Jump to content

Berlin Crisis of 1961: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Stonewall (talk | contribs)
m v2.05 - Autofix / Fix errors for CW project (Link equal to linktext)
 
(292 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Cold War incident in divided Berlin}}
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{History of Berlin}}
| conflict = Berlin Crisis of 1961
The '''Berlin Crisis of 1961''' (4 June – 9 November 1961) was the last major politico-military European incident of the [[Cold War]] about the occupational status of the German capital city, [[Berlin]], and of [[History of Germany since 1945|post–World War II Germany]]. The [[USSR]] provoked the Berlin Crisis with an [[ultimatum]] demanding the withdrawal of Western armed forces from [[West Berlin]]—culminating in the city's ''de facto'' [[Partition (politics)|partition]] with the East German erection of the [[Berlin Wall]].
| partof = [[Cold War]]
| image = US Army tanks face off against Soviet tanks, Berlin 1961.jpg
| imagesize = 250px
| caption = U.S. [[M48 Patton|M48]] tanks face Soviet [[T-54/55|T-55]] tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, October 1961.
| date = 4 June – 9 November 1961
| place = [[Checkpoint Charlie]]
| result = 'Stalemate'
* Erection of the [[Berlin Wall]] on 12–13 August 1961
| combatant1 = {{flag|Soviet Union}}<br>{{flag|East Germany}}<br>'''Supported by:'''<br>[[File:Warsaw Pact Logo.svg|20px]] [[Warsaw Pact]] {{small|(Except Albania)}}
| combatant2 = {{flag|United States}}<br>{{flag|West Germany}}<br>'''Supported by:'''<br>{{flag|NATO}}
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Nikita Khrushchev]]<br>{{flagicon|East Germany}} [[Walter Ulbricht]]
| commander2 = {{flagicon|United States}} [[John F. Kennedy]]<br>{{flagicon|West Germany}} [[Konrad Adenauer]]
}}
The '''Berlin Crisis of 1961''' ({{langx|de|Berlin-Krise}}) was the last major European political and military incident of the [[Cold War]] concerning the status of the German capital city, [[Berlin]], and of [[History of Germany (1945–90)|post–World War II Germany]]. The crisis culminated in the city's ''de facto'' [[Partition (politics)|partition]] with the [[East Germany|East German]] erection of the [[Berlin Wall]].


The Berlin Crisis began in June 1961 when Soviet Premier [[Nikita Khrushchev]], meeting with US President [[John F. Kennedy]] at the [[Vienna summit]], reissued an [[ultimatum]] which demanded the withdrawal of all armed forces from Berlin, including the Western armed forces in [[West Berlin]]. The East German government also sought a way to stop its "brain drain" as its population fled west through Berlin, made possible by the city's four-power status and the allowance of free travel. No agreement was reached and in August 1961, with Khrushchev's backing, East German leader [[Walter Ulbricht]] ordered the closing of the border and the construction of a wall around West Berlin. A brief stand-off between American and Soviet tanks occurred at [[Checkpoint Charlie]] in October following a dispute over free movement of Allied personnel; the confrontation ended peacefully after Khrushchev and Kennedy agreed to withdraw the tanks and reduce tensions.
The [[22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union]]—the last to be attended by the [[Communist Party of China]]—was held in Moscow during the crisis.


==History==
==Background information==
===Emigration through Berlin "loophole"===
===1961 Berlin ultimatum===
At the [[Vienna summit]] on 4 June 1961, tensions rose. Meeting with US President [[John F. Kennedy]], Soviet Premier [[Nikita Khrushchev]] reissued the Soviet ultimatum to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany and thus end the existing four-power agreements guaranteeing American, British, and French rights to access West Berlin and the occupation of East Berlin by Soviet forces.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/berlin.htm|title=Berlin Crisis|website=GlobalSecurity.org|access-date=23 September 2016}}</ref> However, this time he did so by issuing a deadline of 31 December 1961. The three powers responded that any unilateral treaty could not affect their responsibilities and rights in West Berlin.<ref name=":0" />
{{Main|Eastern Bloc emigration and defection|Eastern Bloc}}
After the [[Soviet occupations|Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe]] at the end of World War II, some of those living in the newly acquired areas of the [[Eastern Bloc]] aspired to independence and wanted the Soviets to leave.<ref name="thackeray188">{{Harvnb|Thackeray|2004|p=188}}</ref> Between 1945 and 1950, over 15 million people emigrated from Soviet-occupied eastern European countries to the West.<ref name="bocker207">{{Harvnb|Böcker|1998|p=207}}</ref> Taking advantage of this route, the number of Eastern Europeans applying for political asylum in [[West Germany]] was 197,000 in 1950, 165,000 in 1951, 182,000 in 1952 and 331,000 in 1953.<ref name="loescher60">{{Harvnb|Loescher|2001|p=60}}</ref>


===Rising tensions===
By the early 1950s, the Soviet approach to controlling national movement, restricting emigration, was emulated by most of the rest of the [[Eastern Bloc]], including East Germany.<ref name="dowty114">{{Harvnb|Dowty|1989|p=114}}</ref> Up until 1953, the lines between [[East Germany]] and the western occupied zones could be easily crossed in most places.<ref name="dowty121">{{Harvnb|Dowty|1989|p=121}}</ref> Consequently, the [[Inner German border]] between the two German states was closed, and a barbed-wire fence erected. In 1955, the Soviets passed a law transferring control over civilian access in Berlin to East Germany, which officially abdicated them for direct responsibility of matters therein, while passing control to a government not recognized in the US-allied West.<ref name="harrison98">{{Harvnb|Harrison|2003|p=98}}</ref> When large numbers of East Germans then defected under the guise of "visits", the new East German state essentially eliminated all travel between the west and east in 1956.<ref name="dowty121"/>
In the growing confrontation over the status of Berlin, Kennedy undercut his own bargaining position during his Vienna summit negotiations with Khrushchev in June 1961. Kennedy essentially conveyed US acquiescence to the permanent division of Berlin. This made his later, more assertive public statements less credible to the Soviets.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kempe|2011|p=247}}</ref> Kennedy decided on a flexible policy proposed by his younger advisors, with only a few concessions to the hardliners around [[Dean Acheson]]. The United States now defined three vital interests in its policy for Berlin, and linked all of them only to the western part of the city: the presence of Western troops in West Berlin; the security and viability of the western sectors; and Western access to them.<ref>{{harvp|Daum|2008|pages=26–27}}</ref>


As the confrontation over Berlin escalated, Kennedy delivered on July 25 a television speech in Washington on [[Columbia Broadcast System|CBS]], and broadcast nationwide in the US. He reiterated that the United States was not looking for a fight and that he recognized the "Soviet Union's historical concerns about their security in central and eastern Europe." He said he was willing to renew talks, but he also announced that he would ask Congress for an additional $3.25 billion for military spending, mostly on conventional weapons. He wanted six new divisions for the Army and two for the Marines, and he announced plans to triple the draft and to call up the reserves. Kennedy proclaimed: "We seek peace, but we shall not surrender."<ref>{{cite web |title=RADIO AND TELEVISION REPORT TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ON THE BERLIN CRISIS, JULY 25, 1961 |url=https://www.jfklibrary.org/archives/other-resources/john-f-kennedy-speeches/berlin-crisis-19610725 |website=John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum}}</ref>
With the closing of the Inner German border officially in 1952,<ref name="harrison99">{{Harvnb|Harrison|2003|p=99}}</ref> the border in Berlin remained considerably more accessible than the rest of the border because it was administered by all four occupying powers.<ref name="dowty121"/> Accordingly, Berlin became the main route by which East Germans left for the West.<ref>Paul Maddrell, ''Spying on Science: Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945–1961'', p. 56. Oxford University Press, 2006</ref> The Berlin sector border was essentially a "loophole" through which East Bloc citizens could still escape.<ref name="harrison99"/> The 4.5<ref>https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1N7aUJ0z1gBpSAWDbLHwEbNqDp7sGodbXVvIRKNhQcD4/edit#slide=id.ga01456a75_1_0</ref> million East Germans that had left by 1961 totaled approximately 20% of the entire East German population.<ref name="dowty122">{{Harvnb|Dowty|1989|p=122}}</ref> The loss was disproportionately heavy among professionals—engineers, technicians, physicians, teachers, lawyers and skilled workers.<ref name="dowty122"/> The [[brain drain]] of professionals had become so damaging to the political credibility and economic viability of East Germany that closing this loophole and securing the Soviet-imposed East-West-Berlin frontier was imperative.<ref name="pearson75">{{Harvnb|Pearson|1998|p=75}}</ref>

===Berlin ultimatum===
In November 1958, Soviet Premier [[Nikita Khrushchev]] issued an ultimatum giving the Western powers six months to agree to withdraw from [[Berlin]] and make it a free, demilitarised city. At the end of that period, Khrushchev declared, the Soviet Union would turn over to East Germany complete control of all lines of communication with West Berlin; the western powers then would have access to West Berlin only by permission of the East German government. The United States, United Kingdom, and France replied to this ultimatum by firmly asserting their determination to remain in [[West Berlin]] and to maintain their legal right of free access to that city.

In May 1959 the Soviet Union withdrew its deadline and instead met with the Western powers in a Big Four foreign ministers' conference. Although the three-month-long sessions failed to reach any important agreements, they did open the door to further negotiations and led to Premier Khrushchev's visit to the United States in September 1959. At the end of this visit, Khrushchev and President [[Dwight Eisenhower]] stated jointly that the most important issue in the world was general disarmament and that the problem of Berlin and "all outstanding international questions should be settled, not by the application of force, but by peaceful means through negotiations."

Khrushchev and Eisenhower had a few days together at [[Camp David]], the presidential retreat. There the leaders of the two superpowers talked frankly with each other. "There was nothing more inadvisable in this situation," said Eisenhower, "than to talk about ultimatums, since both sides knew very well what would happen if an ultimatum were to be implemented." Khrushchev responded that he did not understand how a peace treaty could be regarded by the American people as a "threat to peace." Eisenhower admitted that the situation in Berlin was "abnormal" and that "human affairs got very badly tangled at times."

Khrushchev came away with the impression that a deal was possible over Berlin, and they agreed to continue the dialogue at a summit in Paris in May 1960. However, the Paris Summit that was to resolve the Berlin question was cancelled in the fallout from [[1960 U-2 incident|Gary Powers's failed U-2 spy flight]] on 1 May 1960.

==Escalation and crisis==
Meeting with US President [[John F. Kennedy]] in the [[Vienna summit]] on 4 June 1961, Premier Khrushchev caused a new crisis when he reissued his threat to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany, which he said would end existing four-power agreements guaranteeing American, British, and French access rights to West Berlin. However, this time he did so by issuing an ultimatum, with a deadline of 31 December 1961. The three powers replied that no unilateral treaty could abrogate their responsibilities and rights in West Berlin, including the right of unobstructed access to the city.

In the growing confrontation over the status of Berlin, US President John F. Kennedy undercut his own bargaining position during his Vienna Summit negotiations with Khrushchev in June 1961. Kennedy essentially conveyed US acquiescence to the permanent division of Berlin. This made his later, more assertive public statements less credible to the Soviets.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=0-399-15729-8|pages=247}}</ref>

As the confrontation over Berlin escalated, Kennedy, in a speech delivered on nationwide television the night of 25 July, reiterated that the United States was not looking for a fight and that he recognised the "Soviet Union's historical concerns about their security in central and eastern Europe." He said he was willing to renew talks. But he announced that he would ask Congress for an additional $3.25 billion for military spending, mostly on conventional weapons. He wanted six new divisions for the Army and two for the Marines, and he announced plans to triple the draft and to call up the reserves. Kennedy proclaimed, "We seek peace, but we shall not surrender."

The same day Kennedy requested an increase in the Army's total authorised strength from 875,000 to approximately 1 million men, along with an increase of 29,000 and 63,000 men in the active duty strength of the Navy and the Air Force. Additionally, he ordered that draft calls be doubled, and asked the Congress for authority to order to active duty certain ready reserve units and individual reservists. He also requested new funds to identify and mark space in existing structures that could be used for fall-out shelters in case of attack, to stock those shelters with food, water, first-aid kits and other minimum essentials for survival, and to improve air-raid warning and fallout detection systems.


Vacationing in the [[Black Sea]] resort of [[Sochi]], Khrushchev was reported to be angered by Kennedy's speech. [[John Jay McCloy]], Kennedy's disarmament adviser, who happened to be in the Soviet Union, was invited to join Khrushchev. It is reported that Khrushchev explained to McCloy that Kennedy's military build-up threatened war.
Vacationing in the [[Black Sea]] resort of [[Sochi]], Khrushchev was reported to be angered by Kennedy's speech. [[John Jay McCloy]], Kennedy's disarmament adviser, who happened to be in the Soviet Union, was invited to join Khrushchev. It is reported that Khrushchev explained to McCloy that Kennedy's military build-up threatened war.


==The Berlin Wall==
===Plans for the Berlin Wall===
{{Main|Barbed Wire Sunday}}
[[File:Berlin Wall 1961-11-20.jpg|thumb|right|East German construction workers building the Berlin Wall in 1961]]
[[File:Berlin Wall 1961-11-20.jpg|thumb|right|East German construction workers building the Berlin Wall in 1961]]


During the early months of 1961, East German government actively sought a means of halting the emigration of its population to the West. By the early summer of 1961, East German President [[Walter Ulbricht]] apparently had persuaded the Soviets that an immediate solution was necessary and that the only way to stop the exodus was to use force. This presented a delicate problem for the Soviet Union because the four-power status of Berlin specified free travel between zones and specifically forbade the presence of German troops in Berlin.
In early 1961, the East German government sought a way to stop its population leaving for the West. [[Walter Ulbricht]], First Secretary of the [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany|Socialist Unity Party]] (SED) and [[Staatsrat]] chairman and thus East Germany's chief decision-maker, convinced the Soviet Union that force was necessary to stop this movement, although Berlin's four-power status required the allowance of free travel between zones and forbade the presence of German troops in Berlin.<ref name=":0" />


During the spring and early summer, the East German government procured and stockpiled building materials for the erection of the [[Berlin Wall]]. Although this extensive activity was widely known, few outside the small circle of Soviet and East German planners believed that East Germany would be sealed off.
The East German government began stockpiling building materials for the erection of the [[Berlin Wall]]; this activity was widely known, but only a small circle of Soviet and East German planners believed that East Germans were aware of the purpose.<ref name=":0" /> This material included enough barbed wire to enclose the 156&nbsp;km (97&nbsp;mi) circumference of West Berlin. The regime managed to avoid suspicion by spreading out the purchases of barbed wire among several East German companies, which in turn spread their orders out among a range of firms in West Germany and the United Kingdom.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kempe|2011|p=324}}</ref>
This material included enough barbed wire to enclose the 96-mile circumference of West Berlin. The regime managed to avoid suspicion by spreading out the purchases of barbed wire among several East German companies, which in turn spread their orders out among a range of firms in West Germany and the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=0-399-15729-8|pages=324}}</ref>


On 15 June 1961, two months before the construction of the Berlin Wall started, First Secretary of the [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany|Socialist Unity Party]] (SED) and [[Staatsrat]] chairman [[Walter Ulbricht]] stated in an international press conference, ''"Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu errichten!"'' (''No one has the intention to erect a wall''). It was the first time the term ''Mauer'' (wall) had been used in this context.
On 15 June 1961, two months before the construction of the Berlin Wall started, Walter Ulbricht stated in an international press conference: "''Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu errichten!''" ("No&nbsp;one has the intention to erect a wall"). It was the first time the term ''Mauer'' (wall) had been used in this context.


On 4–7 August 1961, the foreign ministers of the US, UK, France and West Germany secretly met in Paris to discuss how to respond to the Soviet actions{{explain|reason=what actions?|date=August 2017}} in West Berlin. They expressed a lack of willingness to engage in warfare. Within weeks, the [[KGB]] provided Khrushchev with descriptions of the Paris talks. These showed that US Secretary of State [[Dean Rusk]], unlike the West Germans, supported talks with the Soviet Union, though the KGB and the [[GRU (Soviet Union)|GRU]] warned that the US was being pressured by other members of the alliance to consider [[economic sanctions]] against East Germany and other socialist countries and to move faster on plans for conventional and [[nuclear armament]] of their allies in Western Europe, such as the West German [[Bundeswehr]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.videofact.com/english/cia_kgb.html|title=Spy vs. Spy: The KGB vs. the CIA|last=Zubok|first=Vladislav M.|date=1994}}</ref>
On 4–7 August 1961, the foreign ministers of four Western countries (the United States, United Kingdom, France and West Germany) held secret consultations in Paris. The only question on the agenda was how to react to the Soviet provocations in Berlin. In the course of these meetings Western representatives expressed an understanding of the defensive nature of Soviet campaign in Germany, and unwillingness to risk a war.


The West had advance intelligence about the construction of the Wall. On 6 August, a [[Human intelligence (intelligence collection)|human intelligence]] source, a functionary in the SED, provided the 513th Military Intelligence Group (Berlin) with the correct date of the start of construction. At a weekly meeting of the Berlin Watch Committee on 9 August 1961, the Chief of the US [[Military liaison missions|Military Liaison Mission]] to the Commander Group of Soviet Forces Germany predicted the construction of a wall. An [[Signals intelligence|intercept]] of SED communications on the same day informed the West that there were plans to begin blocking all foot traffic between East and West Berlin. The interagency intelligence Watch Committee assessment said that this intercept "might be the first step in a plan to close the border", which turned out to be correct.
In less than three weeks the [[KGB]] laid on Khrushchev's desk quite accurate descriptions of the Paris talks, well ahead of its rival, the [[GRU]]. The intelligence materials correctly noted that, in contrast to the West Germans, US Secretary of State [[Dean Rusk]] supported talks with the Soviet Union aimed at preservation of the status quo ante. However, the KGB and GRU warned that pressure in the alliance was forcing the Americans to consider economic sanctions against East Germany and other socialist countries, as well as to accelerate plans for conventional and nuclear armament of their West European allies, including the West German [[Bundeswehr]].[http://www.videofact.com/english/cia_kgb.html]


===Closing of the border===
The West had advance intelligence about the construction of the Wall. On 6 August, a [[Human intelligence (intelligence collection) | HUMINT]] source, a functionary in the SED, provided the 513th Military Intelligence Group (Berlin) with the correct date of the start of construction. At 9 August weekly meeting of the Berlin Watch Committee, the Chief of the [[Military liaison missions | US Military Liaison Mission to the Commander Group of Soviet Forces Germany]] predicted the construction of a wall. A 9 August 1961 [[Signals intelligence | intercept]] of SED communications informed the West that there were plans to begin blocking all foot traffic between East and West Berlin. The interagency intelligence Watch Committee assessment said that this intercept "might be the first step in a plan to close the border," which turned out to be correct.
On Saturday 12 August 1961, the leaders of East Germany attended a garden party at a government guesthouse in [[Döllnsee]], in a wooded area to the north of East Berlin, and Walter Ulbricht signed the order to close the border and erect a Wall around West Berlin.


At midnight, East Germany's border police, the East German army and units of the Soviet Army began to close the border; by morning on Sunday 13 August 1961, the border to West Berlin had been shut. East German troops and workers had begun to tear up streets running alongside the barrier to make them impassable to most vehicles, and to install barbed wire entanglements and fences along the {{convert|156|km|mi|abbr=on}} around the three western sectors and the {{convert|43|km|mi|abbr=on}} which actually divided West and East Berlin. Approximately 32,000 troops were employed for the building of the Wall, after which the Border Police became responsible for manning and improving it. To discourage Western interference and perhaps control potential riots, the Soviet Army was present.<ref name=":0" />
On Saturday 12 August 1961, the leaders of East Germany attended a garden party at a government guesthouse in [[Döllnsee]], in a wooded area to the north of East Berlin, and Walter Ulbricht signed the order to close the border and erect a Wall.


On August 18, 1961, Chancellor [[Konrad Adenauer]] issued a statement to the Bundestag denouncing the construction of the wall by East German authorities.<ref>{{Cite web |author=Konrad Adenauer |title=Bundestag Speech of August 18, 1961 |url=https://www.bundestag.de/dokumente/textarchiv/1961/0618-adenauer-1961-167 |publisher=Deutsche Bundestagsprotokolle |page=9769–9772 |accessdate=2024-12-08}}</ref> Adenauer stated the wall is a direct violation of "human rights and the Four-Power status of Berlin."<ref>{{Cite web |author=Chronik der Mauer |title=Chronicle of the Berlin Wall: November 1961 |url=https://www.chronik-der-mauer.de/en/chronicle/_year1961/_month11/?moc=1#anchoryear1961 |website=Chronik der Mauer |accessdate=2024-12-08}}</ref> He emphasized the detrimental consequences of a potential war with the [[Soviet Union]], and that using negotiations could resolve the issue in a nonviolent manner. Adenauer concluded his speech by expressing his commitment to working toward a peaceful solution.<ref>{{Cite web |author=Konrad Adenauer |title=Bundestag Speech of August 18, 1961 |url=https://www.bundestag.de/dokumente/textarchiv/1961/0618-adenauer-1961-167 |publisher=Deutsche Bundestagsprotokolle |page=9769–9772 |accessdate=2024-12-08}}</ref>
At midnight the army, police, and units of the East German army began to close the border and by morning on Sunday 13 August 1961 the border to West Berlin had been shut. East German troops and workers had begun to tear up streets running alongside the barrier to make them impassable to most vehicles, and to install barbed wire entanglements and fences along the {{convert|156|km|mi|abbr=on}} around the three western sectors and the {{convert|43|km|mi|abbr=on}} which actually divided West and East Berlin. Approximately 32,000 combat and engineer troops were used in building the Wall. Once their efforts were completed, the Border Police assumed the functions of manning and improving the barrier. The Soviet Army was present to discourage interference by the West and presumably to assist in the event of large-scale riots.


Kennedy did not give in to angry demands for immediate action raised by West Berliners and their mayor, [[Willy Brandt]]. Instead, he sent vice president [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] together with [[Lucius D. Clay]], the hero of the [[Berlin Airlift]] of 1948‒49, to West Berlin on August 19. They managed to calm the population and demonstrate symbolically the United States' solidarity with the city. On August 20, 1,500 additional American soldiers arrived in West Berlin.<ref>{{harvp|Daum|2008|pages=51–57}}</ref>
On 30 August 1961, President John F. Kennedy had ordered 148,000 Guardsmen and Reservists to active duty in response to Soviet moves to cut off allied access to Berlin. The [[Air National Guard]]'s share of that mobilisation was 21,067 individuals. ANG units mobilised in October included 18 tactical fighter squadrons, 4 tactical reconnaissance squadrons, 6 air transport squadrons, and a tactical control group. On 1 November, the Air Force mobilised three more ANG fighter interceptor squadrons. In late October and early November, eight of the tactical fighter units flew to Europe with their 216 aircraft in operation "Stair Step", the largest jet deployment in the Air Guard's history. Because of their short range, 60 Air Guard [[F-104]] interceptors were airlifted to Europe in late November. The [[United States Air Forces in Europe]] (USAFE) lacked spare parts needed for the ANG's ageing [[F-84]]s and [[F-86]]s. Some units had been trained to deliver tactical nuclear weapons, not conventional bombs and bullets. They had to be retrained for conventional missions once they arrived on the continent. The majority of mobilised Air Guardsmen remained in the US [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/berlin.htm]


On 30 August 1961, in response to moves by the Soviet Union to cut off access to Berlin, President Kennedy ordered 148,000 Guardsmen and Reservists to active duty. In October and November, more [[Air National Guard]] units were mobilised, and 216 aircraft from the tactical fighter units flew to Europe in operation "Stair Step", the largest jet deployment in the history of the Air Guard. Most of the mobilised Air Guardsmen remained in the US, while some others had been trained for delivery of tactical nuclear weapons and had to be retrained in Europe for conventional operations. The Air National Guard's ageing [[F-84]]s and [[F-86]]s required spare parts that the [[United States Air Forces in Europe]] lacked.<ref name=":0" />
==KGB subversion and disinformation plan==
{{unbalanced|date=May 2012}}
On 29 July 1961, [[KGB]] chief [[Alexander Shelepin]] sent a memorandum to Khrushchev containing an array of proposals to create a situation in various areas of the world which would favour dispersion of attention and forces by the United States and their satellites, and would tie them down during the settlement of the question of a German peace treaty and West Berlin. The multifaceted deception campaign, Shelepin claimed, would show to the ruling circles of Western powers that unleashing a military conflict over West Berlin can lead to the loss of their position not only in Europe, but also in a number of countries of Latin America, Asia and Africa.


[[Richard Bach]] wrote his book ''Stranger to the Ground'' centred around his experience as an Air National Guard pilot on this deployment.
Khrushchev sent the memo with his approval to his deputy [[Frol Kozlov]] and on 1 August it was, with minor revisions, passed as a [[Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|CPSU Central Committee]] directive. The KGB and the Ministry of Defense were instructed to work out more specific measures and present them for consideration by the Central Committee.


===Berlin travel disputes===
The first part of the deception plan must have pleased Khrushchev, who in January 1961 had pledged, before the communists of the whole world, to assist movements of national liberation. Shelepin advocated measures to activate by the means available to the KGB armed uprisings against pro-Western governments.
[[File:EUCOM Checkpoint Charlie Standoff 1961.jpg|thumb|right|American tanks face an East German [[water cannon]] at [[Checkpoint Charlie]].]]


The four powers governing Berlin ([[Soviet Union]], United States, United Kingdom, and France) had agreed at the 1945 [[Potsdam Conference]] that Allied personnel could move freely in any sector of Berlin. But on 22 October 1961, just two months after the construction of the Wall, the US Chief of Mission in West Berlin, E. Allan Lightner, was stopped in his car (which had occupation forces license plates) while crossing at [[Checkpoint Charlie]] to go to a theatre in East Berlin.<ref>{{harvp|Daum|2008|pages=29–30}}</ref> President [[John F. Kennedy]] worked closely with retired Army General Lucius D. Clay, who had been in charge of the [[Berlin Blockade|Berlin Airlift of 1948–1949]]. They decided to demonstrate American resolve. The American command in the West Berlin garrison considered a plan to pull down the wire and barricades with bulldozers. This, however, was overruled by the troop commander, Brigadier General Frederick O. Hartel. General Clay went to Berlin for 10 months.<ref>[https://www.archives.gov/files/research/foreign-policy/cold-war/1961-berlin-crisis/overview/us-military-response.pdf The U. S. Military Response to the 1960 -1962 Berlin Crisis]</ref><ref>[https://www.dailypress.com/news/dp-xpm-19900502-1990-05-02-9004270393-story.html RECALLING THE WALL - FREDERICK HARTEL]</ref>
The destabilising activities started in [[Nicaragua]] where the KGB plotted an armed mutiny through an internal revolutionary front of resistance; in co-ordination with [[Fidel Castro]]'s Cubans and with the [[Sandinista National Liberation Front|Revolutionary Front Sandino]]. Shelepin proposed to make appropriations from KGB funds in addition to the previous assistance $10,000 for purchase of arms. Shelepin planned also the instigation of an armed uprising in [[El Salvador]], and a rebellion in [[Guatemala]], where guerrilla forces would be given $15,000 to buy weapons.


===Military stand-off===
The campaign extended to Africa, to the colonial and semi-colonial possessions of the British and the Portuguese. The KGB promised to help organise anti-colonial mass uprisings of the African population in [[British Kenya]], the British [[Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland]] and [[Portuguese Guinea]], by arming rebels and training military cadres.
US Commandant General Watson was outraged by the East Berlin police's attempt to control the passage of American military forces. He communicated to the Department of State on 25 October 1961 that Soviet Commandant Colonel Solovyev and his men were not doing their part to avoid disturbing actions during a time of peace negotiations, and demanded that the Soviet authorities take immediate steps to remedy the situation. Solovyev replied by describing American attempts to send armed soldiers across the checkpoint and keeping American tanks at sector boundary as an "open provocation" and a direct violation of GDR regulations. He insisted that properly identified American military could cross the sector border without impediments, and were only stopped when their nationality was not immediately clear to guards. Solovyev contended that requesting identifying paperwork from those crossing the border was not unreasonable control; Watson disagreed. In regard to the American military presence on the border, Solovyev warned:<blockquote>I am authorized to state that it is necessary to avoid actions of this kind. Such actions can provoke corresponding actions from our side. We have tanks too. We hate the idea of carrying out such actions, and are sure that you will re-examine your course.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v14/d162|title=Department of State-Office of the Historian-Foreign Relations of The United States-Berlin Crisis-1961–1962-Document 192|website=state.gov|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=May 2020}}<ref>{{cite archive |item = Telegram From the Mission at Berlin to the Department of State |type = Textual Record |date = 1961-10-13 |collection = Foreign Relations, 1961-1963, Volume XIV, Berlin Crisis, 1961-1962 |collection-url = https://2001-2009.state.gov/r/pa/ho/frus/kennedyjf/xiv/15865.htm |institution = US Department of State}}</ref></blockquote>Perhaps this contributed to Hemsing's decision to make the attempt again: on 27 October 1961, Hemsing again approached the zonal boundary in a diplomatic vehicle. General Clay sent ten jeeps with infantry troops to escort Hemsing through East Berlin and ten [[M48 Patton|M-48]] tanks, some fitted with bulldozer blades, close to Checkpoint Charlie.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Showdown in Berlin |url=https://www.airandspaceforces.com/article/0911berlin/ |access-date=2023-08-10 |website=Air & Space Forces Magazine |language=en-US}}</ref>
{{externalimage|float=right|width=200px|image1=
[https://web.archive.org/web/20070331075042/http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,1018784_4,00.jpg US tanks (foreground) face Soviet tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, on 27–28 October 1961] |image2=
[https://web.archive.org/web/20220612173327/https://farm1.static.flickr.com/135/345154333_807ba1c967.jpg?v=0 US Tanks facing Soviet Tanks in Berlin 27 October 1961]
}}


[[File:Soviet tanks in Berlin 1961.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.2|Soviet T-55 tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, October 27, 1961.]]
Shelepin suggested to bring to attention of the United States through KGB information channels information about agreements between the USSR, the People's Republic of China, [[North Korea]] and [[North Vietnam]] about joint military actions to reunify [[South Korea]], [[South Vietnam]], and [[Republic of China|Taiwan]] in case of the eruption of armed conflict in Germany. The Soviet General Staff, proposed Shelepin, together with the KGB, should work out the relevant disinformation materials; and reach agreement with Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese friends about the demonstration of military preparations in those areas.


Immediately afterwards, 33 [[T-54/T-55|T-54]] Soviet tanks drove to the [[Brandenburg Gate]]. As one of the first to spot the tanks when they arrived, Lieutenant Vern Pike was ordered to verify whether they were indeed Soviet tanks. He and tank driver Sam McCart drove over to East Berlin, where Pike took advantage of a temporary absence of any soldiers near the tanks to climb into one of them. He came out with definitive evidence that the tanks were Soviet, including a Red Army newspaper.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kempe|2011|pp=470–471}}</ref>
Shelepin also planned to cause uncertainty in government circles of the United States, the United Kingdom, [[Turkey]], and [[Iran]] about the stability of their positions in the Middle and Near East. He offered to use old KGB connections with the chairman of [[Kurdistan Democratic Party]], [[Mustafa Barzani]], to activate the movement of the [[Kurds|Kurdish]] population of [[Iraq]], Iran, and Turkey for creation of an independent Kurdistan that would include the provinces of aforementioned countries. Barzani was to be provided with necessary aid in arms and money. Given propitious developments, noted Shelepin, it would become advisable to express the solidarity of Soviet people with this movement of the Kurds. The movement for the creation of Kurdistan, he predicted, will evoke serious concern among Western powers and first of all in the UK regarding their access to oil in Iraq and Iran, and in the United States regarding its military bases in Turkey. All that will also create difficulties for Iraqi Prime Minister Gen. [[Abdul Karim Kassim]] who had begun to conduct a pro-Western policy.


Ten of these tanks continued to [[Friedrichstraße]], and stopped just 50 to 100 metres from the checkpoint on the Soviet side of the sector boundary. The US tanks moved towards the checkpoint, stopping an equal distance from it on the American side of the boundary. From 27 October 1961 at 17:00 until 28 October 1961 at about 11:00, the respective troops faced each other. As per standing orders, both groups of tanks were loaded with live munitions. The alert levels of the US Garrison in West Berlin, then [[NATO]], and finally the US [[Strategic Air Command]] (SAC) were raised.
The second component of Shelepin's grand plan was directed against NATO installations in Western Europe and aimed to create doubts in the ruling circles of Western powers regarding the effectiveness of military bases located on the territory of the Western Germany and other NATO countries, as well as in the reliability of their personnel. To provoke the local population against foreign bases, Shelepin contemplated working with the East German and [[Czechoslovakia]]n secret services to carry out "active measures" to demoralise servicemen in Western Europe (by agents, leaflets, and brochures), and even by terrorist attacks on depot and logistics stations in West Germany and France.


It was at this point that US Secretary of State [[Dean Rusk]] conveyed to General Lucius Clay, the US commanding officer in Berlin, that "We had long since decided that Berlin is not a vital interest which would warrant determined recourse to force to protect and sustain." Clay was convinced that having US tanks use bulldozer mounts to knock down parts of the Wall would have ended the crisis to the greater advantage of the US and its allies without eliciting a Soviet military response. Frederick Kempe argues that Rusk's views support a more unfavorable assessment of Kennedy's decisions during the crisis and his willingness to accept the Wall as the best solution.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kempe|2011|pp=474–476}}</ref>
One of the more imaginative strands in the web of Soviet strategic deception concerned the number and even existence of new types of arms and missiles. Along with the General Staff, the KGB long practised a dubious combination of super-secrecy and bluffing, thereby producing a series of panicky assessments in the West about a [[bomber gap]] and then a [[missile gap]]. This time Shelepin asked Khrushchev to assign to his organisation and the military the task of making the West believe that the Soviets were absolutely prepared to launch an attack in retaliation for Western armed provocations over West Berlin. The disinformation package included the following tasks:


The United States deployed the [[Davy Crockett (nuclear device)|Davy Crockett]] tactical nuclear recoilless gun during the Berlin crisis of 1961, according to Brigadier General Alvin Cowan, Assistant Division Commander of the United States 3rd Armored Division, at the Tactical Nuclear Weapons Symposium of 1969. According to Cowan, the device was [eventually] retired, in part, because "it was essentially a platoon weapon," and there was apparently "great fear that some sergeant would start a nuclear war."<ref>{{cite report |date=1969 |title=Proceedings of the Tactical Nuclear Weapons Symposium |url=https://www.osti.gov/opennet/servlets/purl/1018707.pdf |publisher=AEC and DoD |page=173}}</ref> President Kennedy had voiced concern, to include when he inspected the Crockett during his June 1963 visit to Fliegerhorst Kaserne, Hanau, about US infantrymen having frontline nuclear weapons, reassurances that the D/C squads did not include Mental Cat 4 GIs notwithstanding. Also, [[Secretary of Defense]] [[Robert McNamara]] wanted to rush 171 Crocketts to USAREUR in December 1971 {{dubious|date=March 2022}} [from page 224 of Marc Trachtenberg's book, HISTORY & STRATEGY (Princeton University Press, 1991)].
* to convince the West that Soviet land forces were now armed with new types of tanks; equipped with tactical nuclear weapons;
* to create a conviction among the enemy about a considerable increase of readiness of Rocket Forces and of the increased number of launching pads-produced by the supply of solid liquid ballistic missiles of medium range and by the transfer from stationary positions to mobile launching positions on highways and railroads which secure high manoeuvrability and survivability;
* to spread a false story about the considerable increase in the number of nuclear submarines with solid-fuel [[submarine-launched ballistic missile|SLBM]]s;
* to bring to Western attention information about the strengthening of anti-aircraft defence;
* to disorient the enemy regarding the availability in the Soviet Air Forces of new types of combat-tactical aircraft with air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles with a large operational range.


===Resolution===
On 10 November, Soviet Defense Minister [[Rodion Malinovsky]] and KGB Deputy Chief [[Peter Ivashutin]] asked the CPSU Central Committee Secretariat to approve, in addition to the crisis contingency planning by the military forces, deceptive steps directed at producing in the adversary's mind "a profound conviction that the Soviet Union firmly intends to use force in response to military provocations of Western powers and has at its disposal all necessary combat means". The KGB took upon itself the task to inform Western intelligence through unofficial channels that the Soviet Union has taken necessary measures to strengthen its troops in Eastern Germany and to arm them with more modern tactical missiles, newer tanks, and other armaments sufficient for the delivery of a quick and crushing response strike on the adversary. Through the same channels KGB intended to increase the adversary's belief in the high manoeuvrability and mobility of Soviet armed forces and their readiness, in case the West unleashes an armed conflict in Germany, to move within a minimal time up to the battle lines of the European theatre and to convey as a proof thereof that this summer, during the exercises in the Near-Carpathian and other military districts, some divisions demonstrated an average speed of advancement of about 110–130&nbsp;km per day.
With [[GRU (Soviet Union)|GRU]] spy [[Georgi Bolshakov]] serving as the primary channel of communication, Khrushchev and Kennedy agreed to reduce tensions by withdrawing the tanks.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kempe|2011|pp=478–479}}</ref> The Soviet checkpoint had direct communications to [[Anatoly Gribkov|General Anatoly Gribkov]] at the Soviet Army High Command, who in turn was on the phone to Khrushchev. The US checkpoint contained a Military Police officer on the telephone to the HQ of the US Military Mission in Berlin, which in turn was in communication with the White House. Kennedy offered to go easy over Berlin in the future in return for the Soviets removing their tanks first. The Soviets agreed. Kennedy stated concerning the Wall: "It's not a very nice solution, but a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war."<ref>Gaddis, John Lewis, ''The Cold War: A New History'' (2005), p. 115.</ref>


A Soviet tank moved about 5 metres backwards first; then an American tank followed suit. One by one the tanks withdrew. But General [[Bruce C. Clarke]], then the Commander-in-Chief (CINC) of [[US Army Europe]] (USAREUR), was said to have been concerned about General Clay's conduct{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} and Clay returned to the United States in May 1962. Gen. Clarke's assessment may have been incomplete, however: Clay's firmness had a great effect on the German population, led by West Berlin Mayor [[Willy Brandt]] and West German [[Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic)|Chancellor]] [[Konrad Adenauer]].{{citation needed|date=September 2018}}{{dubious|date=May 2022}}
Along the lines of Shelepin's proposal, the KGB's military-industrial consultants suggested other disinformation steps. Perhaps echoing Khrushchev's boast that his missiles could hit a fly in the sky KGB proposed to convey to US intelligence the information that during its recent series of atomic tests—in September–October 1961—the Soviet Union successfully tested a [[Tsar Bomba|super-powerful thermonuclear warhead]], along with a system of detecting and eliminating the adversary's missiles in the air.


== See also==
The KGB laboratories fabricated evidence for US intelligence about the solution in the Soviet Union of the problem of constructing simple but powerful and user-convenient atomic engines for submarines which allow in the short run increasing considerably the number of atomic submarines up to fifteen.
* [[Berlin Crisis of 1958–1959]]

* [[Escape attempts and victims of the inner German border]]
Finally, the KGB received instructions to promote a legend about the invention in the Soviet Union of an aircraft with a close-circuited nuclear engine and its successful flight tests which demonstrated the engine's high technical capacities and its safety in exploitation. On the basis of the [[Myasishchev M-50]] bomber, with consideration of the results of those flight tests, according to this disinformation, a [[Nuclear aircraft|strategic bomber with nuclear engines]] and unlimited range had been designed.<ref>http://www.videofact.com/english/cia_kgb.html</ref>
* [[Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950)]]

**[[Republikflucht]] Flight from East Germany
==Stand-off between US and Soviet tanks==
* [[History of Berlin]]
[[File:EUCOM Checkpoint Charlie Standoff 1961.jpg|thumb|right|American tanks face an East German water cannon at [[Checkpoint Charlie]].]]
* [[Nikita Khrushchev]]

* [[Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower]]
The four powers governing Berlin ([[Soviet Union]], United States, United Kingdom, and France) had agreed at the 1945 [[Potsdam Conference]] that Allied personnel could move freely in any sector of Berlin. But on 22 October 1961, just two months after the construction of the Wall, the US Chief of Mission in West Berlin, E. Allan Lightner, was stopped in his car (which had occupation forces license plates) while crossing at [[Checkpoint Charlie]] to go to a theatre in East Berlin. The former Army General [[Lucius D. Clay]], US President [[John F. Kennedy]]'s Special Advisor in West Berlin, decided to demonstrate American resolve.
* [[Presidency of John F. Kennedy]]

Clay sent an American diplomat, Albert Hemsing, to probe the border. While probing in a vehicle clearly identified as belonging to a member of the U. S Mission in Berlin, Hemsing was stopped by East German police asking to see his passport. Once his identity became clear, US Military Police were rushed in. The Military Police escorted the diplomatic car as it drove into East Berlin and the shocked GDR police got out of the way. The car continued and the soldiers returned to West Berlin. A British diplomat — British cars were not immediately recognisable as belonging to the staff in Berlin — was stopped the next day and showed his identity card identifying him as a member of the British Military Government in Berlin, infuriating Clay.

US Commandant General Watson was outraged by the East Berlin police's attempt to control the passage of American military forces. He communicated to the Department of State on 25 October 1961 that Soviet Commandant Colonel Solovyev and his men were not doing their part to avoid disturbing actions during a time of peace negotiations, and demanded that the Soviet authorities take immediate steps to remedy the situation. Solovyev replied by describing American attempts to send armed soldiers across the checkpoint and keeping American tanks at sector boundary as an "open provocation" and a direct violation of GDR regulations. He insisted that properly identified American military could cross the sector border without impediments, and were only stopped when their nationality was not immediately clear to guards. Solovyev contended that requesting identifying paperwork from those crossing the border was not unreasonable control; Watson disagreed. In regards to the American military presence on the border, Solovyev warned, "I am authorized to state that it is necessary to avoid actions of this kind. Such actions can provoke corresponding actions from our side. ''We have tanks too.'' We hate the idea of carrying out such actions, and are sure that you will re-examine your course."<ref>[http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v14/d192|US Department of State|Office of the Historian|Foreign Relations of The United States|Berlin Crisis|1961–1962|Document 192]</ref>

Perhaps this contributed to Hemsing's decision to make the attempt again: on 27 October 1961, Mr. Hemsing again approached the zonal boundary in a diplomatic vehicle. But Clay did not know how the Soviets would respond, so just in case, he had sent tanks with an infantry battalion to the nearby [[Tempelhof International Airport|Tempelhof]] airfield. To everyone's relief the same routine was played out as before. The US Military Police and Jeeps went back to West Berlin, and the tanks waiting behind also went home.
{{externalimage|align=right|width=200px|image1=
[http://www.webcitation.org/5ZGMjgJBb US tanks (foreground) face Soviet tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, on October 27–28, 1961]|image2=
[http://www.webcitation.org/5ZGMau22R US Tanks facing Soviet Tanks in Berlin October 27, 1961]
}}

Immediately afterwards, 33 Soviet tanks drove to the [[Brandenburg Gate]]. Curiously, Soviet premier [[Nikita Khrushchev]] claimed in his memoirs that as he understood it, the American tanks had seen the Soviet tanks coming and retreated. Col. Jim Atwood, then Commander of the US Military Mission in West Berlin, disagreed in later statements. As one of the first to spot the tanks when they arrived, Lieutenant Vern Pike was ordered to verify whether they were indeed Soviet tanks. He and tank driver Sam McCart drove over to East Berlin, where Pike took advantage of a temporary absence of any soldiers near the tanks to climb into one of them. He came out with definitive evidence that the tanks were Soviet, including a Red Army newspaper.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=0-399-15729-8|pages=470–471}}</ref>

Ten of these tanks continued to [[Friedrichstraße]], and stopped just 50 to 100 metres from the checkpoint on the Soviet side of the sector boundary. The US tanks turned back towards the checkpoint, stopping an equal distance from it on the American side of the boundary. From 27 October 1961 at 17:00 until 28 October 1961 at about 11:00, the respective troops faced each other. As per standing orders, both groups of tanks were loaded with live munitions. The alert levels of the US Garrison in West Berlin, then [[NATO]], and finally the US [[Strategic Air Command]] (SAC) were raised. Both groups of tanks had orders to fire if fired upon.{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}

[[File:Soviet tanks in Berlin 1961.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.2|Soviet tanks at Checkpoint Charlie October 27, 1961.]]

It was at this point that US Secretary of State [[Dean Rusk]] conveyed to General Lucius Clay, the US commanding officer in Berlin, that "We had long since decided that Berlin is not a vital interest which would warrant determined recourse to force to protect and sustain." Clay was convinced that having US tanks use bulldozer mounts to knock down parts of the Wall would have ended the Crisis to the greater advantage of the US and its allies without eliciting a Soviet military response. His views, and corresponding evidence that the Soviets may have backed down following this action, support a more critical assessment of Kennedy's decisions during the crisis and his willingness to accept the Wall as the best solution.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=May 2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=0-399-15729-8|pages=474–476}}</ref>

With KGB spy [[Georgi Bolshakov]] serving as the primary channel of communication, Khrushchev and Kennedy agreed to reduce tensions by withdrawing the tanks.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=0-399-15729-8|pages=478–479}}</ref> The Soviet checkpoint had direct communications to [[Anatoly Gribkov|General Anatoly Gribkov]] at the Soviet Army High Command, who in turn was on the phone to Khrushchev. The US checkpoint contained a Military Police officer on the telephone to the HQ of the US Military Mission in Berlin, which in turn was in communication with the White House. Kennedy offered to go easy over Berlin in the future in return for the Soviets removing their tanks first. The Soviets agreed. Kennedy stated concerning the Wall: "It's not a very nice solution, but a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war."<ref>Gaddis, John Lewis, ''The Cold War: A New History'' (2005), p. 115.</ref>

A Soviet tank moved about 5 metres backwards first; then an American tank followed suit. One by one the tanks withdrew. But General [[Bruce C. Clarke]], then the Commander-in-Chief (CINC) of [[US Army Europe]] (USAREUR), was said to have been concerned about Clay's conduct{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} and Clay returned to the United States in May 1962. Gen. Clarke's assessment may have been incomplete, however: Clay's firmness had a great effect on the German population, led by West Berlin Mayor [[Willy Brandt]] and West German [[Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic)|Chancellor]] [[Konrad Adenauer]].


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}


==References==
==Further reading==
* Barker, Elisabeth. “The Berlin Crisis 1958–1962.” ''International Affairs'' 39#1 (1963), pp. 59–73. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2610505 online].
* British Garrison Berlin 1945 -1994, "No where to go", W. Durie ISBN 978-3-86408-068-5
* Beschloss, Michael. ''The Crisis Years: Kennedy and Khrushchev, 1960–1963'' (1991) [https://archive.org/details/crisisyears00mich online]
*{{Citation|last=Böcker|first=Anita|title=Regulation of Migration: International Experiences|publisher=Het Spinhuis|year=1998|isbn=90-5589-095-2}}
* [https://www.archives.gov/files/research/foreign-policy/cold-war/1961-berlin-crisis/overview/berlin-wall-overview.pdf Carmichael, Neil. "A Brief History of the Berlin Crisis of 1961" (US National Archives. 2011)]; short essay; no copyright
*{{Citation|last=Dowty|first=Alan|title=Closed Borders: The Contemporary Assault on Freedom of Movement|publisher=Yale University Press|year=1989|isbn=0-300-04498-4}}
* {{cite book |last=Daum|first=Andreas|author-link=Andreas Daum|year=2008|title=Kennedy in Berlin|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-85824-3}}
* {{cite book |last1=Durie |first1=William |title=The British Garrison Berlin 1945 - 1994: nowhere to go ... a pictorial historiography of the British Military occupation / presence in Berlin |date=2012 |publisher=Vergangenheitsverlag ([[:de:Vergangenheitsverlag|de]]) |location=Berlin |isbn=978-3-86408-068-5 |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/978161722 |language=English |oclc=978161722}}
*{{Citation|last=Dowty|first=Alan|title=Closed Borders: The Contemporary Assault on Freedom of Movement|publisher=Yale UP|year=1989|isbn=0-300-04498-4}}
* Freedman, Lawrence. ''Kennedy's Wars: Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam'' (Oxford UP, 2000) pp 45–120. [https://archive.org/details/kennedyswarsberl0000free_i9c0 online]
* Gearson, John PS, and Kori N. Schake, eds. ''The Berlin Wall Crisis: Perspectives on Cold War Alliances'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
*{{Citation|last=Harrison|first=Hope Millard|title=Driving the Soviets Up the Wall: Soviet-East German Relations, 1953–1961|publisher=Princeton University Press|year=2003|isbn=0-691-09678-3}}
* {{cite book | vauthors=((Hornsby, R.)) | date=2023 | title=The Soviet Sixties | publisher=Yale University Press }}
*{{Citation|last=Kempe|first=Frederick|title=Berlin 1961|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Group (USA)|isbn=978-0-399-15729-5|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/berlin1961kenned0000kemp}}
*{{Citation|last=Loescher|first=Gil|title=The UNHCR and World Politics: A Perilous Path|publisher=Oxford UP|year=2001|isbn=0-19-829716-5}}
* Lunak, Petr. "Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis: Soviet brinkmanship seen from inside." ''Cold War History'' 3.2 (2003): 53–82.
*{{Citation|last=McAdams|first=James|title=Germany Divided: From Wall to Reunification|publisher=Princeton UP|year=1993|isbn=0-691-07892-0|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/germanydividedfr00mcad}}
* Newman, Kitty. ''Macmillan, Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis, 1958–1960'' (Routledge, 2007).
*{{Citation|last=Pearson|first=Raymond|title=The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire|publisher=Macmillan|year=1998|isbn=0-312-17407-1}}
*{{Citation|last=Pearson|first=Raymond|title=The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire|publisher=Macmillan|year=1998|isbn=0-312-17407-1}}
* Rasmussen, Kasper Grotle. "In search of a negotiated settlement: McGeorge Bundy and the 1961 Berlin crisis." ''Journal of Transatlantic Studies'' 14.1 (2016): 47–64.
*{{Citation|last=Thackeray|first=Frank W.|title=Events that changed Germany|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|year=2004|isbn=0-313-32814-5}}
* Schick, Jack M. ''The Berlin crisis, 1958–1962'' (1971) [https://archive.org/details/berlincrisis19580000schi online]
*[http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/berlin.htm Berlin Crisis of 1961]
* Sergunin, Alexander. "The role of the Executive Office of the President in the US decision-making on the Berlin crisis of 1961." ''Americana'' 15 (2017): 64–95.
*[http://homepages.stmartin.edu/Fac_Staff/rlangill/PLS%20310/The%20Wall,%201958-1963.htm The Wall, 1958–1963]
* Slusser, Robert M. ''The Berlin Crisis of 1961: Soviet-American Relations and the Struggle for Power in the Kremlin, June–November, 1961'' (Johns Hopkins UP, 1973) [https://www.amazon.com/Berlin-Crisis-1961-Soviet-American-June-November/dp/0801814049/ excerpt]
*[http://nils.lib.tufts.edu/Fletcher/FortyYearCrisis.pdf Forty Years Crisis]
* Smith, Jean Edward. ''The defense of Berlin'' (1963).
* Taubman, William. ''Khrushchev: The Man and his Era'' (WW Norton & Company, 2003). pp 480–506.[https://archive.org/details/khrushchevmanhis00taub online]
* {{Citation|last=Thackeray|first=Frank W.|title=Events that changed Germany|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|year=2004|isbn=0-313-32814-5|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/eventsthatchange00fran}}
* Tompson, William. ''Khrushchev: A political life'' (Springer, 2016). [https://archive.org/details/khrushchevapolit0000tomp online]
* Trachtenberg, Marc. ''A Constructed Peace: The Making of the European Settlement 1945‒1963'' (Princeton UP, 1999) pp. 283–402. [https://www.amazon.com/Constructed-Peace-Settlement-1945-1963-International-ebook/dp/B087N475P4/ excerpt]
* Voorhees, Theodore. ''The Silent Guns of Two Octobers: Kennedy and Khrushchev Play the Double Game'' (U of Michigan Press, 2020).
* Windsor, Philip. "The Berlin Crises" ''History Today'' (June 1962) Vol. 6, pp. 375–384, summarizes the series of crises 1946 to 1961; online.
* Zubok, Vladislav. "Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis (1958‒1962)" (CWIHP, 1993) [https://web.archive.org/web/20100602020055/http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/ACFB7D.pdf online], primary sources

==External links==
*[http://homepages.stmartin.edu/Fac_Staff/rlangill/PLS%20310/The%20Wall,%201958-1963.htm The Wall, 1958–1963] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200628215811/http://homepages.stmartin.edu/Fac_Staff/rlangill/PLS%20310/The%20Wall,%201958-1963.htm |date=28 June 2020 }}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20041211204415/http://nils.lib.tufts.edu/Fletcher/FortyYearCrisis.pdf Forty Years Crisis]
*[http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB56/ First strike options and the Berlin Crisis]
*[http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB56/ First strike options and the Berlin Crisis]
*[http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/khrush.htm Khrushchev's Secret Speech on the Berlin Crisis, August 1961] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210117004542/http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/khrush.htm |date=17 January 2021 }}
*[http://www.php.isn.ethz.ch/collections/colltopic.cfm?lng=en&id=16161 The 1961 Berlin Crisis and Soviet Preparations for War in Europe]
*[http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/khrush.htm Khrushchev’s Secret Speech on the Berlin Crisis, August 1961]
*[https://www.archives.gov/research/foreign-policy/cold-war/1961-berlin-crisis/2011-conference.html Conference: "From Vienna to Checkpoint Charlie: The Berlin Crisis of 1961"]
*[http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/ACFB7D.pdf Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis (1958–1962)]
*[http://www.archives.gov/research/foreign-policy/cold-war/1961-berlin-crisis/2011-conference.html Conference: "From Vienna to Checkpoint Charlie: The Berlin Crisis of 1961"]
* {{Internet Archive short film|id=gov.archives.arc.2569772|name=Big Picture: Operation Readiness}}
* {{Internet Archive short film|id=gov.archives.arc.2569772|name=Big Picture: Operation Readiness}}


{{Berlin Wall}}
{{Berlin Wall}}
{{John F. Kennedy}}
{{John F. Kennedy}}
{{Cold War}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Cold War history of Germany]]
[[Category:Cold War history of Berlin]]
[[Category:Berlin Wall|Crisis of 1961]]
[[Category:Berlin Wall|Crisis of 1961]]
[[Category:Inner German border]]
[[Category:Inner German border]]
Line 146: Line 148:
[[Category:Foreign relations of the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Foreign relations of the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Germany–Soviet Union relations]]
[[Category:Germany–Soviet Union relations]]
[[Category:Germany–United States relations]]
[[Category:Soviet Union–United States relations]]
[[Category:Soviet Union–United States relations]]
[[Category:East Germany–Soviet Union relations]]
[[Category:East Germany–West Germany relations]]
[[Category:United States–West Germany relations]]
[[Category:1961 in international relations]]
[[Category:1961 in international relations]]
[[Category:1961 in East Germany]]
[[Category:1961 in East Germany]]
[[Category:1961 in military history]]
[[Category:1961 in military history]]
[[Category:1961 in politics]]
[[Category:1961 in politics]]
[[Category:West Berlin|Crisis of 1961]]
[[Category:Combat incidents]]
[[Category:Combat incidents]]
[[Category:Cold War history of the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Cold War history of the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Diplomatic incidents]]
[[Category:Diplomatic crises of the Cold War]]
[[Category:1960s in Berlin|Crisis of 1961]]
[[Category:1960s in West Berlin|Crisis of 1961]]
[[Category:Ultimata]]
[[Category:Battles involving Germany]]

Latest revision as of 05:32, 10 December 2024

Berlin Crisis of 1961
Part of Cold War

U.S. M48 tanks face Soviet T-55 tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, October 1961.
Date4 June – 9 November 1961
Location
Result

'Stalemate'

Belligerents
 Soviet Union
 East Germany
Supported by:
Warsaw Pact (Except Albania)
 United States
 West Germany
Supported by:
 NATO
Commanders and leaders
Soviet Union Nikita Khrushchev
East Germany Walter Ulbricht
United States John F. Kennedy
West Germany Konrad Adenauer

The Berlin Crisis of 1961 (German: Berlin-Krise) was the last major European political and military incident of the Cold War concerning the status of the German capital city, Berlin, and of post–World War II Germany. The crisis culminated in the city's de facto partition with the East German erection of the Berlin Wall.

The Berlin Crisis began in June 1961 when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, meeting with US President John F. Kennedy at the Vienna summit, reissued an ultimatum which demanded the withdrawal of all armed forces from Berlin, including the Western armed forces in West Berlin. The East German government also sought a way to stop its "brain drain" as its population fled west through Berlin, made possible by the city's four-power status and the allowance of free travel. No agreement was reached and in August 1961, with Khrushchev's backing, East German leader Walter Ulbricht ordered the closing of the border and the construction of a wall around West Berlin. A brief stand-off between American and Soviet tanks occurred at Checkpoint Charlie in October following a dispute over free movement of Allied personnel; the confrontation ended peacefully after Khrushchev and Kennedy agreed to withdraw the tanks and reduce tensions.

History

[edit]

1961 Berlin ultimatum

[edit]

At the Vienna summit on 4 June 1961, tensions rose. Meeting with US President John F. Kennedy, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev reissued the Soviet ultimatum to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany and thus end the existing four-power agreements guaranteeing American, British, and French rights to access West Berlin and the occupation of East Berlin by Soviet forces.[1] However, this time he did so by issuing a deadline of 31 December 1961. The three powers responded that any unilateral treaty could not affect their responsibilities and rights in West Berlin.[1]

Rising tensions

[edit]

In the growing confrontation over the status of Berlin, Kennedy undercut his own bargaining position during his Vienna summit negotiations with Khrushchev in June 1961. Kennedy essentially conveyed US acquiescence to the permanent division of Berlin. This made his later, more assertive public statements less credible to the Soviets.[2] Kennedy decided on a flexible policy proposed by his younger advisors, with only a few concessions to the hardliners around Dean Acheson. The United States now defined three vital interests in its policy for Berlin, and linked all of them only to the western part of the city: the presence of Western troops in West Berlin; the security and viability of the western sectors; and Western access to them.[3]

As the confrontation over Berlin escalated, Kennedy delivered on July 25 a television speech in Washington on CBS, and broadcast nationwide in the US. He reiterated that the United States was not looking for a fight and that he recognized the "Soviet Union's historical concerns about their security in central and eastern Europe." He said he was willing to renew talks, but he also announced that he would ask Congress for an additional $3.25 billion for military spending, mostly on conventional weapons. He wanted six new divisions for the Army and two for the Marines, and he announced plans to triple the draft and to call up the reserves. Kennedy proclaimed: "We seek peace, but we shall not surrender."[4]

Vacationing in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Khrushchev was reported to be angered by Kennedy's speech. John Jay McCloy, Kennedy's disarmament adviser, who happened to be in the Soviet Union, was invited to join Khrushchev. It is reported that Khrushchev explained to McCloy that Kennedy's military build-up threatened war.

Plans for the Berlin Wall

[edit]
East German construction workers building the Berlin Wall in 1961

In early 1961, the East German government sought a way to stop its population leaving for the West. Walter Ulbricht, First Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED) and Staatsrat chairman and thus East Germany's chief decision-maker, convinced the Soviet Union that force was necessary to stop this movement, although Berlin's four-power status required the allowance of free travel between zones and forbade the presence of German troops in Berlin.[1]

The East German government began stockpiling building materials for the erection of the Berlin Wall; this activity was widely known, but only a small circle of Soviet and East German planners believed that East Germans were aware of the purpose.[1] This material included enough barbed wire to enclose the 156 km (97 mi) circumference of West Berlin. The regime managed to avoid suspicion by spreading out the purchases of barbed wire among several East German companies, which in turn spread their orders out among a range of firms in West Germany and the United Kingdom.[5]

On 15 June 1961, two months before the construction of the Berlin Wall started, Walter Ulbricht stated in an international press conference: "Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu errichten!" ("No one has the intention to erect a wall"). It was the first time the term Mauer (wall) had been used in this context.

On 4–7 August 1961, the foreign ministers of the US, UK, France and West Germany secretly met in Paris to discuss how to respond to the Soviet actions[further explanation needed] in West Berlin. They expressed a lack of willingness to engage in warfare. Within weeks, the KGB provided Khrushchev with descriptions of the Paris talks. These showed that US Secretary of State Dean Rusk, unlike the West Germans, supported talks with the Soviet Union, though the KGB and the GRU warned that the US was being pressured by other members of the alliance to consider economic sanctions against East Germany and other socialist countries and to move faster on plans for conventional and nuclear armament of their allies in Western Europe, such as the West German Bundeswehr.[6]

The West had advance intelligence about the construction of the Wall. On 6 August, a human intelligence source, a functionary in the SED, provided the 513th Military Intelligence Group (Berlin) with the correct date of the start of construction. At a weekly meeting of the Berlin Watch Committee on 9 August 1961, the Chief of the US Military Liaison Mission to the Commander Group of Soviet Forces Germany predicted the construction of a wall. An intercept of SED communications on the same day informed the West that there were plans to begin blocking all foot traffic between East and West Berlin. The interagency intelligence Watch Committee assessment said that this intercept "might be the first step in a plan to close the border", which turned out to be correct.

Closing of the border

[edit]

On Saturday 12 August 1961, the leaders of East Germany attended a garden party at a government guesthouse in Döllnsee, in a wooded area to the north of East Berlin, and Walter Ulbricht signed the order to close the border and erect a Wall around West Berlin.

At midnight, East Germany's border police, the East German army and units of the Soviet Army began to close the border; by morning on Sunday 13 August 1961, the border to West Berlin had been shut. East German troops and workers had begun to tear up streets running alongside the barrier to make them impassable to most vehicles, and to install barbed wire entanglements and fences along the 156 km (97 mi) around the three western sectors and the 43 km (27 mi) which actually divided West and East Berlin. Approximately 32,000 troops were employed for the building of the Wall, after which the Border Police became responsible for manning and improving it. To discourage Western interference and perhaps control potential riots, the Soviet Army was present.[1]

On August 18, 1961, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer issued a statement to the Bundestag denouncing the construction of the wall by East German authorities.[7] Adenauer stated the wall is a direct violation of "human rights and the Four-Power status of Berlin."[8] He emphasized the detrimental consequences of a potential war with the Soviet Union, and that using negotiations could resolve the issue in a nonviolent manner. Adenauer concluded his speech by expressing his commitment to working toward a peaceful solution.[9]

Kennedy did not give in to angry demands for immediate action raised by West Berliners and their mayor, Willy Brandt. Instead, he sent vice president Lyndon B. Johnson together with Lucius D. Clay, the hero of the Berlin Airlift of 1948‒49, to West Berlin on August 19. They managed to calm the population and demonstrate symbolically the United States' solidarity with the city. On August 20, 1,500 additional American soldiers arrived in West Berlin.[10]

On 30 August 1961, in response to moves by the Soviet Union to cut off access to Berlin, President Kennedy ordered 148,000 Guardsmen and Reservists to active duty. In October and November, more Air National Guard units were mobilised, and 216 aircraft from the tactical fighter units flew to Europe in operation "Stair Step", the largest jet deployment in the history of the Air Guard. Most of the mobilised Air Guardsmen remained in the US, while some others had been trained for delivery of tactical nuclear weapons and had to be retrained in Europe for conventional operations. The Air National Guard's ageing F-84s and F-86s required spare parts that the United States Air Forces in Europe lacked.[1]

Richard Bach wrote his book Stranger to the Ground centred around his experience as an Air National Guard pilot on this deployment.

Berlin travel disputes

[edit]
American tanks face an East German water cannon at Checkpoint Charlie.

The four powers governing Berlin (Soviet Union, United States, United Kingdom, and France) had agreed at the 1945 Potsdam Conference that Allied personnel could move freely in any sector of Berlin. But on 22 October 1961, just two months after the construction of the Wall, the US Chief of Mission in West Berlin, E. Allan Lightner, was stopped in his car (which had occupation forces license plates) while crossing at Checkpoint Charlie to go to a theatre in East Berlin.[11] President John F. Kennedy worked closely with retired Army General Lucius D. Clay, who had been in charge of the Berlin Airlift of 1948–1949. They decided to demonstrate American resolve. The American command in the West Berlin garrison considered a plan to pull down the wire and barricades with bulldozers. This, however, was overruled by the troop commander, Brigadier General Frederick O. Hartel. General Clay went to Berlin for 10 months.[12][13]

Military stand-off

[edit]

US Commandant General Watson was outraged by the East Berlin police's attempt to control the passage of American military forces. He communicated to the Department of State on 25 October 1961 that Soviet Commandant Colonel Solovyev and his men were not doing their part to avoid disturbing actions during a time of peace negotiations, and demanded that the Soviet authorities take immediate steps to remedy the situation. Solovyev replied by describing American attempts to send armed soldiers across the checkpoint and keeping American tanks at sector boundary as an "open provocation" and a direct violation of GDR regulations. He insisted that properly identified American military could cross the sector border without impediments, and were only stopped when their nationality was not immediately clear to guards. Solovyev contended that requesting identifying paperwork from those crossing the border was not unreasonable control; Watson disagreed. In regard to the American military presence on the border, Solovyev warned:

I am authorized to state that it is necessary to avoid actions of this kind. Such actions can provoke corresponding actions from our side. We have tanks too. We hate the idea of carrying out such actions, and are sure that you will re-examine your course.[14][failed verification][15]

Perhaps this contributed to Hemsing's decision to make the attempt again: on 27 October 1961, Hemsing again approached the zonal boundary in a diplomatic vehicle. General Clay sent ten jeeps with infantry troops to escort Hemsing through East Berlin and ten M-48 tanks, some fitted with bulldozer blades, close to Checkpoint Charlie.[16]

External images
image icon US tanks (foreground) face Soviet tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, on 27–28 October 1961
image icon US Tanks facing Soviet Tanks in Berlin 27 October 1961
Soviet T-55 tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, October 27, 1961.

Immediately afterwards, 33 T-54 Soviet tanks drove to the Brandenburg Gate. As one of the first to spot the tanks when they arrived, Lieutenant Vern Pike was ordered to verify whether they were indeed Soviet tanks. He and tank driver Sam McCart drove over to East Berlin, where Pike took advantage of a temporary absence of any soldiers near the tanks to climb into one of them. He came out with definitive evidence that the tanks were Soviet, including a Red Army newspaper.[17]

Ten of these tanks continued to Friedrichstraße, and stopped just 50 to 100 metres from the checkpoint on the Soviet side of the sector boundary. The US tanks moved towards the checkpoint, stopping an equal distance from it on the American side of the boundary. From 27 October 1961 at 17:00 until 28 October 1961 at about 11:00, the respective troops faced each other. As per standing orders, both groups of tanks were loaded with live munitions. The alert levels of the US Garrison in West Berlin, then NATO, and finally the US Strategic Air Command (SAC) were raised.

It was at this point that US Secretary of State Dean Rusk conveyed to General Lucius Clay, the US commanding officer in Berlin, that "We had long since decided that Berlin is not a vital interest which would warrant determined recourse to force to protect and sustain." Clay was convinced that having US tanks use bulldozer mounts to knock down parts of the Wall would have ended the crisis to the greater advantage of the US and its allies without eliciting a Soviet military response. Frederick Kempe argues that Rusk's views support a more unfavorable assessment of Kennedy's decisions during the crisis and his willingness to accept the Wall as the best solution.[18]

The United States deployed the Davy Crockett tactical nuclear recoilless gun during the Berlin crisis of 1961, according to Brigadier General Alvin Cowan, Assistant Division Commander of the United States 3rd Armored Division, at the Tactical Nuclear Weapons Symposium of 1969. According to Cowan, the device was [eventually] retired, in part, because "it was essentially a platoon weapon," and there was apparently "great fear that some sergeant would start a nuclear war."[19] President Kennedy had voiced concern, to include when he inspected the Crockett during his June 1963 visit to Fliegerhorst Kaserne, Hanau, about US infantrymen having frontline nuclear weapons, reassurances that the D/C squads did not include Mental Cat 4 GIs notwithstanding. Also, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara wanted to rush 171 Crocketts to USAREUR in December 1971 [dubiousdiscuss] [from page 224 of Marc Trachtenberg's book, HISTORY & STRATEGY (Princeton University Press, 1991)].

Resolution

[edit]

With GRU spy Georgi Bolshakov serving as the primary channel of communication, Khrushchev and Kennedy agreed to reduce tensions by withdrawing the tanks.[20] The Soviet checkpoint had direct communications to General Anatoly Gribkov at the Soviet Army High Command, who in turn was on the phone to Khrushchev. The US checkpoint contained a Military Police officer on the telephone to the HQ of the US Military Mission in Berlin, which in turn was in communication with the White House. Kennedy offered to go easy over Berlin in the future in return for the Soviets removing their tanks first. The Soviets agreed. Kennedy stated concerning the Wall: "It's not a very nice solution, but a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war."[21]

A Soviet tank moved about 5 metres backwards first; then an American tank followed suit. One by one the tanks withdrew. But General Bruce C. Clarke, then the Commander-in-Chief (CINC) of US Army Europe (USAREUR), was said to have been concerned about General Clay's conduct[citation needed] and Clay returned to the United States in May 1962. Gen. Clarke's assessment may have been incomplete, however: Clay's firmness had a great effect on the German population, led by West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.[citation needed][dubiousdiscuss]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f "Berlin Crisis". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  2. ^ Kempe 2011, p. 247
  3. ^ Daum (2008), pp. 26–27
  4. ^ "RADIO AND TELEVISION REPORT TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ON THE BERLIN CRISIS, JULY 25, 1961". John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
  5. ^ Kempe 2011, p. 324
  6. ^ Zubok, Vladislav M. (1994). "Spy vs. Spy: The KGB vs. the CIA".
  7. ^ Konrad Adenauer. "Bundestag Speech of August 18, 1961". Deutsche Bundestagsprotokolle. p. 9769–9772. Retrieved 8 December 2024.
  8. ^ Chronik der Mauer. "Chronicle of the Berlin Wall: November 1961". Chronik der Mauer. Retrieved 8 December 2024.
  9. ^ Konrad Adenauer. "Bundestag Speech of August 18, 1961". Deutsche Bundestagsprotokolle. p. 9769–9772. Retrieved 8 December 2024.
  10. ^ Daum (2008), pp. 51–57
  11. ^ Daum (2008), pp. 29–30
  12. ^ The U. S. Military Response to the 1960 -1962 Berlin Crisis
  13. ^ RECALLING THE WALL - FREDERICK HARTEL
  14. ^ "Department of State-Office of the Historian-Foreign Relations of The United States-Berlin Crisis-1961–1962-Document 192". state.gov. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  15. ^ "Telegram From the Mission at Berlin to the Department of State" (1961-10-13) [Textual Record]. Foreign Relations, 1961-1963, Volume XIV, Berlin Crisis, 1961-1962. US Department of State.
  16. ^ "Showdown in Berlin". Air & Space Forces Magazine. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
  17. ^ Kempe 2011, pp. 470–471
  18. ^ Kempe 2011, pp. 474–476
  19. ^ Proceedings of the Tactical Nuclear Weapons Symposium (PDF) (Report). AEC and DoD. 1969. p. 173.
  20. ^ Kempe 2011, pp. 478–479
  21. ^ Gaddis, John Lewis, The Cold War: A New History (2005), p. 115.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Barker, Elisabeth. “The Berlin Crisis 1958–1962.” International Affairs 39#1 (1963), pp. 59–73. online.
  • Beschloss, Michael. The Crisis Years: Kennedy and Khrushchev, 1960–1963 (1991) online
  • Carmichael, Neil. "A Brief History of the Berlin Crisis of 1961" (US National Archives. 2011); short essay; no copyright
  • Daum, Andreas (2008). Kennedy in Berlin. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85824-3.
  • Durie, William (2012). The British Garrison Berlin 1945 - 1994: nowhere to go ... a pictorial historiography of the British Military occupation / presence in Berlin. Berlin: Vergangenheitsverlag (de). ISBN 978-3-86408-068-5. OCLC 978161722.
  • Dowty, Alan (1989), Closed Borders: The Contemporary Assault on Freedom of Movement, Yale UP, ISBN 0-300-04498-4
  • Freedman, Lawrence. Kennedy's Wars: Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam (Oxford UP, 2000) pp 45–120. online
  • Gearson, John PS, and Kori N. Schake, eds. The Berlin Wall Crisis: Perspectives on Cold War Alliances (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
  • Harrison, Hope Millard (2003), Driving the Soviets Up the Wall: Soviet-East German Relations, 1953–1961, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-09678-3
  • Hornsby, R. (2023). The Soviet Sixties. Yale University Press.
  • Kempe, Frederick (2011), Berlin 1961, Penguin Group (USA), ISBN 978-0-399-15729-5
  • Loescher, Gil (2001), The UNHCR and World Politics: A Perilous Path, Oxford UP, ISBN 0-19-829716-5
  • Lunak, Petr. "Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis: Soviet brinkmanship seen from inside." Cold War History 3.2 (2003): 53–82.
  • McAdams, James (1993), Germany Divided: From Wall to Reunification, Princeton UP, ISBN 0-691-07892-0
  • Newman, Kitty. Macmillan, Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis, 1958–1960 (Routledge, 2007).
  • Pearson, Raymond (1998), The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire, Macmillan, ISBN 0-312-17407-1
  • Rasmussen, Kasper Grotle. "In search of a negotiated settlement: McGeorge Bundy and the 1961 Berlin crisis." Journal of Transatlantic Studies 14.1 (2016): 47–64.
  • Schick, Jack M. The Berlin crisis, 1958–1962 (1971) online
  • Sergunin, Alexander. "The role of the Executive Office of the President in the US decision-making on the Berlin crisis of 1961." Americana 15 (2017): 64–95.
  • Slusser, Robert M. The Berlin Crisis of 1961: Soviet-American Relations and the Struggle for Power in the Kremlin, June–November, 1961 (Johns Hopkins UP, 1973) excerpt
  • Smith, Jean Edward. The defense of Berlin (1963).
  • Taubman, William. Khrushchev: The Man and his Era (WW Norton & Company, 2003). pp 480–506.online
  • Thackeray, Frank W. (2004), Events that changed Germany, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 0-313-32814-5
  • Tompson, William. Khrushchev: A political life (Springer, 2016). online
  • Trachtenberg, Marc. A Constructed Peace: The Making of the European Settlement 1945‒1963 (Princeton UP, 1999) pp. 283–402. excerpt
  • Voorhees, Theodore. The Silent Guns of Two Octobers: Kennedy and Khrushchev Play the Double Game (U of Michigan Press, 2020).
  • Windsor, Philip. "The Berlin Crises" History Today (June 1962) Vol. 6, pp. 375–384, summarizes the series of crises 1946 to 1961; online.
  • Zubok, Vladislav. "Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis (1958‒1962)" (CWIHP, 1993) online, primary sources
[edit]