The DDR and The Federal Republic were opposite social/political systems that bordered one another, BUT, so did other Communist and Capitalist nations.
It was Germany that was always alluded to as the potential "flashpoint" for World War III and potential nuclear annihilation. It was Germany where the greatest fear of the use of tactical nuclear weapons was generated.
The one thing that Germany had that no other nations in Europe had was a divided Capital between the two social systems. Berlin had the Berlin Wall, referenced in East Berlin as the "Antifascist Protective Rampart" and in West Berlin as the "Wall of Shame."
I believe there were more killings in the West Berlin border areas than all the other frontiers between East and West?
Why was there such a greater tension in Germany between the two major opposing forces in the world as compared to the rest of the world, in your opinion?
It was Germany that was always alluded to as the potential "flashpoint" for World War III and potential nuclear annihilation. It was Germany where the greatest fear of the use of tactical nuclear weapons was generated.
The one thing that Germany had that no other nations in Europe had was a divided Capital between the two social systems. Berlin had the Berlin Wall, referenced in East Berlin as the "Antifascist Protective Rampart" and in West Berlin as the "Wall of Shame."
I believe there were more killings in the West Berlin border areas than all the other frontiers between East and West?
Why was there such a greater tension in Germany between the two major opposing forces in the world as compared to the rest of the world, in your opinion?
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