What was the result of the Berlin Blockade?

Background

One of the most brutal conflicts in recent history, World War II devastated 113 countries from six continents. Beginning in 1939, the Allied forces — primarily Britain, Russia and the USA — sought to stop Nazi Germany in its conquest for European domination. In the six years that followed, Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party devastated Europe and wreaked violence against many social minority groups. By 1945, Western Europe had been ravaged, an entire race of people had come close to extinction and the dynamic of power in several affected countries had been forever changed. Hitler committed suicide in May 1945, and the Nazi regime collapsed. Japan surrendered in August. Even after peace was declared, the world felt the political and economic repercussions for decades.

Following the war, a defeated Germany was divided into four sections, each of which was to be occupied by one of the Allied Powers. The Soviet Union took control of the eastern part of Germany, while France, Great Britain and the United States took control of the western part. The German capital of Berlin was also divided into four sections, even though Berlin itself was in the middle of the Soviet-controlled part of Germany. Although they had been allies during the war, the United States and the Soviet Union clashed philosophically on many issues. The superpowers disagreed about how to rebuild Germany, and tensions quickly rose, resulting in what later came to be known as the Cold War. Fearing that the Soviets would try to extend their communist philosophy to other countries, the United States adopted a policy of “containment,” which involved rebuilding war-torn Europe and promoting democracies to halt the spread of communism. In March 1948, Britain, France and the United States decided to combine their sections of Berlin into one unified West Berlin, angering the Soviets further. In June 1948 the Soviet Union, whose territory fully surrounded the capital, cut off all ground traffic into and out of West Berlin in an attempt to force the Allies to abandon the city. The blockade of Berlin had begun.

President Truman suddenly faced a crisis. The citizens of West Berlin were quickly running out of food, supplies and time. Truman’s advisors suggested several options. They could evacuate the citizens of West Berlin, try to negotiate with the Soviet Union with the support of the newly-formed United Nations, figure out a way to get supplies into the city or simply abandon Berlin altogether. Their decision would determine exactly how involved the United States would be in Berlin - and in rebuilding post-war Europe.

Ultimately, Truman determined that it was of utmost importance that the United States remain a presence in Berlin. He and the remaining Allies began the Berlin Airlift, an operation that carried food, fuel and other supplies into West Berlin by plane. The effort required a lot of careful planning and many resources, but the Airlift allowed the United States to keep a foothold in post-war Germany.

Key Question

Was the Berlin Airlift the best option to address the Berlin Blockade, or would a different option have better served the USA’s interests?

Directions

Materials

Documents to be examined:

  1. Letter from Philip Johnston to Harry Truman, September 12, 1948
  2. Memo for the National Security Council: U.S. Military Courses of Action with Respect to the Situation in Berlin, July 28, 1948
  3. Letter from Matthew Connelly to Michael Disalle, July 26, 1948
  4. Former President Truman speaking on the blockade of Berlin, 1964 [audio]
  5. Universal International Newsreel on the Berlin Airlift, 1948 [video]
  6. Telegram from Alfred Bingham to Harry Truman, June 25, 1948
  7. Typed Diary of Harry Truman, July 19, 1948
  8. Classified Messages between Berlin and Washington, April 1948
  9. Outtakes from “Operation Vittles,” 1948 [video]
  10. “Yup Sonny” Cartoon by Jake Schuffert, 1948

The Berlin Blockade/Airlift

On 23 June 1948 all road, rail and canal links between West Berlin and West Germany were closed. The Russians’ aim was to force the West to withdraw from the city by reducing it to starvation point. Many Germans had lost their homes, the refugee crisis in Berlin was problematic, this caused chaos. Berlin had only food and fuel enough for six weeks.

The western powers, convinced that a retreat from West Berlin would be the prelude to a Russian attack on West Germany, were determined to hold on. General Clay, the American commander in Berlin, predicted that: “When Berlin falls, Western Germany will be next. If we withdraw our position in Berlin, Europe is threatened … Communism will run rampant.”

The West, therefore, decided to fly supplies into the city along the three air corridors permitted to the allies. They gambled that the Russians would not risk the outbreak of war by shooting the planes down. Despite several very close shaves, they were right. Over the next ten months 2 million tons of supplies were airlifted to the blockaded city in a remarkable operation that kept over 2 million West Berliners from starvation. Only in May 1949 did the Russians admit failure by lifting the Blockade, but by then there was no question that the old wartime alliance was over and the Cold War had begun.

What was the result of the Berlin Blockade?

iv) The Consequences of the Berlin Blockade

The consequences of the Berlin blockade were far reaching and were to dominate European politics for the next forty years. Pesident Truman was under no illusion that the Blockade had been a test of strength, designed by Stalin to see whether the West would resist and whether the USA would stand behind the Truman doctrine.

The Blockade certainly resulted in the final collapse of the wartime alliance and cooperation between the West and the Soviet Union. The ‘Iron Curtain’ that Churchill had seen descending across Europe in 1946 became ever more of a reality as both East and West endeavoured to secure their positions in Europe. Even so, it is also important to note that armed conflict did not result from the Blockade. The conflict was more of a struggle of will between the two sides, neither of which was prepared to risk direct military confrontation with the other. This was to set another pattern that was to last in Europe until the great upheavals of 1989. It was also a necessity since the Russians in late August 1949 exploded their own atomic bomb, much earlier than anyone had anticipated. East-West relations entered a new, and even more deadly phase.

In many ways the most important consequence of the Blockade was the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in April 1949. The Blockade had demonstrated the West’s military unreadiness and frightened them into making definite preparations. Already in March 1948 Britain, France, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg had signed the Brussels Defence Treaty promising military collaboration in the event of war. Now they were joined by the USA, Canada, Portugal, Denmark, Ireland, Italy and Norway. All signed the North Atlantic Treaty, agreeing to regard an attack on one of them as an attack on them all and placing their defence forces under a joint NATO command structure. This was a highly significant development because it marked the abandonment of isolationism by the United States.

Finally, after the collapse of the Blockade, two separate German states came into being. Since there was no prospect of the Russians allowing a united and ‘free’ Germany to be created, the western powers went ahead alone and set up the Federal Republic of Germany. The Russians replied by establishing their own German state, the German Democratic Republic. In response to Marshall Aid, the Russians set up their own programme known as COMECON (Council of Mutual Economic Aid) under which Stalin was able to link the economies of all Russia’s satellites and influence their economies for the benefit of the Soviet Union. Each satellite produced what Stalin wanted it to, so that Poland, for example, concentrated on coal and steel. Finally in 1955 the Warsaw Pact was established after West Germany was admitted to NATO. The Pact was a military alliance between Russia and her satellites, but in practice it was more of a gesture against West German membership of NATO as there was already no doubt about the Soviet’s influence and control over the armed forces of her satellites. Problems surrounding Berlin did not go away. It led eventually to the construction of the Berlin Wall when Khruschchev challenged President Kennedy.

In brief then, the main consequences of the Berlin Blockade were:

* Deterioration of East-West relations to their worst point since 1945, escalating the early stages of the Cold War.
* Psychological boost for the western powers (having succeeded in defending Berlin)
* The formation of NATO and the coordination of the West’s defences
* Division of Germany: the establishment of the German Federal Republic in August 1949 and the German Democratic Republic in September 1949
* Long-term commitment of the USA to the protection of Europe: military garrisons in NATO countries

Cold War  
Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam Conferences Stalin and Truman: ideological differences Soviet Satellite States
Cominform and Comecon US Involvement in Europe Post WW2 Truman Doctrine
Marshall Plan Bizonia Berlin Airlift
NATO: Origins and History The arms race and Mutually assured destruction Soviet rule in Hungary
Destalinization Hungarian Revolution Berlin: Refugee Crisis
Khruschev's challenge to the west over Berlin 1960: Paris Summit Kennedy and the Berlin Crisis
Berlin Wall President Kennedy visit to Berlin Cuban Missile Crisis: Why were missiles there?
Cuban Missile Crisis: Why did Kennedy respond as he did? Cuban Missile Crisis: Resolution and analysis

What were the causes and effects of the Berlin Blockade?

What caused the Berlin Blockade? Stalin wanted Germany to remain weak, as a strong Germany could represent a threat to the Soviet Union. The Western Allies disagreed and were encouraging Germany to rebuild in the Western sectors. This angered Stalin who decided to force the Allies out of Berlin.

What was the most important consequence of the Berlin Blockade?

In many ways the most important consequence of the Blockade was the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in April 1949. The Blockade had demonstrated the West's military unreadiness and frightened them into making definite preparations.