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Title: Decolonization: Chapter 39


1
Decolonization Chapter 39
2
Decolonization and the Third World
  • The Third World consisted of nations in Latin
    America, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East that
    had
  • lagged behind countries in the West in economic
    and political development
  • or had been kept under the political and economic
    thumb of foreign powers
  • or had been directly colonized.

3
Factors Leading to Decolonization
  • After World War II, decolonization and national
    liberation became major agents of change in Asia,
    the Middle East, and Africa.
  • After the world struggle against dictatorship,
    many leaders argued that no country should
    control another nation.
  • Others questioned the high cost and commitment of
    holding colonies.
  • Nationalist movements among native peoples.

4
Factors that Impacted the Economic and Political
Success of Newly Liberated Nations
  • Did the nation fight to become free?
  • How enlightened had the colonizing power been?
    Had it educated a native elite, leaving behind
    politicians, economists, and trained personnel
    with practical skills?
  • Were there serious ethnic, cultural, or religious
    divisions?
  • Did a country have natural resources to exploit?
    Did the government exploit them efficiently or
    were they unable to diversify its economy?
  • Did a newly liberated country take sides in the
    Cold War, i.e. the United States or the Soviet
    Union? Superpowers often intervened in the
    affairs of decolonized nations.

5
India
  • Britain handed over power freely to India.
  • Mohandas Gandhi used passive resistance to
    accomplish his goals.
  • In 1935, the British Parliament passed the
    Government of India Act which increased suffrage
    and turn provincial governments over to Indian
    leaders.
  • In 1947, the British granted India its
    independence.
  • India followed a path of nonalignment with either
    superpower.

6
India
  • Although the British did not have to be expelled
    by force, independence still led to violence.
  • Hindu-Muslim conflict cost at least a million
    lives.
  • In 1948, Mohandas Gandhi, spiritual leader of the
    Indian freedom movement, was assassinated by a
    Hindu extremist who opposed his rhetoric of
    tolerance between the two faiths.

7
What factors led to the division of India?
  • Muhammad Ali Jinnah led the Muslim League in
    pushing for the division of Indian into two
    separate nations Pakistan (Muslim) and India
    (Hindu)
  • Pakistan was then divided into eastern and
    western regions separated by Indian territory.
  • Unequal distribution of wealth between the two
    Pakistans ended in civil war in the early 1970s.
    East Pakistan became the independent nation of
    Bangladesh.

8
What were the goals of the nonaligned movement?
  • Led by Indian Prime Minister Nehru
  • Bandung Conference (1955)
  • Leaders from 23 Asian and six African nations met
    in Bandung, Indonesia.
  • Goal Find a path, a third alternative between
    choosing between the U.S. and the Soviet Union
    maintain neutrality.
  • Stressed struggle against colonialism and racism
  • first international conference of coloured
    peoples in the history of mankind.

9
Nonaligned Movement
  • The preservation of peace forms the central aim
    of Indias policy. It is in the pursuit of this
    policy that we have chosen the path of
    nonalignment in any military or like pact of
    alliance. Nonalignment does not mean passivity
    of mind or action, lack of faith or conviction.
    It does not mean submission to what we consider
    evil. We believe that each country has not only
    the right to freedom but also to decide its own
    policy and way of life. Only thus can true
    freedom flourish and a people grow according to
    their own genius.
  • Nehrus Speech at
    Bandung Conference

10
Patterns in the Postwar Middle East
  • The regions strategic and economic importance as
    the worlds key source of petroleum. Two-thirds
    of the worlds crude oil is produced in the
    Middle East.
  • Contradictions between the urge to modernize and
    a desire to preserve Islamic tradition. One of
    the difficult questions facing the Middle East is
    how to balance Islamic heritage with progressive
    social and political practices. In particular
    how women are treated depends on how this issue
    is resolved.
  • Competition between the United States and the
    U.S.S.R. for influence in the region during the
    Cold War.
  • Authoritarianism. Dictatorship and human rights
    abuses have persisted.
  • The destabilizing effect of the Arab-Israeli
    conflict since 1948.

11
What events contributed to the Arab-Israeli
conflict?
  • The land called Palestine now consists of Israel,
    the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.
  • To Jews, their claim to the land dates back 3,000
    years, when Jewish kings ruled the region.
  • To Palestinians (both Muslims and Christian), the
    land has belonged to them since the Jews were
    driven out around 135 C.E.

12
What events contributed to the Arab-Israeli
conflict?
  • After being forced out of Palestine during the
    second century, the Jewish people were not able
    to establish their own state and lived in
    different countries throughout the world.
  • The global dispersal of Jews is known as the
    Diaspora.
  • During the late 19th and 20th centuries, a group
    of Jews began returning to the regions. They
    were known as Zionists, people who favored a
    Jewish homeland in Palestine.

13
What events contributed to the Arab-Israeli
conflict?
  • At the time, Palestine was still part of the
    Ottoman Empire, ruled by Islamic Turks.
  • After the defeat of the Ottomans in World War I,
    the League of Nations asked Britain to oversee
    Palestine until it was ready for independence
  • In 1917, British Foreign Secretary Sir Arthur
    Balfour promoted the idea of creating a Jewish
    homeland in Palestine.
  • Despite the Balfour Declaration, efforts to
    create a Jewish state failed.
  • Hostility between Palestinians and Jews continued
    to grow.

14
What events contributed to the Arab-Israeli
conflict?
  • In 1947, the Untied Nations voted for a partition
    of Palestine into a Palestinian state and a
    Jewish state.
  • The terms of the agreement gave Jews 55 percent
    of the area even though they made up only 34
    percent of the population.
  • In the wake of the war and the Holocaust, the
    U.S. and many Europeans felt great sympathy for
    the Jews.
  • All of the Islamic countries voted against the
    partition.
  • On May 14, 1948, the state of Israel was
    established.
  • The day after it was proclaimed a state, six
    Islamic statesEgypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon,
    Saudi Arabia, and Syriainvaded Israel. This was
    the first of many Arab-Israeli wars.

15
What factors have united the Arab nations since
independence? What factors have divided them?
  • Egypt became an independent republic in 1952.
  • Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser encouraged
    Arab nationalism.
  • Nasser was a proponent of pan-Arabism. He wanted
    to create a United Arab Republic to join all Arab
    nations together.
  • Nasser also condemned states that joined with
    foreign powers in military alliances.
  • Nasser dedicated himself to ridding Egypt and the
    Arab world of imperial interference

16
Describe the Suez crisis of 1956. What was the
outcome?
  • The Suez Cana, which runs along Egypts eastern
    border, was controlled by British interests for
    many years.
  • In 1956, Egypt declared ownership of the Suez
    Canal.
  • French, British and Israeli troops tried to seize
    the canal.
  • The United States and USSR, however, did not want
    a conflict and forced the British, French and
    Israelis to withdraw, leaving the canal in
    Egyptian hands.
  • The end result was a huge blow to the diplomatic
    prestige of France and Britain.

17
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18
Revolution in Iran
  • Since the 1920s Iran has been ruled by the
    secular, modernizing shahs.
  • The last shah of Iran ruled form 1941 to 1979.
    He used Irans oil wealth to industrialize and
    modernize.
  • Like the Turkish government, the shahs regime
    opposed Islamic traditionalism, encouraging
    Western dress, Western education, the unveiling
    of women, and the eradication of Islamic law. He
    became an ally of the United States.
  • Unfortunately, the shah relied on repression to
    carry out modernization.
  • By 1979, the shah was in poor health, and his
    popularity had plummeted. He was viewed as an
    American puppet.

19
Revolution in Iran
  • In 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini, an Islamic
    fundamentalist the shah had exiled years before,
    returned to Iran and took control of the country.
  • This Iranian Revolution transformed the country
    into an anti-Western (anti-U.S.) dictatorship.
  • The new regime held American hostages captive for
    many months from 1979 to 1981.
  • At the same time, Iran went to war with Iraq.
  • The Iran-Iraq War lasted from 1980 to 1988 and
    devastated both countries.
  • The Iranian Revolution is unusual in that it is
    anti-modern and religiously based.

20
What about Iraq?
  • Iraq came under control of Saddam Hussein in
    1979.
  • Hussein was one of the most powerful dictators.
  • Hussein turned his brutality against hiw own
    people, his neighbors, and the United States.
  • During the war with Iran, he used poison gas,
    drafted teenaged children to fight, and killed
    many civilians.

21
Decolonization in Africa
  • Decolonization began in Africa mainly during the
    1950s and 1960s.
  • By the late 1990s, Africa would contain 46
    countries.
  • Security and economic stability in most of them
    are still affected by the legacy of colonialism.

22
National Liberation in North Africa
  • North African states had several advantages over
    sub-Saharan Africa when it came to
    decolonization.
  • They were largely homogeneous in terms of
    religion, ethnicity, and language.
  • They had existed as meaningful political units
    for a long time, making the transition to
    nation-state easier.
  • Their colonizing powers left behind technology
    and industrial infrastructures (railroads,
    telegraphs, canals, roads, etc.)

23
Decolonization in North Africa.
  • Egypt and Libya declared independence in 1952.
  • Morocco and Tunisia gained freedom from France in
    1956.
  • The long and painful Algerian War of Independence
    against France completed the process of
    independence in North Africa.
  • Algeria gained its independence in 1962.

24
Independence in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • For the most part, the movements were nonviolent.
  • They were led by intellectuals and labor
    activists.
  • Kenya was an exception.

25
GHANA
  • Following World War II, the British began making
    preparations for Ghanas independence. For
    example, they allowed more African to be
    nominated to the Legislative Council.
  • In 1947, Kwame Nkrumah led a nonviolent movement
    to liberate the Gold Coast (Ghana) from the
    British.
  • He organized strikes and boycotts.
  • On receiving it independence in 1957, the Gold
    Coast took the name Ghana.

26
GHANA
  • Nkrumah pushed for new roads, new schools, and
    expanded health facilities.
  • These costly projects crippled the country and
    undermined the economy and strengthened his
    opposition.
  • In 1966, while Nkrumah was in China, the army and
    police in Ghana seized power.
  • Since then, the country has shift back and forth
    between civilian and military rule.
  • In 2000, Ghana held its first open elections.

27
KENYA
  • Kenya, in contrast to Ghana had to take up arms
    against their European rulers in order to win
    their freedom.
  • Mau Mau was a secret society that was made up of
    native Kenyan farmers forced out of the highlands
    by the British.
  • Mau Mau used guerrilla war tactics to push white
    farmers from the highlands.
  • By the time the British granted Kenya
    independence in 1963, more than 10,000 Africans
    and 100 settlers had been killed.
  • Jomo Kenyatta became president of the new nation.
  • He worked hard to unite the various ethnic and
    language groups.
  • Ethnic conflicts in Kenya resulted in hundreds of
    deaths and thousands homeless.

28
Varying Transitions of Freedom in Africa
  • For the most part, decolonization in the parts of
    African that had been British and French went
    smoothly.
  • Both Britain and France prepared their colonies
    for freedom by educating native elites, allowing
    greater native representation in transitional
    governments, and minimizing the possibility of
    interethnic conflict.
  • The worst transitions to independence were made
    by Belgian and Portuguese colonies who had been
    exploitative and did not prepare colonies for
    independence.

29
South Africa
  • Decolonization in South Africa was tainted by the
    clash between white and black citizens of the
    newly free country.
  • The government that declared freedom from Britain
    was controlled by the white minority, largely
    descended from the Dutch Boers.
  • These Afrikaners practiced the policy of
    apartheid (extreme racial segregation).
  • South Africa is one of the worlds richest
    sources of gold and diamonds.
  • Between the 60s and 90s, the white government
    of South Africa turned the country into the
    wealthiest, most modern, and most industrialized
    on the continent.

30
South Africa
  • By the 1980s, internal unrest, economic
    problems, and international revulsion were
    placing pressure on the South African government
    to abandon apartheid.
  • Nelson Mandela, who was the leader of the African
    National Congress, was imprisoned form 1964 to
    1990 by the white authorities.
  • In 1990, Nelson Mandela was released.
  • In 1994, free elections resulted in Mandela
    becoming the countrys president.

31
Problems Facing Independent Africa
  • Dictatorship (Uganda 1971-1979) and Zaire
    (1965-1977)
  • Corruption Many African regimes tended to
    function under unlawful systems.
  • Failure to modernize and diversify economies.
  • The Cold War Many nations became pawns in the
    global chess game between the United States and
    USSR.
  • Rapid population growth and food shortages
    (Somalia and Ethiopia)
  • The HIV/AIDS pandemic
  • Lack of cultural or linguistic unity Most
    borders were drawn by European colonizers for
    their own benefit and convenience, leaving behind
    confusing varieties of ethnicities, languages,
    cultural practices and religions in each country.

32
Problems Facing Independent Africa
  • Intertribal and interethnic conflict Nearly all
    African wars have been fought within national
    borders, not between different countries.
  • Uncontrolled flow of small arms and light
    weapons Thousands of children have been
    forcibly drafted into militias and
    paramilitaries.
  • Treatment of women In Africans more developed
    countries and especially in cities, women have
    attained a certain degree of economic and social
    equality.
  • However, progress has been slow and women are
    still dominated by men, especially in rural
    areas.

33
What about Latin America?
  • Latin America had freed itself form colonial
    domination in the 1800s.
  • National liberation and modernization involved
    the struggle against dictatorship at home and the
    political and economic influence of the United
    States.
  • World War II forced a number of the dictators out
    of power.
  • From 1950-1980, many Latin American countries
    reverted to exploitative economies and
    dictatorial governments.
  • In Latin America, modernization often led to a
    concentration of wealth in the hands of a few and
    weak social justice for the working classes and
    indigenous peoples.
  • By the mid 1970s, only Colombia, Venezuela, and
    Costa Rica could be considered democratic.

34
What about Latin America?
  • Argentina military rule from 1976-1983. This
    regime ruthlessly purged intellectuals and
    dissidents, causing at least 30,000 to disappear
    over a decade and a half.
  • Brazil and Chile had military regimes form the
    mid 1960s through the mid 1980s.
  • Mexico was an authoritarian oligarchy during the
    50s and 60s.
  • Cuba was led by dictator Fidel Castro beginning
    in 1959.

35
Latin America as a Cold War Battlefield
  • Almost all of the military dictatorships in the
    70s and 80s found themselves heavily in debt,
    especially to the U.S.
  • The U.S., fearing the spread of Marxist ideas,
    made a practice of supporting any Latin American
    regime that opposed communism.
  • Unfortunately, the pro-US regimes in Latin
    America tended to be right-wind and dictatorial.
  • Nicaraguan Revolution In 1979, the Marxist,
    Soviet supported movement

36
China Under Mao Zedong
  • 1953-1957 Five Year Plan Industry grew 15
    percent a year agricultural output grew slowly.
  • 1958-1961 Great Leap Forward China suffered
    economic disaster industrial declines and food
    shortages. Mao lost influence.
  • 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution Mao regained
    influence by backing radicals. Purges and
    conflicts among leaders created economic, social,
    and political chaos

37
Describe China after Mao Zedongs death in 1976..
  • 1970s Zhou Enlai tried to form ties to the
    West.
  • 1971 The U.S. reversed its policy and endorsed
    UN membership for the Peoples Republic of china.
  • 1972 President Nixon made a state visit to
    China. He met with Mao and Zhou.
  • In 1979 the U.S. and China established
    diplomatic relations.
  • 1980 Deng Xiaoping, a lifelong communist,
    supported moderate economic policies. He used
    capitalist ideas to help Chinas economy.
  • Deng eliminated Maos communes and leased land
    to individual farmers. He called for progress in
    agriculture, industry, defense, and science and
    technology.

38
Describe China after Mao Zedongs death in 1976..
  • 1970s Zhou Enlai tried to form ties to the
    West.
  • 1971 The U.S. reversed its policy and endorsed
    UN membership for the Peoples Republic of china.
  • 1972 President Nixon made a state visit to
    China. He met with Mao and Zhou.
  • In 1979 the U.S. and China established
    diplomatic relations.
  • 1980 Deng Xiaoping, a lifelong communist,
    supported moderate economic policies. He used
    capitalist ideas to help Chinas economy.
  • Deng eliminated Maos communes and leased land
    to individual farmers. He called for progress in
    agriculture, industry, defense, and science and
    technology.
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