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On this day in history, November 9, 1989, Berlin Wall falls, marking Cold War victory by US, western Allies

The Berlin Wall, which divided communist East Berlin from democratic West Berlin, fell amid confusion and joy on Nov. 9, 1989, effectively ending the Cold War.

The Berlin Wall, a foreboding vestige of the Cold War that divided communist East Berlin from democratic West Berlin, was opened and fell amid confusion, then joyous celebration on this day in history, Nov. 9, 1989. 

Jubilant Germans arrived over the next 24 hours with sledgehammers and axes to tear down the symbol of repression — a physical manifestation of the Soviet Union's fearsome but ultimately fragile "Iron Curtain."

"The fall of the Berlin Wall … was one of the most consequential events of the 20th century, exposing the Soviet Union as a corrupt, weak ‘empire’ and effectively ending the Cold War," the Heritage Foundation reported of the event. 

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"By January 1989, there was scarcely a ruble’s worth of difference between a Third World nation and a member of the Warsaw Pact, the group of Eastern and Central European nations that served at Moscow’s pleasure."

The Berlin Wall was born out of the entente between the Soviet Union and the western allies, the United States, United Kingdom and France, primarily, that joined forces to defeat Nazi Germany in World War II.

The Red Army overwhelmed Germany from the east in the spring of 1945; the U.S.-led allies swept over the Rhine River from the west. 

After its surrender in May, Germany was divided between a Soviet sector in the east, and American, British and French sectors in the west. They became separate nations — East Germany and West Germany — in 1949.

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Berlin, deep within Soviet-controlled East Germany, was similarly subdivided. West Berlin became a remote island of western democracy far behind what Winston Churchill dubbed the Iron Curtain, more than 100 miles from West Germany.

The uneasy alliance between the victorious World War II powers begin to disintegrate when the Soviet Union shut off transportation routes between West Berlin and the outside world in 1948. 

The U.S. responded with the Berlin Airlift — flying in necessities for two million residents of West Berlin across Soviet-controlled airspace. That effort was soon aided by the U.K. 

"At one point, Air Force and Navy planes were landing at Tempelhof Airport every 45 seconds," notes the U.S. Department of Defense in its history of the humanitarian mission.

"On Easter Sunday, April 17, 1949, the constant procession of planes managed to deliver 13,000 tons of cargo, including the equivalent of 600 railroad cars of coal — all in one day!"

West Berlin began to rise from the ruins of World War II and prosper in the 15 years after the war; it soon became a magnet for East Germans fleeing communism. 

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Soviet-backed East Germany responded by building a 100-mile wall around West Berlin in 1961. The proverbial Iron Curtain had become a real steel-and-concrete curtain symbolizing the repression of Soviet communism.

The division between the prosperity of the west and the economic failures and political repression behind the Iron Curtain soon become apparent to those leaving that Iron Curtain behind.

International pressure reached a fever point in June 1987 when President Ronald Reagan, speaking in West Berlin, dared Soviet leader MIkhail Gorbachev by name to "tear down this wall!"

Protests rapidly mounted among within the Soviet Bloc of Eastern Europe.

"In 1989, political changes in Eastern Europe and civil unrest in Germany put pressure on the East German government to loosen some of its regulations on travel to West Germany," the Imperial War Museum of London reports of the final days or the Berlin Wall.

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"At a press conference on 9 November, East German spokesman Günter Schabowski announced that East Germans would be free to travel into West Germany, starting immediately." 

His televised message, it turns out, was delivered by mistake. But the news, broadcast across western television, spread immediately. Thousands of Germans flooded the Brandenburg Gate, overwhelming guards who had no orders.

The images of joyous Germans reuniting, hugging, laughing and celebrating over the next 24 hours appeared to herald a hopeful new era in world history. 

Germany reunited less than a year later, in Oct. 1990. 

The Soviet Union collapsed the following year, In Dec. 1991.

The United States and its Western Allies had won the Cold War.

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