.

Question

How did the Allies respond?

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The Berlin blockade in numbers

The Berlin blockade in numbers
  • 24 June 1948, Stalin cut all land access to Berlin for the Allies.
  • West Berlin only had enough food for 36 days.
  • There was amongst West Berliners.
  • Planes landed every 2 minutes.
  • In total, 2 million tonnes of supplies were airlifted in.
  • 101 men died.
  • The blockade ended on 12th May 1949 after 324 days.
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Consequences of the Berlin airlift and impact on relations

Image caption,
Photograph of cargo planes dropping relief supplies in the Berlin Airlift
  1. The Berlin airlift was a defeat for the Soviets and a great boost for the West.
  2. was formed in April 1949 for the common defence of Europe.
  3. It convinced the West that Germany could not be united and declared their zones a separate state. In May 1949, the German Federal RepublicWest Germany 鈥 was set up. On October 1949, the German Democratic Republic - East Germany 鈥 was created from the Soviet zone. Germany was now divided into two states.
  4. Berlin remained a in east-west relations.
  5. The crisis highlighted the dangers of superpower conflict. It also showed the limitations. The Soviets did not use their larger army; the US did not use their .
  6. was proven to have worked - West Berlin had remained under a government.
  7. The established by Soviet Countries - agreed to defend each other if one was attacked.
Image caption,
Photograph of cargo planes dropping relief supplies in the Berlin Airlift

NATO - Warsaw Pact

NATOWarsaw Pact
FormedApril 1949May 1955
AimsTo resist an attack by the USSR on the USA or its Allies in Western Europe, based on the principle that an armed attack on one of its members was an attack on them all.To resist an attack on the Soviet bloc by the USA or its NATO allies.
MembersUSA, UK, Canada, West Germany, Portugal, France, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg.USSR, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, East Germany, Albania.
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