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Cold War Division of Germany

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Cold War Division of Germany. HI136 History of Germany. Schedule ... August 1961 Berlin Wall built cementing division. Principles. Denazification. Democratisation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cold War Division of Germany


1
Cold War Division of Germany
  • HI136 History of Germany

2
Schedule
  • Germany in 1945 die Stunde Null (zero hour)
  • Occupation Policies
  • The First Berlin Crisis
  • The Second Berlin Crisis
  • Conclusion

3
Liberation of the Concentration Camp Dachau
4
A badly managed disaster area
Refugees arriving in Berlin, 1945
Black market raid in Berlin, 1945
5
The Formal Division
  • Teheran Feb. 1943 Germany will be divided and
    occupied
  • London Sept. 1944 three zones envisaged (joined
    by French in 1945)
  • Potsdam July 1945 Germany to be single economic
    unit, but administered by zonal commanders
    meeting in Allied Control Council
  • Officially, temporary situation pending peace
    treaty, but de facto consolidation
  • 1947 Economic Council appears in western zones as
    proto-government
  • June 1948 separate currencies introduced
  • May 1949 Federal Republic of (West) Germany
    announced Oct. 1949 German Democratic Republic
    (East) follows
  • May 1955 FRG joins NATO GDR joins Warsaw Pact
  • August 1961 Berlin Wall built cementing division

6
(No Transcript)
7
Principles
  • Denazification
  • Democratisation
  • Demilitarisation
  • Decentralisation
  • Decartelisation
  • (Dismantlement)

8
Soviet Occupation
  • Gradualist approach with creeping Sovietisation
    (no one-party copy of USSR)
  • Lack of planning, but smash and grab (Beria)
    versus reconstruction (Tyulpanov) factions
  • Mass rapes alienate women
  • Nationalisation of industry popular (77
    support), but dismantling of 30 of factories
    unpopular (approx. 30)
  • Land reform (popular among farmers, but set
    unilateral precedent, upsetting western partners)
  • Refugees USSR mainly blamed for inhumane
    treatment of refugees, ca. 1.5 million die)
  • Norman Naimark, The Russians in Germany

9
Revisionist views of Russia
  • Stalins perceived desire for a deal on Germany
    (united but neutral)
  • Message to KPD leaders in June 1945 that Germany
    would remain united
  • Brakes on separatist pressures from East German
    leaders (June 1948)
  • National unity offers (March 1952 Stalin Notes)
    was this to try to scupper FRG integration into
    military bloc?
  • Rolf Steininger, Wilfried Loth, Stalins Unwanted
    Child

10
French Occupation
  • Hopes for dismemberment of Germany (Rhinelandia
  • International control of Ruhr
  • Oppose centralised institutions
  • Non-signatories to Potsdam (no refugees allowed
    into French Zone)
  • Punitive reparations from German industry and
    forestry
  • Only join Anglo-American Bizone in 1948

General Koenig, French commander
11
British Occupation
  • April 1946 British alarm at communist-SPD merger
    in Soviet Zone (bid for all-zone superparty?)
  • Mid-1946 British sterling crisis occupation
    becoming liability
  • Invite other occupiers to merge zones (only US
    accept gt Bizonia, Jan. 1947)
  • Britain now seen as proactive keen to encourage
    firmer line from Americans (Deighton, The
    Impossible Peace)
  • Post-revisionist synthesis stresses regional
    actors

Ernest Bevin, British foreign secretary
12
American Occupation
  • JCS 1067 no fraternisation population to be
    kept at subsistence level
  • May 1946 US halt reparations deliveries to
    Soviet Zone
  • Byrnes speech (Sept. 1946) America pledges to
    stay in Germany for long haul
  • 1947 governor Clay blocks moves to
    nationalisation of industry
  • Carolyn Eisenberg, Drawing the Line, for a
    critical view of the Americans

13
Marshall Aid, June 1947-1952
  • West Germany as locomotive to economic recovery
    of western Europe
  • Internationalisation of economy to satisfy French
    security worries
  • Renewed West German infrastructure of Ruhr mines
  • Was it more psychological than real aid? (Werner
    Abelshauser v. Christoph Buchheim)
  • Cf dismantling policy in eastern Germany

14
Schedule
  • Germany in 1945 die Stunde Null (zero hour)
  • Occupation Policies
  • The First Berlin Crisis
  • The Second Berlin Crisis
  • Conclusion

15
Berlin the quadripartite city
16
Berlin cont.
  • Liberated by USSR in April 1945 at cost of
    100,000 casualties western sectors occupied July
    1945
  • Formal access only recognised via air
  • Easy access to West via open border, including
    U-Bahn or flown out of Tempelhof

17
Berlin Airlift
  • Soviet concerns at western preparations for
    separate West German state (London talks from
    Jan. 1948)
  • Currency reform June western Allies introduce
    deutschmark into western zones and West Berlin
  • Soviets retaliate with closure of access to West
    Berlin
  • General Clay organises airlift with political
    support from Mayor Reuter despite difficulties
    in autumn 1948, tonnages rise in Nov.
  • Propaganda debacle for East
  • Western Allies move from being victor powers to
    protector powers

American transport aircraft (raisin bomber)
lands at Tempelhof note the children waiting for
possible sweets thrown overboard
18
(No Transcript)
19
Berlin the Divided City
  • During blockade two city governments
  • U-Bahn (West) S-Bahn (East)
  • Currency speculation
  • Shopwindow Berlin Ku-Damm as showcase of
    western standard of living
  • Espionage centre (CIA Berlin tunnel, human
    intelligence)
  • Broadcasting RIAS American radio

Beware RIAS poison communist anti-American
poster warning of US broadcasts
Poster showing smuggling of currency between
sectors
20
Schedule
  • Germany in 1945 die Stunde Null (zero hour)
  • Occupation Policies
  • The First Berlin Crisis
  • The Second Berlin Crisis
  • Conclusion

21
Refugees via Berlin Inner-German border
22
Berlin Crisis, 1958-61
  • GDRs desire for recognition by West
  • USSRs hopes for peace treaties removal of
    atomic weaponry from FRG
  • Khrushchev ultimatum for West to leave West
    Berlin within 6 months
  • Western intransigence threat of nuclear weapons
    to preserve West Berlin but non-intervention in
    East Berlin
  • Economic race to overtake West German economy
    falters in 1960
  • Wall cheap alternative to subsidies by USSR

23
Conclusion Division of Germany
  • Traditional interpretation Soviet Union is
    responsible
  • Revisionist interpretation USA are mainly
    responsible
  • Post-revisionist interpretation both sides are
    responsible
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