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Wilfried Ranke

Chronicle of 1933 to 1955*/1

 
 

Catalog No.: 34

1933-44

16.11.33
Sixteen years after the October Revolution the USSR ist formally recognized by the United States of America.

23.8.39
The signing of the Hitler-Stalin Non-Aggression Pact causes a major upset in relations between the USA and USSR.

11.3.41
The Lend-Lease Act comes into force in the USA.

22.6.41
At 3.15 pm the German Army launches its attack an the USSR ("Operation Barbarossa").
The threat posed to Anglo-American interests by the Axis Powers increases the importance of the USSR to the west.

14.8.41
In the Atlantic Charter-a joint declaration by US President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill issued after a conference an board the US battleship Augusta off Newfoundland - the Soviet Union is confronted with Anglo-American war aims: an open-door policy in a world of equal sovereign states, the right of national-self determination and free world trade with unimpeded access to all raw materials.

7.11.41
The USSR receives supplies from the USA under the terms of the Lend-Lease Act.

7.12.41
Japanese warplanes attack the US Pacific Fleet stationed in the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii.
The Surprise attack, which also signals the start of Japanese land operations, extends the war to the Pacific region. The USA and Great Britain declare war on Japan. On 5 December Hitler had promised Japan support in the event of war; on 11 December Germany and Italy therefore declare war on the USA.

6.6.44
Start of the allied Normandy landings
The invasion in western Europe finally creates the "second front" which Stalin has been calling for since 1942 to relieve the Red Army. In Soviet eyes it appeared that the Allies had deliberately delayed this urgently awaited relief action. Suspicion that the burden was split unequally led to growing mistrust between the partners of the anti-Hitler coalition.

16.10.44
The Red Army reaches German soil.

21.10.44
The US Army occupies Aachen.


1945

3.1.45
Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov hands the American Ambassador a formal request for capital aid to help rebuild the USSR.
There are extensive discussions within American government circles as to how the superior financial power of the USA can be used most effectively against the Soviet Union; no consensus is reached. The commercially-minded Americans have little sympathy for the desperate plight of the USSR. The Soviets for their part have to come to terms with the fact that no credit will be forthcoming from their prosperous and powerful "brothers in arms" to help them repair the enourmous damage caused to their country by the war, thus further straining relations with the USA.

4 to 11.2.45
At the Yalta Conference in the Crimea differences in ideas about a new world order emerge. While the Soviets urge for an agreement an mutually respected spheres of influence, President Roosevelt propounds an open-door policy in a unified world clearly governed by free trade interests.
Roosevelt successfully presses for a declaration an a liberated Europe which makes reference to the right of national seif-determination, as demanded in the Atlantic Charter. Soviet politicians see the open-door strategy of the Americans as an excuse for economic aggression.

12.4.45
Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the USA since 1933, dies; he is succeeded on the same day by Vice President Harry S. Truman.

25.4.45
Units of the Red Army and the US Army meet near Torgau an the Elbe.

8.5.45
Unconditional surrender of the German Army.

12.5.45
American supplies under the Lend-Lease Act are abruptly halted. Ships loaded with cargo for the Soviet Union are stopped at sea and ordered back.
Even if the cessation of shipments were not to be interpreted as a deliberately anti-Sovietact, its consequences inevitably strained relations between the Soviet Union and the USA. In the eyes of the Soviets, it confirmed their fears of aggressive economic imperialism on the part of the USA.
When it emerges that Soviet requests for American credit would also fall on deaf ears, the possibility of obtaining reparations from vanquished Germany gains political importance. For the Soviets reparations now represent the only potential source of material recompense for war losses and the enormous destruction sustained by their country. American efforts to use their economic power as a means of forcing concessions from the Soviets ultimately serve only to exacerbate the conflict.

17.7 to 2.8.45
The Potsdam Conference. During a meeting in the Cecilienhof on 24 July, President Truman mentions to Stalin the effects of the atom bomb tested in America.

 


1946

22.2.46
George F. Kennan sends Washington his "long telegram" from Moscow. The 8000-word document, which analyzes the main aspects of Soviet behaviour since the end of the war, is absorbed with great interest by government circles in the USA.
The telegram triggers intense debate and has a considerable influence an future US policy. "World Communism is like a malignant parasite which feeds only an diseased tissue. That is the point at which domestic and foreign policy meet." The Truman administration uses Kennan's observations as a legitimation for its continuing hard line against Communism demonstrated both at home and abroad.

5.3.46
Churchill's speech in Fulton, Missouri in which the British politician speaks for the first time in public about an "iron curtain" which divides the European continent from Stettin an the Baltic to Trieste an the Adriatic.

25.4 to 12.7.46
Second Conference of Foreign Ministers in Paris.
The two sessions of the conference are devoted to the situation in Germany. On 11 July US Secretary of State Byrnes calls for the economic merger of the four zones of occupation and invites the other occupying powers to join the American zone in an economic union; only the British show any interest in this offer, while Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov persists in calls for Soviet reparations and criticizes the occupation policy.

25.5.46
General Clay announces the end of reparations from the American occupied zone to the USSR.

6.9.46
In Stuttgart's Staatstheater US Secretary of State Byrnes outlines the principles of American occupation policy in Germany to members of US military government and the minister-presidents of states in the American occupied zone.
Particular significance attaches to his statement that the USA could maintain a presence in Europe for a considerable time.

 

Catalog No.: 22
1947

12.3.47
President Truman goes before Congress to ask congressmen to approve aid totalling 400 million dollars for Greece and Turkey and the dispatch of American military and civilian personnel to these countries.
Since the political feelng at home has become clearly anti-totalitarian and anti-Soviet, his political aims, which come to be known as the "Truman Doctrine", are accepted: 'I believe we must assist free people to determine their own fate in their own way".

22.3.47
President Truman issues the Loyalty Act which makes it legal to scrutinize the political views and allegiances of all US federal employees.

3.5.47
Despite protests from the US military government, the Deutsche Theater in the Soviet sector of Berlin stages the first German performance of the anti-American play "The Russian Question" by Konstantin Simonov.

5.6.47
In a speech to Harvard University, US Secretary of State Marshall announces a program of aid for the reconstruction of Europe.

16.6.47
Pravda carries an article containing the first negative reaction to US Secretary of State Marshall's speech on 5 July.
Referring to America's involvement in Greece and Turkey announced shortly before by President Truman, the Soviet commentator regards Marshall's proposals as an extension of the Truman plan of intervention in the internal affairs of other countries.

18.6.47
Bidault and Bevin, the foreign ministers of France and Great Britain, invite their Soviet colleague Molotov to take part in consultations on the Marshall Plan.
The talks take place shortly afterwards in Paris but the parties come no closer to agreement. On 1 July Molotov receives a telegram from Moscow instructing him to reject Franco-British ideas an the reconstruction of Europe under the terms of the Marshall Plan. Because of Soviet anxieties over the economic superiority of the USA, he rejects a common recovery program an the grounds it would threaten economic independence and was therefore irreconcilable with the preservation of national sovereignty.

4.7.47
The governments of all the European states with the exception of the Soviet Union and Spain receive invitations from Paris to a conference to discuss a European recovery program based an the US aid proposals.

July 1947
George F. Kennan publishes an analysis in the American journal "Foreign Affairs" entitled "The Sources of Soviet Conduct" in which he argues for a strategy of "containment" to counter what he calls Soviet expansionism. The highly regarded and much discussed article strikes a chord in the west.

20 to 24.9.47
Second SED Party Congress in Berlin. At the opening of the Congress, Colonel Tulpanov, representing the Soviet military administration, talks of two Germanys, one "a country of progressive forces" and one "a country of people who, with the a id of foreign - in particularly American - capital, are intent on driving the German people once more into the bloody carnage of the imperialist war being prepared by the capitalists."

30.9.47
In a small town in Silesia in Poland C0MINFORM, the Information Bureau of Communist and Workers' Parties, is founded, its permament seat located in Belgrade. The Bureau remains in existence until 17 April 1956. During the foundation conference, Andrei A. Zhdanov, the head of the Soviet delegation, expounds the "two camp theory" for the first time.
The meeting of Communist Party leaders in Poland, which also includes delegates from the French and Italian Communist Parties, gives Zhdanov, the Soviet's chiefideologist, the opportunity to condemn the Marshall Plan as a scheme to enslave Europe and an expression of an "aggressive, nakedly expansionist course," pursued by the USA, "the main force within the imperialist camp", in Europe.
The new resolution to reject the "expansionist appetites" of the capitalists leads to criticism of the conduct hitherto of the large Communist Parties in France and Italy. Whereas in the immediate postwar period they had pursued a popular front policy of mutual recovery, rejected demands for nationalization and contributed to internal stability through participation in govemment, they were now called an to remember the revolutionary foundations of the Communist movement and oppose US control of policymaking in their countries.
Zhdanov uses COMINFORM's foundation conference as a platform to clarify the Soviet-Communist position, claiming the "peace camp" representing the community of socialist states, is threatened by "aggressive American capitalism".

1.10.47
At a press conference General Clay condemns Colonel Tulpanov's welcoming address to the Second SED Party Congress.
Clay calls the speech the first public attack in front of a German audience by an official representative of one occupying power against another, he demands a public apology, but this is not forthcoming in the desired form the Soviet military administration.

4 to 8.10.47
The First Congress of German Authors, staged by the Association for the Protection of German Authors in conjunction with the Cultural Federation for the Democratic Revival of Germany, meets in Berlin.
A paper given by the American Melvin Lasky on "Cultural Freedom" in which he calls the USSR a totalitarian dictatorship provokes an angry response from the Soviet delegates.

28.10.47
General Clay, the American military governor in Germany, announces that, in view of the controversy surrounding Colonel Tulpanov's speech an 20 September, the US military government is to launch "Operation Talk Back".
The plan involves an information campaign to improve understanding of American policy and democratic ideas and to counter Soviet propaganda in Germany.

13.11.47
RIAS starts broadcasting a series on "Freedom against Totalitarianism" which opposes Soviet Communist policy with the official propaganda of the American military government.

25.11 to 15.12.47
The Fifth Conference of Foreign Ministers in London ends inconclusively and is adjourned with no date set for a future meeting since there seems no prospect of reaching agreement an policy on Germany.



1948

7 to 8.1.48
In Frankfurt-am-Main the American and British military governors inform the minister-presidents of the Anglo-American bizone states of their decisions regarding a reform of the bizone.
The proposals for reforming the administration of the bizone come under heavy fire in SMAD's "Tägliche Rundschau": In response, General Hay, the deputy US militarygovernor, makes it clear that Berlin is not a city in the Soviet occupied zone; the USA, he emphasizes, will always regard Berlin as the capital of Germany and remain in the city on a four-powerbasis until such time as Germany is unified.

25.2.48
In Prague the Communists engineer a government reshuffle which secures all the key positions for them and the left-wing of the Social Democrats.

17.3.48
"Gangsters at work", a brochure published by the SED with the approval of the Soviet military administration, is used by the deputy US military governor as grounds to accuse the SED before the coordinating committee of the Allied Control Council of waging psychological warfare involving Nazi methods against the US occupying power.

12.5.48
The US military government issues new denazification guidelines which apply to a more limited circle of people.

7.6.48
After the close of the Six-Power Conference in London, the London Recommendations, which propose the convening of a constituent assembly for a west German state, are published.

16.6.48
Following a dispute about the behaviour of Colonel Howley, the US commandant in Berlin, the Soviet delegation withdraws from the Allied Kommandatura, ending allied cooperation at commandant level in Berlin.

19.6.48
The "German People's Council", which exists only in the Soviert zone of occupation, declares that it represents the whole of Germany.

20.6.48
Currency reform in the three western zones.
On 18 June the military governors of France, Great Britain and the United States announce the introduction of a new currency in the Western zones of occupation administered by them. They inform the Soviet Commander-in-Chief in Germany, Marshall Sokolovsky, of the reform and declare that it does not extend to Berlin. On the following day Marshall Sokolovsky describes the currency reform in the Western zones as the final act which divides Germany and imposes wide-ranging restrictions an traffic between the zones.

23 to 24.6.48
Warsaw Conference of foreign ministers of eight eastern European states.
The conference endorses the rejection of the Marshall Plan; in a closing declaration the foreign ministers protest against the creation of an imperialist "Western bloc".

24.6.48
Currency reform in the Soviet zone of occupation; beginning of the blockade of West Berlin.
In the night of 23/24 June all communications by land or water with the Western sectors of the city are cut off. In addition the Soviet military govemment orders a halt to deliveries of food and energy supplies from the Soviet zone to the Western sectors. On the following day new money coupons marked with a "B" are issued in the Western part of the city.

27.6.48
The COMINFORM Conference in Bucharest excludes Yugoslavia and the COMINFORM states impose an economic blockade on it.
An SED declaration an the Yugoslav issue is published on 4 July on the front page of all the party newssheets. In the declaration the Unity Party indicates it is falling in with the change of course set by the Communist Party in the Soviet Union, condemning Tito and rejecting the thesis of "different paths" to socialism. The SED becomes involved in the process of Stalinization taking hold of the entire eastem bloc.
The stage is set to cleanse the party of "Titos agents" and other "hostile and degenerate elements".

3.7.48
In the Soviet zone of occupation the "Kasernierte Volkspolizei" (KVP or People's Police Force stationed in barracks) is formed.

21.8.48
Because of a growing number of incursions by police from the Soviet sector, the border between the British and Soviet sector at Potsdamer Platz in Berlin is secured with barbed wire.

1.9.48
In Bonn the Parliamentary Council is constituted.

19.10.48
At a meeting of the UN Security Council representatives of the three western powers call the blockade of Berlin a threat to peace.

22.10.48
The "German People's Council" unanimously accepts the draft for a "constitution of the German Democratic Republic".

*(extract from catalog: Germany in the cold war; 1945-1963, Berlin 1962)

 

 

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