The Berlin Airlift, which took place from June 1948 to September 1949, cost the United States and its allies approximately $224 million at the time, equivalent to about $2 billion today when adjusted for inflation. This operation involved delivering over 2.3 million tons of supplies to West Berlin in response to the Soviet blockade. The airlift was a significant logistical effort, with thousands of flights conducted to sustain the city's population during the crisis.
Not so much NATO's role in the Berlin Airlift, but the Berlin Airlift in the role of the forming of NATO is more important.
Began to airlift supplies to Berlin (:A+
The Berlin Airlift.
The population of West Berlin at the time of the blockade and airlift (1948-49) was about 2 million.
The Berlin Airlift
No. The Soviets instituted the Berlin blockade, so the allies initiated the Berlin airlift to get supplies to civilians inside the blockaded city.
The Berlin Airlift proved to the USSR the US would not let Berlin be cut off. The USSR wanted to starve Berlin into joining them.
No the Berlin airlift ended 1990.
Berlin Airlift
It was a Berlin airlift.
Harry Truman was the president when the airlift foiled the Soviet blockade of West Berlin.
The Berlin Airlift came as a massive relief operation to sustain the Allied Sectors occupied Berlin against Soviet aggression and blockade. The two major airfields of the Berlin Airlift were Tegel and Templehof.