Title: The Cold War
1The Cold War
- Decolonization, DeStalinization the Brezhnev
Doctrine - McKay 999-1007, Palmer 21.113
2The Cold War1945-1979
Helsinki Accords
Dr. Zhivago published outside USSR
Hungarian Uprising
Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)
U2 Incident (1960)
Prague Spring -Brezhnev Doctrine
Decolonization
1945 1956 1961 1968 1979
Ostpolitik (1963)
Dien Bien Phu (1954)
Kitchen Debate (1959)
Two Germans recognized by UN (1973)
Berlin Wall erected (1961)
Ich bin ein Berliner speech (1963)
Sputnik Launched (1957)
Crimes of Stalin Speech
3The Soviet Union1945-1953
- After WWII Stalin reinstituted oppressive rule
- Terror and oppression had been relaxed during
Great Patriotic War - Over 12 million Soviet Citizens died (1945-53) in
Siberian Gulags - Brutal forced-labor camps
- Eastern Bloc
- Soviet army installed one-party communist rule in
Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, E. Germany,
Romania, Bulgaria, Albania - All had Five Year Plans that emphasized heavy
industry (RR), and agriculture over consumer
products - Stalin purged 500 thousand Czechs, and hundreds
of thousands of other eastern Europeans - Only communist Yugoslavia (led by Marshal Tito)
kept independence
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5Nikita Khrushchev and De-Stalinization
- Stalin died in 1953
- Nikita Khrushchev emerged as the General
Secretary - Began policy of De-Stalinization
- Crimes of Stalin Secret Speech (1956)
- At the 20th Congress of the Communist Party
- Denounced godlike stature of Stalin his brutal
rule - Began Khrushchev Thaw
- Censorship was relaxed
- Gulags closed
- Gosplan shifted resources away from heavy
industry military to consumer goods - Peaceful coexistence
- Wanted to prove communism was better than
capitalism on its own merits - Tolerated anti-Stalinist views
- Boris Pasternak
- Wrote Dr. Zhivago (1956) which told story of an
intellectual who rejects the brutality of the
Bolsheviks and Stalin but ultimately dies - Not published in USSR until 1988 but author was
not expelled or jailed
6I won the Nobel Prize for literature. What was
your crime?, October 30, 1958
- Political cartoonist Bill Mauldin castigated the
Soviet Union for not permitting Boris Pasternak
to travel to accept his Nobel Prize
7The Hungarian Uprising (1956)
- Some Hungarians thought that the Crimes of Stalin
speech was a sign of nod to democracy and self
determination - Imre Nagy
- installed as new leader by students and workers
- a liberal communist reformer
- Massive demonstrations demanded non-communist
parties be legalized - Began arming themselves
- Had ended collectivization
- Wanted to remove Soviet Troops, withdraw from
Warsaw Pact - Promised free elections
- This could lead to the end of communist rule in
Hungary - Soviets invaded
- Rebels hoped and expected US help which never
came - Soviets crushed rebellion
- Nagy executed
Imre Nagy, HungarianPrime Minister
8Hungarian Uprising (1956)
9Sputnik I (1957)
- 1st man-made satellite launched by Soviets
- USSR capable of hitting US anywhere with nuclear
weapons - Space Race began
- US Reaction
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) formed - B-52 fleet enlarged
- Submarines equipped with nuclear weapons
- Developed ICBM
- Educational system funding for science programs
greatly increased
The Russians have beaten America in spacethey
have the technological edge!
10Sputnik (1957)
11The Kitchen Debate (1959)
- impromptu debate (through interpreters) between
then U.S. Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow, on July 24,
1959 - entire house was built that the American
exhibitors claimed anyone in America could afford - filled with labor saving and recreational devices
meant to represent the fruits of the capitalist
American consumer market - About the capitalist states, it doesn't depend
on you whether we (Soviet Union) exist.If you
don't like us, don't accept our invitations,
and don'tinvite us to come to see you. Whether
you like it our not, history is on our side. We
will bury you. -- Khrushchev, 1956
12The Kitchen Debate (1959)
13U-2 Spy Incident (1960)
- American U-2 pilot Gary Powers was shot down over
Soviet airspace - Eisenhower claimed that it was merely a weather
plane - Khrushchev revealed that Soviets possessed the
plane, its spy cameras and the pilot himself - Paris Peace Summit was canceled
- Cold War got colder
14Paris, 1961
Khrushchev JFK meet to discuss Berlin and
nuclear proliferation. Khrushchev thinks that
JFK is young, inexperienced, and can be rolled.
15The Berlin Wall (1961)
- 2-3 million East Germans escaped to West between
1949-1961 - Brain Drain
- Many were best and brightest
- Krushchev threatened to enforce 1958 ultimatum
for Allies to leave Berlin - Soviets would protect E. Germanys sovereignty
- Built 28 mile fortified rampart complete with
sentry stations - Became enduring symbol of Cold War
Click for Clip
16The Berlin Wall
17Ich bin ein Berliner! (1963)
President Kennedy tells Berliners that the West
is with them!
18The Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)
- Following the Bay of Pigs invasion, communist
Fidel Castro looked to USSR for protection from
the US - Khrushchev sent military technicians and missiles
to Cuba (1962) - Began constructing missile silos
- U2 spy plane spotted sites
- JFK issued a 13 day quarantine and promised
full retaliatory response - Soviet denied missiles existence before UN
Security Council - Adlai Stevenson produced irrefutable photographs
- Soviet ships turned back from blockade at last
minute - Let to Khrushchev's downfall
- Foreign policy too reckless
- Agricultural policy not producing more food
19Cuban Missile Crisis
20Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)
21Decolonization
- 33 of world population ruled by foreign power in
1945 - Trend after WWII for colonial powers to give up
or lose through attrition their colonial holdings - WWII had reduced European power and destroyed the
Western sense of moral superiority - British resigned themselves that loss of empire
was inevitable - French gave up Syria and Lebanon But tried to
hold onto Algeria Indochina
22British Decolonization
- India
- Independence movement led by Mahatma Gandhi
(1869-1948) - Studied law in GB
- Passive Resistance
- March to the Sea (salt) 1930)
- GB (mercantilistically) took raw cotton from
India for its mills - GB partitioned India in 1947
- India (Hindu majority) Pakistan (Muslim
majority) - displaced up to 12.5 million people
- estimates of loss of life varying from several
hundred thousand to a million - created an atmosphere of mutual hostility and
suspicion between India and Pakistan - Kashmir still major point of contention between
India and Pakistan - E. Pakistan broke away from India in 1971
formed Bangladesh
23British Decolonization
- Palestine Mandate
- Former Ottoman-Syrian territory carved out after
WWI and administered by British - Balfour Declaration promised Zionists a Jewish
State - This conflicted with Laurence of Arabias
nationalism spark and rise of Arab nationalism - Illegal (exceeded quota) occurred during 30s as
Jews fled Nazis - Brits continued ban on immigration even after
WWII - Assination of Lord Moyne by Fighters for the
Freedom of Israel led Churchill to turn against
Zionist movement - Bombing of King David Hotel in Jerusalem killed
92 British gov. officials - British under increased pressure from US handed
over Mandate to UN Partition Plan (1947) - British hampered by established a Jewish state
inside of Palestine--which was divided into two
states by the United Nations - Arabs refused to accept this division
- Series of wars led to Israel conquest of West
Bank, Golan Heights, and Gaza Strip
24British Decolonization Africa
- Africa
- During Scramble for Africa, European powers
divided Africa and its resources into political
partitions at the Berlin Conference of 1884-85 - 1905, Africa was almost completely controlled by
Euros - justified by White Man's Burden, an obligation to
"civilize" the peoples of Africa - During WWII amount of raw materials being
transported to Europe and prompted the creation
of local industries - Which led to creation of new towns, which led to
increased literacy, which allowed for
pro-independence newspapers - Atlantic Charter included provision for autonomy
of imperial colonies. - After the war, the British still considered
their African colonies as "children" and
"immature" they introduced democratic government
only at the local levels - Small elite western education nationalists led
pressured GB to finally grant independence - Characterized by planned decolonization
- Ghana (1957 and Nigeria (1960)
25French Decolonization
- Algeria
- Conquered by Charles X in 1830
- 20 of population was European by 1914
- Pieds Noir (black feet)- derogatory term for
European immigrants - Had larger say in gov than Arabs
- Violent clashes broke out in May 1945 b/t Pieds
and Arab Algerians - National Liberation Front (FLN) led guerilla
attacks against French - 4th Republic refused to give up
- Charles DeGaulle reentered politics
- Became president of 5th Republic (strong
executive) - Began strategic retreat from Algeria
- Marred by attempted coup in 1961 assassination
attempts on DeGaulle - Referendum in 1962 granted Algeria independence
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27Vietnam War
- French tried to hold onto their SE. Asian Empire
- Communist/Nationalist Ho Chi Minh fought French
- Defeated French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954
- Geneva Conference in 1954 French recognized
independence Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia - Divided Vietnam along the 17th parallel until
general election could be held in 56 to
determine if a united Vietnam should be communist
or parliamentary - Ngo Dinh Diem (President of S.V.) feared the
popularity of communists and refused to
participate in nationwide election - Viet Cong (expert insurgent guerrilla fighters)
undermined S.Vietnamese government by
redistributing land and calling Diem a puppet of
the West - Ho received aid from China and Soviets while
South asked US for more aid - Eisenhower viewed N.V. expansion as the 1st of a
tumbling row of dominoes to spread communism
and began to aid the South began gradual
increase in aid
28The Vietnam War
- LBJ used supposed N. Vietnamese torpedo boat
attack on US destroyers in Gulf of Tonkin as
pretext to gain power to take all necessary
measures - Involved burning entire villages, defoliating
hundreds of thousands of acres, countless
refugees - 550 thousand American soldiers by 69
- Tet Offensive shook American confidence that it
could militarily win the war - French president Charles De Gaulle called US
detestable - Had withdrawn France from NATO
- Protest movement grew in college campuses
throughout Western Europe - Compared war to imperialism
- Nixon promised (Vietnamization) but actually
escalated the war (Invaded Cambodia) - Kissinger negotiated a cease fire in January of
1973 and troops left by March of 1973 - 12 year war ended in 1975 with Fall of Saigon
29The Prague Spring (1968)
- period of political liberalization in
Czechoslovakia from January to August 1968 - Led by reformist Alexander Dubcek
- Reforms included a loosening of restrictions on
the media, speech and travel - Communism with a human face!
- Reform frightened hard liners
- Leonid Brezhnev
- General Secretary of Communist Party (1964-1982)
- Began period of Re-Stalinization economic
stagnation - Initiated massive arms build-up
- Re-Stalinization dictatorship was collective
through the Politburo rather than 1 man - Brezhnev sent 250 thousand troops
- Remained occupied until 1990
30Brezhnev Doctrine
- Brezhnev Doctrine
- USSR had the right to intervene in the name of
proletarian internationism and to protect
socialism from capitalism - IE. the Bizzaro World opposite of the Truman
Doctrine - Really a political speech trying to justify
invasion of Czech and Hungary (1956) - Excuse to retain Soviet hegemony in E. Europe
- US only protested but brutal repression made
Soviets look bad
Source Leonid Brezhnev, the General Secretary of
the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union , speech at the Fifth Congress
of the Polish United Workers' Party on November
13, 1968 "When forces that are hostile to
socialism try to turn the development of some
socialist country towards capitalism, it becomes
not only a problem of the country concerned, but
a common problem and concern of all socialist
countries."
31Soviets Invade Czechoslovakia
32Ostpolitik
- Ostpolitik (1963)
- Willy Brandt, (W. German Chancellor) began to
improve relations with E. Germany - Change through rapprochement
- Wanted to settle the German Question
- Christian Democratic Party, led by Conrad
Adenauer held power from 1949 to 1969 - refused to have any contact with the GDR
government due to its undemocratic character - Negotiated treaties with USSR, Poland and
Czechoslovakia that accepted existing boundaries
in return for peace - Two German states within one German nation
- recognized as 2 independent nations at the UN in
1973 - This greatly reduced Cold War tensions
Willy Brandt (left) and Willi Stoph in Erfurt
1970, the first encounter of a Federal Chancellor
with his East German counterpart
33Nixon China
- President Richard Nixon was more pragmatic than
ideological (Machiavelli would love him) - Pursued foreign policy of Realpolitik
- Pursued a balance of power (Remember Peace of
Westphalia) policy by opening up relationships
with seeming foes - Used Western technology, trade, and investment as
a carrot for international cooperation - Soviets were in dire need of Western technology,
loans, and grain - Western bankers loaned to E. European nations
who greatly benefited - US recognized that bipolar (2 superpower) time
was gone with growing power of China - Said it would accept Peoples Republic of China
into the UN in 1971 - 1972 Nixon (Mr. Anti-communist) visited Mao in
Beijing to open up relations - This put major pressure on the Soviets to pursue
Detente
34Détente SALT
- Used Brandts model to ease tensions with
Brezhnev - Easing of tensions led to historic arms reduction
treaty - Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (which began
under LBJ) resumed - 1972 signed SALT I Treaty
- Reaffirmed peaceful coexistence
- Agreed to reduce it antimissile defense system
and not increase offensive weapons for 5 years - Didnt stop arms race but did cool tensions and
reduce threat of preemptive strike
35Helsinki Accords
- Nations of NATO, Warsaw Pact, and 12 European
nations met at Helsinki for a Conference on
Security and Cooperation in Europe (1975) - Pledged to work for peace, economic and cultural
cooperation, protection of human rights - Accord were not a formal treaty but set up
Helsinki watch committees - Surveillance of human rights in member nations
- the civil rights portion of the agreement
provided the basis for the work of the Moscow
Helsinki Group, an independent non-governmental
organization created to monitor compliance to the
Helsinki Accords - USSR signed because didnt believe it would
encourage dissent in its territory - Noted as the high point of Cold War Détente
- Ended in 1979 with Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
Click for Clip
"Leonid Brezhnev had looked forward to the
'publicity he would gain... when the Soviet
public learned of the final settlement of the
postwar boundaries for which they had sacrificed
so much'... 'Instead, the Helsinki Accords
gradually became a manifesto of the dissident and
liberal movement'... What this meant was that the
people who lived under these systems at least
the more courageous could claim official
permission to say what they thought." Cold War
scholar John Lewis Gaddis in his book "The Cold
War A New History" (2005)