Title: The Collapse of the Soviet Union
1The Collapse of the Soviet Union
- And the world watched with wonder
2Eastern Bloc
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
15 Republics Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia,
Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
7 Satellite Countries Bulgaria, Czech Republic,
East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia
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4Was the Collapse Due to Force? No
- The Cold War cost more than 11 trillion. But the
collapse of the Soviet Union and its satellites
was not a result of force. - No NATO tank fired a shot.
- No bomb fell on the Kremlin.
5A Home-Grown Insurgency
- Instead, a massive, home-grown insurgency, led by
a number of different participants, contributed
to the collapse - Workers
- Dissident intellectuals
- Advocates of national self-determination
- Reformers
6Polish Trade Union Solidarity
- The downfall began in 1980 when striking Polish
workers organized Solidarity, an independent
trade union of nearly 10 million members.
7Support from Catholic Church
- Solidarity, which had strong support from the
powerful Polish Catholic Church, demonstrated how
a working-class movement could offer an entire
nation moral and political leadership.
8Solidaritys Chairman Lech Walesa
- The Polish military drove Solidarity underground
in 1981. However, in 1983, Solidaritys chairman,
Lech Walesa, won the Nobel peace prize. In 1990,
he would be the first freely elected president of
the Polish nation in more than sixty years.
9The Gorbachev Revolution
- Mikhail Gorbachev, who came to power in 1985 as
the General Secretary of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union (CPSU), recognized that the
Soviet Union could not remain politically and
economically isolated and that the Soviet system
had to be changed if it was to survive.
10Gorbachev's Five-Point Plan
- The key pieces to Gorbachev's plan for the
survival of the Soviet Union were a series of
reforms - Glasnost (openness) greater freedom of
expression - Perestroika (restructuring) decentralization of
the Soviet economy with gradual market reforms - Renunciation of the Brezhnev Doctrine (armed
intervention where socialism was threatened) and
the pursuit of arms control agreements - Reform of the KGB (secret service)
- Reform of the Communist Party
11The Objective Survival
- Gorbachev knew that the Soviet Union would have
to change if it was to survive. - Central planning in a modern industrial economy
brought many inefficiencies. - The factory management system provided little
incentive to make technological improvements and
every incentive to hide factory capacities to
ensure low quotas - The socialist farm system was inefficient there
were poor worker incentives and storage and
transportation problems. - The Soviet State could no longer afford the high
defense spending that accompanied the Cold War.
12Insistent Calls for Change
- He believed that his reforms were necessary and
used his leadership and power to attempt to
implement them. - The policy of glasnost (openness) made it
possible for people to more freely criticize the
government's policies. When people realized it
was safe to speak out, the calls for change
became more insistent.
13Reforms Were Too Slow
- The gradual market reforms and decentralization
of the economy (perestroika) were too slow and
failed to keep pace with the crisis and his
people's demands. - The Soviet Union was suffering a deterioration of
economic and social conditions and a fall in the
GNP.
14Party Reforms a Failure
- His attempts to reform the Communist Party were a
failure. Change was too slow to keep pace with
events and he was continually hampered by his
need to give in to the hard-liners in order to
retain power. As communism collapsed in Eastern
Europe, reform of communism in the Soviet Union
became unlikely.
15Release from Soviet Domination
- The renunciation of the Brezhnev Doctrine (armed
intervention in support of socialism) released
the Eastern European states from Soviet
domination. - The communist rulers of these states could not
survive without the support of the Soviet Union.
The Brezhnev Doctrine was articulated in 1968
when the Soviet army occupied Czechoslovakia to
end the Prague Spring, an attempt by Alexander
Dubcek to build socialism with a human face.
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17Reagans Brandenburg Gate Speech
- President Ronald Reagan called upon Gorbachev to
tear down the Berlin Wall "In the Communist
world, we see failure, technological
backwardness, declining standards... Even today,
the Soviet Union cannot feed itself. The
inescapable conclusion is that freedom is the
victor. General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek
peace,if you seek prosperity for the Soviet
Union, if you seek liberalization Come here to
this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
18President Reagan giving a speech at the Berlin
Wall, Brandenburg Gate, Federal Republic of
Germany. June 12, 1987
19Wave of Demonstrations
- Beginning in September 1989, a wave of huge
demonstrations shook Communist regimes across
eastern Europe. A massive tide of East German
emigrants surged through Czechoslovakia and
Hungary to the West, undermining the authority of
the Communist hard-liners who still clung to
power in the German Democratic Republic (GDR).
20A tram is blocked by East German demonstrators in
the center of the city in October 1989. Their
banner reads 'Legalization of opposition
parties, free democratic elections, free press
and independent unions.'
21The Wall Came Down
- Finally, on the night of November 9, 1989,
ordinary Germans poured through the Berlin Wall.
The GDR quickly disintegrated, and by the end of
1990, all of East Germany had been incorporated
into the wealthy, powerful Federal Republic of
Germany.
22The Rise of Nationalism
- With the iron grip of the centralized Soviet
state relaxed and the growing failure of the
state to adequately feed and clothe its people,
nationalism in the republics surged and
separatist movements threatened the very
existence of the Soviet Union.
Super Cute Protesters Moldova The hot, angry
face of nationalism - Apr 13, 2009
23Events in Eastern Europe
- Communist governments in Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
and Bulgaria either tumbled or underwent reform. - The Communist dictatorship in Romania fell after
a week of bloody street battles between ordinary
citizens and police, who defended the old order
to the bitter end.
24Radical Change
- Radical change finally reached the Soviet
heartland in August 1991, when thousands of
Russian citizens poured into the streets to
defeat a reactionary coup d'état.
25Independent Republics
- The Communist party quickly collapsed, and the
Soviet Union began the painful and uncertain
process of reorganizing itself as a loose
confederation of independent republics.
26Boris Yeltsin
- Boris Yeltsin, who headed the Russian Republic,
replaced Gorbachev as president of a much-
diminished state. Gorbachev found that there was
no Soviet Union to lead and retired into private
life.
Time magazine's July 15, 1996, issue, featured a
10-page spread about a squad of U.S. political
pros who "clandestinely participated in guiding
Yeltsin's campaign.
27Nobel Peace Prize
- Gorbachev won the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize. He
brought a peaceful end to the cold war, and
dramatic change to his country's economy, though
not in the way he intended.
28The End of the Cold War
- The Cold War was over, brought to a close not by
the missiles and tanks of the principal
participants, but by the collective courage and
willpower of ordinary men and women.
29Ronald Reagans Role
- In the United States, partisans of Ronald Reagan
claimed much of the credit for ending the Cold
War. Reagan's frank denunciation of the Soviet
Union as an evil empire," along with his
administration's military buildup, were said to
have inspired eastern bloc dissidents at the same
time the arms race exhausted the productive
capacity of the Soviet Union and other
inefficient Communist regimes.
30Nuclear Stockpiles, 1945-2006
Source data from Robert S. Norris and Hans M.
Kristensen, "Global nuclear stockpiles,
1945-2006," Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 62,
no. 4 (July/August 2006), 64-66. Online at
http//thebulletin.metapress.com/content/c41206509
12x74k7/fulltext.pdf
31The National Debt
438 billion deficit
US Pop 304,998,272 Share of Debt/Person
34,526.04 Daily Increase 3.84 billion
32Another Side to the Story
- According to U.S. diplomat George Kennan, author
of "The Sources of Soviet Conduct" (1947) and
architect of the containment policy, the West's
militarized posture helped the Communists to
rationalize their authoritarian rule. The more
U.S. policies followed a hard line, the greater
was the tendency in Moscow to tighten the
controls and to discourage liberalizing
tendencies.
33The Collapse of the Soviet Unionand the End of
the Cold War
John Paul IIsCATHOLICCHURCH
East GermanNATIONALISM
Lech Walesa'sSOLIDARITY
Gorbachevs REFORMS
Eastern Bloc
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Glasnost
Ronald Reagans FOREIGN POLICY
Perestroika
EVIL EMPIRESpeech
No BrezhnevDoctrine
MILITARY BUILDUP
Ordinary MEN WOMEN
ReformKGB
ARMS RACE
COURAGE
ReformComm Party
WILL POWER
34Remaining Communist Countries
- At its peak, communism was practiced in dozens of
countries - Soviet Union Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia,
Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan - Asian Countries Afghanistan, Cambodia, Mongolia,
and Yemen - Soviet Controlled Eastern bloc countries
Bulgaria, Czech Republic, East Germany, Hungary,
Poland, Romania, Slovakia. - The Balkans Albania, Bosnia, Herzegovina,
Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia,
and Slovenia. - Africa Angola, Benin, Congo, Ethiopia, Somalia,
Eritrea, and Mozambique. - Currently only a handful of countries identified
as communist remain Laos, North Korea, Vietnam,
China, and Cuba.