The Berlin Airlift: The Cold War Mission to Save a City

The Berlin Airlift: The Cold War Mission to Save a City

The Berlin Airlift: The Cold War Mission to Save a City

The Berlin Airlift: The Cold War Mission to Save a City

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

“A detailed dramatic narrative...Vivid.”—Times (London) Literary Supplement. How the Allies kept the population of West Berlin alive in the face of a Russian blockade.

In the summer of1948, the Russians occupied all of Eastern Europe. Behind Russian lines, the Allied-controlled part of the great city of Berlin stood as the lone Western outpost in a sea of Communist occupation. Then the Soviets closed all Allied traffic through their zone, sealing off the food and supply routes on which the city relied.

A vast air armada streamed from Western airfields to supply the hard-pressed Berliners with food and necessities. For over a year the Americans led a gigantic—and successful—effort to keep an entire city alive in the face of Soviet hostility.

With strong insight into the characters of Ernest Bevin, General Clay, Dean Acheson, and Robert Schumann, and now with a foreword by former British minister to Berlin Sir Michael Burton, this a story of individual heroism and high brinkmanship politics, of daily life under appalling circumstances, and great achievements against all odds.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781510740617
Publisher: Skyhorse
Publication date: 07/23/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 480
Sales rank: 1,058,324
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.20(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Ann Tusa is the coauthor, along with her husband and writing partner John, of The Last Division and The Nuremberg Trial. She is a graduate of Cambridge University and lives in London, England.

John Tusa is a former staff producer and managing director for the BBC and a winner the Royal Television Society’s Journalist of the Year award. He is a graduate of Cambridge University, where he met his wife and writing partner, Ann. They live in London, England.

Sir Michael Burton was British Minister in Berlin from 1985-1992. 

Read an Excerpt

How the Allies kept the population of West Berlin alive in the face of A Russian blockade.

In the summer of1948, the Russians occupied all of Eastern Europe. Behind Russian lines, the Allied-controlled part of the great city of Berlin stood as the lone Western outpost in a sea of Communist occupation. Then the Soviets closed all Allied traffic through their zone, sealing off the food and supply routes on which the city relied.

A vast air armada streamed from Western airfields to supply the hard-pressed Berliners with food and necessities. For over a year the Americans led a gigantic—and successful—effort to keep an entire city alive in the face of Soviet hostility.

With strong insight into the characters of Ernest Bevin, General Clay, Dean Acheson, and Robert Schumann, and now with a foreword by former British minister to Berlin Sir Michael Burton, this a story of individual heroism and high brinkmanship politics, of daily life under appalling circumstances, and great achievements against all odds.

Table of Contents

Foreword xi

Introduction xv

1 Fumbling the Peace 1

2 Who Is Going to Take Berlin? 19

3 Doctors or Heirs? 40

4 The Patient Sinks 65

5 Putting on the Squeeze 90

6 A War of Pinpricks 113

7 Scramble 143

8 A Cushion of Time 170

9 Amiable Bears 199

10 Miracles Take Time 234

11 Berlin Splits 267

12 Cracks of Light 296

13 Prodigies of Agreement 329

14 Back to Normal? 357

Sources 380

References 385

Index 425

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