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Berlin on the Brink - The Blockade, the Airlift, and the Early Cold War (Hardcover)
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Berlin on the Brink - The Blockade, the Airlift, and the Early Cold War (Hardcover)
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No place symbolized the cold war more than Berlin, and no event
illustrates how East-West conflict developed more than the Berlin
blockade. The blockade (June 24, 1948-May 12, 1949) was one of the
first international crises of the cold war. During the occupation
of post-World War II Germany, the Soviet Union blocked the Western
Allies' railway and road access to the sectors of Berlin under
Allied control. Their aim was to force the western powers to allow
the Soviets to supply Berlin with food and fuel, thus enabling the
Soviets to control the entire city. In response, the Allies
organized the Berlin airlift to carry supplies to the people in
West Berlin. Scholars in recent years have tended to ignore the
blockade in the belief that "we now know" all that can be said
about it. The success of the airlift in breaking the blockade has
led many-after the fact-to see the airlift as the execution of a
well-conceived plan of a few diplomats, rather than as a brilliant
improvisation by many people, influenced by time and chance. In
Time and Chance: A History of the Berlin Blockade, Daniel F.
Harrington examines "the Berlin question" from its origin in
wartime plans for the occupation of Germany through the Paris
Council of Foreign Ministers meeting in 1949. Harrington draws on
previously untapped archival sources to challenge standard accounts
of the postwar division of Germany, the origins of the blockade,
the original purpose of the airlift, and the leadership and
decision-making of President Harry S Truman. While thoroughly
examining American, British, French, and Soviet diplomacy at the
top levels, Harrington also pays careful attention to events on the
ground in postwar Berlin and to details of the that led to its
success. He demonstrates how the airlift owed its success less to
decisions at the top than to the ingenuity and hard work of people
at the bottom-pilots, mechanics, and Berliners. Time and Chance
reshapes the conventional understanding of a critical event of cold
war history and promises to be the definitive book on the Berlin
blockade. Daniel F. Harrington is deputy command historian at
United States Strategic Command and has published many essays in
journals such as Diplomacy & Statecraft, International History
Review, and Diplomatic History.
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