As a result, many Eastern Germans migrated to the West because they didn’t like the way their government works. Which led to the forming of the Berlin Wall by the East German authorities. Shown in document 3b, the impact of the wall was significant because it…
Berlin Wall: Built by communist government to separate impoverished, Soviet - controlled East Berlin from the…
Berlin was an immediate victim to the Cold War. Berlin was shared amongst 4 powers, the French, British, United States and the Soviet Union.(doc 3a) Since Berlin was shared with the Soviet Union, part of Berlin was communist as the other half wasn't. The Soviet Union built a wall to keep capitalist ideas out of their sector of Berlin.(doc 3b) Not only did the Soviet Union build this wall but they also blockaded the city hoping to force out the western sector. This attempt failed as the United States responded with the Berlin airlift which brought food and supplies to Berlin each day. Germany wasn't…
Initially believed to have been implemented by Stalin to aid the “spread of communism to Western Europe”, the Berlin Blockade was the first action taken by the Soviets in the war. In an attempt to starve the west into giving into communism, Stalin closed all roads, rail and canal links to West Berlin. With help from the West’s developing economy, the East had not with communism. The clear divide in living standards between Capitalism and Communism rulings were pedestalled for all the world to see, threatening Stalin’s approach for Communism’s spread. Many orthodox historians believe that Stalin therefore commenced the Berlin blockade because he wanted to start starving the west into submission, so he could spread communism west. However, threatening this theory was Stalin’s paranoia, and it could be argued that he felt threatened by the possibility of Soviet satellite states seeing the benefits of capitalism drowned by the downfall of communism. Stalin couldn’t risk this, so had to act by weakening capitalism and exposing its own downfalls. Stalin’s reluctance to expand further across Europe could also be used as evidence to support the idea that this was not an act of Soviet expansionism. Source 9 states “withdraw the Soviet Union behind its new defensive east European barrier” suggesting Truman chose to blow the Berlin…
The building of a barrier would sufficiently quell the tide of fleeing refugees, as well as prevent East German residents from seeking employment outside the East German workforce. The East German leaders knew this, and thus, secretly planned and later carried out the construction of such a barrier. In addition to solving the refugee crisis, the construction of a barrier also prevented the nuclear war brewing between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union’s main reason for demanding that the Western Powers remove their troops from East Berlin stemmed from their unhappiness over the emigration of their East German citizens. With this wall no more emigration would be possible, therefore eliminating the reason the nuclear war threat was made in the first…
In this essay I will be talking about both John Kennedy’s and Ronald Reagan’s speeches about the berlin wall. The second paragraph is my interpretation of Kennedy’s speech. The next paragraph is about Reagan’s speech. Then, I’ll explain why I think Kennedy’s speech was more convincing to actually tear down the wall.…
After Reagan’s famous “Tear Down this Wall”, speech, the Berlin Wall had officially been torn down by 1989, officially reuniting East and West Germany after 45 years of communist intervention. This was a very…
Fifteen to sixteen years after World War Two, which was about 1960-1961 the Berlin Wall was built to separate East and West Berlin Germany. West Berlin was controlled by the United States, France, and the United Kingdom. East Berlin was controlled by the Soviet Union.…
Because of Germany’s loss in World War II, their country and capital city of Berlin were divided into sectors and put under control of the British, French, Americans, and Soviets. Berlin was technically in the Soviet Union’s occupied zone, so they believed that they should have complete control of the city. To promote this idea, they closed all highways, canals, and railroads going to and from West Germany, controlled by the other nations. This made it difficult for nations to bring in supplies to their own sectors in Berlin. Soviets thought that this would help drive those countries and their people out of Berlin, but it only angered them more.…
One of the good this is that the United states, France, and the United Kingdom showed that you can stand up to communism…no they didn’t stop communism completely but the United states made sure that Germany didn’t become a communist state. Another positive change is that the United states had changed is that they saved the German economy by going into the Marshall Plan which in later turned to become a major success by standing up to the Russian government by re-establishing the German economy. One thing that wasn’t so positive is that the United states and the Soviet Union did not like each other for a long period. Along with that the Berlin wall was built to separate east and west Berlin so that immigrants couldn't go from the east side of Berlin to the west or the other way around. Because the Berlin wall didn't fall until November 9, 1989… so thinking about it there where many of thing that could say that this was an influential topic while other pieces of evidence shows that the airlift could’ve been more cost…
Soviet Union built this this wall to prevent people from leaving the Soviet Union and prevent interaction with Europe. People were segregated from the rest of the world. This tension between the United States and Russia caused the expansion of the Cold War through the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Bay of Pigs, and the Berlin Wall.…
The Berlin Wall was created to separate the city Berlin into east and west where no one is allowed to cross the border. It was a barbed wired and concrete wall with very high levels of security which made it impossible to get to the other side. Before the wall was built, refugees were escaping from east Berlin to the West, especially skilled workers who found a better living under a democracy. After a large number of refugees escaping to the west, Nikita Khrushchev, leader of the Soviet Union at the time, makes an order for the Berlin wall to be built with heavy security. Many did not enjoy their life on the Eastern part even when countries tried to revolt against the Soviet Union such as Imre Nagy, prime minister of Hungary and Alexander Dubcek leader of Czechoslovakia. By these countries trying to leave the Soviet Union, it violated the Warsaw Pact which means a “A war on one is a war on all” and anyone who tried to leave the Warsaw Pact would either get executed or pulled out of power by the Soviet Union. Eventually by 1989, the Berlin Wall falls and Germany is reunited a year later.…
The U.S., England, and France wanted to reunify Germany, whereas the Soviets wanted to keep their claim to Eastern Germany, and saw the West’s efforts as an attack on their claim. Since the capitol was also split, it created an isolated Western-controlled area surrounded by the Soviets. Consequently, the Soviets and U.S. argued over whether West Berlin should remain a Western-owned land, as the Soviets were angered by their citizens escaping into West Berlin. Since the U.S. refused to give up their territory, the Soviets built the Berlin Wall, a wall surrounding West Berlin, where they would shoot anyone trying to cross. The Berlin Wall became a physical representation of the iron curtain, which was the metaphorical separation between the Soviet controlled East of Europe and the U.S. and allied controlled West.…
Millions of people escaped the Eastern Bloc through Berlin. By 1961, the Soviets and East Germans had enough. They built a wall to prevent further escape and to keep the professional classes trapped. The Berlin Wall became a symbol of communist oppression and a propaganda tool for the west. At this time, it lessened tensions between the two Cold War foes. At one point before the wall, the two sides pointed tanks at each other in the streets of Berlin. John Kennedy visited the wall and let the Berliners know the free world stood with them.…
Well, what has the past taught us about walls? The Chinese built a wall to keep Manchurian invaders out of the country, and we all know how that turned out. The Berlin wall divided East and West Germany; East Germany wanted to prevent Western fascists from invading the country and individuals from defecting to the West. The Berlin wall eventually fell. It’s possible that a wall isn’t the answer.…