the consequences of wwii decolonization and cold war

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The Consequences of WWII Decolonizatio n and Cold War

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Page 1: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

The Consequences of WWII

Decolonization and Cold War

Page 2: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Consequences of WWII

Staggering casualties – over 20 million in the Soviet Union aloneDecline of European power and the rise of the U.S. and U.S.S.R. as Superpowers=Cold WarDecolonizationDiscrediting of “scientific racism” – the Holocaust revealed

Page 3: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Creation of the United Nations - 1945

League of Nations never really worked.

Belief in need for international body

Had military power

Worked together to solve problems

Permanent council members who have veto powers – U.S., U.S.S.R., France, Great Britain and China

Currently 192 member nation-states

Page 4: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Origins of the Cold War

Yalta Conference 1945Division of Eastern & Western EuropeDivision of Germany and BerlinStalinist elections: Poland (1945), Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia (1947-48)

Page 5: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Yalta Conference

Page 6: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Containment of Communism

Iron Curtain speech by Winston Churchill (1946)Truman Doctrine (1947)Marshall Plan (1947)Berlin Airlift (1948-1949)NATO – North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1949)Warsaw Pact (1955)

Page 7: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Truman DoctrineTriggered by the communist insurrections in Greece and TurkeyPromised U.S. aid to any nation fighting communism

"I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures. I believe that we must assist free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way.

I believe that our help should be primarily through economic and financial aid which is essential to economic stability and orderly political processes."

Page 8: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Marshall Plan

Between 1947-51, U.S. provide $9.4B to rebuild after WWII

Stalin refused for all East to take part

http://www.charleslipson.com/Images/Stalin-Marshall-Plan-cartoon.jpg

Page 9: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Berlin Airlift

1948-1949

Germany and Berlin were divided at Potsdam into four zone

1948 – Three zones united in West Germany

Stalin blockaded West Berlin

321 day airlift

Stalin withdrew blockade in 1949

Result was two Germanys – East and West

Page 10: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 11: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

NATO and Warsaw Pact

Page 12: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

1950s to early 1960sIncreasing tensions1949 Chinese Revolution1949 Soviets get atomic bomb1950-53 Korean War1950s - “Red Scare” - McCarthyism1957 Sputnik1960 U-2 incident – U.S. Spy plane shot down in USSR1961 Bay of Pigs1961 Berlin Wall was built1962 Cuban Missile Crisis

Page 13: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Sputnik

Page 14: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Eastern European Revolts

1953 Khrushchev succeeded Stalin

1956 Poland strikers had a limited success

1956 ambitious Hungarian revolt under Imre Nagy crushed by Soviet troops

Page 15: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

The Berlin Wall

Built in 1961

Built to stop the flow of refugees to the West

Most visible symbol of the Cold War

“Checkpoint Charlie”

Page 16: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 17: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Checkpoint Charlie

Page 18: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

“Battles of the Cold War”

Page 19: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

The Korean War1950-53“Battle” of the Cold War“limited war”Former Japanese colony – then divided into North and SouthUSSR withdraws from UN Security CouncilJune 1950 Northern invasion along the Pusan PerimeterU.N.-led counter-invasion – InchonChinese invasion – Yalu River - MacArthur’s firingStalemate38th ParallelDMZ – demilitarized zone – “the most dangerous place on earth”

Page 20: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

South Korean troops inspect fence in 1975

Page 21: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Vietnam Conflict – Domino TheoryViet Minh under Ho Chi Minh 1946-1954 France – France had always wanted Vietnam as a colony1959-1975 U.S. enteredLeaders – Ho Chi Minh in the North and Ngo Dinh Diem in the SouthJohnson and Nixon war plans – US participationGuerilla warfareExpansion and Vietnamization – war ending in 1975 with US withdrawal

Page 22: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Napalm

Page 23: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Cuban Revolution

1959 Fidel Castro overthrew Fulgencio Batiste

Early support for Castro because he instituted national education and medical reforms

Nationalized large-scale landholdings, appealed to Soviets for aid

Castro also preached revolution to other Latin American nations

Page 24: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 25: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis

1961-1962Bay of Pigs was planned by Eisenhower and carried out in 1961 by JFKThis damaged Kennedy politically and scared Castro into the arms of the SovietsCuban Missile Crisis, October 1962. The closest US and USSR came to nuclear war.13 day standoff

Page 26: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 27: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Latin America in the Cold War

Latin American countries were generally economically dependant on U.S., gross economic inequalities, authoritarian governments1960s – military dictators seized Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay. Other stayed ruled by junta. True democracies are rare.

Page 28: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Latin America1950-1970s Marxist revolts throughout Latin America. Generally crushed by right-wing governments, backed by U.S.1954 CIA intervened covertly in Guatemala1965 & 1983 U.S. directly intervened in the Dominican Republic and Grenada1970-80s - Nicaragua – Contras (US supplied) vs. Sandinistas (Marxist) – the largest conflict outside of Cuba – big mistake for U.S.By the late 1980s the U.S. is criticized for overstepping its bounds in international affairs

Page 29: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Soviet-Afghanistan War1978-1990sClient state toppled by internal rebellion in 1978Soviets sent in 5000 advisors1979-88 rebellion against Soviet controlResistance was led by the mujahidin – Islamic freedom fighters backed by the U.S.Soviets withdrew 1989, but the civil war lasted into the 1990sTaliban (from the mujahidin) imposed a government in late 1990s

Page 30: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Society during the Cold War

Eastern bloc countries (2nd World): low production and industry Losing propaganda war with the West Economic troubles after arms race of 80s

Western bloc countries (1st World): Prosperous But politically tumultuous

Non-aligned, non-industrialized nations (3rd World)

Society will begin to change by the 1970s & 80s

Page 31: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Social Movements during the Cold War

Peace Movement

European Anti-Nuclear Movement

Civil Rights Movements in the U.S.

Feminist Movements

Sexual Revolution

Gay Rights Movement These movements grew out of the social

and population changes as well as unhappiness with Vietnam

Page 32: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Gorbachev - Russia

Reforms of the 1980sSoviet Union was weakened by Afghanistan Chernobyl accidentArms raceGlasnost and perestroikaHe tried to work within Communist party until an attempted coup in 1991Gorbachev placed under house arrest but the Russian president Yeltsin led massive protests

Page 33: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Gorbachev

Page 34: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster

Page 35: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

1989

Collapse of the Soviet Bloc

1981-1989 – Poland’s Solidarity Party – Catholics and workers – Pope John Paul II

1989 – Poland gained right to multiparty elections – Elected Lech Walesa and threw out the communists

Revolts in Hungary Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Albania, East Germany and Romania

Page 36: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Lech Walesa

Page 37: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Fall of the Berlin Wall

1989 – Access was opened, main gate opened.

Triggered by flood of refugees flowing east and west through Hungary

Wall actually came down in 1990

Germany began the reunification process

Page 38: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 39: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Break-up of the Soviet Union

1991 USSR dissolved by December

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania all left the USSR in 1991

Commonwealth of Independent States led by Yeltsin

1992 – 17 more republics had left

Economic, religious and crime problems

Page 40: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Problems after the break-up

Economic dislocationResurgence of ethnic tensionAnti-SemitismLimited experience with democracyShaky governments with widespread corruption and crimeThe legacy of terror from the worst dictatorships left scars

Page 41: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

ChechnyaWith the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991, a number of regions managed to break away and gain independence. Late 1991 - Chechnya's drive for independence. Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin, refused Chechnya's declaration of independence,Sent in troops instead, only to withdraw when confronted by armed Chechens.1994 Russia invades again. Massive casualties1999 10,000 Russian troops sent in2003 Separatist referendum – leaders killed2004 – School children killed in Chechen rebel bombing2005 March Separatist president killed

Page 42: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War
Page 43: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Yugoslavia

The former Yugoslavia broke apart in 1990Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina1991 Civil war between 3 main groupsCroats (Roman Catholic)Serbs (Greek Orthodox)Bosnians (Muslim)

Page 44: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

1991-1995Serb President Slobodan Milsevic

Ethnic cleansing

Practiced against Bosnians and Croats

Over 200,000 civilians killed

Ended only with 1995 U.N. intervention

Page 45: The Consequences of WWII Decolonization and Cold War

Review