The Cold War: Overview Flashcards

1
Q

What was Deutscher’s Great Contest?

A
  • After 1917, USA and USSR were operating different economic and social structures.
  • This would lead to hostile relations.
  • Foreign policy is an extension of Domestic policy.
  • USSR = weak economy after WWI. They were not a threat until 1928.
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2
Q

Who was to blame for the beginning of the Cold War?

A
  • Orthodox (Until 1960s): Soviet expansionism

- Revisionist (60s and 70s): US Imperialism

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3
Q

Yalta Conference

A
  • February 1945
  • Democratic processes in Europe
  • Promoting Economic recovery
  • Pursuing anti-Nazi policies
  • Helping liberated countries establish provisional governments.
  • Germany into 4
  • Reparations
  • Trials of War Crimes
  • Poland
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4
Q

The Potsdam Agreement

A

(The five ‘Ds’)

      - Denazification
      - Democratisation
      - Demilitarisation
      - Decentralisation
      - Decartelisation (Free Market Economy) - Reparations set at $20b
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5
Q

The Breakdown of the Alliance

A
  • Death of FDR (April 1945) and Churchill not re-elected
    - Only US President Stalin trusted
  • America dropping Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima
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6
Q

What were the origins of the Korean War?

A
  • Divided Korea along the 38th parallel
  • North: Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)
    - Backed by the USSR and China
  • South: Republic of Korea (ROK)
    - Backed by the USA
  • GOAL: Destruction of the other
  • North invades South (25 June 1950)
  • USSR believed USA would not react - Acheson’s ‘Defensive Perimeter’ Speech.
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7
Q

Why was the USSR assumption that the USA wouldn’t react a wrong one?

A
  • It goes against the American policy of Containment
  • Berlin Blockade and subsequent airlift - USA not giving into communist aggression.
  • UN mission (led by USA) to support South Korea
  • Not giving communists leeway
  • Containment
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8
Q

Where the UN right to go to war in Korea?

A
YES:
- Defending of South Korea - Democracy
NO:
- Internal conflict
- US manipulation of UN.
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9
Q

End of the Korean War

A
  • 1951: becomes clear that neither side will win, peace talks begin.
  • War doesn’t actually end until 1953.
  • Countries were weary of war
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10
Q

What were the implications of the Korean War?

A
  • Containment had been succesful - forces of communism were contained.
  • USA foreign policy became less Euro-centric after Korean War.
  • Didn’t put an end to communism in the north or the region (Vietnam)
  • Strenghtened US commitment to the region.
  • 1954: South-East Asian Treaty Organisation (SEATO) formed to stop communist gains.
  • Brough USSR and PRC closer together.
  • Exasperated tensions between USA and USSR
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11
Q

What was the Geneva conference?

A
  • July 1955
  • First meeting between USA and USSR leaders since Potsdam.
  • Soviets proposed and USA accepted.
  • Discussed issues such as Germany and Nuclear Weapons
  • No agreement but friendly atmosphere
  • Realisation of those present that none wanted war.
    - MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction)
  • Geneva Accords
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12
Q

What was agreed in the Geneva Accords

A
  • A “provisional military demarcation line” running approximately along the 17th Parallel.
  • A 3 miles (4.8 km) wide demilitarized zone on each side of the demarcation line
  • French Union forces to regroup to the south of the line and Viet Minh to the north
  • Free movement of the population between the zone for three hundred days
  • Neither zone to join any military alliance or seek military reinforcement.
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13
Q

What was Khrushchev’s Secret Speech

A
  • A speech that criticised the reign of Joseph Stalin.
  • Especially the purges that were used by Stalin
  • An attempt to draw the Soviet Communist Party closer to Leninism.
  • Served as an ulterior motive to K who used it as a means to consolidate power within the communist party.
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14
Q

Result of the ‘Secret Speech’

A
  • Poland:
    - Riots by factory workers in Poznan (1956)
    - Also due to increased production quotas
    - Polish engaged in reform and liberalisation
    - Gomulka - Communist who favoured reform
    - Inspired Hungary
  • Hungary:
    - October 1956: 50,000 students demonstrate against Communist rule outside Polish embassy in Budapest
    - Nagy’s Government was accepted
    - Dulles congratulated the Hungarians for challenging the Red Army and the US promised financial aid.
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15
Q

Causes of the Sino-Soviet Split.

A
  • Soviet aid was a loan not a gift, and the USSR charged interest.
  • China took out high interest loans to pay for Soviet advisors.
  • Stalin disagreed with Mao that a Proletarian revolution could be peasant-based.
  • USSR was critical of the Great Leap Forward and later the cultural revolution.
  • China accussed the USSR under Khrushchev of perverting Socialism.
  • USSR accussed Mao of perverting distorting Marxism to fit with China’s peasant society.
  • Mao felt Stalin disrepsected him and the Chinese guests during his stay in 1950.
  • When Krushchev visited Mao, they were put in a hotel with no air conditioning.
  • Mao was referred to as an ‘Asian Hitler’ and a ‘living corpse’ while Khrushchev was called a ‘redundant old boot’.
  • Mao blamed de-Stalinization for unrest in Eastern Europe.
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16
Q

Détente and the USA

A
  • The main reason for following a period of Détente was the Vietnam war.
  • Growing awareness of the dangers of Nuclear War
    - The USSR were starting to achieve some parity with the USA.
  • Nixon, although a hardline anti-communist, believed that Vietnam was having a negative effect on the USA maintaining its superiority over the USSR.
  • American public wanted out as well, Ecomomy beginning to decline.
17
Q

Détente and the USSR

A
  • Complelling economic reasons
    - Stagnation
    - Soviet spending on keeping up with the USA
18
Q

Triangular Diplomacy

A
  • USA, USSR and China

- USA plays China and USSR off of each other

19
Q

The Berlin Wall

A
  • Khrushchev proposes a peace treaty (November 27 1958)
    - France, Britain and USA (+USSR)
    - Recognise the two states, East and West while Berlin was a free city
    - Taken by the Americans as K wanting to integrate Belin in to East.
  • Mass emigration from East to West.
    - By 1961, 2.7m East Germans had emigrated
  • August 12-13: East Germans erected the Berlin Wall
  • “… the wall was the only remaining option.” - Khrushchev
  • Stand off between USA + USSR after USA threatened to bulldoze part of the wall.
    - Tank vs Tank
    - Khrushchev tested the USA and was right in suggesting the USA would not go to war over Germany.
20
Q

Détente in Europe

A
  • 1968: Prague Spring - Stability
  • Ostpolitik: Eastern Policy
  • Moscow Treaty:
    - 1970
    - Formally ended WWII
    - Confirmed division of Germany
    - Change of Polish Territory
  • Final Quadripartite Protocol:
    - 1972
    - USSR accepted West Germany’s links with West Berlin
  • Basic Treaty
    - 1972
    - W. Germany recognises E. Germany as a seperate nation but also aimed to establish closer links
  • Helsinki Accords:
    - 1975
    - Aims:
    - USSR aim = recognise dominant power in E. Europe and Acceptance of status quo
    - USA aim = Borders and Human Rights
    - Recognized inviolable border of Europe
    - Cooperation - called for closer ties
    - Human Rights: Freedom of information, freedom of travel.
21
Q

SALT treaties

A
  • Strategic Arms Limitations Treaty
  • 1972 + 1979
  • Limited the number of Nuclear Arms a country could have.
22
Q

Iranian Hostage Crisis

A
  • November 4 1979 - January 20, 1981
  • Islamic militants occupied US embassy.
  • Held US diplomats and families hostage
  • Carter refused to negotiate with militants
  • Growing US impatience
    - Disastorous rescue mission
  • Hostages released after 444 days
23
Q

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan

A
  • 1978: Afghan government overthrwon by the Communist People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan
  • Negative public opinion
  • Many joined the rival Mujahideen
    - Guerilla Movement on a holy mission sent by Allah.
  • December 1979: Brezhnev sends troops to support the Communist government
24
Q

The Cold War became less confrontational after 1970.

A
  • Helsinki Accords (1975)
  • Ostpolitik (1970s)
    - Willy Brandt
  • SALT I+II
  • Basic Treaty
  • Final Quadripartite
25
Q

The Cold War did not become less confrontational after 1970.

A
  • Sino-Soviet relations
  • Violation of Human Rights
  • Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
  • Rise of the Neo-Conservatives
  • Brezhnev’s Africa
  • Iranian Hostage Crisis
26
Q

End of Détente

A
  • Brezhnev’s ill health
    - Lack of leadership
    - Slow
  • Helsinki Accords
    - Human Rights
  • New scramble for Africa
  • Rise of Neo-Cons
  • Lance vs Brezinski
  • Carter vs Electorate
  • Plan B
27
Q

Economic problems in the USSR

A
  • Went into stagnation in 1975.
  • Inefficiencies of command economy
    - State controlled economy
  • Technologically backward
  • Corruption and the Blackmarket
  • False reports increased inefficiencies
  • Poor living standards
    - 1980: Only 9% of Soviets owned Cars
28
Q

Communism in USSR in 1980s

A
  • Politically confused
  • Alcoholism
  • Decreased living conditions and life expectancy
  • Increased infant mortality
  • Large punishments for small crimes.
29
Q

Ronald Reagan

A
  • Lected November 1980
    - Inauguarated January 1981
  • Anti-Communism
  • Critical of detente
    - “Isn’t that what a farmer has with his turkey - until thanksgiving day”
  • Increased Military spending on unprecedented scale
  • Maintain and increase American supremacy
  • Very popular with US public
30
Q

Reagan’s Foreign Policy

A
  • Massive increase in Arms spending
    - SDI: “Star Wars”
    - Anti-Ballistic misile system in Space
    - Huge cost ($60bn)
    - Could/would the USSR compete
  • Reagan Doctrine
    - Assisting anti-communist governments
    - And anti-communist rebels
    - Ensure USSR faced great costs to support friendly regimes or communist insurgents
    - (US increase arms, therefore USSR would have to increase)
  • CND: Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
31
Q

Why did the Cold War return in the early 1980s.

A
  • The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 re-opended the Cold War.
  • They invaded to put in place a pro-Soviet government under Babrak Karmal.
  • This was against the wishes of several Islamic guerilla groups and soon led to a war between them and the Soviet troops.
  • President Carter boycotted the Moscow Olympics in 1980 in protest.
  • This new Cold War became even ‘chillier’ when Reagan became President in 1981. Reagan supplied the Islamic groups with money and weapons - including Bin Laden.
  • The war lasted until 1989 when the Soviet forces withdrew, after losing 20,000 men.
32
Q

Why was the USSR so keen to end the Cold War?

A
  • In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev became leader of the USSR (aged 54).
  • USSR could not continue to pay 25% of their GDP on weapons.
    - Compared to the USA who only spent 3%
  • The war in Afghanistan could not be won and was very expensive.
  • The standard of living in USSR was very low.
    - In the 1980s 10,000 Soviet-made TVs exploded killing 1000 people.
  • The USSR depended on Western grain imports
    - Paid for in Western currency
  • Military spending and Cold War tension had to be reduced so that industry could concentrate on consumer goods.
33
Q

The end of the Cold War

A
  • Gorbachev met Reagan in Washington in 1987.
  • INF (Intermediate Nuclear Force) Treaty agreed to destroy all intermdiate range nuclear weapons.
  • Followed by START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) agreement with George Bush in 1991 to reduce stocks of long range nuclear weapons.
  • Gorbachev was extremely popular in the West. He was the man to end the Cold War.
  • He was also very popular in Eastern Europe as the man who let them break free from the Soviet Union.
  • Only in the USSR was he less popular because his policy of Perestroika failed to
34
Q

The end of Communism

A
  • Gorbachev’s new ideas backfired on him. Perestroika meant that the USSR had a real choice of quality goods
    - The prices were high and for the first time there was unemployment
  • The various states which made up the USSR demanded their independence: Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.
  • Yeltsin (leader of Russia) wanted nothing to do with Communism or Gorbachev.
  • 1991: Communist army generals try to get rid of Yeltsin but most of the army stayed loyal to Yeltsin.
    - Yeltsin banned the communist party.