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The Berlin Wall : The End Of World War II

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The ending of World War II was the start of the building of the Berlin Wall. The United States and Great Britain helped provided West Berlin with food and supplies to help them survive. This was extremely hard because the Soviets decided to build a wall between East and West Germany to keep the people separate. The Soviets decided to do this because the future of Germany and Berlin was a major point in the postwar treaty talks, and tensions grew when the United States, Britain, and France moved in 1948 to join their occupation zones into the Federal Republic of Germany. In response, the USSR launched a land of blockade to West Berlin in an effort to force the West to abandon the city. However, a massive airlift by Britain and the United States kept West Berlin supplied with food and fuel. In May 1949 the Soviets ended the defeated blockade. The Berlin Wall was built by East Germany in an effort to separate Soviet East Germany from non soviet West Germany. The Soviet Union had taken control of Germany, but not all of Berlin. They then built the Berlin Wall to separate their Community east Germany from the Republic west Germany. The wall was heavily fortified with many layers in depth and thickness. The wall was first built with just barbed wire, this was done overnight, and by the morning, families were separated. Within weeks the wire fence was fortified with concrete and a second fence was built in June 1962. Some people attempting to escape East Berlin were shot on sight in the area that became known as “The Death Strip.” The Death Strip was very well known to all of berlin because that was the wall that separated East Berlin from West Berlin. As time went on construction began on an even more secure wall, this was called the “Border Wall 75” in 1975. This took five years to finish. The wall had 45,000 sections of reinforced concrete. Each slab of concrete wall was 3.9 feet wide and 12 feet tall and weighed 3 tons each. In total the Berlin Wall included 79 miles of fencing, about 300 watchtowers, more than 250 guard dog runs, 20 bunkers, and 65 miles of anti-vehicle trenches. The evening of November 9, 1989, East Germany declared an easing of travel restrictions to the West, and thousands were allowed

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