What History Tells Us About Building a Wall to Solve a Problem

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East and West German citizens celebrate as they climb the Berlin wall at the Brandenburg gate after the opening of the East German border, November 9, 1989. Reuters

While drumming up support on the campaign trail, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has touted the supposed benefits of building a wall between the U.S. and Mexico, saying it would be "easy, and it can be done inexpensively." He has even suggested getting Mexico to pay for the construction.

Walls, fences and barriers haven't just been built to stem immigration, but for security reasons, too. There is already a multi-billion-dollar fence stretching for hundreds of miles along part of the border between the U.S. and Mexico, but it's had mixed results—like other walls and fences around the world. Here are some of the notable precedents.

Great Wall of China

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Tourists walk along the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall of China in Huairou District, Beijing, August 28, 2007. Deurbon Chow/Reuters

Trump has compared his grand plan of a U.S.-Mexico border wall to the Great Wall of China. Construction on the 13,000-mile wall began in the 3rd century B.C. and continued into the 14th through 17th centuries under the Ming dynasty. Originally built to prevent attacks on China from the north and meant to keep out Manchu invaders, the wall ultimately failed to do so. Manchurians broke through the wall, prompting the fall of the Ming dynasty and heralding the start of the Qing dynasty. Today, the wall is a UNESCO World Heritage site and receives millions of visitors every year.

Berlin Wall

More than a decade after the end of World War II, the government of what was then East Germany (the German Democratic Republic) began the construction of a wall in Berlin to prevent Western "fascists" from entering the Communist country and to keep East Germans from defecting to the West. The 96 mile-long wall fell on November 9, 1989, a defining moment of the 20th century remembered for jubilant scenes of people scaling and hacking off pieces of the wall. The following year, East and West Germany were reunified. Slivers of the Berlin Wall today stand outside the United Nations headquarters in New York and in the Newseum in Washington, D.C.

Belfast Peace Walls

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A section of the peace wall that divides Catholic and Protestant communities runs along Cupar Way, west Belfast, Northern Ireland, November 6, 2012. Cathal McNaughton/Reuters

Just like the city's murals to fallen Loyalist and Republican fighters and victims, Belfast's Peace Walls have become an unlikely tourist attraction in a city still prone to episodic violence. The walls, which separate Catholic and Protestant neighborhoods in Belfast, were first built in 1969 during The Troubles, a particularly brutal period of sectarian violence that began in the late 1960s and lasted for 30 years. Made from concrete, corrugated iron and bricks, and sometimes topped with several feet of wire, parts of the wall are covered in graffiti odes to its counterpart barrier in the Middle East. (Palestinian flags are a common sight in Belfast's minority Catholic areas, while Israeli flags flutter in some Protestant neighborhoods.) In 2013, Northern Irish lawmakers proposed tearing down the peace walls by 2023, but many residents believe violence would reignite if the walls were removed.

West Bank Wall

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Palestinians, not permitted by Israeli security forces to cross into Jerusalem from the West Bank due to an age limit, climb over a section of the controversial Israeli barrier as they try to make their... Mohamad Torokman/Reuters

Sometimes referred to by Palestinians as the "Apartheid Wall" or their "Berlin Wall," construction of the wall between the West Bank and Israel was started in 2002 by the government of then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to protect Israelis from Palestinian suicide bombers. It costs $260 million each year for Israel to maintain, Al Jazeera reports. The barrier is partly a 6-foot high electronic fence, partly a 26-foot high concrete wall, and the entire structure is around 435 miles long, more than twice the length of the Green Line (199 miles), the officially recognized border between Israel and the West Bank, according to 972 magazine.

Israel/Egypt

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An Israeli soldier stands near the border fence between Israel and Egypt as African would-be immigrants sit on the other side near the Israeli village of Be'er Milcha, September 6, 2012. Nir Elias/Reuters

Israel has another fence along its western border with Egypt, which was built to stem the "unfettered flow of illegal infiltrators, the smuggling of drugs and weapons" into Israel, according to the Defense Ministry, and to keep African migrants out of the country. Construction on the $400 million fence began in 2011 and took two years. Stretching 140 miles along the border, it stands between 15 and 20 feet high and is topped with barbed wire. The wall was a success: 43 African migrants entered Israel in 2013, compared to 17,000 in 2011.

Hungary

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The poles of a new fence on the border with Croatia are set up near Beremend, Hungary, September 21. Bernadett Szabo/Reuters

Earlier this year, and to the alarm of humanitarian organizations, Hungary announced plans to construct a fence along its southern border with Serbia to prevent asylum seekers from entering the country en route to northern and western Europe. Hungary has nearly completed its fences with both Serbia and Croatia at a cost of 100 million euros ($117 million), a move that international human rights group Amnesty International says violates international law. Hungary has also made it a criminal offence to enter the country illegally, although around 4,000 people are passing through a narrow gap in the fence every day, Al Jazeera reports.

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Before joining Newsweek, Lucy Westcott was an editorial fellow at The Wire. Previously a United Nations correspondent for the Inter ... Read more

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