The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

95
The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries

Transcript of The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Page 1: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Origins of the Cold War

From Allies to Adversaries

Page 2: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Consequences of WWII• Staggering casualties and refugee problems• Rise of the USSR and US/decline of Europe• Decolonization worldwide• Discrediting of “scientific racism”

• Dachau, 1945

Page 3: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

More Causes

• Failure to agree on compliance with Yalta Agreements– Stalinist elections: Poland

(1947), Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia (1947-48)

– Allied 2nd Front

• Containment of Communism

Page 4: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Founding of the United Nations

• Established immediately after WWII

• Military power, unlike the League of Nations

• Permanent council members (veto powers): U.S., U.S.S.R. (now Russia), France, Great Britain, China

Page 5: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Containment of Communism

• Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” speech (1946)

• George Kennan’s “Long Telegram” (1946)

• Truman Doctrine, 1947

• Marshall Plan, 1947

• Berlin Airlift, 1948-49

• North Atlantic Treaty Organization “NATO,” 1949

• Warsaw Pact, 1955

Page 6: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Truman Doctrine

• Triggered by communist insurrections in Greece and Turkey

• Promised US aid to any nation fighting communism

Page 7: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Marshall Plan • 1947-51: U.S. provided 9.4 billion to rebuild after WWII

• Stalin refused to allow East to take part

Page 8: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 9: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 10: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 11: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Cold War: Division of E. and W. Europe

Page 12: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Berlin Blockade & Airlift (1948-49)

• Germany & Berlin divided at Potsdam into four zones

• 1948: Three zones united into West Germany

• Stalin blockaded West Berlin

• 321 day airlift

• Stalin withdrew blockade in 1949

• Result: two Germanys, East and West

Page 13: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 14: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Decolonization• India; Pakistan;

Palestine 1947

• Dutch E. Indies 1949

• Egypt 1956

• Africa 1950’s-80’s

• Vietnam 1940’s-70’s

• Caribbean 1950’s-60’s

Page 15: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Israel’s Turbulent

Birth • Palestine mostly Arab, minority Jewish population exploded after WWII (Holocaust survivors)

• 1947: British gave up, turned area over to U.N.

• U.N. partitioned Jewish and Arab areas1948: New state of Israel attacked by Arab neighbors. Israel won with U.S. aid.

• Refugees from war not allowed back in, still in camps ringing Israel

• Further wars in 1960s added more Jewish territory

Page 16: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Revolution in China 1945-49

• 1911 Revolution: overthrew monarchy

• Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang (KMT) est. by Sun Yat Sen, 1916

• Chinese Communist Party (CCP), est. 1921

• 1924: Chaing Kai-shek (KMT)

• War with Japan (1931-45)

• Civil War (1945-49)

• 1949: Communist China

Page 17: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

China’s Cultural Revolution

• People’s Republic of China, under Mao Tse Tung 1950-60: Soviet Period

• 1960s-70s: worsening relations with Soviets“Great Leap Forward:” 1958-62

• Cultural Revolution, 1960s, Mao’s “Little Red Book”“Gang of Four” (1969-76)

• 1972: Nixon’s visit, diplomatic relations opened with U.S.1976: Deng Xiaoping

• 1981: population control

Page 18: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Korean War 1950-1953

• Former Japanese colony, then divided North/South

• Northern invasion--June, 1950 (Pusan Perimeter)

• U.N.-led counter-invasion (Inchon) pushed to Yalu River

• Chinese invasion, MacArthur’s firing

• Stalemate

• 38th Parallel

Page 19: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

India and Pakistan

• Freed from British control (since 1600s) in 1947

• Hindu majority, Muslim minority--resulted in two countries

• Fighting since over Kashmir contested region on border

• U.S. allied with India, Soviets supported Pakistan

Page 20: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Egypt, 1956• Nominally independent since

1922; British interest: Suez Canal

• Canal built 1869, connects Atlantic & Mediterranean, Indian & Red Seas

• 14% total world trade; 26% oil, 41% total trade from Gulf states

• Canal nationalized in 1956 by Egyptian President Abdul Nassar

• USSR announced support of Egypt

• U.S. forbid Israeli/European interference; Canal transferred to Egyptian control

Page 21: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Dutch East Indies

Dutch fought for control after WWII

Lost in 1949

Became modern day Indonesia

Page 22: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Sub-Saharan Africa (British)

• 1957: Ghana Nigeria, Uganda, Sierra Leone, Kenya freed without much fight

• Rhodesia (British settlers) was a different matter– 1965: white settlers declared independence,

internal warfare/Civil War– 1980: Africans won: Zimbabwe

Page 23: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Increasing Cold War Tensions, 1950’s – early 1960’s

• 1949: Chinese Revolution

• 1949: Soviets get atomic bomb

• 1950-53: Korean War

• 1959: Sputnik

• 1960: U-2 incident

• 1961: Bay of Pigs

• 1961: Berlin Wall

• 1962: Cuban Missile Crisis

Page 24: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

E. European Revolts, 1950’s

• 1953: Khruschev succeeded Stalin

• 1956: Poland strikers had a limited success

• 1956: more ambitious Hungarian revolt under Imre Nagy crushed by Soviet troops

Page 25: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Ruined statue of Stalin in Budapest

Page 26: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Soviet Tanks in Budapest

Page 27: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Tiananmen Square, China, 1989

• Student-led Chinese movement

• Attempted to use worldwide attention to force reforms (one of 1st movements to use internet)Crushed (on camera)

• Leaders now in exile, waiting for communists to die off

Page 28: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 29: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 31: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Vietnam Conflict

• French colony (Indochina), then Vichy (Japanese control)

• Viet Minh (under Ho Chi Minh) started fighting against Japanese

• 2 cycles: French (1946-54), U.S. (1959-75)

• When French lost, divided North/SouthHo Chi Minh (North) and Ngo Dinh Diem (South)

• Johnson & Nixon: war

• Expansion & “Vietnamization” (‘73) war, ending 1975

Page 32: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Cuban Revolution

• 1959: Fidel Castro overthrew Fulgencio Batista

• Early support: instituted national education and medical reforms

• Nationalized large-scale landholdings, appealed to Soviets for aid

• Also preached revolution to other Latin • American nations

Page 33: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile Crisis, 1961-62

• Bay of Pigs: planned by Ike, carried out in 1961 by JFK

• Damaged Kennedy, scared Castro into arms of Soviets

• Cuban Missile Crisis, Oct. 1962: closest US and USSR came to nuclear war: 16 day standoff.

Page 34: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Cold War in Latin America• Latin American countries generally economically dependant on

U.S., gross economic inequalities, authoritarian governments

• 1960s: military dictators seized Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay. Other states ruled by juntas--true democracies rare.

• 1950s-70s: Marxist revolts throughout Latin America. Generally crushed by right-wing governments, backed by U.S.

• 1954: CIA intervened covertly in Guatemala

• Directly in Dominican Republic (1965) and Grenada (1983)

• Largest conflict outside Cuba: Nicaragua, 1970s-80s: Contras vs. Sandinistas

Page 35: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Berlin Wall, 1961-1989

• Built to stop the flow of refugees to the West

• Most visible symbol of the division of East and West

• “Checkpoint Charlie”

• 10, 315 days

Page 36: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

October, 1961

Page 37: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

August, 1961

Page 38: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 39: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Potsdamer Platz 1963

Page 40: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Prague Spring,1968

• Led by Alexander Dubcek—trying to get partial independence/free elections for local positions

• Result: Brezhnev Doctrine/Invasion of Czechoslovakia

Page 41: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Soviet-Afghanistan War• Client state toppled by internal

rebellion in 1978, Soviets sent in 5000 advisors.

• 1979-88 rebellion against Soviet control

• Resistance led by mujahidin (Islamic freedom fighters) backed by U.S.

• Soviets withdrew 1989, but civil war into the 1990s

• Taliban (from mujahidin) imposed government in late 1990s.

Page 42: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Cold War Society, East and West

• Eastern Bloc: low production, losing propaganda war with West, economic troubles after 1980s due to arms race

• Western Bloc: prosperous but politically tumultuous

• 1950s: McCarthy decade, stable and conservative

• Social Movements of 1960s: grew out of social and population changes as well as unhappiness with Vietnam

• Peace Movement

• Anti-Nuclear (European)

• Civil Rights Movement

• Feminist Revolution

Page 43: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Gorbachev’s Reforms, 1980’s• Soviet Union by late 1980s

weakened by Afghanistan, Chernobyl accident, and arms race

• Glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring)

• Gorbachev tried initially to work within Communist party, until attempted coup in Summer 1991

• Gorbachev placed under house arrest in Crimean, but Russian president Boris Yeltsin led massive protests

Page 44: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Collapse of Soviet Bloc, 1989• Poland’s Solidarity

Party (1981-89): Catholics and workers

• 1989: Poland gained right to multiparty elections; elected Lech Walesa, threw out communists

• Example led to revolts in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Albania, East Germany, Romania

Page 45: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 46: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 47: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 48: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

• This monument, found currently in the city of Gdansk, honors the workers in the Gdansk shipyard who sacrificed their lives and careers to form the Solidarity Trade Union.

Page 49: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 50: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 51: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 52: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Vaclav Havel

Page 53: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

• President Havel demonstrated key ringing. In 1989 protesters shook key rings to symbolize the end of the communist rule in the country.

Page 54: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

• The Romanian flag with the communist logo cut out became the symbol of the 1989 Revolution

Page 55: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 56: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 57: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 58: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 59: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Fall of the Berlin Wall, 1989

• Triggered by flood of refugees flowing east to west through Hungary

• Wall came down Nov. 9, 1989

• Germany began reunification process; completed Oct. 3, 1990.

Page 60: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Leipzig Demonstration, Oct. 1989

Page 61: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Nov. 9, 1989

Page 62: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Trabant Crossing Berlin Checkpoint

Page 63: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Nov. 14, 1989

Page 64: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 65: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

German Reunification Celebration

Page 66: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Break-up of Soviet Union, 1991

• Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania left USSR 1991

• USSR dissolved Dec. 1991 “Commonwealth of Independent States,” led by Russia under Boris Yeltsin.

• By 1992, 17 republics had left

• Economic, religious, and crime problems

Page 67: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 68: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Post-Soviet Problems

• Economic dislocation

• Resurgence of ethnic tensions, anti-Semitism

• Limited political experience with democracy led to shaky governments, widespread corruption and crime

• Legacy of terror from worst dictatorships left scars

• Velvet divorce: Czech Republic & Slovakia split.– Official Jan. 1, 1993

Page 69: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

The Former Yugoslavia

• Yugoslavia broke apart into Yugoslavia (Serbia), Slovenia, Croatia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1990

• By 1991, civil between three main groups: Croats (Roman Catholic), Serbs (Greek Orthodox), and Bosnians (Muslim)

• 1991: Macedonia and Montenegro also broke away• 1991-95: Under Serb President Slobodan Milosevic,

“ethnic cleansing” practiced against Bosnians and Croats– over 200,000 civilians killed– only ended with 1995 NATO intervention

Page 70: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 71: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 72: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 73: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 74: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 75: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 76: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 77: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 78: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 79: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 80: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 81: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 82: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 83: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 84: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 85: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 86: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 87: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 88: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 89: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 90: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 91: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

• Srebrenica, 1995; Serbs guard Bosnian prisoners within view of U.N. peacekeepers. These men and 6-8,000 others would be dead within a few hours

Page 92: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Kosovo Crisis

• Kosovars (ethnic Albanians living in Kosovo) declared their independence from Yugoslavia in 1998.

• After repeated Serbian incidents of “ethnic cleansing,” the UN sent troops to stop the killings.

• Kosovo is still part of Yugoslavia, today.

Page 93: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

Kosovo Census Results

• Year Serbs Albanians

1948 171,911 498,2421953 189,869 524,5591961 227,016 646,6051971 228,264 916,168 1981 209,497 1,226,736 1991 194,190 1,596,072

Page 94: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.
Page 95: The Origins of the Cold War From Allies to Adversaries.

• Kosovo under United Nations’ administration