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'Lay an iron ring': Krushchev order for Berlin Wall is finally uncovered

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    'Lay an iron ring': Krushchev order for Berlin Wall is finally uncovered

    'Lay an iron ring': Krushchev order for Berlin Wall is finally uncovered
    Krushchev blamed fleeing citizens for East Germany's problems

    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...247817561.html

    DEREK SCALLY in Berlin

    ALMOST 20 years after it fell, the Berlin Wall has given up its last secret. A German researcher has found in a Moscow archive the long-sought, conclusive evidence of the decision to build the hated structure on August 13th, 1961 – with the direct approval of the Soviet Union.

    A yellowing protocol suggests that the decision was made on August 1st in a telephone conversation between Walter Ulbricht, head of the East German Politburo, and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.

    The written record of their discussion, lasting from 3.40pm to 6pm, suggests that Ulbricht was anxious to close the border, but that the final nod came from Khrushchev. The 28-page protocol of the conversation, transformed this weekend into a two-hander play at a Berlin theatre, begins with discussion of butter and milk shortages in the GDR.

    The discussion then moves to the general one about the declining economic situation in the German socialist republic.

    “When I came to your party conference two years ago, everything was fine. You wanted to overtake [West Germany] in 1961/62. What’s happened?” asked Khrushchev of Ulbricht.

    Ulbricht blames Poland and Bulgaria for failing to deliver the promised levels of coal and steel. He also blames the destabilising influence of West Germany and claims that “Bonn is preparing, step-by-step, for an uprising” in the GDR in the autumn.

    The Soviet leader suggests the problem has to do with the disappearance of East German citizens across the border: more than 200,000 in 1960 alone. “Too many engineers have disappeared, something has to be done,” says Khrushchev.

    He reminds Ulbricht that he had sent his ambassador to discuss “using the current tensions with the West to lay an iron ring around Berlin”.

    This was music to the ears of Ulbricht. He had already ordered enough barbed wire to encircle the west sector of the city and suggested to the Soviet leader that “there are a series of questions that cannot be solved with an open border”.

    Finally, Khrushchev makes his decision.

    “We’ll give you one, two weeks to prepare yourselves economically,” he said. “Then call in the parliament and announce the following communiqué: ‘From tomorrow, checkpoints will be erected and through-traffic forbidden. Whoever wants to pass can only do so with the permission of certain authorities of the GDR.”

    Exactly 12 days later, the lights went out at the Brandenburg Gate and the Berlin Wall went up.

    #2
    this was just now discovered? in Russia I assume...man the russians can hide anything. I always wondered of the conversation that led to the building of the berlin wall. I always thought Khrustchev was just bored one day and was wondering of ways to limit the control of capitalist nations across the world and just thought 'you know, I could just wall em' all off. That might just work!' The thought-process of a communist....

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      #3
      Another article on this topic...

      Klaus Wiegrefe: Who Ordered the Construction of the Berlin Wall?

      Source: Spiegel Online (5-30-09)

      [Klaus Wiegrefe is a Spiegel editor.]

      They met in Stalingrad, where they fought on the same side in 1942. One of them, the son of a miner from Ukraine, organized the city's defenses against the German Wehrmacht forces, while the other, a German exile, used a bullhorn to encourage infantrymen to change sides. This much is certain, and it is also certain that the two men -- the impulsive Kremlin dictator Nikita Khrushchev and the calculating founder of the German Democratic Republic, Walter Ulbricht -- were never overly fond of each other.

      Nevertheless, during the decade in which they simultaneously shaped the fates of their respective countries, Khrushchev and Ulbricht were close allies. But which of the two men was responsible for the construction of the Berlin Wall on Aug. 13, 1961? Whose idea led to a 165.7-kilometer (103-mile) bulwark -- a monstrous barrier of concrete and barbed wire, surrounding the western section of the city, armed with watchtowers and booby traps?

      Never before had a regime locked up its own population. The border between the two Germanys had been sealed off for some time, but when the Wall went up, the loophole into West Berlin, through which East Germans had been able to flee to West Germany, was also closed.

      From then on, anyone who wished to leave East Germany was risking his or her life. At least 136 people died in the attempt to surmount the Berlin Wall. They were shot by border guards, ripped to shreds by landmines or they drowned in the Spree River.

      Was this sinister method of border control created at the urging of Ulbricht, because his state of workers and farmers was threatened by a brain drain, as former Soviet diplomats claimed after German reunification? Or did Khrushchev order the Wall's construction, as former senior members of the East German communist party, the SED, claim?

      For years, historians have been trying to clear this contradiction, and now an answer may be in the offing. It appears in a Soviet document that Matthias Uhl of the German Historical Institute in Moscow has discovered: a previously unknown record of a conversation that took place between the two leaders on Aug. 1, 1961...

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        #4
        And one more...

        Behind the Berlin Wall
        http://www.eursoc.com/eursoc_news_an...rlin-wall.html

        Who gave the order for the construction of the Berlin Wall, erected by the German Democrat Republic (East German) government to prevent its citizens fleeing to the freedom of the West?

        It's been a subject of debate among historians for some decades. Was the first modern example of a nation imprisoning its own citizens ordered by Walter Ulbricht, the founder of the East German state, or by the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev?

        According to papers discussed in an article by Klaus Wiegrefe in Spiegel, the Kremlin dictator Khrushchev demanded that the East Germans take steps to build the 165.7-km barrier encircling West Berlin. A wire fence had encircled the Western part of the city for a decade, and even when stricter border controls were put in place, large numbers of Berliners continued to cross from East to seek a new life in the West. In all, 3.5 million are believed to have left for the West by 1961.

        It did not escape Moscow's attentions that a large number of East Germany's most talented people were fleeing the country. Yuri Andropov wrote in 1958 that the "flight of the (East German) intelligentsia had reached a particularly critical phase." There was a feeling that the entire East German project was at stake: Ulbricht belligerently demanded $17 billion in reparations for "manpower losses" from the West German authorities.

        This East German propaganda booklet, published in 1955, shows how the Eastern Bloc authorities tried to depict those who chose to leave their dictatorship:

        Both from the moral standpoint as well as in terms of the interests of the whole German nation, leaving the GDR is an act of political and moral backwardness and depravity.

        Those who let themselves be recruited objectively serve West German Reaction and militarism, whether they know it or not. Is it not despicable when for the sake of a few alluring job offers or other false promises about a "guaranteed future" one leaves a country in which the seed for a new and more beautiful life is sprouting, and is already showing the first fruits, for the place that favors a new war and destruction?

        Is it not an act of political depravity when citizens, whether young people, workers, or members of the intelligentsia, leave and betray what our people have created through common labor in our republic to offer themselves to the American or British secret services or work for the West German factory owners, Junkers, or militarists? Does not leaving the land of progress for the morass of an historically outdated social order demonstrate political backwardness and blindness? ...

        [W]orkers throughout Germany will demand punishment for those who today leave the German Democratic Republic, the strong bastion of the fight for peace, to serve the deadly enemy of the German people, the imperialists and militarists.

        Ulbricht didn't take much persuading, clearly, and by the evening of 13 August the border was closed and the construction of the Berlin Wall started.

        Khrushchev and his German counterpart planned to make a feeble effort to justify the wall by arguing that it was designed to keep Western spies out, rather than hem East Berliners in; though as the Spiegel article indicates, it is unlikely that even Khrushchev believed this one would fly. In any case, when Ulbricht suggested bringing his economic experts along to meetings to discuss the closing of the border, Khrushchev counselled against it, warning that "it would only strengthen the flow of people leaving."

        The Kremlin boss feared a mass exodus from the East if word got out of a permanent border crossing.

        The Berlin Wall was eventually breached in November 1989; German reunification was formally concluded on October 3, 1990.

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          #5
          Genossen,
          Genosse Walter Ulbricht was never much liked by many I read...

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