Berlin Blockade and Berlin Airlift, 1948-49

Background

Ever since the Yalta Conference, it had been clear that Berlin was going to be a flash point in the Cold War, and this came to a head in 1948.

  • Germany had been divided into four zones of occupation each controlled by one of the Allies.
  • The German capital, Berlin, lay inside the Russian zone and was also divided into four zones of occupation.
  • Access to Berlin for the Allies was by way of road, rail and canal, and via three specific air corridors.
A map showing the allies' four zones of occupation in Germany after World War II

What caused the Berlin Blockade?

Stalin wanted Germany to remain weak, unthreatening and as a ‘’ between it and the West. He rapidly lost patience with the way the West were acting in Berlin and decided to push them out.

What were the Western Allies doing in Berlin that made Stalin so upset?

  1. Using money from the Marshall Aid programme, the Allies were helping the Germans to rebuild their economy – they had learnt their lesson from the and did not want to make Germany financially crippled again. This meant introducing a new, stable currency and more jobs for workers in the Western sectors. Stalin was angered by this.
  2. Under the Marshall Plan, the USA supplied goods to German shops for workers to buy. This was a nice way of showing the communists that America’s capitalist economy was flourishing.
  3. At a meeting in London in January 1948, Britain and the USA joined their zones together to create ‘Bizonia’ and make it easier to administer them. (France would later join and they’d change the name to West Germany).

On 24th June 1948, Stalin cut all land access to Berlin for the Allies. This became known as the Berlin Blockade.

"Cabinet discuss crisis in Berlin"

What did the Berlin Blockade mean for West Berlin?

  1. Berlin could now only be accessed by air, resulting in a restriction on the freedom to travel outside Berlin for all Germans.
  2. A shortage of food - West Berlin only had enough food for 36 days.
  3. A lack of basic goods like fuel and medicines.
West Berlin, shown on the map, could only be accessed by air. The people only had food for 36 days and as the blockade continued there were shortages of basicgoods like fuel and medicines

The Reaction of the Western Allies

Photo showing cargo planes dropping relief supplies in the Berlin Airlift

The Berlin Blockade was the first real test for the American policy of . As forcing their way into the city by land could have led to another war, the Allies decided that their sectors of Berlin would be supplied by air. This became known as the Berlin Airlift and it lasted for eleven months until the Blockade was lifted in May 1949.

At the height of the Berlin Airlift, a plane landed at Berlin’s Templehof Airport every minute. Keeping West Berlin supplied in this way cost the USA $350 million and Britain £17 million.

Stalin was powerless to stop the Berlin Airlift. To shoot down the planes could have provoked World War Three, and at this stage, unlike the USA, the USSR did not have nuclear weapons.

The Aftermath of the Berlin Blockade

  1. Berlin would remain a source of tension in Europe for the duration of the Cold War.
  2. In April 1949 the USA, Britain and France officially announced the formation of the German Federal Republic (West Germany).
  3. Elections in the Germany Federal Republic in August 1949 resulted in victory for the anti-communist politician, Konrad Adenauer, and the Christian Democratic Union.
  4. The formation of NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) in April 1949 – an alliance of countries around the North Atlantic for their mutual defence.
  5. The USSR responded to the formation of NATO with the Warsaw Pact in May 1955– similarly an alliance of the communist countries of Eastern Europe for their mutual defence.
  6. Finally, on 29 August 1949, the USSR exploded its first atomic bomb. The USA no longer had a on nuclear weapons.

Revision tip

Generally, all Western actions were matched by the USSR. Learn the pairs and their dates!

The difference in politics, economics and military policy between the USA, on the left, and USSR, on the right, after World War II

Politics: Truman Doctrine (1947) vs Cominform (1947)

Economics: Marshall Plan (1948) vs Comecon (1949)

Military: NATO (1949) vs Warsaw Pact (1955)