The End of the Cold War - Part II - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The End of the Cold War - Part II

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The End of the Cold War - Part II Causes of the Collapse of the Soviet Union Government leaders were disillusioned by Khrushchev s secret speech, the rise of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The End of the Cold War - Part II


1
The End of the Cold War - Part II
2
Causes of the Collapse of the Soviet Union
  • Government leaders were disillusioned by
    Khrushchevs secret speech, the rise of
    capitalism, and the lack of world revolution
  • New freedoms, such as assembly, speech, and
    religion undermined the familiar and rigid sense
    of order there were many protests and
    demonstrations
  • Ethnic and social conflicts reappeared in the
    Balkans leading to strikes and growing incidents
    of crime
  • Czechoslovakians versus Slovakians
  • Serbs versus Albanian Kosovars in Kosovo
  • Serbs and Croats versus Muslims in
    Bosnia-Herzegovina

3
Causes of the Collapse of the Soviet Union
  • During the mid-1980s, there was a fall in world
    oil prices, which deprived the USSR of currency
  • In Apr. 1986, a melt-down at a nuclear reactor at
    Chernobyl caused an expensive clean-up
  • In 1988, a terrible earthquake in Armenia killed
    25,000 and massive destruction. There was a poor
    response from the rest of the USSR, which showed
    apathy and a lack of unity

4
Causes of the Collapse of the Soviet Union
  • People were depressed because
  • Lack of honesty from the government on the
    economic situation and other things
  • Lack of consumer goods
  • Spending on military
  • Lack of a good future or ability to move up
  • Inability to participate in government or talk
    freely

5
Mikhail Gorbachev
  • In order for his reforms of glasnost and
    perestroika to take place, he needed to end the
    Cold War to lower defense spending
  • He declared that the satellite nations were in
    charge of their own future and he assured them
    that he would not intervene in their affairs
  • He supported change and opposed the use of force
    to stop it
  • Satellite nations had been kept in check through
    the use of Soviet force

6
Poland
  • Reform communists and Solidarity leaders came
    together in a roundtable talks from Feb.-Apr 1989
  • Solidarity was legalized, strikes were legalized,
    elements of a free market were introduced, and
    Senate elections were to be held
  • The communists had control of the media and
    money, so they expected to win the elections, but
    they lost 99 of 100 seats
  • They formed the first non-communist majority in
    the Eastern Europe
  • The President resigned in 1990 and the leader of
    Solidarity, Lech Walesa, was elected President in
    Dec. 1990

7
Hungary
  • Economic problems in Hungary led to the people
    urging for reform
  • Janos Kadar resigned in April 1988 and the
    President of Hungary was now a reform communist
    named Imre Pozsgay
  • President George H.W. Bush met with opposition
    party leaders in July 1989
  • He wanted a multi-party system and other reforms
  • Gorbachev consented to a request to cut down the
    barb wire fence (iron curtain) between Hungary
    and Austria
  • Elections were held in October 1989 that replaced
    the communist leader with a democratic one

8
East Germany
  • The hard line president, Erich Honecker, rejected
    Gorbachevs glasnost and perestroika
  • In October, Gorbachev visited East Germany and
    claimed that change was needed. He also ordered
    Soviet troops stationed in East Germany not to
    intervene
  • As a result, huge crowds were gathering in the
    major cities to demand the end of Communist
    control

9
East Germany
  • Thousands fled from East Germany to Austria to
    Hungary to West Germany
  • Demonstrators were beaten by police
  • On Oct. 18, Honecker resigned
  • When new arrangements for travel to the West were
    announced, reporters asked the government
    spokesman when the checkpoints would be opening.
    He said Right away
  • Thousands of East Berliners began gathering at
    the checkpoints, to the surprise of the border
    guards, who had received no orders

10
East Germany
  • The crowds told the guards that they had heard on
    the television that the Wall was to be
    immediately thrown open
  • The commander at one of the check points decided
    to let the crowd through
  • Soon crowds were clambering all over the wall,
    and many began to break it with hammers

11
East Germany
  • December 1989
  • The government of East Germany collapsed
  • This marked the beginning of the end of the Cold
    War
  • October 1990
  • Germany reunited

12
Czechoslovakia
  • In Nov. 1989, a student demonstration was crushed
    by police
  • Alexander Dubcek came back to Czechoslovakia to
    support Civic Forum, a reform movement/party/union
    of workers
  • Workers demonstrated and threatened a general
    strike if the government didnt resign
  • The government resigned in Dec. 1989 and Dubcek
    and other reformers were elected to leadership
    positions
  • All this was called the Velvet Revolution because
    there was no violence

13
Causes of the Collapse of the Soviet Union
  • Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, and Albania
    communism fell in 1990
  • In June 1990, Russia declared their independence
    from the USSR
  • August 1991
  • Mikhail Gorbachevs policies of glasnost and
    perestroika caused the old-guard communists to
    want to preserve the system
  • They tried a military coup, but it was foiled
    with the help of Russian Republic president Boris
    Yeltsin (one of the republics in the Union of
    Soviet Socialist Republics, or USSR)

14
The Fall of Communism
  • December 1991
  • Gorbachev resigned as Soviet president
  • The Soviet Union dissolved into 15 republics
    loosely confederated in the Commonwealth of
    Independent State (CIS), with Russia the most
    powerful state and Yeltsin the president
  • To varying degrees, all the new governments in
    the CIS repudiated communism and embraced
    democratic reforms and free-market economies

15
1 Armenian SSR 2 Azerbaijan SSR 3
Byelorussian SSR 4 Estonian SSR 5 Georgian
SSR 6 Kazakh SSR 7 Kirghiz SRR 8 Latvian
SSR 9 Lithuanian SSR 10 Moldavian SSR 11
Russian SFSR 12 Tajik SSR 13 Turkmen SSR 14
Ukrainian SSR 15 Uzbek SSR
16
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17
The Fall of Communism
  • Results of the Fall of the Soviet Union
  • The demise of the Soviet Union was a complete end
    to the Cold War
  • No more tension over nuclear war between the U.S.
    and Russia
  • It also marked the virtual end of communism
    world-wide
  • Democracy now had no more ideological battles
    left to fight

18
Boris Yeltsin
  • Russias first popularly elected president, Boris
    Yeltsin, introduced further reforms (i.e.
    freedom to import and export)

19
Results of No More Cold War in Russia
  • Russias transition to a free-market economy has
    not been smooth
  • 25 of the population lives in poverty, which was
    largely nonexistent in the last decades of the
    Soviet Union
  • Law and order has broken down and organized crime
    has flourished

20
Results of No More Cold War
  • GDP has dropped
  • The U.S. is left as the worlds policeman
  • There has been a wave of democratization
    throughout Latin America, Africa, and Eastern
    Europe
  • Space exploration has declined without the
    competitive pressure of the space race

21
New Cold War?
  • In 1999, ailing Boris Yeltsin named Vladimir
    Putin, a former KGB agent, his replacement
  • Defense Shield
  • Fear that a U.S. defense shield in the Czech
    Republic and Poland would be offensive
  • Putin threatened to face missiles on those
    countries who participated

22
New Cold War?
  • U.S. Influence in Eastern Bloc
  • Russia is resentful at attempts to get former
    satellite nations and former parts of the USSR
    into NATO and the EU
  • Former President Vladimir Putin compared it to
    the Third Reich
  • Disabled Spy Satellite
  • U.S. hit a disabled toxic spy satellite in Feb.
    2008
  • China and the USSR believed the U.S. was testing
    anti-satellite technology

23
New Cold War?
  • Chechnya
  • Republic that seeks independence from Russia and
    has used terrorist tactics to gain Russias
    attention to their goal
  • Russia has used torture to gain information out
    of Chechnyans, summarily executed people, and
    sent troops to squash rebellions

24
New Cold War?
  • Elections
  • In Mar. 2008 were deemed by some to be unfair
    because
  • the government controls censorship
  • intimidated voters
  • harasses opposition groups
  • authorities would fill out and cast ballots
  • Oppose Kosovo Independence
  • UN and EU support Kosovo independence
  • EU wants to send peacekeeping troops, which
    Russia believes needs Security Council approval
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