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1995-02-23
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<text id=93HT0215>
<link 93XP0503>
<link 93HT0330>
<title>
1940s: Berlin Airlift
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1940s Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
Berlin Airlift
</hdr>
<body>
<p> [Surprisingly, the French and Italian governments easily
withstood the efforts of the Communists at national paralysis;
popular support of both regimes indicated how much Frenchmen and
Italians resented Communist opposition to the Marshall Plan. De
Gasperi's Christian Democratic Party received its largest
plurality before or since in the May 1948 elections.
</p>
<p> Ominously, the Soviets in the spring of 1948 began to step up
pressure on an especially vulnerable spot: Berlin. They started
interrupting the flow of food, coal and other goods into the
city through Soviet-occupied Germany.]
</p>
<p>(July 6, 1948)
</p>
<p> The Russians last week threw practically everything they had
against besieged Berlin--everything except five well-equipped
Red Army divisions hovering under the chestnuts of Potsdam ten
miles away. Never before had a city of three million people, in
time of "peace," been summoned to surrender before the threat
of starvation, civil war within, or a bigger war without. It
seemed clear by last week that, in the Communist Baedeker,
Berlin was listed right after Prague.
</p>
<p> As "economic and administrative sanctions" against the
Western powers, the Russians last week stopped all food trains
from the Western zones on which Berlin depends for survival; cut
the Western sectors' electricity in half (by halting their own
contribution to it); blocked all coal shipments for Berlin
industries; forbade the city government to distribute any food
outside the Soviet sector; cut off all milk supplies from the
Soviet zone. They even cut medicine supplies, but yielded under
an American threat to withhold penicillin.
</p>
<p>(July 12, 1948)
</p>
<p> "The Risk of War." Besieged Berlin was tense and tired. A
chilly rain fell. U.S. and British armored cars prowled
sluggishly through streets that breathed the smells peculiar to
ruins in the rain--smells of wet bricks, damp dust and scorched
wood.
</p>
<p> The crucial battle for Berlin was being fought in the hearts
and minds of Berliners--but first & foremost in their bellies.
The Russians were attempting to starve into submission 2 1/2
million people in the city's Western sectors. They had been
driven to employ a weapon which disgraced them before the
civilized world. The Americans and the British were trying to
feed the two million Berliners--by air. The G.I.s called it
"Operation Vittles."
</p>
<p> The incessant roar of the planes--that typical and terrible
20th Century sound, a voice of cold mechanized anger--filled
every ear in the city. It reverberated in the bizarre stone ears
of the hollow, broken houses; it throbbed in the weary ears of
Berlin's people who were bitter, afraid, but far from broken;
it echoed in the intently listening ear of history. The sound
meant one thing: the West was standing its ground and fighting
back.
</p>
<p> At Tempelhof Airport the occasional shiny C-54s and many
battered C-47s landed at the daylight rate of one every three
minutes. Scores of ten-ton trucks rolled out to meet them. One
hundred and fifty G.I.s and German workers labored 24 hours a
day to get them unloaded. In the orange and white control tower,
13 G.I.s worked around the clock, surrounded by Coke bottles,
cigarette smoke, and the brassy chattering of radios.
</p>
<p> How had the U.S. got itself into a fix where one general and
4,000 G.I.s were supposed to hole an outpost deep inside a Red
sea of Russian power? The story goes back to the era when the
U.S. felt that, in dealing with Russian Communists, it might be
dealing with friends. In the war, Olympian mists of Teheran and
Yalta, the Big Three decided: 1) to split Germany into four
zones under an Allied Control Council, rather than run it as a
single occupation; 2) similarly to divide the rule of Berlin.
In one way, the arrangement worked to the West's advantage--it
kept the Russians out of the Ruhr. But it made Berlin into a
potential time bomb.
</p>
<p> It might have been smarter for the U.S. not to have gone to
Berlin in the first place, or to have withdrawn two years ago
when Berlin had not become a spectacular issue testing the
West's firmness. Today those are academic questions, for the
U.S. stands committed. The U.S. stake in Berlin is faith.
Withdrawal would leave to despair--and to Soviet
persecution--tens of thousands of anti-Communists whom the U.S.
encouraged to speak their minds against the Reds. It would mean
the retreat of an army which, however small, is the symbol of
America's commitment to Western European safety. It would give
the Russians a chance to rally all Germans around their old
capital; that might wreck America's plans for a Western German
state and a healthy Ruhr, on which the Marshall Plan depends.
Last week's ruthless siege of Berlin was a siege of all of
Germany and Europe as well.
</p>
<p>(July 19, 1948)
</p>
<p> The Russians were making "Operation Vittles" as difficult as
they could. The Russians announced that their aircraft were
about to begin instrument flying maneuvers in the area including
the air corridor between Berlin and the Western zones. U.S.
officers snapped back that the Russians would do so "at their
own risk."
</p>
<p> To date, the U.S. and Britain had carried some 20,000 tons of
supplies to Berlin.
</p>
<p> Last Sunday, the first sunny day in weeks, Berliners forgot
about their usual meager pleasures and instead went out to
Tempelhof Airport. Sitting amid the ruins surrounding the field,
perched on trees and fences, they watched the steady, reassuring
stream of planes roaring out of the skies.
</p>
<p> [The Berlin Airlift was a resounding triumph (and also an
enormous Allied expense). The Communists in Berlin's Soviet zone
responded with the usual strikes, demonstrations and riots.
Finally, realizing the bankruptcy of their policy and the
erosion of the already low level of their popular support in the
city (they had received 20% of the vote in the 1946 municipal
elections), the Communists boycotted the elections set for
December 1948, effectively completing the division of the
once-great capital. In an exceptionally large turnout (86.2%),
the rest of the population elected a socialist mayor, Ernst
Reuter.
</p>
<p> The blockade was not lifted until May 1949.]
</p>
<p>(May 16, 1949)
</p>
<p> Sound trucks rolled through the streets, blaring out the news;
the city's great ordeal was drawing to an end. Berlin's early
skepticism thawed. The people finally realized that a victory
had been won.
</p>
<p> Last week General V.I. Chuikov, Soviet commander in Germany,
ordered restoration of "transport, trade and communications
services" at 12:01 on Thursday morning of this week. At the same
moment, the Western counter-blockade would end.
</p>
<p> At Helmstedt, main crossing point on the Soviet-British
frontier, workmen and soldiers had hurriedly installed radio and
telephone equipment, repainted border signs, clipped weeds at
the sides of the long unused highway.
</p>
<p> Berlin's people had been living mainly on the airlift's
dehydrated potatoes, powdered eggs, powdered milk, dried
vegetables and occasional cans of meat; this week they would get
better food, and more of it. The blockade had shut down much of
Berlin's industry, thrown 125,000 out of work. There had been
only four hours of electricity a day; Berliners had lighted
their homes with candles or gone to bed at sunset. The siege's
end meant not only more food, more jobs and more light, but a
relatively comfortable winter ahead.
</p>
<p> "Even the ruins of Berlin," TIME Correspondent Dave
Richardson cabled this week, "are marked by the East-West
conflict of the past eleven months. In past springs, stately
chestnut and linden trees had spread a canopy of pink and white
over the ruins. This year, street after street in Berlin is bare
of trees. In the long hard winter of the blockade, Berlin's
people had to decide whether to accept Soviet Russia's offer of
coal or cut down their trees. They chose to give up the trees."
</p>
<p> [The split in Berlin reflected the de facto division of
Germany as a whole. In 1949, the Western Zone was given many of
the appurtenances of self-government by its occupiers, under a
statue that served as a sort of interim peace treaty in the face
of Soviet intransigence. Western Germany adopted a constitution,
elected a government headed by Christian Democrat Konrad
Adenauer, and proceeded with a vigorous recovery that would soon
give the non-country one of the world's most powerful
economies.]</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>