Title: MOST OF HISTORY: THE FIRST HUMANS
1ERA 8 Western Europe and Decolonization
Day 3, Session 5A Craig Benjamin
2PART ONE INTRODUCTION
3Colonial Powers
- In 1945 Western Europe still the home
- base of the worlds colonial empires
- Apart from the USA and USSR (both
non-traditional imperialists) - all of the worlds imperial powers were in
Western Europe - Germany stripped of her overseas colonies in
1919 Italy in 1946 - But British, Dutch, French, Belgian and
Portuguese empires were still largely intact - Dissolution of these empires in the early
post-war decades a fundamental element in the
changing European scene - Decolonization a necessary precondition for the
emergence of a new European Community of equal
democratic partners
www.fresno.k12.ca.us
4Decolonization
- During and immediately after the Second World War
many European imperialists had hoped they would
be able to keep or reform their empires - As Churchill put it I have not become His
Majestys First Minister in order to preside over
the liquidation of the British Empire - But in the end, that is exactly what he did
www.loc.gov/exhibits/ churchill
5PART TWO PROCESS OF DECOLONIZATION
6Practical Reasons for Decolonization
For many reasons, by 1945 maintenance of Europes
empires had become impossible. Elites of colonial
peoples (many of them educated in Europe) had
learned the nationalism and democracy of their
masters and were demanding independence. Links
between the home countries and the colonies
weakened during the war. And as a result of the
war, there were no longer the resources available
to restore them by force.
sun3.lib.uci.edu
7Moral Reasons
www.irak.pl
- No longer the will to perpetuate the rule of one
race over another - USA (upon whom Western Europe now depended) was
absolutely opposed to old-style imperialism, and
so was the United Nations - Imperialism no longer viable or respected, and
the only question was whether the imperialists
would bend to the winds of change, or try to
stand against it
8Soviet Imperialism
www.planum.net/news
- Nothing better demonstrates gulf between Eastern
and Western Europe at this time than their
attitudes to imperialism - At the very time the Soviet Union was extending
and consolidating its empire over the peoples of
Eastern Europe, the governments of Western Europe
were trying to dismantle theirs - These twin aspects of European imperialism rarely
discussed under the same heading
9Complexities of Decolonization
- Process of decolonization immensely complex, and
many of the complications derived from conditions
beyond Europe - Each empire possessed its own ethos and specific
circumstances - Each possessed a variety of territories ranging
from self-governing dominions to colonies and
trusteeships - Each power also wielded very different degrees of
military force - Except for Britain and Portugal, all the imperial
powers had been defeated and occupied during the
war, and started from a position of weakness
10The British Empire
- British Empire was the largest colonial empire
ever created The Empire on which the Sun Never
Set - Occupied an area 125 times larger than Great
Britain itself - Process of decolonization remarkable because of
the centrality of empire to Britain - Despite this centrality,
- Britain made no serious
- attempts to retain its
- possessions once the local
- demand for independence
- became well established
- An empire that was assembled
- over several centuries through
- tough military conquest was
- dispersed in roughly
- quarter of a century
11xenohistorian.faithweb.com/ worldhis
12British Empire in 1945
- By 1945 British Empire was already in a great
state of transformation - All of the white dominions (Australia, Canada,
New Zealand and South Africa) had been
independent since 1931 - Many other crown possessions were being prepared
for self-rule or native administration - Of 250,000 employees
- in the British Colonial
- Office in 1945 only
- 66,000 were from Britain
www.abc.net.au/sport
13Indian Independence
- Test-case was India, nation of 400 million
people, where Mahatma Gandhis campaign of
non-violent resistance had attracted world-wide
attention before the war - Various attempts made by Britain in the inter-war
years to come up with an effective compromise
solution, but to no avail - Eventually it was the post-war Labour Government
that made the decision to grant India
unconditional independence - On 15 August 1947 the last British Vicerory
(wartime hero Viscount Mountbatten) saw the
British flag lowered for the final time
www.kaliman.com.mx
14The Subcontinent Violently Fractures
- As soon as independence was granted, vast
subcontinental territory began to fracture along
religious lines - Only solution seemed to be partition, so India,
Pakistan, Burma and Ceylon all emerged as
independent states - India primarily Hindu, flanked by Muslim Pakistan
to the northwest, and later Muslim - Bangladesh to the northeast
- The partition unleashed an orgy of
- intercommunal massacres between
- Muslims and Hindus, in which a
- million people may have died
- But none of this violence was
- directed towards the British
www.hindu.com
15India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka Map
www.cnn.com
16Palestine
- Smaller dependencies caused much greater trouble,
particularly in the Middle East - Following First World War Palestine had been
assigned to Britain as their mandate, on the
understanding that Britain would facilitate the
establishment of a Jewish homeland - After the Second World War, an exhausted Britain
was forced to deal with increasing tensions
between Palestinians and returning Jews - Also considerable pressure to allow Jewish
survivors of Nazi holocaust to settle in
Palestine - Following several years of violence, Britain
referred the issue to the United Nations
European Jews arrive in Palestine, 1946
www.thingsmagazine.net
17Palestinian Partition
- UN Special Committee on Palestine recommended
partition - accepted by Britain - But idea of the creation of a Jewish state in the
region provoked violent reactions from Arab
states - British Government reacted by rapidly withdrawing
from the region, terminating its mandate in May
1948 - Prelude to the establishment of the State of
Israel in part of the former mandate, and the
Kingdom of Jordan in the other part - Also led to an Arab-Israeli war that continued
until 1949, and to a certain extent has continued
up to the present day
www.gc.peachnet.edu
18Violent Independence Struggles in Smaller States
- In Malaya communists staged an insurgency
- that lasted from 1948 to 1957
- In Cyprus Britain found itself at war with the
Eoka rebels from 1950 to 1960 - In Kenya the violent Mau-Mau (above right)
launched a bloody campaign against Britain that
lasted from 1952 to 1957 - led to significant
British military intervention - Kenya was Britains most valuable remaining
colony with valuable plantation assets - Eventually Kenya was granted independence in 1963
- In Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) African rebels
waged an often violent campaign for independence
from 1959, that culminated in full independence
by 1980
19Ghana and Nigeria
- Elsewhere in Africa the process of decolonization
was more peaceful - Gold Coast Colony (Ghana) was the first
experiment in the granting of independence in
1958 - Nigeria also peacefully achieved independence in
1960 - Virtually every British colony in Africa had been
granted independence by 1965, bringing to an end
more than a century of British imperialism on the
continent
imfundo.digitalbrain.com
20Indonesian Demands for Independence from
the Dutch
- Dutch faced with an independence movement in the
Dutch East Indies (Indonesia) before the Japanese
occupied the region from 1941-45 - By the end of the war the Dutch no longer had the
means to reclaim control of the colony, so
Britain occupied the region - Independence movement drew strength at the end of
the war, led by Sukarno, who declared the
independent Republic of Indonesia in August 1945 - At first British and Indonesians cooperated to a
certain extent to take care of the immediate
post-war problems
21Dutch Attempts to Reclaim Indonesia
- When Dutch replaced British in Nov 1946 they
moved against the independence movement by
blockading ports over which the independence
group had gained control - But Dutch no longer had the resources to regain
control, and in the end the UN negotiated a
settlement creating the United States of
Indonesia - New nation theoretically functioned in
partnership with the Dutch, but in 1956 Sukarno
unilaterally ended the arrangement - Dutch-owned plantations all seized and
nationalized, and most of the remaining Dutch
settlers left - So Dutch Empire, that had been 55 times larger
than the Netherlands, was closed down at one blow
Sukarno 1946
22French Decolonization
- Unlike Britain and Holland, France reluctant to
see the loss of its overseas empire, and this led
it into a series of debilitating wars - Because she had been humiliated in the war,
France seemed determined to assert her authority
in the colonies - Ultimately the French Empire, 19 times larger
than France, expired in agony - Despite attempts to restructure the
administration of its overseas territories,
France found itself confronted by - the same demands for
- independence faced by
- the other colonial powers
- From the end of the war
- until 1962 France was
- continuously engaged in a
- series of exhausting, violent
- wars that threatened the
- very stability of France itself
sio.midco.net/ mapstamps
23Colonial Empire in Indo-China Vietnam
- French empire in Indo-
- China consisted of Vietnam,
- Laos and Cambodia
- Area occupied by the Japanese
- in the Second World War, although
- a puppet Vichy-style French colonial
administration was left in charge - Late in the war Japan replaced the regime with
the pro-Japanese, Vietnamese emperor Bao Dai, who
proclaimed independence from France
www.itisnet.com
Central Post Office in Saigon, built by
French during the Colonial Era
24The Vietminh
- Vietnamese communists had formed an effective
anti-Japanese resistance movement (the Vietminh)
which was strong in the north, close to its bases
in China - When Japan surrendered the Vietminh moved to fill
the power vacuum and proclaimed an independent
Democratic Republic of Vietnam - France wanted to reassert control and reoccupied
the major cities with the indirect assistance of
British forces sent to assist with the surrender
of the Japanese
Leader of the Vietminh, Ho Chih Minh
25Direct Confrontation with the Vietminh
- First direct confrontation with the Vietminh
occurred at Haiphong harbor in November 1946 -
Vietminh fired on a French warship - In French retaliation 6,000 Vietnamese were
killed, leading to the outbreak of a guerilla war
against the French - Initial phase of the war from 1947-49, resulted
in stalemate - With the success of the Communist revolution in
China in 1949, Vietminh gained a powerful ally
and were able to drive French out of North
Vietnam in 1950
vi.uh.edu/pages
Vietminh supply column crossing the Mekong
26French Defeat at Dien Bien Phu
Defeated French soldiers at Dien Bien Phu
www.griffith-h.schools.nsw.edu.au
- Exhausted by the war effort, the cost of
maintaining a colonial war was too much for the
French - From 1952 on USA agreed to cover cost of the war
- French made a dramatic attempt to defeat the
Vietminh by enticing them into a major
confrontation, where they hoped to crush the
rebels - 15,000 French soldiers sent to Dien Bien Phu
where they were surrounded by the Vietminh - Following a six-month siege (Nov 1953 May 1954)
the French garrison was forced to surrender
27Battle of Dien Bien Phu
cla.calpoly.edu
28Vietnam Divided
- Defeat marked end of French colonial ambitions in
Indo-China - 1954 Geneva Accords partitioned Vietnam into two
zones hope was this would be only a temporary
measure before national elections could reunite
the two countries - North ruled by the Vietminh as the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam - South governed by the State of Vietnam
- French handed over their responsibilities to the
USA, which saw Vietnam as a test case for the
containment of Communism, leading to the Vietnam
War of 1964-73
Stamps issued by the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam
www.jimstonebraker.com/ vietnam
29North African Colonies
- During their colonial era, French had
- acquired many colonies in North Africa,
- including Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria
- Many of the inhabitants of these colonies
- possessed full French citizenship, and many of
them eventually moved to France where they make
up substantial sections of the French population - Algeria long regarded as an integral part of
Metropolitan France - its citizens granted full
citizenship in 1947 - Local government assembly was elected by two
separate electoral colleges, one for the 1.2
million European inhabitants, one for the 8.5
million Arabs
www.africanculturalcenter.org
30- In 1959 violent demonstrations broke out in
Algeria, demanding independence - Led to a long and brutal war between French and
native Arab population - Despite sending an army of 400,000 troops, the
French were unable to suppress the uprising, and
the French settlers refused to agree to any
compromise - Crisis so severe that General de Gaulle,
re-emerged into political life - French hoped he would lead them to victory, but
de Gaulle saw the war as unwinnable and prepared
to give the Algerians independence
Crisis in Algeria
mairie.wanadoo.fr/mairie
31Algerian Mutiny and Independence
- Group of French officers in Algeria refused to
accept De Gaulles decision, and stage a mutiny - Briefly seized control of Algiers before the
mutiny was crushed - De Gaulle forced through the acceptance of
Algerian independence, agreed to in the Evian
Accords of 1962 - France retained oil-rights and a naval base for
15 years, and almost one million European
inhabitants of Algeria moved to France, causing
short-term housing and employment pressures - De Gaulle continued to support the new (and
unstable) Algerian government with substantial aid
Algerian independence fighters
Algiers, 1959
reference.allrefer.com/. ../algeria170
32Fifth French Republic
- So turbulent, violent and costly had been the
manner in which decolonization had been carried
out that the very fabric of the Fourth French
Republic had been weakened - De Gaulle rewrote the French constitution,
leading to the creation of the Fifth Republic
(declared right) - All remaining French colonies given the right to
self-government and to secede - If they became independent, but remained as
members of the new French Community they would
retain a favored tariff relationship with France - Only one former colony (Guinea in W Africa)
refused to join the French Commonwealth - France left the country, but only after stripping
it of its assets and cutting off all economic aid
33The Belgian Congo
- Belgiums colonial empire had consisted of the
gigantic Congo Basin in Africa, 78 times the size
of Belgium itself - Region was rich in minerals heavily exploited by
the Belgians for a century - But Belgium had invested little in developing the
skills of the local population as late as 1960
there were no university graduates or skilled
professionals - In 1959 an independence movement emerged in the
Congo
www.zum.de/.../centrafrica
34Rapid Belgian Decolonization
- Belgian authorities caught unprepared, and in the
wake of violent demonstrations decided to quit
region within six months - With no preparation of the local population for
self-rule, civil war broke out almost immediately - Secessionist movement quickly seized control of
the mineral-rich southern province of Katanga
Belgian troops in the Congo artists impression
35Soviets Become Involved
- Soviet government, attempting to increase its
involvement in the world at the same time the
Europeans were decolonizing, stepped in and
provided support for the central government - Belgian government provided support for the
Katanga secessionists, hoping to retain control
of the valuable mineral resources - UN then attempted to restore order, but the UN
Secretary General, the Norwegian Dag
Hammarskjold, was killed while on a mission to
the Congo
www.time.com
36Stanleyville
- In the chaos that followed one rebel group seized
western hostages at the key city of Stanleyville - Belgians sent in their paratroopers (with
American assistance) to rescue the hostages - Other African states condemned use of troops as
an exercise - in neo-imperialism
- In the years since, in
- several African states,
- the former European
- colonial powers have
- continued to intervene
- occasionally in support
- of various factions
Belgian paratroopers at Stanleyville
www.freerepublic.com
37The Portuguese Empire
- Portuguese Empire survived longest, and was the
last to be dismantled - Both Portugal and Spain had been ruled since the
1930s by conservative, authoritarian governments
which refused to support decolonization - So Portugal had to be forced to dismantle its
empire by outside forces - In 1961 India seized a large Portuguese colony of
Goa
Portuguese-built cathedral in Goa, India
www.traveliteindia
38Uprising in Angola Revolution in Portugal
- Also in 1961 violent uprisings took place in
Portugals large African empire, at the time that
most of former colonial Africa had already
achieved independence - Revolts started in Angola (23 times larger than
Portugal itself) and spread to Portuguese Guinea
and Mozambique - Portugal, refusing to grant independence, found
itself involved in long and debilitating military
struggles with various rebel groups - In 1974 Portuguese General Antonio de Spinola
(above) staged a revolution in Portugal itself
(the Carnation Revolution) with the aim of ending
the colonial wars - Once Spinola gained power, Portugals African
possessions were rapidly granted independence
(1975-6)
39Independence Struggle in Angola
www.informatuttonet.com
www.informationwar.org
news.bbc.co.uk
40Hong Kong and Macao
go.hrw.com/atlas
- Portugals last colony Macao (also the last
European colony in Asia) was ceded to - China in 1999
- This, along with Britains hand-over of the
protectorate of Hong Kong to China in 1997,
brought to an end 400 years of European colonial
rule in Asia
www.nimbustier.net
41PART THREE EFFECTS OF DECOLONIZATION
42Links Between Europe and Former Colonies
- Wave of post-war decolonization followed by
efforts by many of the former imperial powers to
retain links with their former colonies - In some cases they attempted to retain indirect
control, in others the links were mainly symbolic - Britain encouraged all of its former colonies to
join the British Commonwealth, and some still
retain the British monarch as their head of state
(including Australia and New Zealand) - France, the Netherlands and Portugal all
similarly attempted to create a common community
amongst their former colonies
43The British Commonwealth
www.wwnorton.com/.../ ralph/resource/british.htm
44Financial Links
- Britain and France retained financial roles with
their former colonies by establishing currency
systems that linked them to the mother land - Britain also retained substantial economic
interest in Iran, and when the Iranians
threatened to nationalize the huge Anglo-Iranian
Oil Corporation, Britain conspired with the USA
to overthrow the Iranian government - Britain also attempted to remain the predominant
power in the Middle East, to help guarantee oil
supplies to the West - Major opponent of British
- influence in the region was
- the Egyptian leader, Colonel
- Nasser, and confrontation
- between Cairo and Whitehall
- precipitated the Suez Crisis
- of 1956
Refinery near Tehran built by the A-IOC
45Nasser and Israel
- After Britain and France had withdrawn from the
Middle East, region became increasingly complex
and unstable - Nasser became President of Egypt after
overthrowing the monarchy - His government increasingly confrontational with
Israel, blocking Israeli shipping through the
Suez Canal - Nasser also built up the Egyptian army using
weapons purchased from the Soviets - This caused concern in the West, and it looked as
though the Middle East was being drawn into the
Cold War - Both France and Britain had poor relations with
Egypt
i-cias.com/e.o/nasser.htm
46Suez Crisis
- June 1956 British withdrew last forces from
Egypt - Nasser immediately nationalized Suez Canal,
owned jointly by Britain and France, to fund a
huge dam project at Aswan - Britain, France and Israel decided upon joint
action against Egypt - Plan was for Israel to attack Egypt and move to
the canal this would give an Anglo-French force
the excuse to intervene and take control of the
canal - Israel attacked and rapidly reached Suez Canal,
and the Anglo-French force (belatedly on Nov 5)
sent in paratroopers and launched an amphibious
assault early in November - Both USA and USSR agreed in the UN (a rare
event) and a demand was made for a ceasefire on
Nov 2 - British and French agreed to desist - ceasefire
signed Nov 6 - Israeli force also withdrew from Egypt and the
Gaza Strip
www.navis.g
47web.umr.edu
Suez Crisis Images
48A Bi-Polar World
- British and French prestige badly damaged by
their humiliating withdrawal - British PM Anthony
Eden resigned - Suez marked the end of the role of Britain and
France as great powers capable of acting as
equals with any other nation on the planet - After 1956 it was clear that the international
system had become a bi-polar world with only two
superpowers the United States and the Soviet
Union - Yet their responses to the new geopolitical
realities were to be different - Britain decided to accept US hegemony and play
the new game but France disapproved of the USA
and decided to try and go it alone (as in
Indo-China and Algeria)
www.dhm.de/
49British Response
- Britain turned consciously from an
overseas-focused to a Euro-focused state - Conservative government elected in 1959
instigated a policy of rapid disengagement from
Africa, and by 1963 PM Harold Macmillan had
overseen the liquidation of all of Britains once
vast African empire - Similar policy adopted by the Labour Government
of Harold Wilson in the 1960s, but in order not
to make former colonies feel cut adrift, the
Commonwealth was strengthened - But Britain continued to play an active role in
areas such as Malaysia, where the involvement of
50,000 commonwealth troops maintained the
independence of Malaysia in the face of threats
from Indonesia, effectively enhancing British
prestige
www.time.com
50French Response?
www.prostatakrebs-bps.de/ vip.html
Chad troops with captured Libyan tank, 1985
Mitterand
- France maintained a more active stance with its
former colonies, particularly in its former
sub-Saharan empire - Fiscally it supported the widely-used African
franc, and also maintained a military presence in
the region - In the 1980s war between Chad and Libya, for
example, President Mitterrand of France used
French troops to help the Libyans defeat the
advancing Chadians
51Mururoa Atoll
- France also been reluctant to abandon its former
colonies in the Pacific - Until 1996 France continued to use tiny island of
Mururoa Atoll to test nuclear weapons, despite
protests from New Zealand, Australia and other
Pacific countries - In 1985 French agents boarded and sank a
Greenpeace vessel in Auckland New Zealand, which
had been protesting against French nuclear
testing - France used its weight within the European
Community to threaten economic retaliation
against New Zealand!
www.mururoavet.8k.com
52Sinking of Rainbow Warrior in Auckland Harbor
www.matauribay.co.nz/ s
53Remnants of Colonialism
go.hrw.com/atlas/ norm_htm/falkland
- Remnants of once vast colonial empires are still
controlled by European states around the world - Britain retains several island possessions,
particularly in the Caribbean and the Atlantic - One of these, the Falkland Islands in the South
Atlantic, was the cause of a war between Britain
and Argentina in 1982
54South Thule in the Falklands
www.astralsociety.com
55The Falklands
- Britain and Argentina had a long-running
territorial dispute over the sovereignty of the
Falklands (Las Malvinas) - Military government in Argentina (to shore up its
own flagging popularity) sought to pressure
Britain to withdraw from the Falklands - The Argentines assumed Britain would be unwilling
to fight a long-distance war over 1,800 people
and 400,000 sheep
When Argentine scrap-metal merchants landed on
South Georgia in March 1982, the Argentine
government followed with a full-scale invasion of
the Falklands, and war erupted
www.warshipsifr.com
56The Falklands War
The Belgrano Sinking
- Britain responded to the crisis by dispatching a
large naval task force, which arrived in
late-April after a voyage of 8000 miles - Britain declared a 200-mile exclusion zone around
the Falklands - Controversial incident occurred when the British
Navy sank the Argentine battlecruiser General
Belgrano, with the loss of some 800 men - British then landed waves of ground forces on the
islands, which were quickly recaptured - Argentine government soon fell, and the new
government accepted the end of hostilities
57CONCLUSION DECOLONIZATION AND IMMIGRATION
58From Emigration to Immigration
- For centuries Europe a region of emigration
Europeans left the continent to settle in lands
all over the world, including the USA, Canada and
Australia - But in the post-war era Europe became a target
for immigration with large numbers of people
seeking to resettle there - Chief amongst these were people from the former
colonial possessions of individual European
countries - Initially Britain recruited immigrants from its
former colonies in the immediate post-war era
because of severe labor shortages - All Commonwealth citizens had the free right of
immigration - But in 1972, with rising immigrant numbers, the
government passed the Commonwealth Immigration
Act which sought to regulate the flow
59Immigrant Numbers
- Since 1945 immigrants have sought to move to
- Europe for economic or political reasons
- In Britain the immigrant population from the
- New Commonwealth stood at 74,000 in 1951
- by 1981 it had risen to 2.2 million
- France had a population of 1.5 million African
immigrants in 1990, and half a million from Asia - Portugal, following the collapse of its empire,
gained a population of 800,000 immigrants out of
a total population of 10 million - In 1972 Uganda expelled its entire Asian
population, with the result that 29,000 British
passport holders moved to Britain
www.one-world-books.demon.co.uk
60Muslim Populations
- Immigration waves have changed the cultural map
of Europe - For the first time in history Western and central
Europe have sizeable Muslim populations, for
example, augmented by economic migrants from
Muslim Turkey - One obvious effect of this has been to embroil
Europe in Muslim affairs, e.g. the Salman Rushdie
affair - In 1989 the Indian-born British author was the
subject of a fatwa (death sentence) placed on him
by the Iranian religious leader Ayatollah
Khomeni, on charges on anti-Allah blasphemy in
his book The Satanic Verses
Salman Rushdie and Muslim women in France
61Conclusion I
- Europes interaction with non-European world
based on a long and complex history - Linguistic legacy of a common language has
remained an important link between former
colonial countries and their former colonies - Former colonial countries also remain important
destinations for higher education for students
from their former empires - Trend towards globalization of information has
connected the former colonial world to the old
powers ever more closely - Just as decolonization seemed to be a process
that would separate Europe from the non-European
world, so globalization has brought them even
closer together in different ways
62 Conclusion II
- Effects of decolonization have clearly been
equally profound on the ex-imperialists and the
ex-colonials - Imperial powers reduced to the same standing as
other sovereign states in Europe, which made
eventual European Union much more feasible - Also lost many traditional economic benefits of
colonialism notably access to captive markets
and cheap raw produce - Also shed the burden (financial and military) of
defending and administering distant possessions - In Eastern Europe decolonization watched with
surprise and envy - Citizens of Eastern Europe, now no more than
colonial subjects of the Soviet Union, wondered
when decolonization would also begin to apply to
them as well - As we will see, they had a very long wait before
this eventuated under the rule of Mikhail
Gorbachev in the late-1980s