By war's end, up to a third of Berlin had been destroyed by concerted Allied air raids, Soviet artillery, and street fighting. The so-called
Stunde Null—zero hour—marked a new beginning for the city. in front of his office, May 1945 The US-UK
Combined Bomber Offensive had dropped 75,000 tons of bombs on the city. Only 300,000 of 1,500,000 homes were undamaged. Removing the rubble, the US estimated, would require ten 50-car trainloads a day for 16 years. Thirty-seven
Berlin buses and fewer than 10% of the U-Bahn cars were operable. On 24 April 1945, even before the end of street fighting in Berlin, colonel-general
Nikolai Berzarin was appointed Soviet military commander of the city. By his "Order No. 1" on 28 April, Berzarin assumed all governmental power. He worked to re-establish order in the ruined German capital, creating a city police force and supplying the population with food, water, gas and electricity, as well as re-opening schools and theatres. On 17 May, he appointed non-partisan
Arthur Werner the first post-war
Mayor of Berlin presiding over a civil city government. Greater Berlin was divided into four sectors by the Allies under the
London Protocol of 1944, as follows: • the
American sector (210.8 km2), consisting of the boroughs of:
Neukölln,
Kreuzberg,
Tempelhof,
Schöneberg,
Steglitz and
Zehlendorf (see:
commandants of Berlin American Sector); • the
British sector (165.5 km2 The Soviets used the period from May 1945 to July 1945 to dismantle industry, transport and other facilities in West Berlin, including removing railway tracks, as reparations for German war damage in the Soviet Union. This practice continued in
East Berlin and the Soviet occupation zone after 1945. Conditions were harsh, and hundreds of thousands of refugees from the east kept pouring in. Residents depended heavily on the black market for food and other necessities.
Greater Berlin City Council election was held on 20 October 1946. It was the only all-Berlin election in the period between the end of the
Second World War and
German reunification in 1990. The clear winner of the election was the
Social Democratic Party (SPD) led by
Otto Ostrowski, which won 48.7% and 63 seats, just three short of a majority. The
Christian Democratic Union finished in second place under
Ferdinand Friedensburg with 22.2% of votes and 29 seats. The
Socialist Unity Party (SED), formed a few months earlier as a merger of the
Communist Party and the SPD branches in the Soviet zone, took just 19.8% of the vote and 26 seats. The remaining 9.3% of the votes went to the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) which received 12 seats. Berlin's unique situation as a city half-controlled by Western forces in the middle of the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany made it a natural focal point in the
Cold War, after 1947. Though the city was initially governed by a
Four Power Allied Control Council with a leadership that rotated monthly, the Soviets withdrew from the council as east–west relations deteriorated and began governing their sector independently. The council continued to govern West Berlin, with the same rotating leadership policy, though now involving only France, the United Kingdom and the United States.
East Germany chose
East Berlin as its capital when the country was formed out of the Soviet occupation zone in October 1949; however, this was rejected by Western allies, who continued to regard Berlin as an occupied city that was not legally part of any German state. In practice, the government of East Germany treated East Berlin as an integral part of the nation. Although half the size and population of West Berlin, it included most of the historic center. By the establishment of the
Oder-Neisse line and the complete
expulsion of the German inhabitants east of this line, Berlin lost its traditional hinterlands of
Farther Pomerania and
Lower Silesia.
West Germany, formed on 23 May 1949 from the American, British and French zones, had its
seat of government and
de facto capital in
Bonn, although Berlin was symbolically named the
de jure West German capital in West German Basic Law (
Grundgesetz).
West Berlin de jure remained under the rule of the Western Allies, but, for most practical purposes, was treated as a part of
West Germany; however, the residents did not hold West German passports.
Blockade and airlift In response to Allied efforts to fuse the American, French and British sectors of western Germany into a federal state, and to a currency reform undertaken by Western powers without Soviet approval, the Soviets blocked ground access to
West Berlin on 26 June 1948, in what became known as the "
Berlin Blockade". The Soviet goal was to gain control of the whole of Berlin. The American and British air forces engaged in a massive logistical effort to supply the western sectors of the city through the Berlin Airlift, known by West Berliners as "die Luftbrücke" (
the Air Bridge). The blockade lasted almost a year, ending when the Soviets once again allowed ground access to West Berlin on 11 May 1949. As part of this project, US Army engineers expanded
Tempelhof Airport. Because sometimes the deliveries contained sweets and candy for children, the planes were also nicknamed "
Candy Bombers".
The June 17 Uprising With Stalin dead, the KGB chief
Lavrenti Beria jockeyed for power in the Kremlin, putting forth the goal of German reunification. His plan was to set up a workers' demonstration that would allow the Kremlin to remove hardliner
Walter Ulbricht and begin a program of economic concessions to the workers. The plan failed when the demonstrations assumed a mass character. The strike against poor wages and working conditions overnight became a workers' revolution for democratic rights. On 17 June, the Soviets used their tanks to restore order. This failure delayed German unification and contributed to the fall of Beria. It started when 60 construction workers building the showpiece
Stalin-Allee in East Berlin went on strike on 16 June 1953, to demand a reduction in recent work-quota increases. They called for a
general strike the next day, 17 June. The general strike and protest marches turned into rioting and spread throughout East Germany. The East German police failed to quell the unrest. It was forcibly suppressed by Soviet troops, who encountered stiff resistance from angry crowds across East Germany, and responded with live ammunition. At least, 153 people were killed in the suppression of the uprising. The continuation of the street "
Unter den Linden" on the western side of the
Brandenburg Gate was renamed
Straße des 17. Juni in honor of the uprising, and 17 June was proclaimed a national holiday in West Germany. The 50th anniversary of 17 June 1953, in 2003, was marked by reflection on the role of memory in creating a national identity for a unified Germany.
Berlin Wall , 1961-11-20. Those trying to cross the so-called death strip on the eastern side could be shot. Loshitzky depicts the role of the Berlin Wall as a symbol of the Cold War,
détente and the collapse of the Communist regimes in Eastern Europe. She divides the history of the Wall into six major stages: the erection of the Wall (1961); the period of the "geography of fear" from the Cold War; the period of
détente; the short period of
glasnost and
perestroika; the fall of the Wall (1989) and after the Wall. On August 13, 1961, the Communist East German government started to build a wall, physically separating
West Berlin from
East Berlin and the rest of East Germany, as a response to massive numbers of East German citizens fleeing into West Berlin as a way to escape. The wall was built overnight with no warning. This separated families for as long as the wall was up. The East German government called the Wall the "anti-fascist protection wall". The tensions between East and West were exacerbated by a tank standoff at
Checkpoint Charlie on 27 October 1961. West Berlin was now a
de facto part of West Germany, but with a unique legal status, while East Berlin remained part of East Germany. The western sectors of Berlin were now completely separated from the surrounding territory of East Berlin and East Germany. It was possible for Westerners to pass from one to the other only through strictly controlled checkpoints. For most Easterners, travel to West Berlin or West Germany was no longer possible. During the Wall's existence, there were around 5,000 successful escapes into West Berlin; 136 people were officially killed, trying to cross (see
List of deaths at the Berlin Wall), and around 200 were seriously injured. The sandy soil under the Wall was both a blessing and a curse for those who attempted to tunnel their way to West Berlin and freedom. Although it was easy to dig through quickly, it was also more prone to collapse. '' speech from the
Rathaus Schöneberg by John F. Kennedy, June 26, 1963 When the first stone blocks were laid down at
Potsdamer Platz in the early hours of August 13, US troops stood ready with ammunition and watched the wall being built, stone by stone. The US military with West Berlin police kept Berliners 300 meters away from the border. President
John F. Kennedy and the
United States Congress decided not to interfere and risk armed conflict. They conveyed their protest to
Moscow, and Kennedy sent his vice president,
Lyndon B. Johnson, together with
Lucius D. Clay, the hero of the Airlift to the city. Massive demonstrations took place in West Berlin. Almost two years later, on June 26, 1963,
John F. Kennedy visited West Berlin and gave a much-acclaimed speech in front of the Schöneberg City Hall in which he said, "
Ich bin ein Berliner"– "I am a Berliner". This was meant to demonstrate America's lasting solidarity with the city as a Western island in Soviet
satellite territory. Much
Cold War espionage and counter-espionage took place in Berlin, against a backdrop of potential superpower confrontation, in which both sides had nuclear weapons set for a range that could hit Germany. In 1971, the
Four-Power Agreement on Berlin was signed. While the Soviet Union applied the oversight of the four powers only to West Berlin, the Western Allies emphasized in a 1975 note to the
United Nations their position that four-power oversight applied to Berlin as a whole. The agreement guaranteed access across East Germany to West Berlin and ended the potential for harassment or closure of the routes. As many businesses did not want to operate in
West Berlin, due to its physical and economic isolation from the outside, the West German government subsidized any businesses that did operate in West Berlin.
Student movement , in protest against the adoption of the
German Emergency Acts In the 1960s, West Berlin became one of the centers of the
German student movement. West Berlin was especially popular with young German left-wing radicals, as young men living in West Berlin were exempted from the obligatory military service required in West Germany proper: the
Kreuzberg district became especially well known for its high concentration of young radicals. The Wall afforded unique opportunities for social gatherings. The physical wall was set some distance behind the actual sector border, up to several meters behind in some places. The West Berlin police were not legally allowed to enter the space between the border and the wall, as it was technically in East Berlin and outside their jurisdiction: many people took the opportunity to throw loud parties in this space, with the West Berlin authorities powerless to intervene. In 1968 and after, West Berlin became one of the centers of the student revolt; in particular, the Kreuzberg borough was the center of many riots.
750th anniversary File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1986-0926-040, Berlin, 750-Jahr-Feier, Logo.jpg|Logo commemorating Berlin's 750th anniversary File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1987-0101-007, Berlin, 750-Jahr-Feier, Silvesterfeuerwerk.jpg|Fireworks over Berlin on January 1, 1987, in recognition of the city's 750th anniversary File:President Ronald Reagan making his Berlin Wall speech.jpg|
U.S. President Ronald Reagan, speaking before Brandenburg Gate on June 12, 1987, demands the Kremlin free Berlin and "
Tear down this wall!" File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1987-1023-036, Berlin, 750-Jahr-Feier, Staatsakt, Rede Honecker.jpg|Communist leader
Erich Honecker speaks on October 23, 1987, in commemoration of the city's 750th anniversary. == Federal Republic of Germany (1990–today) ==