0% found this document useful (0 votes)
150 views28 pages

IB History Review P2

The document summarizes different types of 20th century warfare such as civil wars, guerrilla warfare, limited wars, and total wars. It then discusses the origins and causes of the Chinese Civil War between 1927-1937 and 1946-1949. The long term causes included the collapse of the Qing Dynasty and rise of warlords, as well as the formation of the nationalist KMT and communist CCP parties which offered competing visions for China. The short term trigger was the KMT's failure to defeat the CCP and establish single party control, leading to full civil war after World War 2 and the withdrawal of Japanese forces from China.

Uploaded by

Yoyo Yu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
150 views28 pages

IB History Review P2

The document summarizes different types of 20th century warfare such as civil wars, guerrilla warfare, limited wars, and total wars. It then discusses the origins and causes of the Chinese Civil War between 1927-1937 and 1946-1949. The long term causes included the collapse of the Qing Dynasty and rise of warlords, as well as the formation of the nationalist KMT and communist CCP parties which offered competing visions for China. The short term trigger was the KMT's failure to defeat the CCP and establish single party control, leading to full civil war after World War 2 and the withdrawal of Japanese forces from China.

Uploaded by

Yoyo Yu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 28

IB History Review Paper 2

Topic 1-Causes, practices and effects of wars


 Different types and nature of 20th century warfare
o Civil War ( Vietnam war and Cuba War)
 Fought between people of same country
 Similar to total war
 Few end in compromise
 Most go until one side wins or gains objective
 Compared to total war
 More bitterness
 Line between civilian and soldier= less clear
 Enemy Is not just troops but entire opposing side
o Everyone chooses sides
 Results in the militarization of communities and rise to power of one
powerful leader
 Usually dictatorships
 Intervention of other countries
 To take advantage of divisions
 Support the side that would be favorable if victorious
 Can arise because:
 People in certain regions of a country feel oppressed
 Political divisions
 Different religious ideas in a country
 Social conflict
 Lots of social pressure
 More personal than in other types of wars
o Guerrilla Warfare
 Groups of civilians who took up arms to attack the enemy
 Smaller groups than the army operate independently to attack the
enemy wherever possible
 Attack essential communication and supply lines
 Useful when fighting a bigger and better supplied army
 Tactics=ambush and sabotage
o Limited war
 Not regional or international conflict
o Total war
 All resources of a nation used by state to achieve victory
 No distinction between home front and fighting front
 Home front: people produce war materials and food to
supply troops
o Provides soldiers for mass armies
 Fighting front: where war is waged
 State takes over/controls production, imports, and exports
 Distribution of resources
o Rations for food and raw materials
 Whole nation encouraged by propaganda
 Hard to oppose conflict
 Total commitment needed
 Vital survival of the nation
 No compromise for peace
o Until one enemy surrenders
o Any thing goes
 Atomic bomb
 New weapons
 Mustard/ poison gas
o Economic warfare to starve enemy
 Bombing raids to destroy economy
 Kill people producing resources
 Limits: prisoners, not mass killings

 Chinese Civil War (1927-37 and 1946-49)


o Origins and causes
 Long-term:
 Collapse of imperial power
o Manchu Qing dynasty = fragile
 Major external and internal threats
 Increase in foreign interest in the
country
o After the defeat of the British in
the Opium wars 1839-42
o Superpowers in the world started
to “carve up” China among them
and control her trade
 Emperor’s inability to resist this influx of foreign
involvement
 Rising nationalist resentment and internal
opposition to the imperial power
 Abdication of the emperor was necessary to
modernize the country
 A military nationalistic uprising
 Power vacuum arose
 The KMT and CCP fight over later in the
civil war
 Warlords and regionalism:
o Failure to fill the power vacuum divided up China
into different regions where warlords brutally
exercised their power over the peasants
o 1912 Yuan Shikai set up a military dictatorship
 Failed to resolve any of China’s big problems
 Such as foreign interest in the country
 Died in 1916 the country descended into
chaos
 Not appointed a successor
 For the next decade powerful warlords divided
up the country into independent regions
 As country was divided up, more people
became nationalistic and wanted to
unify China
 The social conditions under the warlords
were very poor, and the exploitation of
peasants would lead to later significant
support for the CCP.
 As China was internally weak, it had to
accept the TOV and grant the former
German colony of Shandong to China’s
greatest enemy, Japan. This created
more nationalistic feelings.
o Two different political parties, the KMT and the CCP,
were formed. The two parties both offered a solution
to China’s problems and they were willing to fight for it
as well
 KMT
 Leader: Sun-Yat-Sen
 Three main principles:
 1) Nationalism (take away foreign
influence)
 2) People’s democracy (establish a
democratic state)
 3) People’s livelihood (establish
socialism, where the poor are
benefitted)
 Under Chiang Kai-Shek
 Shifts right
 Focuses more on nationalism
 Leads to the white terror in Shanghai in
1927
 CCP
 Communist ideology
 Mao adopts Soviet communism to
Chinese conditions
 Revolutionize Chinese society
 1) Eradicate rural poverty through
collective ownership
 2) Replace traditional Chinese values
with CCP values
 3) Abolish foreign influence especially
western
 CCP want a central economy whilst KMT
wants to maintain capitalism
 Initially parties worked together to defeat
regionalism
 Chiang’s shift to the right  the white
terror (killing of CCP officials) what
some historians have called the “first
Chinese civil war” between 1927-37
 Ideological divisions also essential to
foundation of conflict in 1946
 Short Term:
 Failure of KMT to secure single party state
o Civil war inevitable
o Failed to defeat the CCP in 1927
 CCP severely weakened
 Nationalist government failed to establish
control of China
 CCP builds up its strength and emerged as
much stronger in the "united front" with KMT in
1937 against the Japanese invasion
 After the Japanese invasion, the fighting
between KMT + CCP continued
 CCP had emerged in a much stronger
position able to wage war against KMT
 End of WW2 and failure of US diplomacy:
o Failure of US to secure peace in China in 1946
 Proper civil war broke out between CCP and
KMT in the same year
 Dropping of atom bombs over Hiroshima and
Nagasaki meant that Japan had to withdraw
from China
 Fighting between CCP + KMT could
commence
o Heavily divided between
communists and nationalists,
 Cold war emerged in Europe
 US sought to stall a communist victory
in China
o Intervened to promote a coalition
government in China between
KMT + CCP
 General Marshall led the
negotiations between
 Both parties were not
prepared to honor the
terms of the agreement in
practice
 Were fighting again as
they moved troops into
Manchuria
o Nature
 Civil war:
 Lots of political ideologies involved
o Not so much due to regional differences
 Civilians suffered greatly, bot during and in after math of war
 Resulted in prolonged dictatorship
 Tactics:
 Guerilla war:
o Much of communist success on small scale, not in
large open-order conflict
 Especially with Japanese opposition
o Mao felt was an important part of achieving
revolutionary goals
 Derived from masses and is supported by them
 If it truly represents what people want
o Useful vs. Japanese and KMT
 Both = bigger and more equipped
o Help from Russia
 Course:
 Reasons for Communist victory:
 After the Long March, Mao finally gained
unchallenged command of the CCP
 Reasserting guerrilla strategy
 Communists set up their headquarters
at Yan'an, where the movement would
grow rapidly for the next ten years
o Due to aggression by the
Japanese
 Undermine the Nationalist
government
 Loss of Manchuria, and its
vast potential for industrial
development and war
industries, was a blow to
the Nationalist economy.
 KMT-CCP united front
against Japan
 Communists expanded
their influence wherever
opportunities presented
themselves through mass
organizations,
administrative reforms,
and the land- and tax-
reform measures favoring
the peasants
 Nationalists attempted to
neutralize the spread of
Communist influence
 The Red Army fostered an image of conducting
guerrilla warfare in defense of the people
 Mao began preparing for the establishment of
a new China
 Skillful organizational and propaganda work
The Communists increased party membership
from 100,000 in 1937 to 1.2 million by 1945.
 Nationalist internal reforms
 In vain
 Corruption and political and economic
chaos
 Demoralized and undisciplined Nationalist
troops proved no match for the People's
Liberation Army (PLA)
 Nationalists exhausted by the long war with
Japan and the attendant internal
responsibilities
 Communists take over
 Little resistance

o After Chiang Kai-shek and a few


hundred thousand Nationalist
troops fled from the mainland
o Effects and results
 China remained a single party state in which individual rights and
freedoms were suppressed
 Challenges facing the Government:
 After war with japan, China's economy and its people were
exhausted
 Agriculture production had fallen because people taken
away to fight
o  Food shortages
o Industrial production had also fallen
 Economy bad
o KMT leaders took treasury with them when they fled
 Rift between China and the Western powers
o Cut off from trade and contact with the west, China's
only source of foreign assistance was from the Soviet
Union.
 Still had problems with some landlords
o Social and ethnic divisions
 Effects on West and USA:
 US “Cold War” anxiety
 Refuses to recognize CCP- seat in UN in Taiwan (KMT) and
not PRC (china’s) seat
 New “front” in Cold War- US interpretations of USSR being
the mastermind behind the CCW- cold war context.

 World War 1
o Origins and causes:
 Long Term:
 Nationalism
o Emergence of aggressive patriotism in Europe
 Austria-Hungary had a large number of ethnic
groups after collapse of ottoman empire
 Minorities wanted independence
tension
 France= resentment
 France had to give up Alsace and
Lorraine to Germany in the Franco-
Prussian war.
 Political
o Colonies
 Growing industries needed more raw
materials
 Scramble for Africa
 Colonies wanted independence
o Germany and Britain arms race
 Disagreed over railroad from berlin to Baghdad
 Increase in German navy
 Historiography:
o Britain feels threatened, which
leads to their alliances with
France and Russia
 Germany has strongest army
 Historiography:
o Germany was determined to start
a war
 At the height of its military
power and wanted to
exploit the situation
 Alliances
o Reduced the ability to deal with responses flexibly
o The Triple Alliance
 Germany, Italy and Austria-Hungary
 Nations offered to support each other militarily
in the event of an attack against any of them by
two or more great powers
o Franco-Russian Alliance
 In response to Triple Alliance
 Mutual military assistance if either country was
attacked
o Entente Cordiale
 Britain and France
 Ending conflicts
o Triple Entente
 Britain, France and Russia
 Counterweight to the Triple Alliance.
 Economical:
o Commercial Rivalry
 Britain dominated the market
 Most manufactured goods
 Germany closing in on France
 Exporting more Iron
 Historiography:
o More British insecurity towards
Germany
 Short Term:
 Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
o Serbian nationalist group black hand
 Blank check from Germany
o Kaiser Wilhelm
o Allowed Austria to declare war
o Nature
 Total war:
 Entire population expected to contribute to the war effort
 Technological developments:
 75mm Field Gun
 Magazine rifle
 Machine gun
 Tactics:
 Germany
o Bringing up forces by railway, dividing its forces and
attacking with infantry supported by cannons
 Defensive: used machine guns, barbed wire
and heavy big guns to defend lines
o Germany sent Mexico an invitation to start a war
against the US
 Zimmerman Telegram
o Unrestricted Submarine Warfare tactic
 Sank US ships
 Trench Warfare
 Strategies:
 Land:
o Germany:
 Defend on eastern front and attack rapidly on
the west
 Schlieffen Plan
 Distract USA so no threat
 Seas:
o Britain starts a blockade in the North Sea
 Make Germany rely solely on its internal goods
 Starve it
o Effects and results
 Social:
 Improved status of women
 Social barriers undermined because of the emphasis of
national unity
 Nationalism exploded
 Most killed were between 18-38
 Fall in the birth rate between 1914-1918
 Manpower shortage during the 1930s.
 Political:
 Increased Role of Governments
o Health and education
o Greater control over the private sector
 Spread of democratic ideals
 The US came out favorable in the war
o The power of France, Germany, Russia, and England
all declined
 League of Nations to prevent this from happening again
 Economic:
 Belief in need for economic self-sufficiency
 Economic problems due to land that was destroyed
o Partially due to Trench warfare
 Germany ruined
o Declined as world power and in general
o In ruins because lost of fighting in home
o Blamed for war
 The Treaty of Versailles
 Germany to blame
o Lost 10% of its land
o Lost All its overseas colonies
 With this lots of its natural resources and
industries (iron and Steel) that had made it
economically prosperous before
o Alsace-Lorraine returned to France.
o No annexation of Austria, Czechoslovakia, or Poland
and Danzig
o Rhineland was to be declared a demilitarized zone
o Armed forces can be no larger than 100,000
o No manufacturing of weapons.
o No importing or exporting weapons
o No poison gas.
o No tanks.
o Small navy, 12 destroyers, 6 battleships, and 6
cruisers
o No Submarines
o No military aircraft
o War Guilt Clause justifies reparations.
 According to Germans:
o Did not feel as though they started the war
o Did not lose
o Supposed to be a peace conference and not a
surrender
 Effects of treaty:
o Germany falls behind in its Reparation payments
o French and Belgian soldiers invade the Ruhr region
and sack raw materials and goods in order to
compensate
 Allowed under the Treaty of Versailles
o German government orders the workers to strike
 The strike aids in causing the growing inflation
o French kill 100 workers and expel 100,000
protestants from the region in retaliation

 World War 2
o Origins and causes:
 Long-term:
 Versailles:
o German resentment:
 Had expected Wilson’s 14 points (not a blame
game)
 Treaty of Versailles= unfair
 Many displaced due to new boundaries
(land lost by Germany)
 Took everything Germany could use to
rebuild economy recession
resentment
o Historiography:
 Orthodox: failed to solve problems and made
some worse
 Revisionist: problem was not treaty but failure
to uphold its terms
 Communist Russia:
o With Germany defeated, no power strong enough to
prevent Russia from spreading communism to Europe
 Not much about remilitarization
 Weakness of League of Nations:
o Never granted any army
o Weapon=economic sanctions imposed on those who
did not comply
 Did not have much impact because biggest
economic power (US) not a member
 Germany’s situation could not get much worse
o It was completely ignored by aggressors (japan in
Manchuria)
 Short-term:
 Great depression:
o Hurt economy=mad people
 Germany really not able to recover
o Break down of diplomatic system
o Attempts to fix economy not prevent a war
o Also aided in rise of Nazis to power
 End of reparations
o Allowed Germany to recover economically
o Showed looseness of punishments
 Pushed for more
 Failure of disarmament
o Germany demanded to be considered equal at
conference in Geneva to other allies in league of
nations or they would quit
 Meaning that Germany could create an army
as large as any of the other powers
 Granted and Germany could remilitarize
 Quit league because did not want to be
obligated to fight in a war because of
league of nations
 Rise of fascist leaders and appeasement
o Fascism: exalts nation and often race above the
individual
o Britain was too weak to declare war on Germany in
the beginning after ww1
o Remilitarized Germany and sought to reunite German
speakers
 Troops in Rhineland
 Nazis in formally German states stir up trouble
 Sudetenland: voted to reunite with
Germany
o Hitler demands it and it is given
to him
o Promised not to take rest of
country
 Does so anyways
 Appeasement abandoned
 Nazi-soviet treaty
 Avoid war on two fronts
 Hitler attacks Poland
o Britain and France declare war
 Orthodox view: Hitler wanted to expand Germany
 Revisionist: improvisation and took advantage of
opportunities
o Nature
 Total war:
 Entire population expected to contribute to the war effort
 Mass bombing of civilians brought the front line to ordinary
people
 People killed in Germany due to bombings = 4x number of
British soldiers killed in WW1
 Technological developments:
 Long range air craft
 Homing torpedoes
 Air craft carriers as warships
o Used to be just support
 Tactics:
 Airborne assaults
o Parachutes from planes
o To seize or sabotage things behind enemy lines
 Strategies:
 Air:
o Bombers to destroy enemy’s industry, cities and
morale
 On battlefield
 Strategic air raids
 Land:
o Tanks
 Fast, low, and heavily armored
 Seas:
o Submarine
 German: Wolf-pack method
 Us vs. Japanese
 Resistance and revolutionary movements:
 German forces faced lots of guerrilla warfare tactics in
places they occupied
o Effects and results
 Peace (not so much) settlement
 Hitler kills himself
o 2 front war = too much
 Going to lose
 Japan: after atomic bombs
o Surrender
 Results:
 Huge physical and economic destruction
o Most killed in any war in history by far
o 20 million people displaced or without homes
o Aerial bombing= mass destruction over all of Europe
 Cities destroyed
 Communications and transportation destroyed
 Total war meant victors in same
condition as losers (destruction)
 Political:
o No redrawing of map of Europe
 No major treaty or peace settlement
o Yalta and Potsdam:
 Germany’s position
 Poland’s borders
 Fate of eastern European states
 Keeping future stability
o Germany vanished
 Partitioned between US, France, Britain and
Russia
o Eastern European bloc: dominated by Russia
o Fascism and Nazism disappeared
o United nations
 Aimed to maintain peace, promote dialogue
between nations and international cooperation
(like LON)
 Many more nations involved in the
development
 Vs. fascism
o Balance of power changed from Europe
 USSR and US emerge as super powers
 European nations all damaged by war
 Economic costs meant they could not
maintain overseas empires

 Americas: Falklands/Malvinas (1982)


o Origins and causes:
 Long term
 Dispute over sovereignty of the island
o Had little strategic or economic importance or value to
Britain or Argentina
o Once Argentina had gained independence from Spain
she laid claim to them
o In 1833 the British had sent a force to protect them.
o So the dispute between the two countries over the
rightful ‘ownership’ of these islands’ has a 150-year
history.
 Argentinian foreign Policy strategy
o A stronghold in the South Atlantic
o Chile=major rival
 Short term
 Political instability in Argentina led to the rise of the military
junta
o ‘Dirty war = ‘the disappeared’
o Increasing unpopularity
 Systematic execution of left-wing opponents
o War was fought to divert attention
 Severe economic crisis
o Argentina, stemmed particularly from foreign debt
o British
 Thatcher’s austerity measures (privatization)
to fight inflation were very divisive, all the more
so due to the high unemployment.
 She did not plan it but used it to bolster support
and to keep her image
 Argentina thought they had good relations with Us, so they
might get aid if needed
o Diplomacy failed
 USA failure to mediate
 Immediate
 Negotiations broke down in early 1982:
o Both had faulty or unclear intelligence about the other
side’s intentions.
 March 26th the Argentinian junta order a full invasion. This
occurred on April 2nd.

Topic 5: The Cold War


 Origins of the Cold War
o Ideological differences
 USSR
 Communism: politics
o No central government
o Dictator ship of proletariat would fade away and
society based on complete equality
 Communism economics
o Everyone takes what they need gives according to
their ability
o Production community owned
o Communal gain, not individual gain
 USA
 Democracy: politics
o Centralized government elected by people
 Capitalism: economics
o Supply and demand drive motivation and economic
growth
o Production privately owned
o Mutual suspicion and fear
 Communism viewed by capitalist states with mistrust and fear of it
spreading
 Stalin attempts to take advantage of post WW2 state to
increase Russian influence in Europe
o Tried to occupy as much of Germany and Eastern
Europe as possible
 USSR feared an uprising to end communism
 Capitalists states= hostile towards Russia
o USA: Truman Suspicious of Stalin
 Some believe dropping atomic bomb was also
directed towards Russia
 Look what we can do if you piss us off
 Did not tell Russia, their ally at the time, that
they were going to do so
 Told Churchill about bomb
o Delay to launch D-day= deliberate to exhaust USSR
before ending the war
o From wartime allies to post-war enemies
 During Russian revolution, USA and other capitalist states sent
troops to help anti-communists
 Stalin sure there would be another attempt to destroy communism
 Hitler invades in 1941
 USSR angry with appeasement policy of west
o Yalta Conference:
 In Russia, between allied leaders (Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill)
 Agreements:
 Establishment of UN
o 5 permanent members each with a veto in Security
Council
 Germany
o Demilitarized
o Divided between USSR, USA, France, and Britain
 East and West
 Berlin split too
 West=bigger than East and had the better part
 More industrious
 Eastern Europe
o Stain agreed that governments of eastern Europe
should have free elections
 Did not happen, USSR just took over
 Japan:
o Stalin to enter war with Japan as soon as Europe’s
war ended
 Wanted land in return
 Dropping of bomb eliminated the need for
Russia’s help
 Problems:
 Poland
o Potsdam Conference:
 Truman replaced Roosevelt
 Tougher on communists
 Truman did not like Russia communist government in Poland
 Russia promised to include more noncommunist in
government from old regime but Truman not appeased
o Communism in Eastern Europe:
 Cause alarm in the west
 Stalin interferes with Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Poland
 Speech:
 Communism and Capitalism cannot coexist
o War inevitable
 Iron Curtain Speech
 Addressed lack of free elections as promised in Yalta
 USSR compared Churchill to Hitler
 The grip tightens
 Churchill agrees to let Russia keep the satellite states
o How it got control was the problem
o Truman Doctrine
 Policy of containment
 USA would provide economic and military assistance to
prevent the spread of communism past 1947 borders
 Change from isolationism
 Inspired by Greece
o Communists try to overthrow monarch
 Monarch restored by British but strain from
fighting communistsaid from USA
o Marshall Plan:
 Economic expansion of Truman Doctrine
 Economic aid to rebuild after WW2
 Economic recovermarkets for America exports and
safeguards
 Economic prosperity meant less need for communism
 USA got to investigate money records
 USSR left out (had none)
 “Dollar imperialism”
 No satellite states or Czechoslovakia allowed to accept it
o Molotov Plan in response
 COMECON
 Council for Mutual Economic Assistance
o Centralized agency linked to
Eastern bloc countries to Moscow
o Stimulate control of economic
development
o Czechoslovakia:
 Moving towards west
 12 noncommunist forced to resign form Gov.
 Foreign minister killed
 Elections of all communist members
 Protests from west, but could not prove Russian involvement
o Berlin Blockade and Airlift:
 Disagreements over treatment of Germany
 West=revival
o Called for unification of 4 zones
o New currency
 East=satellite state
 Communists irritated that there was island of capitalism in berlin in
middle of soviet zone
 New currency put over edge
 Closed all road, rail, and canal links
 Force west to withdrawal
o West holds on fearing the results of appeasement
 West sends supplies by planes
o Neither side wanted war so predicted that USSR
would not shoot down planes
 Division of Germany
 West: German Federal Republic
 East: German Democratic Republic
o NATO:
 North Atlantic Treaty Organization
 Collective security army
 Agreed to regard an attack on one of them as an attack on
all of them
 Berlin crisis UN needs an army
 Warsaw Pact in response
o Historiography:
 Traditionalists:
 USSR to blame
 Blame=most active during “war”
 US supported mutual cooperation
o UN
o Attempts to negotiate between USSR and Britain
 US acted in response to Russian hostility
 Revisionists:
 Even before start, USA had sought to limit USSR influence
 USSR acted in response to USA aggression and ambition
 Post-revisionists:
 All forces played a part
 Nature of the Cold War
o Cuba:
o Cuba’s relative economic wellbeing
 Depended much on the USA as principal market for it agricultural
output and investments
 Had been ruled by Fulgencio Batista
 Had degenerated into a repressive and corrupt dictatorship
 Communists had agreed to support the pro-Batista
government in 1938, and in returned they were allows to
operate as a legal political party, the Partido Socialista
Popular
 Castro: no alternatives but a resort to armed force
o Political scene was not open to opponents
o 26 July 1953, led a small group of revolutionaries in
Santiago, but taken prisoner
 Amnesty and fled to Mexico
 Che Guevara
 With him to Cuba in another coup
 Defeated
 Fled and groped with other ant-Batista
forces
o Batista was suggested by the USA to step down in
favor of a Junta
 He fled the country
 Revolutionary forces marched into Havana and
a new government was established
 Castro and Guevara immediately took
charge of the army
 Castro = Prime Minister
 Castro’s rule:
 Typical reforms of a newly installed nationalist regime:
 Takeover of US companies
 Reduction of utility and service fees
o Expect trouble with the USA
 Guatemala-style intervention
o Move against other political factions
 Many middle classes into exile
 Counterrevolutionaries
 USA = hostile
 The CIA started recruiting
o Did not declare himself a Marxist-Leninist until late
1961.
o Agrarian reform took place
o Trade and credit agreements with the USSR
 Bought weapons from east Europe
 Oil from soviet=cheaper
o Eisenhower cut the sugar quota
 In response nationalized US companies and all
US banks
 Trade embargo
o Kennedy
 Bay of Pigs (originally Eisenhower’s idea but
Kennedy ruined it)
 The Missile Crisis
 Soviets nuclear missiles in Cuba
o Khrushchev: although the USSR
would defend Cuba from another
attack, it would not establish
military bases there of its own
o Refused to place offensive
missiles in other countries
despite USA missiles in Turkey
and Western Europe
 Problems to be address:
o Berlin
 Wanted to end Western
occupation city
 An escape route for
thousands of refugees
Berlin Wall
o Presence of American missiles in
Turkey and Italy
 Arms race and nuclear power
o Ussr far behind USA
o Restore credibility in the Russian
nuclear threat quickly
 Cuba
 US blockade
o Wasn’t working as construction of
the missile sites continued
o Two letters from Khrushchev
 Ordered the Missiles in
Turkey disarmed
 US pledge not to invade
Cuba
o Arab-Israeli Conflict:
o Mass immigration of Jews to Palestine
 Arabs mad
 British wanted two to live together
 Divide Palestine in two states was rejected by the Arabs
 Unable to cope with the problem after WW2
 Asked the UN to deal
o Divide Palestine
 Independence of Israel
 Immediately attacked by Egypt, Syria, Jordan,
Iraq and Lebanon
 British to blame because they did not
keep troops there to keep everything
peaceful
 US to blame using influence in UN
o Israel set up by UN in 1948 in Palestine
 Area belonging to Palestinian Arabs
 Outraged Arab opinion around the world
 Blamed Britain = more sympathetic to Jews than to Arabs
 Blamed USA
 Supported the idea of a Jewish state very strongly
 Arab states refused to recognize Israel
 Vowed to destroy it
o Achieve political and economic unity among the Arab
states
o End to foreign intervention in their countries
 Interference in the Middle East by other counties
 Britain and France had been involved in the Middle East for
many years
o Britain with Egypt
 Important position in the world
o Crossroads between the Western nations, the
communist bloc and the Third World of Africa and
Asia
o Oil supplies
 Lack of unity among the Arab sates encouraged other
countries to intervene
 Most Arab countries = nationalist governments
 Bitterly resented Western influence
 Pro-Western govs were swept away and replaced by
regimes which wanted to be non-aligned
 Arab countries were divided among themselves and poorly
equipped
 Results: refugees and mass immigration of Arabs (due to mass
killings of them by Jewish troops)
 Suez War: 1956
 Nasser signed an arms deal with Czechoslovakia for
Russian weapons
o Russian military experts went to train the Egyptian
army
 Americans therefore cancelled a promised grant of 46 million
for the building of the Aswan Dam
o Nasser nationalizing the Suez Canal
 Income from it to finance the dam
 Secret talks between British, French and Israelis
o Israel would invade Egypt across the Sinai peninsula
and Europeans would step in to protect the structure
from the damage
 Captured the entire peninsula in less than a
week
 Britain and France bombed Egyptian airfields
and marched troops in
 Americans refused to support Britain
 UN: Americans and Russians demanded an
immediate ceasefire
 Prepared to send a UN force
o Withdrew
 Six day war
 Still refused to recognize Israel
 Iraq ready to cooperate with Egypt to attack Israel
 Syria bombing Jewish settlements
 Egypt started mobilizing its troops to the Sinai border.
 USSR: flow of anti-Israeli propaganda
o Israel was being supported by the USA
 Israelis decided that they had to attack first
o Launched a series of devastating air attacks
 Cleared out the enemy’s air forces on the
ground and captured the Gaza strip, the entire
Sinai peninsula, the West Bank and the Golan
Heights
 Arabs accept ceasefire
 Results:
o Now kept the gained territories as buffer zones
 Arab displacement again
 Yom Kippur War
 Need for a negotiated peace settlement with Israel
o Wanted US help to be mediator, but Us refused
 Decided to attack Israel again
o Force Americans to act as mediators
 Russian weapons and tactics
 On the Jewish feast of Yom Kippur
o Some early Arab success
o The Israelis turn the tables
 Kept all territory they had captured in 1967 and
even crossed the Suez Canal to Egypt
 USA and the USSR intervene to try to bring out
a peace settlement
 Acting with UN co-operation, they organized a
ceasefire which both sides accepted
 Results:
o Hope of permanent peace
o Arab states made use of the oil-weapon
o The Peace treaty
 The state of war which had existed between the two countries since
1948 was now over
 Israel promised to withdrew it troops from Sinai
 Egypt promised not to attack Israel again and guaranteed to supply
her with oil
 Israeli ships could use the Suez Canal
o Election of the less aggressive Labour government in Israel
 Better relations with the Palestinians
o Oslo accords
 Israel formally recognized the PLO
 The PLO recognized Israel’s right to exist and promised to give up
terrorism
 The Palestinians were given self rule in the West Bank and in part
of the Gaza Strip, areas occupied by Israel since 1967
o Détente:
o 1945 to 1952 there was an increase in tension
o Until 1956 = improved relations between the sides
 In 1953 a cease fire was declared in Korea
 1954 the peace agreement for Indochina was concluded
 Eisenhower talked about “liberation” this policy was more theory
than practice: neither during the revolt in East Berlin in 1953 nor in
Hungary 1956 did the USA plan to intervene
 Advocated a reduction in defense budget
 US away from armed conflicts
 Decrease the tension
 3rd party congress of 1956, were Stalin was denounced and the
possibility of peaceful coexistence between capitalist and
communist nations was now emphasized
 Austrian question was solved
 Relations were established between the Soviet Union and Japan.
 Geneva= new relations
 Trade between East and West increased
 Tourists began to cross the Iron Curtain
 Negotiations on arms control
o Tension increase up to Missile Crisis of 1962
 Middle east problems
 Germany and berlin still not resolved
 Berlin wall
o Extended period of détente until the mid-1970s:
 Contact between the power blocs increased and several conflicts
temporary solutions
 After missile crisis:
 Washington and Moscow had seen into the abyss that a war
and not interested
 Arms limitation and confidence-building measures between
East and West

o Test ban treaty of 1963


 Banned nuclear testes in the atmosphere, in
outer space and under water
o Non-proliferation treaty was signed in 1968
 Promised to refrain from transferring nuclear
weapons to countries not having them
 Other countries promised not to accept or
develop them
o SALT I and SALT II
o USSR and West Germany: Moscow treaty
 No use violence to alter existing boundaries in
Europe
o Four Power agreements solved a number of conflicts
related to Berlin.
 Trade between East and West Germany was
particularly important, as well as the human
gains
o Summits common between East and West
 Aimed at the mutual contact and prevention of
future conflicts between the superpowers
o Vietnam:
o Failure: North Vietnamese communist were not contained
 The loss of hundreds of thousands of American lives, billions of
dollars and damaging division of U.S. public opinion
 The Americans pulled out in 1973.
o Fear of other countries falling to communism “like dominos”
o 1945, Ho Chi Minh declared the independence of the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam.
 Hostilities broke out between French and Vietminh in 1946
 President Roosevelt had pressured France to relinquish its
hold over Vietnam
 Views of USA hardened when Truman became President
o 1950 military aid was sent to help France defeat the Vietminh
 Aid continued by Eisenhower (domino theory)
 Funding 80% of war but not direct involvement
o Geneva Accords
 The French would withdraw from Indochina
 There would be a temporary division of Vietnam at the 17 th parallel
 Ho Chi Minh would control the north.
 Free elections to unite Vietnam in 1956
 Laos and Cambodia would be recognized as independent states.
o USA attempted to strengthen the area south of the 17 th parallel
 To resist an invasion from the north
 SEATO (South-East Asia Treaty Organization)
 Agreed to meet together if there was an armed attack on one
of them and to take action
o US backed Ngo Dinh Diem lead Government in south
 Catholic
 Educated USA
 1955 Diem establishment of the Republic of Vietnam
 US aid to Diem
 US training of the South Vietnamese army
 Ruthless leader
 Land reforms not established
 1956, Diem refused to hold elections
o Groups of communists Vietcong formed themselves in military units
with a political arm known as the National Liberation Front
 Supported by North Vietnam
o Kennedy ‘flexible response’
o Diem continued to generate mass discontent
o Kennedy cut off its aid to the regime
o Johnson inherited a situation where there was no longer a stable
government in the South
 Where the strength of the Communists in the South was increasing
o “Gulf of Tonkin incident” 1964
 American destroyer Maddox was fired on by North Vietnamese
patrol boats off the North Vietnamese coast
 Two days later, Maddox and Turner Joy were also allegedly fired
on
 No physical evidence of the assault was found
 “Open aggression”
 Bombed North Vietnamese installations
 “Gulf of Tonkin Resolution”
 Authorized the President to “take all necessary measures to
repel any armed attack against the forces of the US and
prevent further aggression”
 Legal basis for the war in Vietnam.
o Bombing in North Vietnam
o Sending 100,000 ground forces to South Vietnam in 1965
o The Great Society and the ‘credibility gap’
 Improving civil rights, eradicating poverty, increasing access to
health and education, and creating a cleaner environment
 Development of the ‘credibility gap’
 This was the difference in reality with what the Johnson
administration told Congress and what was actually
happening.
o The Tet Offensive
 War of attrition
 Anti-war movement was gaining support
 Communists launched a surprise attack on holiday
 Communists were gradually pushed back from all cities after the
use of massive firepower
 Military failure for the Vietcong
 Hoped to trigger rebellion, but did not work
o ‘Televised war’
 Not winning
 Bloody
 Regime violated basic human rights
o Anti war protests reached a new peak
o Bombing of the North was halted and peace talks initiated
o Nixon was elected president in Nov 1968
 Wanted American withdrawal form the war
 ‘Peace with honor: the USA could not merely withdraw from
Vietnam
 Nixon wanted a settlement that would guarantee the South a
reasonable chance of survival.
 Henry Kissinger
 To use force to reach a peace agreement
 A bombing campaign along the Ho Chi Minh trail
 ‘Vietnamization’
 The gradual withdrawal of US troops and handing the war
over to the South Vietnamese government
 Nixon doctrine stating that nations were responsible for their
own defense.
o Paris Peace Talks
 Neither side willing to compromise
 North demanding that it have representation in the government of
the South
 All sides continuing to try to win an advantage at the negotiating
table by achieving an upper hand on the battlefield
 Us: airpower to put pressure on the Communists
 Nixon and Kissinger détente with the Soviet Union and
China
o Aim of improving relations with these countries
o Get them to put pressure on North Vietnam to agree
to a peace settlement
Signed in January 1973
Troops would withdraw
North and South would respect the dividing line of the 17 th parallel
North took the initiative
 By end of 1975, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos all fallen to
the forces of communism
o Historiography:
 Most: failure
 Broader aims of America’s effort in Vietnam
 To keep capitalist democracies in South East Asia from
falling to Communism
o Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore –all of whom faced
Communist threats- survived
o Renewed Tensions:
o USA disappointed with the Soviet intervention in conflicts around the
world
o A new Globalism
 Ideological differences still remained
 There could be no peaceful ideological coexistence
o Moscow strengthened its capacity to pursue a global policy
o Overall level of defense was increased
 The navy expanded and air capacity
 More active in the export of armaments and in the early 1980’s had
surpassed USA
o Invasion of Afghanistan in 1979
 Close relations with the changing Afghan governments
 Pro-communist government assumed power
 Proposed only moderate reforms
 Growing Soviet influence
 Political repression and opposition to the reforms  large-scale
Muslim guerrilla against new communist government
 Soviet Union directly intervened with 90,000 troops
 More pro-Soviet leader installed
o Arms limitation treaties had stopped and the USA now expanding its
armament in NATO
o Less economic and technological help from the US
 Us grant China advantages
 USA opening to China
 To scare USSR
o US response to the Soviet invasion:
 Carter proposed major increases in the defense budget
 Grain trade was limited
 Exports of high technology halted
 Olympic games boycotted
o Reagan was firmly anti-communist and had always opposed détente
 USA had to act as the leader of the “free world”
o Reagan’s mandate
 Defense budget increased dramatically
 Verbal attacks on the Soviet Union
o The Reagan administration expected the Soviet Union to yield if the
USA conducted firmly enough
o Relations between the USA and the USSR were worse than at any
time since the Cuban crisis in 1962.
 End of the Cold War
 Gorbachev
o Determined to revitalize
 Years of stagnation
o Modernizing and making more efficient the communist party with the
policies of glasnost and perestroika (economic and social reform).
o Did not want to end communism
 Replace the existing system with a socialist system which was
humane and democratic
o Glasnost
 Human rights and cultural affairs
 Dissidents released
 Freedom of speech
 Aims:
 Use the media to publicize inefficiency and corruption
 Educate public opinion
 Mobilize support for the new policies
o Economic affairs
 Small scale private enterprise allowed
 To provide competition for the slow and inefficient services
provided by the state
 The hope of stimulating a rapid improvement
 Quality control throughout industry taken over by independent state
bodies
o Political changes
 Move towards democracy within the communist party
 Members of soviet elected by people rather than appointed
 Top party positions and factory managers would be elected
 Supreme Soviet replaced by smaller one
 Elected through a Congress of People’s Deputies
 Proper parliament
 Reserved seats for communist party cancelled
o Communist party was on the verge of losing its
privileged position
o Problems:
 Opposition from radicals and conservatives
 Some party members felt that reforms not drastic enough
o Change to a market system as soon as possible
 Conservative communists
o Changes too drastic
o Party was losing control
 The economic reforms did not produce results quickly enough
 Wages were dependent on output
 Factories did not increase overall output
o Instead concentrated on expensive goods
o  Higher wages government print more money
soaring inflation
o Basic goods in short supply
 Nationalist pressures
 Soviet republics had ben under tight control in Stalin’s time
 Reforms  hope for more independence
o Eastern Europe
 Poland
 “Solidarity” popular support
o Combination of economic stagnation that the
government failed to resolve
o Also support of Pope and Church
o ReformsSolidarity legalized and won first free
elections
o Gorbachev’s refusal to support the old Communist
regime
 Polish Communist party collapsed
 East Germany
 Living standards well below West
 No sense of Eastern German nationalism
 People look forward for reunification
 Regime was unpopular
o Its leader was particularly hated
 Pressure to remove leader
 Criticized the repressive system and openly
demanded reforms
 Government wanted to use force to stop
protests, but Gorbachev would not intervene if
needed
 The politburo in power
 Elections were held in 1990, when parties in
favor of unification won
 East and West Germany unified 3 October
1990
 Hungary
 Reform from Communist Party
o Reformers sacked the hard-line leader
 Dominated the government
 October 1989 a new Hungarian Republic was
declared
 Elections took place the following year.
 Czechoslovakia
 “Velvet Revolution”
o Little violence
o People power clear driving force
o Mass demonstrations calling for reform
o 1989 elected president
 Romania
 Violent
 One of the most repressive regimes in the East
o Killing of demonstrators by the army
o Uprising against the leader
o Army refused to act against the demonstrators

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy