CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation

CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation ORDER NOW FOR CUSTOMIZED AND ORIGINAL ESSAY PAPERS ON CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation Template for 80s book report claim: CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation ________(book title)_____________________________________ by ______(author’s full name)___________________ is a (good/poor) supplement to National Geographic ‘s program The 80s the Decade that Made Us because _________________________________________________________________________________________________________. Convince your classmates that they should read a particular book about the 80s. Remember, you are not just saying a book is your favorite or that it’s a great read. You must argue how the book is a good supplement to the National Geographic programs. The Assignment: Choose a book from those posted in Assignments. One student per book, please. Prepare a visual (PowerPoint) presentation. No more than 8 slides: Title slide with title of book and your name Claim 2 specific examples from the book to support your claim — if you quote, you will need to provide a works cited slide Conclusion to support claim Be sure that you consider the objectives of the course and your classmates as the intended audience. Then your argument should show how your recommended book is a good or poor supplement. https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6c3tyl this is the first one attachment_1 Also by Greg Mitchell Tricky Dick and the Pink Lady: Richard Nixon vs. Helen Gahagan Douglas—Sexual Politics and the Red Scare, 1950 The Campaign of the Century: Upton Sinclair’s Race for Governor of California and the Birth of Media Politics Atomic Cover-up: Two U.S. Soldiers, Hiroshima & Nagasaki, and the Greatest Movie Never Made So Wrong for So Long: How the Press, the Pundits—and the President—Failed on Iraq Truth…and Consequences: Seven Who Would Not Be Silenced WITH ROBERT JAY LIFTON Who Owns Death?: Capital Punishment, the American Conscience, and the End of Executions Hiroshima in America: A Half Century of Denial WITH PASCAL J. IMPERATO Acceptable Risks WITH KERRY CANDAELE Journeys with Beethoven: Following the Ninth, and Beyond Frontispiece: Near Bernauer Strasse in the early 1960s. Copyright © 2016 by Greg Mitchell All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Crown, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. crownpublishing.com CROWN and the Crown colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Mitchell, Greg, 1947– Title: The tunnels: escapes under the Berlin Wall and the historic films the JFK White House tried to kill / Greg Mitchell. Description: First edition. | New York : Crown Publishing, 2016. Identifiers: LCCN 2016013452 (print) | LCCN 2016015896 (ebook) | ISBN 9781101903858 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781101903872 (paperback) | ISBN 9781101903865 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Berlin Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961–1989. | Tunnels—Germany—Berlin—History —20th century. | Escapes—Germany—Berlin—History—20th century. | Escapes—Germany (East) —History. | Political activists—Germany (West)—Biography. | Refugees—Germany (East)— Biography. | Documentary films—Censorship—United States—History—20th century. | Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917–1963—Political and social views. | National Broadcasting Company—History. | Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.—History. | BISAC: HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century. | HISTORY / Europe / Germany. | BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Presidents & Heads of State. Classification: LCC DD900 .M58 2016 (print) | LCC DD900 (ebook) | DDC 943/.1550875—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016013452. ISBN 9781101903858 Ebook ISBN 9781101903865 International edition ISBN 9780451498618 Frontispiece by Günter Zint Map by Mapping Specialists Cover design by Elena Giavaldi Cover photograph: Paul Schutzer/Getty Images v4.1 ep Contents Cover Also by Greg Mitchell Title Page Copyright Dedication Epigraph A Note to Readers Map Chapter 1: The Cyclist Chapter 2: Two Italians and a German Chapter 3: The Recruits Chapter 4: The President Chapter 5: The Correspondent Chapter 6: The Leaks Chapter 7: Schorr and the Secretary Chapter 8: Kiefholz Strasse Chapter 9: Prisoners and Protesters Photo Insert Chapter 10: The Intruder Chapter 11: The Martyr Chapter 12: Coming Up Short Chapter 13: Schönholzer Strasse CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation Chapter 14: Underground Film Chapter 15: Threats Chapter 16: Buried Tunnel Chapter 17: Sabotage Chapter 18: Coming Up for Air Epilogue Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography About the Author For Peter Fechter He only earns his freedom who daily conquers anew. —Goethe, Faust The Tunnels adheres strictly to the historical record and reflections by participants and witnesses. It incorporates no invented dialogue. Recreated scenes are not imagined but based in most cases on accounts of two or more participants. Unless otherwise attributed, anything between quotation marks is either actual dialogue (as recalled by a witness, often in an interview with the author) or from a memoir or other book, letter, oral history, court record, interrogation, White House transcript, or other document cited in the Notes. In some quotations I have corrected syntax or punctuation. All of the names are real. Addresses in Berlin, where street names are combined with “strasse” as one word (e.g., Schönholzerstrasse), are rendered here for clarity with “Strasse” or “Platz” or “Allee” as separate words. To an extent that surprised even the author, nearly all of the central events and episodes in this narrative (and surely the most exciting sections) are based on lengthy original interviews with nearly all of the key tunnelers, and several of the couriers and escapees; hundreds of pages of never-before-seen documents from the Stasi archives; and recently declassified State Department and CIA files. Detail left Detail right Harry Seidel loved action, speed, risk. He found them all in bicycle racing. Harry might have been an Olympic champion—still could be, probably—if he changed his attitude, for at twenty-three he remained in his leg-churning prime. But that wasn’t Harry. Once he set his mind on something he went full bore, and now he wasn’t chasing the next turn, other racers, or a finish line. Just months ago he had competed before thousands of cheering fans in raucous arenas. His picture appeared in newspapers. Children might call out to the lean, dark-haired sports hero when they recognized him cycling on the streets of Berlin. Now he toiled nearly alone. No one cheered, even if he deserved it for victories far beyond any of his racing exploits. That would be too dangerous. Since the emergence of the new barrier dividing Berlin on August 13, 1961, Harry’s wife, Rotraut, had worried about him. Whenever he set off on one of his secret missions she wondered if he would fail to come home, perhaps forever. Friends called Harry a draufgänger—a daredevil. They urged him to quit his death-defying deeds, return to cycling, and open that newspaper kiosk he coveted, but they might as well have been shouting into a wintry wind off the River Spree. In just the first months after the Wall arrived, Seidel had led his wife and son, and more than two dozen others, across the nearly impenetrable border to the West. And in Harry’s mind there were still countless others (that is, nearly anyone in the East) to rescue. Seidel had drawn only praise from the state during his cycling career, which had culminated in several East Berlin titles and two medals at the 1959 East German championships. Barely out of his teens, he quit his job as an electrician when the state began paying him to compete full-time. Even as he was being extolled in propaganda organs, Harry revealed himself as insufficiently patriotic when, unlike many others on the national team, he refused to ingest steroids to enhance his performance. He also failed to join the ruling Communist Party. This cost him any chance to make the country’s 1960 Olympic team, and his government stipend was canceled. Now, in early 1962, his reputation in East German secret police files as an escape helper matched his fame as a cyclist. The trade had not come without cost. Seidel’s first escape had been his own. CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation Just hours after the wire and concrete barrier materialized to brutally divide Berlin on the morning of August 13, Seidel left the apartment he shared with his wife, son, and mother-in-law in the Prenzlauer Berg district to explore the border by bicycle. South of the city center he found a spot where the barbed wire was low. With guards distracted by protesters, he shouldered his bike and leaped over the wire. It was a test more than anything. He figured he could return to the East just as easily—which he did, a few hours later, passing through a checkpoint. (It was still no problem going in that direction.) Harry being Harry, he felt confident he could jump the border again in the hours ahead. He wasn’t eager to abandon Rotraut and baby Andre, but he didn’t want to lose the newspaper delivery job he held in the West. Even if he did get stuck across the barrier he would surely find a way to get his family, including his mother, out soon. Later that day Harry considered another vault to the West, but it looked like the border guards were tightening their controls. Just after dark he wrapped his passport in plastic and dove into the Spree to swim the more than two hundred yards to the West. Coming up for air he nearly head-butted an East Berlin police boat. Treading water, he finally heard one of the cops say, “Let’s go, nothing to see here.” After they left he swam the rest of the way to the shore. While Seidel pondered how to rescue his family, one of Rotraut’s brothers tried to get them out using West German passports bearing photos that resembled them. When that brother attempted to smuggle the fake IDs through a checkpoint, they did not pass muster. Harry’s mother and mother-in-law were arrested. His wife remained free only because she had a baby to care for. Harry, enraged, vowed to retrieve his mother when she emerged from prison—and to spring his wife and son immediately. After another bicycle tour, this time along the Western side of the Wall, he determined that the safest place for a breakout was along Kiefholz Strasse, near Treptower, one of the city’s largest parks. There was nothing but barbed wire—no fencing or concrete—at the border there, and plenty of trees and bushes in the American-occupied zone for cover. To provide a blanket of darkness he shot out a couple of spotlights with an air rifle. On the evening of September 3, 1961, three weeks after the coming of the Wall, Rotraut, slender and blue-eyed, received an unexpected phone call at her apartment. Harry, calling from a café in the East, announced that he would pick her up in an hour. Rotraut, whose family had emigrated from Poland, was as anti-Communist as her husband and had been considering ways to escape on her own, so the invitation from Harry was most welcome. When he arrived he told her to dress in black, give their baby part of a sleeping pill, and follow him. Soon they were penetrating the underbrush along Kiefholz Strasse, where Harry had already cut the barbed wire. He crawled through, then stood and lifted the top wire. Rotraut passed him the baby and stepped into the West. Then with Harry she ran like hell to his Ford Taunus. Minutes later the three Seidels were relaxing in Harry’s apartment in the Schöneberg district. The ending was not so happy for two of Rotraut’s brothers, who were arrested on charges that they knew about or assisted the escape. Few in East Berlin imagined that any sort of wall—or “anti-Fascist protection barrier,” as East German leader Walter Ulbricht dubbed it (proving he had read his Orwell)—could last for years. But Harry Seidel was not among the optimistic. He believed the vast, ugly scar and police state were meant to be permanent. And what could the West do about it? Berlin was a fractured island floating precariously in the middle of the Communist state, one hundred miles from West Germany. Harry Seidel sensed that his adventures at the border had barely begun. For one thing, he still had to rescue his mother. — After years of shortages and rationing, East Berliners liked to quip that even when they could afford to buy apples and potatoes they often found worms in them—and “they charge more with the worms.” Another bitter joke: “Did you know that Adam and Eve were actually East Germans? CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation They had no clothes, they had to share an apple, and they were led to believe that they lived in a paradise.” Since shortly after World War II, a wavy line on the map had separated the two German states, even before they took the names German Democratic Republic (GDR) and Federal Republic of Germany (FRG). West Germany was divided into sectors occupied by the Americans, the French, and the British. The Soviet-dominated GDR was Germany’s junior half, in landmass, population, and increasingly, economic performance. In 1955, with its economy booming and jobs plentiful, West Germany achieved full sovereignty, even as the three occupying forces remained. The Communists in the East, meanwhile, scrambled to stem an embarrassing refugee crisis. From the late 1940s to 1961 some 2.8 million East Germans fled to the West. Most of this human tide, nearly 20 percent of the East German population and a high concentration of its skilled workers and professionals, exited via Berlin. GDR soldiers tightly policed the national boundary, but the sector border at Berlin, deep inside East Germany, remained porous. Levels of security varied wildly where the city’s four sectors met. Berlin remained, in most ways, one city, with interconnected telephone service, subway, train, tram, and bus lines. As many as sixty thousand East Berliners with official passes—teachers, doctors, engineers, lawyers, technicians, students—crossed into the West every weekday to work or attend classes at the Technical University or the Free University. They were known as grenzgänger—border crossers. Many never returned. By 1961, West Berlin’s population of 2.2 million doubled that of the Eastern sector. The Soviets grew alarmed. Premier Nikita Khrushchev considered West Berlin “a bone in my throat,” even as he also likened it to testicles he could squeeze whenever he wanted the West to scream. Khruschchev had issued an ultimatum in November 1958 giving the three Western nations six months to agree to make West Berlin a “free,” demilitarized zone, and then withdraw. The Allies rejected this. They held that the unnatural division of the city had to end in free elections in every sector and, ultimately, in reunification. Khrushchev backed down for the moment. Running for president in 1960, John F. Kennedy predicted Berlin would continue to be a “test of our nerve and our will.” The first Kennedy–Khrushchev summit took place in early June, 1961, in Vienna. The sixty-seven-year-old Soviet leader opened by calling Berlin “the most dangerous place in the world.” Testing the inexperienced JFK, he threatened to finally sign a long-promised “peace treaty” with East Germany, ending the four-power agreements on sharing Berlin. The East Germans would thereby gain control of all Western access to the city via air, rail, and autobahn. Again, the three Western nations rejected the idea. Yet a fumbling, intimidated Kennedy hinted that the United States now accepted the semipermanent division of Berlin, which only emboldened Khrushchev. As the summit ended, Kennedy privately called it “the worst thing in my life. He savaged me.” JFK told aides there was little America could do for the East Berliners—the sole goal now was to defend the interests of those already in the West. He assured a top aide, “God knows I’m not an isolationist, but it seems particularly stupid to risk killing a million Americans over an argument about access rights on an autobahn…or because the Germans want Germany reunified.” After all, he added, “We didn’t cause the disunity in Germany.” In a July 25, 1961, speech, Kennedy declared that the United States was not looking for another confrontation on Berlin. CC ENG 124 The Tunnels by Greg Mitchell Book Analysis Presentation Still, in light of the Soviets’ growing belligerence there, JFK ordered a military buildup. “We seek peace,” Kennedy announced, “but we shall not surrender.” West Berliners focused on another element of the speech: Kennedy seemed to suggest that while America would remain a strong defender of West Germany, it would let the Communists do pretty much whatever they wanted in the East. Amid the growing tensions, the number of East Germans arriving at West Berlin’s refugee center, a colony of twenty-five buildings at Marienfelde, spiked. The rate had averaged 19,000 a month in 1961; this more than doubled in early August. East Germans had never been allowed to participate in free elections but they were voting with their feet. Walter Ulbricht, the sixty-eight-year-old East German leader with a Lenin goatee, had seen enough. With Khrushchev’s blessing, he had weeks earlier ordered the stockpiling of massive quantities of barbed wire, fencing, and concrete blocks, his fantasy of a permanent barrier encircling West Berlin suddenly about to come to life. Somehow, despite their vast investment in intelligence operations in Berlin, the Americans knew little about any of this. President Kennedy’s daily CIA briefings mentioned nothing. Not that it likely mattered. American leaders were profoundly ambivalent about the prospect of any sealing of the border. Ulbricht took heart from a well-publicized July 30 television interview with J. William Fulbright, an influential Democratic U.S. senator. Asked whether the Communists might reduce tensions by barring refugee flight, Fulbright answered, “Next week, if they chose to close their borders, they could without violating any treaty. I don’t understand why the East Germans don’t close their border….I think they have a right to close it at any time.” West German media and American diplomats in Bonn, the capital, excoriated Fulbright. Some called him “Fulbricht.” President Kennedy said nothing in public. But at the White House he told an adviser, “Khrushchev is losing East Germany. He cannot let that happen. If East Germany goes, so will Poland and all of Eastern Europe. He will have to do something to stop the flow of refugees. Perhaps a wall. And we won’t be able to prevent it.” Khrushchev, meanwhile, assured Ulbricht, “When the border is closed, the Americans and West Germans will be happy.” He claimed that the American ambassador to Moscow had told him the increasing intensity of the refugee flight was “causing the West Germans a lot of trouble. So when we institute these controls, everyone will be satisfied.” Ulbricht assigned his security chief, Erich Honecker, to make sure the operation succeeded. Just after midnight on August 13 the first barbed wire was unrolled along major boulevards at the border, the first step in sealing off the ninety-six-mile circumference of West Berlin. Thousands of Soviet troops stood in reserve in case demonstrators in the West tried to stop it. Khrushchev had wisely advised Ulbricht to make sure the wire did not extend even one inch across the border. When Secretary of State Dean Rusk heard the news later that morning, he ordered that U.S. officials refrain from issuing statements beyond mild protests. Any American response at the border, he feared, would trigger an escalation on the Communist side. Then he left his office to attend a Washington Senators baseball game. U.S. diplomats hoped West Berlin mayor Willy Brandt would not hear about Rusk’s outing, nor the reaction of Foy Kohler, one of Rusk’s aides: “The East Germans have done us a favor.” More than ever, East Berlin was an armed camp, CBS correspondent Daniel Schorr reported that day. Troops were needed, he added, to hold back a “sullen population.” That night, Edward R. Murrow, the legendary newsman who had left CBS to direct the administration’s U.S. Information Agency (USIA), cabled his friend Jack Kennedy from Berlin, comparing Ulbricht’s move to Hitler’s marching into the Rhineland. He warned JFK that if he didn’t show resolve he might face a crisis of confidence both in West Germany and around the globe. Residents in the East had adapted to the arbitrary division of their city, but the character of that cleaving had changed for the worse that morning of August 13. Tens of thousands suddenly lost their jobs in the West or a chance to complete their studies, as well as freedom to visit friends, family, and lovers. Finishing their routes in East Berlin, the UBahn subway and S-Bahn elevated trains now discharged passengers at the border. On August 14, Kennedy nevertheless told aides that “It’s not a very nice solution, but a wall is a hell of a lot better than a war.” In the same discussion, he said, “This is the end of the Berlin crisis. The other side panicked—not we. We’re going to do nothing now because there is no alt … Get a 10 % discount on an order above $ 100 Use the following coupon code : NURSING10

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