Berlin
After the Soviets hoisted the hammer and sickle over the Reichstag, Germany, along with the city of Berlin, was split in two. The resulting borders left West Berlin surrounded by the communists in East Germany, meaning goods had to be shipped through East Germany before they could arrive in the city. Stalin sought to use the precarious position of West Berlin against its civilians by ordering the blockade of the city, forcing West Berlin to join East Germany [
2].
Unfortunately for Stalin, and fortunately for the West Berliners, the Soviet Union’s plan to starve out the city failed miserably. The Americans and the British airdropped supplies to accommodate the needs of West Berlin’s civilian population [
2]. This created the impression that the Soviets were looking to starve the people of West Berlin for political gain, while the west was intervening to protect them [
2,
3]. The blockade hit its zenith when hundreds of thousands of Berliners took to the streets to protest the Soviets, clearly cementing just how big a political disaster the Berlin Blockade had become for Stalin [
3].
The Berlin blockade also served to demarcate the importance of American power in Europe. Before the blockade, citizens of both America and Europe were weary of aligning themselves toward a common cause in this new global order [
3]. However, by 1949, fear of the Soviets from West Berliners and the rest of Europe drove half the continent into the arms of NATO [
3]. Perhaps if the Soviets didn’t attempt to starve West Berlin, Europe would have less to fear. However, when you're faced with two great powers, one of which is fighting to save Europeans from starvation and another which is actively facilitating said starvation, the choice of partisanship in the bipolar world seems rather easy.
Germany was a principal battleground in the new Cold War, serving as a microcosm for the split between pro-Soviet communism and pro-American liberalism. In an attempt to flex the power of the former, Stalin’s blockade did nothing but embolden the latter, highlighting the fiasco in Berlin as a geopolitical failure for the Stalin regime.
Yugoslavia
At the end of the Second World War, communism was certainly on the rise. The rise of communism was particularly pronounced in countries formerly occupied by the Nazis. The Yugoslavs were among these many burgeoning communist powers, led by the dedicated socialist, Tito. Tito was, quite ironically, an unswerving supporter of Stalin in the aftermath of WW2, and was more than willing to serve the Soviets in the emerging Cold War [
4]. Moreover, Yugoslavian communists fell in lock-step with Stalin’s messaging, clearly cementing themselves as a willing and genuinely communist ally for the Soviet mission of spreading communism around the world [
4].
However, Stalin let his ego get the better of his country’s geopolitical strategy. While the Yugoslav occupation of Trieste and their ardent support of the Greek communists drew a rift between Tito and Stalin, it was Tito himself, Stalin’s broken promises, and Stalin’s erratic behaviour which crystallized the split between the two countries. On the first point, Stalin hated how Tito had emerged as a new face of the communist movement, as he wanted to be the sole hegemon [
5]. Moreover, Stalin had promised Tito a unified Balkan state consisting of Yugoslavian and Bulgarian territories. The prospect of a united Balkan force for communism seemed alluring to all parties involved, at least at first. However, Stalin inexplicably reneged on his promise to Tito, and not long after, Stalin declared Tito an enemy to Marxism and accused him of planning to conquer Bulgaria [
5]. Thus, it would no exaggeration to say that Stalin’s foreign policy turned two countries destined to stand arm and arm in the defining conflict of the second half of the 21st century into bitter rivals.
In short, Yugoslavia fit perfectly into the Soviet Union’s Cold War goals. The Balkan power had a home-grown communist movement led by a popular, pro-Stalin leader, and yet, Stalin managed to compromise this alliance-in-the-making in the strangest and most peculiar way imaginable.
Korea
The Korean War was the defining conflict of the early 1950s, tearing apart a peninsula populated by millions of people. One of the biggest cheerleaders for the Korean was Stalin himself. One reason Stalin was willing to aid Kim was because he thought the Americans lacked the will to fight and die for the South Koreans [
6]. Stalin was also frustrated by his failures in Europe, an issue which was punctuated by the abysmal Berlin Blockade [
6]. But the Korean War was not destined to occur. As a matter of fact, Stalin was initially weary about supporting Kim il Sung’s ambitions to invade the south, but with America’s unwillingness to get involved in China just years earlier, in conjunction with the aforementioned Berlin Blockade hurting Soviet prestige, Stalin had a change of heart [
6].
However, while the war is often attributed to Kim il Sung, it is important to note that the war was only possible because of Stalin. Kim il Sung always wanted to invade his southern neighbour, but he “could not act without the Soviets [
6].” This is important because it conveys how the Korean War would not have happened without Stalin. Kim may have led the north, but without his communist big brother in Moscow supporting him, he would have lacked the wherewithal to risk provoking the Americans. The importance of Soviet support is only amplified when one observes the preparation for the invasion itself. The Soviets orchestrated the invasion plans for the south, sent military equipment, and sent military experts to ensure that said equipment was maintained properly [
7].
Now that I have cemented the role Stalin played in the war itself, I will now attempt to argue that the war was a failure for the Soviet Union’s geopolitical ambitions. For one, you do not need to be a historical scholar to know that the Korean War did not go smoothly for the north. Despite their early gains, the brilliant work of Douglas MacArthur sent Kim’s army running back across the 38th parallel [
8]. It was only the intervention of China which stabilized the north and ground the war to a stalemate. In the aftermath of the Korean War, the two Koreas would remain separate, thereby ending Kim’s dream of conquering his southern neighbour. Thus, it is obvious that the Soviet and North Korean goal of uniting the Korean peninsula under a single unified government failed.
Secondly, the Korean War turned the international community against the Soviet Union. For one, the international community almost universally took the side of the South Korean cause upon the war beginning. The United Nations called for Kim’s North Korea to end their invasion and condemned the war as an affront to the tenuous peace of the post WW2 world [
1]. But these were not just empty words. A coalition of 49 UN member countries supplied the south, and an eclectic mix of 15 countries sent military personnel to directly fight the North Korean invaders [
1]. Ethiopia was among these 15 countries, a nation which took a stand to defend South Korea in order to affirm the international goal of stopping unprovoked aggression, a mission near and dear to Ethiopian hearts and minds given their history with the Italians [
1]. Therefore, it is clear that the international community was firmly opposed to the ambitions of Kim and Stalin.
The Cold War, from the American and Soviet perspective, was a war of international alliances. Securing ideological allies was the primary foreign policy aim of both major powers, and as indicated by the unprecedented international response, the Soviets did nothing but alienate themselves by endorsing Kim’s aggression. Perhaps worst of all, the Soviets failed to lead their North Korean allies to any permanent military gains.
All book pages are from The Cold War: A World History.
In my opinion, you have quite a difficult case to make. It is certainly a fun topic, however.
I might not be much of a challenge, but it could still be fun
Heil Stalin