The Cold War Checkpoints of Berlin | Then & Now

It is now over 30 years since the Berlin Wall came down, and German reunification was completed after over 4 decades of the partition of Germany. It is easy to forget now how we lived in Europe only a generation ago, during The Cold War . This 45 minute video re-visits some of the most iconic Cold War sites in Berlin, principally the series of militarised checkpoints that allowed authorised Allied/Soviet Military and West German citizens (and only a very small number of East German Citizens) to cross between East and West. Where you still risked being shot dead for trying to climb the wall as late as 1989.
These were known by their phonetic alphabet coded names: Checkpoint Alpha, Checkpoint Bravo and the famous Checkpoint Charlie.
In this video we also explore the history of Berlin's shady past as the epicentre for Cold War Espionage and Black Ops so we will visit the infamous Bridge of Spies (The Glienicke Bridge) near Potsdam, made famous in almost every Hollywood Spy movie from 'Funeral in Berlin' with Michael Cain in 1966, to Atomic Blonde with Charlize Theron in 2017. of visit belined the wall where you would be stalked by the Stasi (East German Intelligence goons).
in 1961 Berlin's Checkpoint Charlie became the first flashpoint of a potential World War 3 between the Warsaw Pact and Nato as American and Soviet Tanks faced off against each other. 20 years later in 1981 a provocative visit by US President Ronald Reagan would take the Cold War back to Sub Zero relations.
This video combines present day footage with archival and historical images to not only tell the history of these sites but also to see how they look today.
Chapters:
2:35 Glienicke Bridge (The Bridge of Spies)
10:25 Remnants of the Berlin Wall today
15:56 Allied Checkpoint Charlie
24:12 Allied Checkpoint Alpha
28:55 Marienborn Grenztruppen Garrison
30:31 The BT-4x4 Border Command Tower
33:24 Marienborn DDR/Soviet Border Complex
37:43 Allied Checkpoint Alpha
40:40 Panzerdenkmal (Soviet War memorial)
42:00 Drewitz DDR/Soviet Border Post
43:35 My Summary
#berlinwall #eastgermany #coldwar #soviet

Пікірлер: 517

  • @charlesdarks8850
    @charlesdarks8850 Жыл бұрын

    Man you're better than BBC.

  • @bubba842

    @bubba842

    Жыл бұрын

    That's not too hard these days.

  • @mjfreespirit

    @mjfreespirit

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen

  • @shenghan9385

    @shenghan9385

    Жыл бұрын

    That's an understatement

  • @SuperForged

    @SuperForged

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bubba842 perhaps but let it not detract from the point that these videos are outstanding.

  • @OldSonyMan

    @OldSonyMan

    10 ай бұрын

    The bbc has more 'propaganda' than the DDR ever had !

  • @javimaury5632
    @javimaury5632 Жыл бұрын

    I am a French citizen and was on military duty in Berlin in 1980 at the Quartier Napoleon. I did my duty in Tegel and in Spandau. I find this video very well done and it gives me goodebumps thinking of the time I lived there. Many years later, I returned to Berlin in 1992 as a "tourist", lived in Potsdam and in Köpenick in the old east part of Berlin. Many many visions came back to my eyes and memory and despite being had times, I will never regret my time then. Then I visited the STASI HQ and the Oranienburg Sachsehausen KZ. I left Berlin loaded with deep emotions. Once in a while I return to Cologne where I have very good friends who live there. Living in Spain now and been seriously disabled, I have a hard time traveling long distance, but, as soon I could, I would return to Berlin in a New York minute. Thanks. X

  • @Konstantin2004

    @Konstantin2004

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your memories!

  • @pascalgotlib1781

    @pascalgotlib1781

    Жыл бұрын

    Aujourd'hui tout le monde regrette la RDA ou la vie était bien facile et paisible qu'elle RFA.

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    Javi I was there same time as you, 1982 with US Army I remember so much and the evil and darkness I can never forget, yet I was a free man. God bless you I pray for your strength. And yes I would like to visit one more time

  • @SheerMagnetismDarling007

    @SheerMagnetismDarling007

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you 🙏 for sharing your memories. I salute 🫡 you sir !

  • @turtle19dad

    @turtle19dad

    7 ай бұрын

    I wanna go back too.

  • @Hunter_Nebid
    @Hunter_Nebid Жыл бұрын

    I was on my first tour as a young army spook in Bavaria when the Wall fell. It all happened with incredible speed and it was amazing to see history with my own eyes. Sadly enough, it appears that any lessons from the Cold War have been forgotten by the fools currently running the planet. God save us all.

  • @akosbarati2239

    @akosbarati2239

    11 ай бұрын

    The Wall falling was so much unplanned that an Unofficial Coworker as the Stasi like to call them requested an extraction for December just days before it fell. Unfortunately, the HV-A being way better in destroying their records, it wasn't found out who it was.

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree with you

  • @gerdokurt

    @gerdokurt

    9 ай бұрын

    Sadly enough, it also appears that many people have forgotten that we cant allow a re-roll-out of a criminal russian sowjet union regime, because it means suffering, death and the end of freedom for millions of europeans born on the wrong side of putins new borders.

  • @SheerMagnetismDarling007

    @SheerMagnetismDarling007

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes very well said. Our so called public servants are taking orders from banker elites !

  • @davidsradioroom9678
    @davidsradioroom9678 Жыл бұрын

    I am proud of my little part of bringing down the wall. We were in Berlin three days before the Checkpoint Charlie building was removed and put into the museum. I, too, have warm memories of my time in Germany and would go back in a heartbeat.

  • @gmckemie4281
    @gmckemie4281 Жыл бұрын

    Andy thank you for the research you put in supporting your recording and editing of the video. I was stationed in Germany in the mid 1980s and drove the route from Helmstad to Berlin through the checkpoints and we walked through the Checkpoint Charlie in and out of East Berlin. The thing that was impressed on Allied drivers of privately owned vehicles was to pay attention to your speed when going from checkpoints A and B. If you got to Checkpoint B too fast you’d get a fine for speeding; if it took you too long to get to Checkpoint B, you had to defend yourself from accusations of spying. Had cruise control, set it 62 mph and arrived in the middle of the accepted timeframe.

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    I was the ammo sgt 2/6 Infantry Battalion Berlin and made that same drive many times. So evil worlds largest prison. I went in also to the east via checkpoint Charlie. None of the east germans believed me when I told them I was American. So sad the way they were forced to live

  • @SurvivingTheApocalypse
    @SurvivingTheApocalypse Жыл бұрын

    I am good friends with the last American NCOIC of Checkpoint Charlie (Michael Rafferty). He was there on the day the border was opened and the day the checkpoint closed and took some amazing pictures. Really nice guy.

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    Wish I could hear his stories. I was stationed there 1982 McNair Barracks Zehlendorf

  • @TheByard
    @TheByard Жыл бұрын

    I worked for a construction company in the UK, the site manager was a former pilot and took part in the Berlin Airlift, he would tell me stories of how they flew in food, clothes and even bags of coal. Years later working in Denmark I'd visit the German Christmas markets a short ferry trip away at Lubec. The wall was starting to come down at that time and the next visit we sailed across to Rostock and drove on dual carriageway towards Berlin, enroute we came to a wide section of concrete road, this turned out to be an airstrip and there were buildings half hidden in the trees. The whole area was very aery and like the TV drama series of the 60s dark forests with a mist coming through the trees. The wall was being dismantled and people were collecting lumps of it, mine is somewhere?? My second visit most of the wall had gone, I took a boat tour and the guide described how East German guards would strafe the river if they though swimmers were trying to swim under the surface to escape. On my third visit it was funny to see that though the East and West police forces had joined, the West German police drove Mercedes cars, the East Germans drove Trabants.

  • @jamesmatthew9404
    @jamesmatthew9404 Жыл бұрын

    Just watched this. Absolutely superb. I was born in West Germany in 1976 and spent alot of years living there. As a young child I had no idea of the threat. Only as I grew older and served in the British Army as an adult it's frightening to think of what could have happened. Absolutely loved watching this video and thank you for uploading it. Brings back happy memories 👍

  • @jewelianwest2324
    @jewelianwest2324 Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous video. As a Canadian exchange student in Winsen Luhe in 1980, one of 30 Canadian students across West Germany, we traveled to West Berlin for a week with a day in East Berlin. I was 18 and had no idea of the delicate planning behind this. Thank you for showing the check points we went through, landmarks and sites, the original footage was amazing. At the time I knew of East Germany and the Wall but only later appreciated its frightening reality.

  • @brianfreeman8290
    @brianfreeman8290 Жыл бұрын

    I went back in '94 for the 25 anniversary. Our hotel was a former honeytrap in what had been the East. I visited the museum at CPCharlie. The hot air balloon that some enterprising escapee had built to get his family out fascinated me. As I studied it, a weird and dishevelled old man was shuffling about. Eager for first hand accounts of the bad days, I struck up a conversation with him. He was, it transpired, the man who had built and flown the balloon !

  • @fritzfrostick6910

    @fritzfrostick6910

    Жыл бұрын

    What 25 anniversary was in '94?

  • @akosbarati2239

    @akosbarati2239

    11 ай бұрын

    To be precise, there were two, a successful, and an unsuccessful attempt to leave the GDR in a balloon. The one Disney made a movie about flew 2 families, not one;, though the German version is more accurate. One of the men got severely injured and while he was unconscious, the other guy sold their story as him being the sole hero. The other attempt happened shortly before the fall of the Wall, and technically the husband arrived in West Berlin if you call falling out of your basket to your death as an arrival. He still managed to bring his wife to safety, who was detained by the Stasi. His body was returned. The real jarring thing missing from Andy's video is that the Stasi left no rest, even for the dead. Marienborn had a special mortuary garage to verify the person they transport to bury into West Germany is actually dead, and not a refugee taking their place. When the Stasi collected returned bodies or bodies killed in the death strip, especially after 1972, they sent them to a crematorium to cremate them asap with the money they had found on them.

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    I met him in 1983 in west Berlin while serving with US Army. I have a photo with him and the fabric from his freedom balloon. Let us never forget

  • @michaelwhalen2442

    @michaelwhalen2442

    9 ай бұрын

    I saw the balloon in March 1981 in the museum called "The House at Check Point Charlie." @@berlinbear11b18

  • @akilanelango8997

    @akilanelango8997

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fritzfrostick6910 I think he meant 2014.

  • @SabineSchwark
    @SabineSchwark Жыл бұрын

    I just finished watching your very informative video. I was in West and East Berlin in 1971. And I was at the Drewitz border crossing. I had forgotten after all those years. I just checked my old passport, and there it is! I have stamps for Drewitz on June 6 and June 12, 1971. We were American students studying in Munich and did a trip to Berlin. And, yes the border crossing was nerve-wracking. Thank for your work in presenting a vivid recollection of what that time was really like. I get choked up every time I think about it.

  • @garycastle3709
    @garycastle37099 ай бұрын

    Spent about 5 months in Berlin as a young soldier from Sept 1976 - Feb 1977. West Berlin was a real eye opener to life. But also had its sinister side. I had a brilliant time there and learnt a lot too. I think the Brit sector was the best part of Berlin at the time. I briefly revisited Berlin in 1982 to run the Marathon. It hadn't changed much. I went back in 1984 and 86. Again to run the Marathon. The finish point by that time had changed to the Olympic Stadium. What an uplifting experience. It was a lot better than finishing on the Ku Dam by the Blue Church. I also visited the East in December 1976. What a culture shock, and as stated in the video. In uniform and had to be back by 23:59 hrs. It was my first overseas posting. Great video brought back a number of good memories.

  • @michaelwhalen2442
    @michaelwhalen24429 ай бұрын

    Andy, OUTSTANDING history lesson. I was a US Airman stationed at the Rhein Main Air Base in Frankfurt from '79 to '81. I was able to visit Berlin for five days in March of 1981. Thanks!

  • @wasp6594
    @wasp6594 Жыл бұрын

    I was stationed in West Berlin for six years during the seventies. This video brought back a lot of memories of familiar sights. It also showed me a lot of things I did not know, partly because I was not allowed in East Berlin. Checkpoint Bravo brought back a lot of memories, having gone through several times en route to Helmstedt and West Germany. Happy days.

  • @danshut1981
    @danshut1981 Жыл бұрын

    I love how you can just discover amazing content like this on KZread! I remember visiting checkpoint Charlie and Berlin 88, and remember how bleak it looked to the east, and the scars of the battle of Berlin were still obvious there, incredibly evocative to see it again, and agree, gives you goosebumps seeing it again!

  • @umeng2002
    @umeng2002 Жыл бұрын

    Berlin is such a fascinating city. Living there in the cold war must have been something else.

  • @paulslavin1465
    @paulslavin1465 Жыл бұрын

    I was 11 years old when the wall came down, I remember it happening, I have always been fascinated by the Cold War. This video is an absolute gem, thank you.

  • @oldsguy354
    @oldsguy354 Жыл бұрын

    Very impressive presentation Andy. I was a US Army MP stationed in Berlin at the time of Reagan's 1982 visit. I wasn't working at Charlie the of Reagan's visit, but I spent plenty of time there, and I was working there the day the scenes for the movie Octopussy were filmed and I really do appear in the final cut. I remember the checkpoint area exactly as it appeared during Reagan's visit. It's changed so much that I wouldn't know where/what it was if you dropped me in the middle of it today. Bravo on the other hand, looked mostly like it did 40 years ago, except there's no place to pull over and park to clear the checkpoint. I can still remember looking at traffic coming into the city standing at the window in the gantry over the road. I'm glad that you mentioned some of the victims that were killed trying to escape East Germany. I'm afraid young people don't know, or don't believe just how common it was for people to be shot to death attempting to cross the border. I don't know the numbers but gun fire in the Deadman zone was very common, at least away from the downtown area, and I don't want that tragic fact forgotten. Thanks again for the great presentation and the walk down memory lane. :)

  • @CraigAllison-vv8lp

    @CraigAllison-vv8lp

    Жыл бұрын

    I was there that day as well, probably standing close to you watching. Craig Allison 287mp co 1981-83

  • @berlinbear11b18

    @berlinbear11b18

    11 ай бұрын

    Wish I could sit down and have a coffee with you. Were you in Andrew's? McNair 82/83

  • @richardhill6125
    @richardhill61259 ай бұрын

    I spent 2 years, 7 months, and 13 days as a US Army MP (Jun74 to Jan77) and I spent many hours on duty at Checkpoint Charlie. I also worked on a US Army Patrol Boat in 1976. We patrolled the US sector of the Wansee and we saw the Glienecke Bridge up close and personal many times while "sailing" along on duty. I did get to visit Checkpoint Bravo once while on duty and was shocked at how forward the female British MPs were. Oh Behave!! So many memories of my time in Berlin and I just wish I could have been there when The Wall came down!!!!

  • @richardhill6125

    @richardhill6125

    9 ай бұрын

    Adding a few bits. While being on the MP Patrol Boat on the Wansee, we would sometimes go into the British sector and visit the Canoe Club which was a recreation area for Brits. We became very good friends with the lads who worked there. They were Royal Green Jackets and we invited them to attend our Bicentennial 4th of July Celebration at Andrews Barracks where we were billeted. So much fun. We had more than a couple of impromptu beach parties at the Canoe Club that summer, too. Like I said...so many fond memories! I hope your memories were just as good.

  • @wwmeloy
    @wwmeloy Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your contribution to liberating those in the East. Also prayers to those who were killed and had family trapped in East Berlin during those horrible years. 🙏🏼

  • @cjedgerly
    @cjedgerly Жыл бұрын

    As a 17 year old US high school student "on holiday" in West Germany during the summer of 1989, I had the pleasure of spending 4 nights in West Berlin. My buddy and i (he was 16 - parents did not come with us) went to East Berlin for a day through the Friedrichstrasse Bahnhof. It was an interesting experience to say the least! Thanks for another great video!

  • @herosstratos
    @herosstratos Жыл бұрын

    36:41 In the Grenzübergangsstellen / GüSt (border checkpoints), the people wearing the uniform of the border troops were - with the exception of the commander of the border checkpoint - _not_ members of the Grenztruppen (border troops), but of the Staatssicherheitsdienst (state security service) of the GDR.

  • @33rdusa
    @33rdusa Жыл бұрын

    Great presentation! I was with the US Army in Heidelberg and went through Checkpoint Charlie in 1972. An unforgettable experience. Going across the death zone under the watch tower and into the grim East. Most buildings still had bullet and shell damage. Alexander Platz had been rebuilt and transformed into a soulless open space with a tall tower. No goods there were worth buying. I felt sorry for the people of East Berlin when I was free to walk out and they weren't. I realized why the US Army was still in Germany so many years after the war. Man's inhumanity to man was still very present.

  • @geirjensen4922
    @geirjensen4922 Жыл бұрын

    "The Germany I knew no longer exists" - same for me, and hence I truly appreciate your video, brings back memories and also refreshes my memory. For some reason I had a memory that the T-34 tank memorial was on the opposite side of the highway ...Thanks for the incredible work you've done

  • @AndyMcloone

    @AndyMcloone

    Жыл бұрын

    My pleasure!

  • @user-xm8sc3wn7n
    @user-xm8sc3wn7n Жыл бұрын

    The Glienicker Brücke is actually in a gorgeous area of Berlin/Potsdam. The scenery is pretty stunning and the bridge really fun to walk around on and see where the split was. Really loved visiting it.

  • @user-mw4wv8nk8b

    @user-mw4wv8nk8b

    9 ай бұрын

    It is as you say a lovely area. But..in 2005 when I was there with my husband, fluent German speaker, the locals were not particularly friendly. We crossed the Bridge, for old times sake, reminiscing about how it used to be, then visited a local cafe. On hearing us chatting in English a youngish man approached and questioned us about who we were, why were we there, etc. We politely refused to answer as he was extremely unfriendly. Along with his leatherclad friends he hurled abuse at us in German and they spat in our direction. Needless to say we made a hasty retreat, followed by jeers and lots of gestures! So even in 2005 not all East Germans were pleased to be 'liberated'. We did enjoy the rest of our walk down memory lane though.

  • @monsterajr1
    @monsterajr1 Жыл бұрын

    This was excellent. I watched all night from the US as the wall came down. Then in January 1992 I visited Berlin to see the remnants of the divide before it was all but erased. We drove up from Munich, stopped in Liepzig (horrible grey city then) for a quick break and ended up in Berlin for 2 nights. Those images of the old east/west divide are still with me.

  • @garymathena2125
    @garymathena2125 Жыл бұрын

    I was stationed in West Berlin from 1979-81. The tanks shown in 1962, is Company F 40th Armor. I was also in the Infantry, and did many patrols along the border. I would never have believed the wall would have come down in my lifetime. The supposed fall of communism proved that freedom cannot be held back. I also had the pleasure of training with Her Majesties units stationed in West Berlin. The 17th Royal Hussars, The Cold stream guards and the Royal Irish Rangers. Great memories, thanks for the video.

  • @RebelRebelious
    @RebelRebelious8 ай бұрын

    I've lived in the former east for almost ten years now and find Cold War era history fascinating. I'm really enjoying your videos.

  • @neilfoster814
    @neilfoster8146 ай бұрын

    I'm pleased you mentioned the shooting of Peter Fechter. He bled to death over a period of around an hour because neither the East Germans or the Americans dared to help him (he was at the base of the wall on the west side) due to the fear of sparking an international incident. The west did drop him some bandages, but what could he do, he was paralysed by a bullet through the pelvis and bleeding profusely. After he passed away, the Grenztruppen did recover his corpse, but it was never returned to his family.

  • @bassman19944
    @bassman19944 Жыл бұрын

    Very nice video, thank you. One small correction: at 24:09 the Allied Museum is not at Tempelhof, but on Clayallee in Dahlem, at the site of the former US military cinema, the Outpost Theater (a landmarked building) and the former Nicholson Library building. There are plans to move the museum to one of the hangars of the old Tempelhof Airport, but the museum itself says that this is all in the planning stage and that it could take up to ten years before the move to Tempelhof actually happens.

  • @nigeldunkley2986

    @nigeldunkley2986

    Жыл бұрын

    Some Allied Museum stuff has been already at Tempelhof for years (the British VIP Range Rover, the Ferret FSC, the AMX 30, the 432, etc)

  • @phillip-nielalbertyn2188
    @phillip-nielalbertyn21888 ай бұрын

    Hats of to you Andy!!! This is so informative and interesting. Remembering crying when the wall came down in 1989.Fist vist to Berlin in 1995 and just got back from Berlin (Sept 2023) Can not wait to return to go and check out all the places you pointed out in this video. Again thank you so much for sharing your experience with us!

  • @wushock97
    @wushock97 Жыл бұрын

    It’s hard for me to imagine the Brandenburg Gate without a wall. I got to see it from both West and East Berlin in 1987, but wasn’t allowed to get close to it on the Eastern side of Berlin. It’s interesting to see how different Berlin is today.

  • @CCAFS617
    @CCAFS617 Жыл бұрын

    Wish I still had my mom's old pictures of Berlin. She would've loved seeing videos like this. Could only imagine the chills you had walking along the old wall even in present time. I had a small chill when I took my daughter to the old Patten museum at Fort Knox, KY where they had a small section of the wall compared only seeing the pictures my mom had

  • @NOLAgenX
    @NOLAgenX Жыл бұрын

    I loved that you included the bit about the Military Liaison Missions crossing the Gleinicke Brücke. We had a neighbor a few doors down from us, Major Arthur Nicholson who was shit and killed by the Soviets while out on his MLM mission. It’s a fascinating part of history, the legal spying, that I think should not be forgotten. Excellent videos!

  • @NOLAgenX

    @NOLAgenX

    Жыл бұрын

    Oops, “shot”, not what made it to YT. 😅

  • @nigeldunkley2986

    @nigeldunkley2986

    Жыл бұрын

    Where did you and for that matter, Nick Nicholson and his wife KAren and young daughter live? I went there and for the life of me cant remember where it was. I remember the USMLM Mission House well but the memory has a few fuzzy areas! Many thanks, Nigel (Brixmis mid 80s contemporary )

  • @NOLAgenX

    @NOLAgenX

    9 ай бұрын

    @@nigeldunkley2986Sorry to just get back to you. Good old YT did not notify me. Andy’s video came up in my feed though. We lived off the Dreipfuhl in the small housing area surrounding it, near Oskar Helene Heim station. We just called it the Duckpond.

  • @barryleslie7727
    @barryleslie7727 Жыл бұрын

    I'm flying out to Berlin for a short holiday tomorrow. This has given me a sobering account of the recent history. I was aware of the restrictions and one of my friends is a retired soldier, who talks with good humour of being stationed in Germany. I will bear in mind a lot of the information from the video when I'm walking in the city

  • @lizblows7101

    @lizblows7101

    10 ай бұрын

    I went there this year. So beautiful. You’ll love it.

  • @paulp575
    @paulp575 Жыл бұрын

    I was stationed at Tempelhof Central Airport (US Air Force) from summer 1984 to summer 1988. I clearly remember those checkpoints. Thank you for an awesome video especially with the historical views.

  • @pigunderaroof
    @pigunderaroof3 ай бұрын

    Every now and then you can find an absolute gem to watch on KZread. Wanted to see something made about the old Cold War remnants for a long time. Cheers

  • @mrgarland5210
    @mrgarland5210 Жыл бұрын

    Really amazing and insightful documentary mate. I am the same age as that poor lad shot and killed trying to cross in 1989. Thanks for sharing all this. Really puts perspective.

  • @lynnmcmillan662
    @lynnmcmillan662 Жыл бұрын

    I just loved this video. It brought back memories of places and events I lived through. As a canadian I travelled the route from west Germany thru to West Berlin. We crossed at check point Charlie into east Berlin and thankfully back. I remember standing by the Brandenburg gate next to the wall and being warned by an uncle that I could be shot being that close. All of these memories were in 1989. Again thank you

  • @hobsdigree2
    @hobsdigree2 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for uploading this. Great video.

  • @trz5rtzrtz45zfghfghrt4
    @trz5rtzrtz45zfghfghrt4 Жыл бұрын

    As an East-Berliner, born in the late 70ies, it's interesting to see the view from this perspective. As a kid, the wall never felt like a threat to me (us kids), more somewhat mysterious (from knowing that all the cool stuff from the West is available behind it) ;)... i was 11 when the wall came down. It's crazy how Berlin has changed since then.

  • @onechopbuddy3849
    @onechopbuddy38494 ай бұрын

    This is brilliant, my dad was in the army and posted to Berlin in the late 70s and one of my earliest memory as a child at about 3 or 4 was going up a viewing platform to look over the wall into east Berlin

  • @jpotter2086
    @jpotter208610 ай бұрын

    FANTASTIC video and tour. Thank you!

  • @siegfriedgleich4487
    @siegfriedgleich4487 Жыл бұрын

    Dear Sir, I’m so very thankful for your video. I am a West German, born in 1956; I will never forget 1989 and the following years. I very often visited the DDR/GDR, because my mother was born nearby Erfurt. Again, thanks a lot for this video.

  • @flimsedom
    @flimsedom Жыл бұрын

    In 2015 I sneaked close to the filming set on the Glienicker Brücke. I‘m a history teacher and as I saw it it was like you said Hollywood bollocks. As a retired Sergeant of the Bundeswehr I also asked myself if they had any military advisor on the film set. Slumpy uniforms, some unnecessary armored vehicles, a wooden tower on the bridge which was completely unnecessary since on the other side the Grenztruppen could watch deeply from Klein-Glienicke into Berlin West… Anyway: Thank you for your amazing videos and for your service in Germany! Kind regards once again from Potsdam. 😊

  • @AndyMcloone

    @AndyMcloone

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks, and sorry for my mispronunciation of Gleinicke 🫢

  • @flimsedom

    @flimsedom

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AndyMcloone No need to be sorry about that. I don’t expect non-native speakers to pronounce words like „Glienicke“ or „Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursachergebrauchsanweisungsheftchenheftklammer“ properly. 😉

  • @simonh6371

    @simonh6371

    Жыл бұрын

    So I bet you hated the 'Deutschland 89'' and ''Deutschland 83'' TV miniseries even more, they were full of glaring errors which even a non-German like me could spot.

  • @flimsedom

    @flimsedom

    Жыл бұрын

    @@simonh6371 I never watched it but I read about the plot. This was absolute bollocks. Never ever was a GDR borderguard chosen by the stasi to infiltrate anything. The stasi got their spies from within and was looking for financially or psychologically unstable individuals. A GDR soldier would have uncovered himself simply by using military terminology. When I served in the Bundeswehr, I always could tell who served in the east simply by talking to them.

  • @dinsdaleseven1627
    @dinsdaleseven162710 ай бұрын

    Thank you for posting this video.

  • @radiostephan
    @radiostephan Жыл бұрын

    I watched your ‘Across The Iron Curtain in the 1980s’ video last night, now here I am on my lunch break watching this. Absolutely great content! I learned a lot. Thanks for the first hand insight, Andy!

  • @garyoliver6702
    @garyoliver6702 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating, thank you. I drive tour buses around Europe and frequently visited DDR during the 80’s …challenging at the time. For East Berlin, we would cross via the southern corridor near Eisenach and enter the city from the south. I still drive tour groups to Berlin and struggle to convey just how different it was just three decades ago, but your videos are extremely interesting and helpful to me. Well done… Bravo (…not forgetting Alpha and Charlie too 😂)

  • @Hongaars1969
    @Hongaars1969 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant stuff….thank you for sharing and keeping the memories alive.

  • @johnbuckleymcquaid
    @johnbuckleymcquaid Жыл бұрын

    Excellent documentary. Thank you for making and posting it!

  • @theoldfunker
    @theoldfunker Жыл бұрын

    Many Many thanks. Livlng in West Berlin in the early 70s the borders never worried me, you knew they were there and you had to go and look. The view into East would show westerners how better life in West Berlin was.

  • @Gudi102
    @Gudi102 Жыл бұрын

    Great video!! Thanks for posting it!

  • @berlinbear11b18
    @berlinbear11b1811 ай бұрын

    US Army Berlin 82/83. Being a free man in the worlds largest prison has impacted me forever. I love freedom Thank you Andy. Wish a bunch who served could meet there before we are all gone God Bless

  • @BarneyLeith
    @BarneyLeith Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating! Many thanks for putting this together.

  • @Desert-edDave
    @Desert-edDave Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating to see areas I heard of as a child on TV. To see how they were then and today and to learn of some history is very interesting. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @markusmybusiness2141
    @markusmybusiness21415 ай бұрын

    I didn’t know this was the video I’d been looking for for years. An excellently produced and clear explanation of everything. For years I wondered about certain aspects of where the walls started and finished and how people got from East to West and Vice Versa. You explained so much. Congratulations on a wonderful film. Others should take note. Best 45 mins I’ve spent on the internet in months. Thanks.

  • @stiffscoffin
    @stiffscoffin Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. I was stationed in Berlin 89-91 and this rekindled some fantastic memories. My favourite posting 👏

  • @robertbrodie5183

    @robertbrodie5183

    5 ай бұрын

    same here 86 to 92 hhc 4/502 RATT then bde commo

  • @kaelenleckie3031
    @kaelenleckie3031 Жыл бұрын

    Man it sucks that you’re content is hidden by KZread, you need way more views

  • @johnphillips3475
    @johnphillips3475 Жыл бұрын

    This is excellent - I've always found it hard to find info about Checkpoints Alpha and Bravo, and this gave me exactly what I wanted to know. Thank you so much!

  • @AJGeeTV
    @AJGeeTV Жыл бұрын

    Hey Andy, Thanks for making this superb video. As a civilian in the 1980s, I had a fascination with Eastern Europe and managed to visit most countries, East Germany and Belin being the most fascinating. I had run-ins with the Grenztruppen, the Stasi, and ended up being held on many occasions. In Drewitz, in Potsdam when I illegally to the S-Bahn from East Berlin on a day visa, and at Friedrichstrasse when I arrived from Alexanderplatz after midnight to cross Checkpoint Charlie. I've not really returned since those heady days, and your video is so interesting and brings back thos crazy memories. Thanks again from another ANDY 🙂

  • @Mark-yy2py
    @Mark-yy2py11 ай бұрын

    Hello, fellow “Cold War” warrior! I was in the U.S. Air Force stationed in Germany from 1981-1984, and 1985 to 1988. I missed the fall of the wall by a year. Spent much time in West Berlin in TCA, and was no stranger to the corridor from Helmstedt to West Berlin. Yes, Europe has changed quite a bit since then, but we can always know that we did our duty well during that time.

  • @darrellbordeaux6132
    @darrellbordeaux6132 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @blottonthelandscape
    @blottonthelandscape8 ай бұрын

    Great video. Watched it all. Thanks !

  • @andrewdolinskiatcarpathian
    @andrewdolinskiatcarpathian10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for bringing the past alive.

  • @antiglobaljoel532
    @antiglobaljoel53210 ай бұрын

    Excellent. Thanks so much for sharing.

  • @strongbowism
    @strongbowism Жыл бұрын

    The Cold War era has fascinated me for a very long time and I have watched many documentaries concerning this period in time. Your video is brilliant and informative showing me a number of facts I had not read about or viewed elsewhere. Thank You. Subscribed👍

  • @nebr72
    @nebr72 Жыл бұрын

    This was fascinating. Thanks much for preparing and posting it. I was stationed twice in Germany and made many trips to divided Berlin. This not only brought back memories but was a good reminder to never take freedom for granted. Very well done presentation.

  • @93X777
    @93X7776 ай бұрын

    Great video, thank you!

  • @martinevans7090
    @martinevans70909 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating - thank you!

  • @davemaier7
    @davemaier7 Жыл бұрын

    Outstanding - thank you very much!

  • @fraserdavidson278
    @fraserdavidson278 Жыл бұрын

    Another excellent video, thanks!

  • @angelajackson-smith3067
    @angelajackson-smith306710 ай бұрын

    In 1981 (I was 13) I went on a school trip for two weeks called ‘Behind the Iron Curtain’. I vividly remember crossing Checkpoint Charlie at midnight on a train on our way to Brest, Russia. The tour guides told us beforehand to have our passports ready, no laughing, giggling or anything. I was right by the door and I remember lots of shouting and banging doors and then this enormous jackboot kicking the door open! It was terrifying. We got to our hotel under darkness. In the morning we drove through East Berlin. I thought we’d gone through a time warp to 1950. I will never forget those memories. It is easy to forget the value of your freedom and how important it is to fight for it. These people thought they were being protected when they really they were captured and under constant surveillance. A poignant reminder of what can happen again under digital surveillance and ‘for your own safety’. Amazing videos. Thank you

  • @Robslondon
    @Robslondon Жыл бұрын

    Andy, I’m so glad I found your channel. Your videos are breathtakingly good; some of the best history videos I’ve seen. You deserve a lot more subscribers. Keep up the fantastic work.

  • @ianto1150
    @ianto11507 ай бұрын

    This video was a trip down memory lane. I served in 1st Battalion The Royal Regiment of Wales in Berlin in 1976. I have just discovered your channel, and am looking forward to many more trips. Many thanks.

  • @maartenc6099
    @maartenc60998 ай бұрын

    I am from the Netherlands and I grew up with a divided Europe and a divided Germany. Never visited East Europe our East Germany. But for the last two years I drove with my car to Poland and saw in the distance the tower of checkpoint Alpha. Did not knew there was a museum. Next year I will drive at the same autobahn and will visit the museum. Thanks for this video.

  • @jeffreym.keilen1095
    @jeffreym.keilen109510 ай бұрын

    I was stationed in Germany in the mid 1990's. Took in Berlin for new years 96-97. I loved it over there. Thank you a fantastic doc on the then and now. I was stateside in the '80's as OPFOR at NTC in California and always wanted to be stationed in Germany so I could partake in REFORGER. I never did . Keep the great vids coming.👍

  • @happyoutdoorsireland6787
    @happyoutdoorsireland6787 Жыл бұрын

    This was a brilliant and educational video, I'm sincerely grateful that you took the time to make this. Your easy to listen to and clear, I knew somethings but now know a lot more. I look forward to browsing through your channel in the hope of more videos as enjoyable as was this.

  • @philbraithwaite1316
    @philbraithwaite1316 Жыл бұрын

    An excellent watch. Thanks!

  • @BurnProcessMedia
    @BurnProcessMedia10 ай бұрын

    An amazing tour of the fascinating past. Thanks

  • @nilov71
    @nilov716 ай бұрын

    Amazing! Fantastic video!

  • @ericrawson7669
    @ericrawson7669 Жыл бұрын

    Just subscribed.Thanks for all your amazing videos,Andy.I’m in my early sixties and the one big regret I have is that I didn’t visit Germany during the ‘Cold War’.Your videos answer a lot of my questions.Good luck and keep up the good work! 🇬🇧🇩🇪

  • @__Mr.White__
    @__Mr.White__5 ай бұрын

    Was für eine großartige Zeitreise!

  • @frankandrew6703
    @frankandrew6703 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this, Andy! Terrific detail & an excellent explanation of the 3 checkpoints.

  • @SouravChatterjeeWierdoBeardo
    @SouravChatterjeeWierdoBeardo Жыл бұрын

    Amazing. It's like travelling back in time.

  • @ripley14625
    @ripley14625 Жыл бұрын

    Terrific. Enjoyed it greatly.

  • @lauterunvollkommenheit4344
    @lauterunvollkommenheit43447 ай бұрын

    I always preferred to cross the border at Friedrichstrasse. I'll never forget the scenery from the S-Bahn: the fences, the soldiers with German shepherds, the military Trabants, the raked sand strip, and at last, the wall. It was surreal.

  • @wbwarren57
    @wbwarren57 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video! Thank you.

  • @allan4787
    @allan47875 ай бұрын

    Very enjoyable 45 minutes. My dad was RAF Regiment based at RAF Wildenrath in the late 1950s nowhere near Berlin but as a youngster I was privileged to see lots of Germany and make lifelong friends of many locals. Having read lots of Len Deighton's spy novels it was nice to put them in context Thanks

  • @TheMilitaryBiker
    @TheMilitaryBiker Жыл бұрын

    Just stumbled across your channel mate. I have to say absolutely outstanding content. The information held within is great and very informative. I spent 18 years based in Fallingbostel and loved every minute of my time in Germany. I’ll be watching all of your BAOR videos you’ve put out from now on 😁. Definitely a new subscriber! 🇬🇧🇩🇪

  • @RobWalker1
    @RobWalker110 ай бұрын

    I love the old footage, thanks for making this

  • @millipedic
    @millipedic Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. thanks.

  • @justincoleman7856
    @justincoleman78569 ай бұрын

    So one of my earliest memories was watching the news as the Berlin wall came down. Unfortunately back in those days I ended up having what I now call 'broken memories' as I can only recall parts of those days from when I was laying on the carpet in front of my grandma's old school tv set as they were broadcasting this. However, I had no knowledge of the events before the Berlin wall coming down nor if I had asked about the Berlin wall afterwards. It would take me around 15-20 years after that for me to really do some deep research into a better understanding of the situation. You including a video of Pres Reagan's first visit to the wall back in '82 reminds me of how little I was during that visit. This absolutely makes me want to go back to Germany and visit those specific ACTUAL locations that have legitimate artifacts from that period in time (like the museum as well as the actual wall still in place).

  • @MikeJT62
    @MikeJT62 Жыл бұрын

    Great informative video, thanks for posting.

  • @hunty1970
    @hunty1970 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant content, I found this extremely informative. Thank you. I remember the wall coming down, as I had a friend posted in W.Germany. He too had a memorable time, and was deployed to The Middle East in gulf war 1 from W.Germany. I’ve always wanted to visit Berlin and research it’s Cold War history. Great video, all done.

  • @bajamedic
    @bajamedic Жыл бұрын

    This an absolutely phenomenal look back. I was kid the but vividly remember the wall coming down. I had always wondered where alpha and bravo were and why charlie was so popular. Thank you for taking the time to put this together.

  • @kwakit
    @kwakit Жыл бұрын

    probably the best English video about it, thanks for your excellent work!

  • @neilaxelrod5872
    @neilaxelrod5872 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. Enjoyed it. I’m 58 years old and grew up in the Cold War era. I remember vividly when the wall came down and had visited East Berlin about 3 years prior.

  • @adamlee3772
    @adamlee3772 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent to watch. Thanks for this video too.

  • @garymangan2761
    @garymangan276110 ай бұрын

    Absolutely loved it .always found that era so interesting.fantastic video

  • @kevrymell6636
    @kevrymell66369 ай бұрын

    Really interesting video - many thanks andy