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Title: The Cold War 1945-1995
Description: Cold War notes relevant to the OCR A-Level course, and mainly focuses of the Cold War within Europe. 26 pages worth of detailed notes
Description: Cold War notes relevant to the OCR A-Level course, and mainly focuses of the Cold War within Europe. 26 pages worth of detailed notes
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The Cold War
1941-‐1995
Origins of the Cold War: Page 2
...
Conflict over Germany and Consolidation of Rival Blocs:
Page 8
...
The Cold War and the era of détente: page 16
...
‘The Big Three’ Leaders: page 27
...
The origins of the Cold War
The Cold War was a period of political hostility between Capitalist and Communist countries, in
particular between the USA and the USSR, which from its onset lasted over 40 years
...
The
cold war was more than an Arms Race, but was also a ‘fundamental clash of ideologies and
interests’
...
Clash of Ideologies:
• The basis of Communism was constructed by Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx, and in the 20th
century became the governing ideology of the USSR, much of central Europe and Eastern
Europe, the People’s Republic of China, Cuba and other states
...
owned by private people or firms
...
communism, a spread between rich and poor
...
What did the USSR want?
• In the early 1950s the main aim was to destroy the western powers and create global
communism
...
To
protect from future German Attack, Stalin wanted to keep land annexed from Poland in 1939,
and give Poland German territories
...
Ø An intermediate zone, which was neither communist or capitalist: Yugoslavia, Austria,
Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Finland
...
In 1943 Stalin dissolved Comintern, to convince his allies he wasn’t supporting global revolution
...
g
...
2
• In 1943-‐4, US officials drew up plans for a chain of bases, which would give USA control of the
Pacific and Atlantic Oceans
...
This suggestedly alarmed Stalin and created a ‘spiral of distrust’-‐
Leffler, which led to the Cold War
...
• Atlantic Charter of 1941 supported free trade, no more territorial annexation by Britain and the
right of people to choose their government
...
• They were concerned with Soviet influence spreading into Central Europe and the East
Mediterranean
...
The Foreign Ministers’ Meeting at Moscow, October 1943:
In October 1943, the foreign ministers of the USA, USSR and Britain met in Moscow, to reconcile the
conflicting aims of their states
...
• Issued the ‘Declaration on General Security’
...
Tehran Conference, 28th November to the 1st December 1943:
Ø Attended by Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin, who met
for the first time to discuss post-‐war Europe, future
organisation of the UN, and fate of Germany
...
(no opposition from Britain or USA)
Ø British, Commonwealth and US troops would land in
France, rather than in the Balkans in 1944
...
Churchill-‐Stalin Meeting, October 1944: To protect British interests in the Eastern Mediterranean,
Churchill proposed a division of south-‐eastern Europe into distinct spheres of influence
...
It gave the USSR 90% in Romania and 75% in Bulgaria, and
Britain 90% in Greece, while Yugoslavia and Hungary were to be divided equally into British and
Soviet Zones
...
Although they were
allowed their own governments, power rested with the ACC
...
As USSR had no troops in Italy it
wasn’t represented
...
Poland:
3
Poland was undoubtedly the most complex problem facing the Allies
...
Therefore the British Government wanted to see a democratic
Poland once Germany was driven out by the red army
...
This meant forcing a communist dictatorship, and many poles were anti-‐Soviet and anti-‐communist
...
It attempted to lay the foundations for the coming peace
...
Each power were given
their own zone, including a section of Berlin, which was placed under
four power control
...
Regarding Poland, the allies had to come to compromises:
Ø Poland’s eastern borders would run along the Curzon Line
...
Ø Reorganisation of the provisional government by including
democratic politicians, and plans for elections
...
The amount of land for Poland from Germany was not fixed,
and the words democracy and elections meant different things
...
Declaration on Liberated Europe:
Roosevelt persuaded Stalin and Churchill to agree to the declaration on liberated Europe, which
committed the three government to carry out emergency measures to assist the liberated states and
to encourage democratic governments
...
He wanted the USSR to
declare war against Japan, which would save the USA hundreds of thousands casualties of
invasion of Japan was inevitable
...
Ø He became President when the USA was considering limiting Lend-‐lease shipments to the USSR-‐
this started in 1941, and gave over $50 billion of war supplies to Allied Nations, which was to be
repaid at the end of the war
...
The Potsdam Conference: July-‐August 1945:
Ø Truman and officials hoped that the A-‐bomb would enable
the USA to force Stalin to make concessions in Europe
...
Ø On the 17th July, Stalin, Churchill and Truman met at
Potsdam, and on the 26th Churchill was replaced by Clement
Attlee
...
Ø The ACC was established (UK, USA, USSR and France)
...
This stopped the ACC from gaining real power in Germany
...
These would be taken from their own zones
...
AGREE
DISAGREE
German demilitarisation
Reparations
Denazification
Polands Western Borders
Punishment of War Criminals
Powers of the Allied Control Council (ACC)
Council of Ministers
The Atomic Bomb
It was tested at Alamogordo in New Mexico on the 16th July, and on the 6th August, the atomic bomb
was dropped on Hiroshima, killing nearly half the population, and flattening the city
...
The US wanted to retain its nuclear
monopoly as long as possible or it could hand it over to the UN
...
Truman agreed to the international control of atomic energy by the UN, providing other nations
agreed to abide by the rules
...
These were:
• Exchange of basic scientific information
...
• The elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons
...
At the Moscow conference 1945, the Soviets agreed to establish the UN Atomic Energy Commission
...
The Red Army would control the Soviet Zone, whilst the
KPD would try win support of German Workers in Soviet and Western Zones
...
In the autumn of 1945, the Soviets were ready to agree to set up a central German
transport authority and trade union, but these were defeated by the French, who opposed restoring
a united Germany
...
The
SPD voters rejected the new coalition by 82%
...
The USSR
feared a united Germany would play an important part in US-‐dominated capitalism trading, so they
responded by increasing Soviet-‐Zone production, and transforming firms into soviet-‐controlled
companies
...
In January 1947 the UK and US zones merged economically to form Bizonia, the USSR believed this
was the first step to creating a west German state
...
This
5
was opposed by Ernest Bevin
...
The
USSR would in return some reparations to help balance budgets, and would receive no coal or steel
until the whole of Germany could pay for its own food and raw material imports
...
Reparations: The British zone had the majority of German refugees from Czechoslovakia and Poland
...
Until their zones were self-‐supporting, they delayed delivering USSR quotas, and they
hoped for the Soviets to deliver food to Western Zones
...
Reactions:
Ø The USSR thought that the US were trying to create a capitalist system, which was part of their
global system
...
Ø The USA wanted to unify the three zones, and 1947 these zones merged to form Bizonia
...
The Moscow Conference March-‐April 1947
The USSR made a determined effort to destroy Bizonia by demanding a new central German
administration under four-‐power control, and to end of Bizonia
...
The Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan:
Truman Doctrine: In June 1945 the US assumed that Britain would continue its role in the Eastern
Mediterranean, but by January 1947 Britain faced an economic crisis
...
This was expensive, and by January 1947,
Britain had spent the loan from the USA in 1945
...
On the 21st of February
they informed the US that their financial and military aid to Greece and Turkey would have to stop
on the 31st March
...
Truman feared that the Communists might launch a similar uprising in Italy once
the Allied troops had left
...
On the 12th March,
Truman expressed the seriousness of the international situation, and how Europe was becoming
divided into two
...
Marshall Plan: This was a challenge to the USSR, and forced it to consolidate its hold on eastern
Europe
...
This would create a large and prosperous market,
which would act as a barrier to the further spread of communism, and could hopefully pull the
Eastern European countries out of the Soviet bloc, and build a political structure into West Germany
...
Marshall and Truman asked for $17 billion to fund the recovery of Europe, and
congress agreed in 1948 when Czechoslovakia turned communist
...
Soviets wanted aid, but with no conditions,
but the French and British agreed that European states should have a joint programme
...
US
officials set up an Advisory Steering Committee, which attempted to bring Europeans into line with
essential US requirements:
• Germany’s economic revival was essential
6
• Free Trade
• There was to be co-‐operation on the development of hydroelectric sources, and setting up
targets of productions for coal, agriculture, refined oil and steel
...
Truman Doctrine, March 1947
Reasons for announcement
Britain unable to defend eastern Mediterranean
...
The Doctrine
Truman offered US support to countries resisting Communist subversion
Stressed need to improve economic conditions in Europe
The Marshall Plan
Offers of aid package
Funds distributed by Supranational Organisations
Accepted by Western European States, but rejected by USSR who set up Cominform
...
In a famous
speech at Fulton in 1946, Churchill observed ‘from
Stettin in the Baltic, to Trieste, in the Adriatic, an iron
Curtain has descended across the continent
...
He
couldn’t allow free elections, as communists would be
defeated
...
The
Policy of containment by the USA didn’t involve
Poland, as it was accepted to be in the Soviet Sphere of
Influence
...
Tactics of terror and false electoral results placed the
Communist Peasants party in power
...
Romania: Their King called on the USA and UK not to recognise the new government from the
Soviets
...
In 1946 Groza strengthen position by merging the Communist
Party with the Romanian Socialist Party
...
Opposition
newspapers were closed down, and leading members of opposition were killed
...
In February 1947, the ACC was dissolved,
Marshall aid was refused, and they joined Cominform, and in December 1947, King Michael was
forced to abdicate
...
Bulgaria: In Bulgaria Stalin hoped to avoid unnecessary friction, and in December 1945 he forced the
communists to include two members of the opposition but when these demanded change, he
advised them to be ‘smothered’
...
In the
October 1946 elections the opposition won by over 1/3 of result
...
Stalin allowed the
communists to liquidate the opposite, and the Bulgarian Communist party took creation of
7
Cominform to radicalise, nationalised industry, collectivisation of agriculture and create a one party
state
...
Tito’s ambitions were to assist Greek Communists
attempting to seize power in Greece, whilst claiming border territories from Italy e
...
Trieste
...
The Paris Peace Negotiations
(1947) concluded that Trieste was to be divided into two separates parts: one under Anglo-‐American
control and one Yugoslav
...
In may 1946, the Communists won 38% of votes without any violence or efforts
from the party
...
Jan Masaryk, foreign minister, told a British
ambassador ‘I went to Moscow as the foreign minister of an independent sovereign state, I returned
as a lackey of the Soviet Government’
...
Hungary: In November 1945, there were free elections with no communist influence
...
Although the influence of Communist Party was still apparent in the ACC
...
On the 8th Dec, 1947, a friendship and co-‐operation treaty was signed with Yugoslavia
and a mutual aid treaty with the USSR
...
In the may 1949 elections only the independent
front was allowed to stand
...
Behind the scenes the socialist party attempted to draw closer to the USA
...
The Moscow
conference (mar 1947) was the turning point for France
...
In Autumn Stalin called for violent protests against the Marshall Plan,
socialists distanced themselves from the USSR and accept pro-‐US policy
...
Stalin conceded Italy, and had little choice but to support West as it had been liberated and
occupied by them
...
In May 1947, the communists were dismissed, which cleared the way
for the Marshall plan
...
The US supported the idea of Western European integration
...
Ø The Soviets tried to rally public opinion across Germany against the West
...
The intention was to send a
delegation to the London conference to support Soviet demands
...
The London Conference broke up on 15th
December
...
A hope for 4-‐power control
disappeared, the alternatives of a Western Alliance, closer economic co-‐operation in Western
8
Europe and the creation of West States appeared to be the only practical options for the
Western allies
...
The French dreaded the revival of a Germany with
potential to invade
...
The UK and USA promised to
control the new German government
...
The occupation statue would give
Britain, France and the USA power over trade, foreign relations, economic issues and
disarmament
...
The Berlin Blockade 1948:
The soviets began the blockade, to force the Western allies to abandon a
West German state by pressuring Berlin
...
They also claimed it was a reaction to the new currency, as they feared
that the Soviet zone would be flooded with the worthless Reichmark,
which the Deutschmark was replacing in West Germany and Berlin
...
Three air corridors would be used to deliver
materials, which would be delivered by B29 bombers
...
5000 would be needed for the winter
...
Stalin was uncompromising, but the
West were willing to allow the circulation of the Ostmark all over Berlin, if the blockade was
abandoned
...
The winter of 1948/9 was extremely mild, and Stalin’s gamble was failing
...
By April this had reached 8000 tonnes a day, and 1000 aircraft could use the
corridors at one time
...
Stalin had little option but to ‘cut his
losses’ and stop the blockade
...
Two German States:
The future of Germany was decided by the end 0f 1948
...
The Federal Republic of Germany:
This was approved in the Spring of 1949, by the three western powers, and elections for parliament
took place in August
...
The military
government in the western zone was replaced with a high commission, which still gave Britain,
France and the USA the final say on West German foreign policy, security questions, exports and
other matters
...
However, after the
West German elections, where the KPD won only 5
...
On the
12th November, the government of the new state was formed, and the Soviet military occupation
ended, although a Soviet Control Commission was set up, like the Allied High Commission in the
West
...
The
Communist seizure of power in Prague on 22nd February 1948, persuaded the French to join an
alliance system directed against the USSR rather than Germany
...
Bevin intended the Brussels pact to be underpinned by an Atlantic
alliance in which the USA would be a key member
...
The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO): The Prague coup and Berlin
Blockade persuaded the USA that there was a need to formally commit to the
defence of Western Europe
...
Truman stressed the
treaty wouldn’t oblige the USA to go to war without consent of Congress
...
’,
article 3 stated ‘continuous and effective self-‐help and mutual aid’
...
Growing Soviet Threat to the West: In September 1949, the USSR successfully exploded its first
atomic bomb, a month later China fell to communism, and Stalin began to rapidly expand the Red
Army
...
Korean War: On the 25th June 1950, South Korea was invaded by Communist North Korean troops,
and appeared to many in Western Europe and the USA to be a prelude to a new global conflict in
which Soviets would overrun western Europe
...
Ulbricht
not only supported North Korea, but appeared to recommend similar action as a way of unifying
Germany
...
The purpose was to create a
European army, to ensure the FRG was kept under control, its troops would not join in divisions
(10,000 troops) but in battalions (about 800 troops)
...
He tried to negotiate for independence with the Western Allies, for
‘Equality of treatment’
...
Disagreements about Korea and China: China helped North Korea in Nov, 1950, the West were
alarmed by possibilities of a US retaliation with atomic bombs, which would lead to an all out war,
and withdrawal of US troops in Europe
...
Truman refused, as he could not appease Communism in China or Europe, he assured no atomic
bomb would be used
...
Truman (a democrat), was forced to make rearmament a priority, to end the Korean war
...
Franco-‐German Agreement on the EDC: In Oct, 1951 negotiations on EDC started in Paris, the
French wanted to prevent Germany from becoming a military power
...
In Bonn, there were talks to
replace the occupation statue with the General Treaty, signed 26th May 1952, and the EDC treaty in
Paris
...
Financing Western European rearmament: US began to develop the hydrogen bomb, after the
outbreak of the Korean War, and tripled military spending
...
The
expense of rearmament threatened to destabilise NATO
...
4 billion in 1949 to $8 billion in 1951, this caused a serious balance of payments problem
...
In the UK, a political split developed in April 1951 in the labour
cabinet, over costs of rearmament
...
‘Guns and Butter’: the Organisation for European Economic Co-‐operation (OEEC), was convinced
that West Europe faced an economic issue only solved by a second Marshall Plan, which was
unrealistic
...
For 20 years, West Europe enjoyed a period
of steady growth, ‘unparalled prosperity’, which encouraged economic and political integration
...
In March 1950, was the Stockholm appeal which banned the A-‐bomb and convict as
war criminals to those who used it first
...
It was described as ‘a bogus forum of peace with the real aim of sabotaging national
defence’
...
The US and UK wanted to see the
FRG firmly integrated into the West, and not replaced by a unified Germany, which would be
vulnerable to Soviet pressure
...
Political and Economic Consolidation of the Rival Blocs:
The West: Michael Hogan argued what the US wanted, to rebuild West Europe in the image of the
US
...
France and
smaller European states saw Western political and economic integration as providing the key to
harnessing the great industrial resources of the FRG to the defence of West Europe against
communism and the USSR
...
European Coal and Steel Community July 1952: The Schuman plan would enable Western allies to
exploit Germany’s coal and steel resources, for own rearmament, without the risk of a strong and
independent West Germany
...
Britain wasn’t willing to join the
plan; it didn’t want to lose control of industries
...
The East: Cominform, established in Sept, 1947, was the Communist information bureau
...
Its main tasks were to complete
sovietisation of the Soviet satellite states, to co-‐ordinate activities of communist parties in the soviet
bloc and throughout the world, and to combat Titoism
...
Main tasks were to integrate economies of East Europe, with the
USSR’s
...
The USSR increased power over
satellite states, by introducing a network of bilateral treaties of friendship, co-‐operation and mutual
assistance
...
Friction between Soviets and
Yugoslavs increased, Tito alarmed Stalin with the talk of forming a Balkan federation, without
consulting Stalin
...
In June 1948, Yugoslavia was expelled from Cominform
...
The Thaw 1953-‐55:
New Leaders: Eisenhower became president in 1953, and was much tougher, and spoke of free
people in Eastern Europe
...
On the 1st November
1952, the US tested the first Hydrogen bomb, and the USSR tested in 1953
...
On the 5th March 1953 Stalin died, and a collective leadership started
between Khrushchev, Malenkiv, Molotov, Beria and Bulganin, they shared power for 3 years
...
West and Détente: The soviet leaders wanted détente
...
Churchill suggested a 4 power
conference, for German reunification and demilitarisation
...
They feared a neutral Germany would be vulnerable to
pressure from the USSR, they came to an agreement to discuss a possible agenda at a ‘preliminary
conference’
...
The KGB reassessed values of the GDR, as it was expensive and unstable
...
The GDR reorganised its economy following the USSR
...
Individuals targets were raised, and food prices increased, and farmers were threatened by
collectivisation
...
Large
numbers of east Germans fled to West Berlin, and then the FRG, many were skilled workers
...
These were spontaneous
...
125 were
killed
...
They had two prolonged strategies, call foreign ministers conference, and
provocative broadcasts, to prolong unrest and strengthen support for Adenauer
...
French rejection of the EDC, August 1954: In march 1953, the EDC and general treaty was accepted
by West Germany, but was rejected by the French
...
Britain would have 4 divisions in West Germany
...
This increased division
...
Warsaw Pact and Treaty: 4th May 1955 was the Warsaw Pact
...
It was a response to the FRG in NATO
...
This
was first major summit since Potsdam, it was to discuss reunification of Germany, security and
nuclear weapons and to increase contacts between the East and West
...
They disagreed on German disarmament, and there was no
progress on arms control
...
The Khrushchev era and the ‘2nd’ cold war:
12
The Year of Crisis 1956:
At the beginning on 1956, there were three problems: foreign policy in the developing world,
Destalinisation and Yugoslavia
...
Khrushchev believed that the USSR could exploit
anti-‐colonialism to weaken the west
...
Destalinisation: this had a big impact on the relations between the USSR and satellite states
...
This raised expectations
in satellite states, as they thought they would get more independence from Moscow
...
In
1956 they made a joint agreement that ‘the path of socialism development differs but strengthens
socialism’
...
In June, a revolt broke out in Poznan against soviet influence
...
100,000
were involved, and 57-‐100 were killed, and 500-‐600 were injured
...
The Polish communist
party turned to Gomulka, the former party leader
...
Gomulka became the head of the communist
party, and Poland was said to have won control over it economy but was still loyal to the Warsaw
Pact
...
In October wages and conditions increased
...
In October
students and workers protested for a new government under Imre Nagy, who suggested reforms
similar to Tito, they attacked the AVH and destroyed a Stalin statue
...
The USA’s radio free Europe encouraged Hungarians to revolt, who
believed NATO would provide protection
...
On the 24th October Nagy became prime minister, and on the 28th he
asked the Red Army to leave
...
On the 3rd November Nagy announced he would be leaving the Warsaw pact, and on the
4th November the Red army was sent to Budapest, and this fight lasted two weeks, and 4000 were
killed
...
The Suez Crisis: The USSR were successful in improving relations with Colonel Nasser (Egypt’s
leader), so the US decided to cancel their loans for building the Aswan Dam in July
...
Nationalisation gave Israel, France and Israel an
excuse to overthrow Nasser, as they wanted to remove him
...
On the 16th Oct, they
created a plan for invading Egypt, Israeli troops would invade through
the Sinai, and advance towards the canal
...
When Israel attacked on 29th Oct, the UK and French troops demanded
13
the withdrawal of Israeli and Egyptian troops from the canal, when Nasser refused, Britain bombed
Egypt’s airfields on 31st Oct
...
Nasser was saved by the US, who viewed this war as an attempted by
the UK and France to support their disintegrating empires
...
On
6th Nov, the US stopped the fighting, to prevent Soviet attempts to increase their influence, and to
avoid criticism over lack of support in Hungary
...
The ceasefire the
next day made it looked as if the Soviet ultimatum rather than the US had saved Egypt
...
, 1957
...
A communist
leader under pressure could appeal to the Soviet bloc for aid
...
This led to a fresh break with Tito, who joined with India and Egypt to
form the non-‐aligned movement of neutral states
...
The
US secretary of state warned he was the most dangerous leader of the USSR, and he was prepared
to take dangerous risks
...
His policy of nuclear diplomacy gained more credibility
when the USSR launched the first ICBM in August 1957
...
Overall military balanced favoured the West, but Khrushchev exaggerated the
extent of his success, but it wants until 1960, that they had four ICBMs equipped with nuclear
warheads
...
NATO: Damage done to NATO was quickly repaired, as was the Anglo-‐American relations, yet in
western Europe, distrust of US policies lingered
...
These
fears were strengthened by the US and UK reducing their conventional forces in Europe, equipping
those remaining with nuclear weapons
...
, 1957 Polish foreign minister put plans for a Nuclear
free zone in central Europe, which Adenauer believed was a Soviet trap leading to German
reunification, which would be overrun by the USSR
...
Doubts about US loyalty to West Europe
influenced Adenauer’s thinking about the EEC, and his attitude to De Gaulle of France
...
If the US pulled out of
Europe or sacrificed West Berlin, Gaulle’s vision of Europe was the only alternative
...
The aim was to
create a common market within 12 years whilst forming a more integrated political structure
...
The led to the UK to forming the
European Free Trade Association in 1960, with Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria and
Portugal
...
The Berlin Crisis 1958-‐61:
In autumn 1956 the GDR acted, in contrast to Poland and Hungary as a loyal ally of the USSR
...
It was confronted with West Germany which was thriving, and attracted
14
the young and ambitious
...
Between 1945 and 1961 1/6 of the whole east German
population fled westwards
...
‘Berlin is the testicles of the West…every time I want to make the west scream I squeeze on Berlin
...
On the 27th November Khrushchev followed this with a 6-‐month ultimatum,
demanding demilitarisation of West Berlin, and changing the status into a free city
...
It would enable it to control access to West Berlin, and interfere at will with traffic using
land corridors
...
In Feb 1959 they agreed a foreign ministers conference should meet in Geneva, but splits
were beginning to appear in the Western alliance
...
Geneva Conference, May to August 1959: both sides put forward proposals for German unity but no
agreement was secured
...
USSR
suggested that two Germanys should form a confederation, which would slowly evolve into a united
state
...
Summit Meetings, September 1959-‐May 1960: Between 1959-‐1961 more summits at any time since
WW2
...
Over next two years Khrushchev alternated periods of détente, when he
temporarily allowed the ultimatum to lapse again, with spells of acute crisis during which further
threats were devised, to force West into making concessions over status of Berlin and future of
Germany
...
Adenauer was
desperate to stop plans reducing the FRG to a neutral second-‐rate state, but May 1960, (Paris
Summit), he had no idea what Eisenhower and MacMillan might propose
...
Berlin Wall:
Kennedy and Berlin: Kennedy dramatically increased US forces in Europe, and urged negotiation on
the German question, and stressed on TV on 25th July 1961, that USA was interested in defending
free access to West Berlin from the FRG
...
In April 1960, independent farms in the GDR were forced into collective farms
...
This led to people fleeing to the West
...
There was widespread unrest in factories
...
This was confirmed
at a meeting of Warsaw Pact states in Moscow on 3-‐5th August
15
1961
...
Significance of Berlin Wall: With the construction of the Berlin Wall, Khrushchev achieved a limited
by important success for Soviet policies
...
The western powers
recognised East Germany
...
The people in the East had
no option but to stay in the GDR, this enabled Ulbricht to develop the New Economic System which
would revolutionise the GDR’s economy
...
There was continued
tension along the wall, and US troops were practising tearing down simulated walls, while on 27th
October Soviet and US tanks stood facing each other at Checkpoint Charlie
...
The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962:
Causes: In 1959 The island of Cuba was taken over by communist rebels led by Fidel Castro
...
In 1960
Castro’s new communist government had taken over American property in Cuba
...
This loss wasn’t a huge problem, but Cuba’s economy
depended on America buying sugar from them
...
Castro asked the USSR to buy Cuban sugar
...
The CIA offered an invasion to get rid of communists in Cuba,
but the US and the Soviets both had nuclear weapons
...
They invaded the bay of pigs in April 1961, but was easily
defeated by Castro and supporters in two days
...
These missiles meant the USSR could attack
America without spending large amounts of money developing ICBMs
...
On the 14th October 1962, an American spy plane
flew over Cuba, and took pictures of missile sites in Cuba
...
In April 1961, (4 months after Kennedy coming into power), a force of 1400
Cuban exiles landed at the Bay of Pigs, it was hoped this would start popular uprisings
...
It was a ‘monumental disaster for the US, comparable to the humiliation
the British and French suffered at Suez five years ago
...
Kennedy decided to set up a naval
blockade around Cuba to prevent further missiles reaching it
...
Kennedy sent
a letter to Khrushchev stating that if the missiles weren’t removed then
they would declare war
...
Kennedy received another letter the next day, saying the USSR would
remove missiles if the US removed missiles from Turkey
...
Khrushchev turnt around his ships, and ordered the
dismantle of missiles on Cuba
...
Cuba developed revolutionary strategy in Developing world, independent on the USSR
...
USSR and USA agreed to
hotline and plan to control proliferation of nuclear weapons
...
Both superpowers and western states
sough détente in Europe
...
The USSR were facing a growing threat from the PRC, and hoped for post-‐war
division of Europe, and to be equal in nuclear weapons
...
The French wanted to undermine USA and
USSR within Europe for more independence
...
Détente didn’t mean the cold war was over, as the USSR still constructed a
large navy to increase global power
...
Mao saw Khrushchev to be an appeaser of NATO, and USA, and a betrayer of Stalin and Lenin
...
After 1958, differences between PRC and USSR multiplied:
v Soviet economic advisors warned Mao the ‘Great Leap Forward’ was impractical and harmful to
Chinese economy
...
v In August 1958, the PRC bean an intense bombardment of the Quemoy Islands to rally the
Chinese behind the Great Leap forward, Khrushchev expressed this may lead to war with the US
...
With Khrushchev falling from power in Oct, 1964, a mission was sent to the USSR to improve
relations, but was unsuccessful
...
Each side had hundreds of thousands of
troops along the borders
...
The island was on the PRC side, but was occupied by Soviets
...
On 13th
August, a PRC brigade of over 1000 was annihilated by soviet troops
...
Vietnam 1954-‐1963: USA were determined to avoid elections for a united Vietnamese parliament,
but were held in 1956
...
To stop spread of
communism in South-‐East Asia, USA established the Southeast Asian Treaty Organisation, as a
regional defence system in Sep, 1954
...
This was ineffective, as members were not legally obliged to
assist militarily to prevent spread of Communism
...
He alienated key groups, e
...
Buddhists, by
favouring Roman Catholics
...
In Sept, 1960, the Viet Cong, founded the National front for the Liberation of Vietnam,
which aimed to rally those opposed to Diem by promising reform and creation of a united Vietnam
...
The Viet Cong had seized control of
many villages
...
On May 1963 Diem’s troops fired into a crowed
celebrating Buddha’s birthday, as they had no governmental flags
...
Kennedy backed
17
a coup in South Vietnam in Nov 1963 to remove Diem, he was killed
...
War Escalates: Khanh failed to defeat Viet Cong, and by 1964 war in South Vietnam was escalating
...
Vietnamese boats attacked an US destroyer
...
on 7th August US congress gave authority to defend US forces in South-‐East Asia
...
US tactics were ineffective against Viet Cong,
who were supplied with weapons from the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which supported 170,000 guerrillas
...
Sino-‐Soviet Split and North Vietnam: North Vietnam were given aid by PRC, but was agreed that
unless US troops invaded north, PRC would get directly involved in fighting
...
Vietnam
...
Negotiations to end war: US lost home support for war, and public opinion turnt against the
conflict
...
They penetrated the US embassy,
and the USA and world used this as evidence for the US and south Vietnam defeat
...
Nixon 1968-‐72: His main aim after election, was to end US involvement in Vietnam
...
He calculated that the USSR was
anxious to sign a treaty on Strategic Arms Limitations, that it would pressure North Vietnam to the
conference table, but Brezhnev rejected and supplied North Vietnam
...
Only US air power prevent South Vietnam defeat
...
Nixon assured
the public, that troops would only advance 21 miles into Cambodia, and would withdraw by end of
June
...
The North launched an
attack on the South in June 1972, which was halted by US air attacks
...
Paris Peace Accords: North Vietnam realised that US air power could prevent a takeover of the
South
...
On 27th Jan the
Paris Peace Accords were signed: US were to remove forces within 60 days; US prisoners-‐of-‐war
released; ceasefire was declared throughout Vietnam; territorial integrity of whole of Vietnam
would be recognised by USA and elections would be held in North and South Vietnam
...
They seized
Saigon, and the US embassy had to be evacuated
...
Nixon, Kissinger and Carter reduced USA’s intervention in the developing world,
and instead used regional powers to contain communism
...
Brezhnev +
Kosygin
Originally close to Khrushchev, but helped to
Premier
...
Abroad he offered détente
Brezhnev, 1964-‐1980
...
He
assisted friendly regimes in Africa and Asia
...
Replaced JFK, president until 1969, then
President 1969-‐1974
...
Between 1963 and 1973 many agreements were negotiated, which aimed to stop the spread of
nuclear weapons:
18
v 1963: Test Ban treaty, signed by UK, USSR and USA to ban the testing in the atmosphere,
underwater, and outer space, it was rejected by China and France, who wanted to develop their
own
...
Pledged not to transfer nuclear weapons
to other countries or assist others to manufacture them, in 1969 West Germany joined
...
v May 1972, Nixon and Brezhnev signed SALT 1 agreement at Moscow summit
...
Nixon accepted
that USSR should have more weapons, as USA had superiority in multiple independently
targetable re-‐entry vehicles
...
They were both left defenceless against attack, so if
war would break out, it would guarantee peace
...
v July 1974, USA and USSR agreed negotiations for a SALT II treaty, impose permanent limitations
on nuclear weapons
...
Number of missile launchers and MIRV rocket warheads for both sides further limited
...
Year
USA
USSR
Launchers
Warheads
Launchers
Warheads
1962
1653
3267
235
481
1970
2100
4960
1835
2216
1980
2022
10608
2545
7480
Developments in Western Europe 1964-‐8: Test ban treaty and Nuclear non-‐proliferation treaty were
most significant achievements in the early period of détente
...
USA was failing to win, and was losing position as moral leader of the
west
...
This was made easier with the fall of
Khrushchev in 1964, and the replacement with Brezhnev and Kosygin
...
French leave NATO: Disagreements over Vietnam war and increasing assertiveness of the West
could have destroyed NATO, and led to a US withdrawal
...
In 1963 he vetoed Britain’s application to join the EEC, as they were pro-‐
American, and 3 years later withdrew French forces from NATO
...
Beginning of Ostpolitik: West Germans were setting up trade missions in Yugoslavia and Romania
...
Hamel Report: In Dec, 1967 a NATO committee drew up a report that committed NATO not only to
defend Western Europe, but reach détente with Warsaw Pact states
...
Divisions within the Warsaw Pact: Soviet retreat from Cuba, growing atmosphere of détente, and
Sino-‐Soviet split weakened soviet control over Eastern Europe, and provided Satellite states to
pursue own policies
...
To stop these the Warsaw Pact issued in 1966 the Bucharest Declaration, which redefined
what the Soviet bloc wanted through détente:
§ Recognition of post-‐war frontiers in Eastern Europe
...
19
§ A veto on nuclear weapons in West Germany
...
Prague Spring ‘A serious setback’: in 1968 Alexander Dubcek became first secretary of the Czech
Communist party
...
In April ’68, he unveiled a programme for democratic change and
modernisation of economy
...
In June, he abolished censorship,
leading to a flood of anti-‐Soviet propaganda being published in Czechoslovakia
...
Although Dubcek
agreed to restore censorship, Brezhnev lacked confidence in him, so on the night of 20th-‐21st of
August, 20 divisions of the Warsaw Pact invaded Czechoslovakia and terminated the Prague Spring
...
To counter this, collective intervention would be justified,
this was the Brezhnev doctrine
...
Willy Brandt was West German Chancellor, Oct 1969
...
He had
support from US and NATO, as he promised not to leave NATO or the European Community
(previously EEC)
...
He then signed a 4-‐power treaty on Berlin between Britain, France, USA and USSR
...
Brezhnev and Brandy agreed on
no territorial claims on any other state
...
This created the recognition of the Soviet empire in Europe
...
The ratification of the treaty was made
dependent on Four-‐Power control over Berlin
...
It was parallel with the Moscow
talks, and agreed on no territorial demands on each other
...
Four Power negotiations over Berlin: USA, French and UK involvement demonstrated that Ostpolitik
wouldn’t weaken the FRG’s western links
...
Soviets were anxious and dint want to make
many concessions, but were reluctant to annoy Nixon, as he was improving links with the PRC
...
In return UK, USA and France
agreed that Western Sectors of Berlin were not legally part of the FRG
...
Bark and D
...
Gress
...
Agreement on transit traffic,
west Berliner’s to visit East Berlin and post communication started in 1971
...
The FRG stressed it still considered
those in the GDR to have ‘common citizenship’, which hoped for peaceful reunification
...
The
GDR was still vulnerable, and its existence depended on Soviet help
...
The USSR wanted the west to
recognised permanent territorial and political division of Europe as at Yalta; economic, scientific and
technological co-‐operation and to exploit Western ‘know how’ about technology to modernise its
economy
...
They marked a high
point in détente, and were signed by 33 European states
...
g
...
v Co-‐operation in economics, science, technology and the environment
...
Expanding trade, tourism and cultural contacts
between the two blocs as well as promoting reunion for families split by the iron curtain
...
Whereas for the
US, the stress on human rights, and increased East-‐West contacts equalled a potential for
undermining unpopular soviet dominated regimes
...
Which started in 1973, an agreement was reached at
Vladivostok Summit 1974, but was delayed by the ‘New Cold War’ but agreement was signed in
1979, but was delayed due to soviet invasion of Afghanistan
...
In 1976, the USSR placed SS-‐20 medium-‐range missiles in Central Europe
...
In Nov, 1981
Reagan suggested both sides destroyed their existing medium range weapons, but the Soviets
rejected
...
This regime
embarked on a radical reformation programme, but had widespread opposition from conservative
Islamic forces
...
Between 24th and 27th
Dec, 50,000 Soviet troops were flown in Kabul, and within months there were 100,000 soviet troops
...
The USSR hoped to crush Muslim fundamentalist rebels, and stabilise the government, so
they could withdraw troops
...
The US thought that the Soviets
intended to expand towards the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf where there was a lot of oil and gas
...
The US also supplied weapons to the Mujahedin through Pakistan-‐
Operation Cyclone (1979-‐1989)
...
$20-‐$30 million a year in 1980, and by 1987 was $630 million
...
In May 1980 they approved exports from the PRC of advanced
military equipment to Afghanistan
...
Solidarity Crisis in Poland 1980-‐2: Poland was important to the USSR as it was strategically the main
route to the West, provided 1/3 of the Warsaw Pact troops, and had the largest population of
satellite states, in 1980 36 million
...
The government reacted
by giving political and economic concessions over price increases, and
recognised the solidarity movement as an independent trade union,
initially only in Gdansk
...
Brezhnev
urged the Polish Prime minister to ‘crush the anti-‐socialist forces’ and Honecker, East German leader
wanted to send in troops ‘any delay in acting against them, would mean death…death of Socialist
Poland’
...
21
Kania convinced Brezhnev he could restore power himself, and the US warned against force
...
The 9th congress of the Polish communist party
delegates attacked party leaders and dismantled the organisation
...
In Dec,
1981 Martial Law was declared and in 1982 Solidarity was outlawed
...
German Chancellor,
Schmidt, and Kohl tried to protect it from the consequences of the deteriorating East-‐West relations
...
‘Star Wars’: In Nov, 1982, Brezhnev died and was replaced with Andropov
...
Shooting down of South Korean Airliner: on 1st Sept, 1983, tension between US and USSR further
increased when a Soviet fighter aircraft shot down a South Korean passenger aircraft, which flew
into Soviet airspaces, killing all 269 on board, including 61 US citizens
...
Gorbachev: Glasnost and détente 1985-‐9:
Andropov died in Feb 1984, replaced with Cherenke but he died in March 1985, he was then
replaced with Gorbachev
...
g
...
He came up with a plan to
modernise the economy, renew détente with the west
...
Before Gorbachev the USSR was economically poor, as up until 1961, the USSR and
Comecon states had been performing quite well, based on cars, tractors and heavy industries
...
In 1960s, the Czechs put
forward to decentralise the economy on a localised level, but was discouraged as it might make
political concessions
...
Détente and Ostpolitik, opened up for loans from the West, which could be used for investment and
kept prices down
...
Also oil prices increased, and hit the west but they were able to
modernise
...
Gorbachev’s economic plan was to increase investment in technology,
restructure the economy so it was less centralised (Perestroika), and give workers greater freedom
and incentives to encourage them to work harder
...
In spring 1986, onwards censorship eased and foreign
broadcasts were gradually allowed
...
Investigative journalism
highlighted major corruption in the communist party
...
In May
1989, the newly constituted congress of people’s deputies was elected, in what were the first
elections organised by the communists
...
In Feb 1990, Article 6 was destroyed; officials would need 50% of electorate to
stay in power, it meant long term officials were rejected, and Gorbachev was elected as the first
executive president of the USSR
...
In April 1985, Gorbachev
stopped increasing SS-‐20s in Europe, he failed to persuade Reagan to give up SDI’s for arms control
...
In 1988 at the
22
UN, he publically said Marxism-‐Leninism was not ‘the key to the ultimate truth’
...
Global Détente: Afghanistan-‐ Gorbachev realised soviet policy failed in Afghanistan, and in Nov,
1986 decided that Soviet troops would be withdrawn
...
They believed he would be able to form a government of national unity, that
could negotiate peace
...
This did not bring peace, the Mujahedin, who were not
represented at Geneva, fought on, while the USSR continued financially assisting Najibullah’s forces
...
Global Détente: Cambodia-‐ in 1979, Vietnam supported by USSR, invaded Cambodia, and overthrew
the Khmer Rouge regime, establishing the Pro-‐Vietnam People’s republic of Kampuchea
...
Vietnamese military units stayed in Cambodia to support new regime
...
Gorbachev was ready to collaborate with the USA and
PRC to find a solution to Cambodia’s problems
...
End of PRC-‐Soviet dispute: USSR withdrawal from Afghanistan and co-‐operation over Cambodia had
cleared way for improving relations between the PRC and USSR
...
Deng, who was in the
process of modernising the PRC and embracing Western Capitalism, sympathises with Gorbachev’s
desire to reform Soviet economy, but wasn’t ready for political concessions, and was quick to
declare Martial Law
...
Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe 1989-‐95:
After withdrawing troops for Afghanistan and Africa, Gorbachev refocused on Soviet policy in
Europe, and hoped to safeguard Soviet security through a policy of political co-‐operation and
negotiation
...
By
1989, he was encouraging Communist Eastern European states to reform economically and to
liberalise politically
...
In the GDR, Czechoslovakia,
Romania and Albania, governments unwilling to experiment with political or economic reform, were
compelled to reform by dramatic events in the GDR
...
Poland: 1988 Solidarity movement was legalised due to series of strikes due to price increases
(200%)
...
They
could now compete for 35% (65% reserved for communists) in the lower house of parliament, and
free elections in the upper house
...
On 4th June
elections, Solidarity won 92/100 seats in the upper Sejm, and 160/161 of the seats they would
compete for
...
The solidarity
movement would form government and communists would hold a minority
...
In Nov, 1989, solidarity
removed communist control of army and police, and in Nov, 1990 Lech Walesa (co-‐founder of
23
Solidarity) was elected president
...
May 1988, Hungarian Socialist Workers Party
(MSZMP) replaced Prime Minister Kadar with Grosz, a committed reformer
...
Grosz visited USSR in
March 1989, and Gorbachev welcomed developments, but emphasised that Socialism shouldn’t be
threatened
...
This was accepted, and the leaders were convinced that the MSZMP would be dominant
...
In 1994, formed an alliance with free democrats, and in 1996, was
claimed to be ‘the most left-‐wing social democratic party’
...
He promoted family into
positions of authority they were not qualified for, and Cronyism was a main feature in his
government
...
He launched
Bulgarianisation which led to expulsion of 200,000 ethnic Turks from Bulgaria
...
Bulgarian Communist Party transformed to Bulgarian
Socialist Party (BSP)
...
Collapse of GDR:
GDR was a product of the cold war, Gorbachev needed to win loyalty of the population, as it could
no longer appeal to soviet power to maintain Law and Order
...
West
German loans 1983-‐4 saved it from bankruptcy
...
Honecker, also granted exit visas to East Germans who travelled to Poland and
Prague, and were besieging the West German embassies there in an attempt to flee the GDR
...
In Leipzig, peaceful demonstrations took place in late
Sept-‐Oct 1989, which were reluctantly tolerated as it was known that Gorbachev wouldn’t support a
hard-‐line policy
...
Berlin Wall Opens: on 4th Nov, 500,000 congregated in East Berlin to demand further reform and the
right to travel abroad
...
On 9th Nov, all GDR citizens with passports could have an exit visa valid
for any border crossing, including into West Berlin
...
Velvet revolution: Czechoslovakia: 1989, Czechoslovakia still controlled by those who suppressed
the Prague Spring
...
As a consequence to changes in Poland and
Hungary in summer of 1989, opposition was strengthened, and prime minister announced economic
reforms, but not political reforms
...
A demonstration to honour the death of a student killed in German occupation in WW2,
became a mass protest which triggered the Velvet Revolution
...
On 7th Dec, a new government was
formed with Communists as a minority
...
In 1992, Czechoslovakia broke into two independent states,
Slovakia and Czech Republic
...
Gorbachev was informed of plans to overthrow him in Nov, 1989, and
agreed that the Romanian Communist Party was the dominant force
...
On 21st Dec, the
communist leader fled
...
On 22nd Dec, the National
Salvation Front (NSF) was formed, and established a Council for National Unity and held elections for
a new government in May 1990
...
Yugoslavia: After expulsion from Cominform 1948, it followed a different pattern from other
communist states= more contact from the West, and in 1960s and ‘70s, Tito allowed greater cultural
and intellectual freedom than other communist states
...
Heavily dependent on foreign investment, and by 1989
inflation had reached 300%
...
Communist Party’s leading role was removed by the Federal Prime
Minister from the constitution in Jan 1990, and multi-‐party federal elections were announced
...
Each election brought nationalists to
power, and soon each state demanded independence, leading to the dismemberment of the country
into independent rival states
...
All but Macedonia and Montenegro
fought wars to achieve independence
...
In Feb, 1989 they announced a limited reform programme
based on perestroika
...
March 1991, the former Communist Party, now the Socialist Party of Albania won majority
...
In April 1997, the Albanian Socialist party won a large majority
...
The ‘Alliance for
Germany’ coalition, won majority, on 12th April, the new government claimed they wished to join
the FRG
...
Its reunification marked the end of the cold war
...
At first Gorbachev was opposed to the liquidation of the GDR, and in Dec, 1989,
promised he would ‘see to it that no harm comes from the GDR’
...
President Bush, also gave the green
light, and outlined a formula for negotiations, the ‘two plus four talks’ which would bring together
the two Germany’s and the four occupying powers
...
It was a peace treaty ending the partition of Germany
...
Disintegration of the USSR:
By 1989, it was clear perestroika hadn’t managed to resolve the economic problems
...
the USSR was a federation of 15 republics
...
The Baltic States: They had been part of the Russian Empire until the collapse of Russia in WW1, and
were ‘reabsorbed’ by the USSR in 1940
...
In 1988, the Popular fronts, coalitions of reformers, formed
in all three republics
...
In March, Lithuania and Estonia declared
independence, and Latvia followed in May
...
He was determined to keep
the USSR together
...
On 11th Jan, Bush expressed his concern
...
Russia:
Elections had taken place for the Congress of People’s Deputies in March and April 1990, and gave
majority to reformers and opponents of the communist regime
...
Gorbachev’s rival, Yeltsin, emerged as the leading politician
in the Russia and was elected chairman of congress
...
‘Summer of Sovereignty’:
Elections took place in the other republics in March and April 1990
...
End of the USSR:
Declarations of independence prompted Gorbachev to create of a draft of the new Union Treaty in
Nov, 1990
...
Soviet citizens were asked if they supported the renewed
federation of equal sovereign republics
...
Gorbachev under threat: His position was increasingly vulnerable
...
He faced opposition from the Communists in the army, party
and KGB, who were critical of his policies, and reformers led by Yeltsin, who in June 1991, became
first directly elected president of Russia
...
They launched an abortive coup in Moscow while Gorbachev was away
...
Yeltsin took a key role in rallying the crowds
in Moscow against the coup, and emerged as the saviour of the new Russia
...
The Communist Party was made illegal in Russia in August
...
Gorbachev attempted to draft a new treaty, but this was rejected
...
On 25th Dec, 1991 Gorbachev
resigned, and on 31st Dec, the USSR ceased to exist
...
26
‘The Big Three’ Leaders:
1933-‐
45
1945-‐
53
1953-‐
61
1961-‐
63
1963-‐
69
1969-‐
74
1974-‐
77
1977-‐
81
1981-‐
89
1989-‐
93
1993-‐
01
USA
Franklin
Roosevelt
Harry
Truman
Dwight
Eisenhower
J
...
Kennedy
Lyndon
Johnson
Richard
Nixon
1922-‐
53
1953-‐
64
1964-‐
82
1982-‐
84
1984-‐
85
1985-‐
91
USSR
Joseph
Stalin
Nikita
Khrushchev
Leonold
Brezhnev
Yuri
Andropov
Konstantin
Chernenko
Mikhali
Gorbachev
Gerald
1991-‐ Boris Yeltin
Ford
99
Jimmy
Carter
Ronald
Reagan
George
Bush
Bill Clinton
1940-‐
45
1945-‐
51
1951-‐
55
1955-‐
57
1957-‐
63
1963-‐
64
1964-‐
70
1970-‐
74
1974-‐
76
1976-‐
79
1979-‐
90
1990-‐
97
UK
Winston
Churchill
Clement
Attlee
Winston
Churchill
Anthony
Eden
Harold
McMillan
Alec
Douglas-‐
House
Harold
Wilson
Edward
Heath
Harold
Wilson
James
Callaghan
Margaret
Thatcher
John
Major
27
28
29
Title: The Cold War 1945-1995
Description: Cold War notes relevant to the OCR A-Level course, and mainly focuses of the Cold War within Europe. 26 pages worth of detailed notes
Description: Cold War notes relevant to the OCR A-Level course, and mainly focuses of the Cold War within Europe. 26 pages worth of detailed notes