cold war crisis points china to terrorism. china civil war in ’30s nationalists v. communists...
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Cold War Crisis PointsChina to Terrorism
ChinaCivil war in ’30sNationalists v. CommunistsJoint Effort v. Japan in WW2Civil War resumes ’40sCold War
Nationalists
Chiang Kai-Shek Corruption
Ineffective Leader
Support of USA
Loses, flees
Republic of China aka Taiwan
Communists
Mao Zedong Long March
Peasant support
Support of USSR
Wins 1949… domino
People’s Republic of China… mainland
Communists vs. Nationalists
Mao Zedong Jiang Jieshi (a.k.a. Chiang Kai-shek)
Communists vs. Nationalists
Civil War Resumes
Economic problems cause Nationalist soldiers to desert to Communists
Mao’s troops take control of China’s major cities
In 1949, People’s Republic of China is created
Nationalists flee to Taiwan
The Two Chinas Affect the Cold WarThe Superpowers React
U.S. supports Nationalist state in Taiwan, called Republic of China
Soviets and China agree to help each other in event of attack
U.S. tries to stop Soviet expansion and spread of communism in China
The Two Chinas Affect the Cold War
China Expands under the Communists
China takes control of Tibet and southern Mongolia
India welcomes Tibetan refugees fleeing revolt against Chinese
China and India clash over border; fighting stops but tensions remain
The Communists Transform China Communists Claim a New “Mandate of
Heaven”
Chinese Communists organize national government and Communist Party
Mao’s Brand of Marxist Socialism
Mao takes property from landowners and divides it among peasants
Government seizes private companies and plans production increase
The Communists Transform China
New Policies and Mao’s Response
China and Soviet Union clash over leadership of communist movement
Strict socialist ideas are moderated, Mao reduces his role in government
Red Guards—militia units formed to enforce strict communism in China
The Communists Transform China
The Cultural RevolutionCultural Revolution—movement to build
society of peasants and workers
Red Guards—groups of violent and radical youth—close schools and execute or imprison many intellectuals
In 1968, Chinese army imprisons, executes, or exiles most Red Guards who have been labeled by the government “Counter Revolutionary.”
However, the Cultural Revolution continues until Mao’s death in 1976.
The Red Guards: China’s Teenage Police Force
Between 1966 and 1976, students in China’s Red Guard waged a Cultural Revolution on teachers and professionals that left a million people dead and the country in chaos.
Red Guards holding Mao’s “Little Red Book” of his sayings during the cultural revolution.
Korea: Cold War by ProxyKorea Divided @ 38th
││USSR > N. KoreaUSA >> S. KoreaNK invades SKUN Police Action
US troops
Douglas MacArthur
StalemateArmistice 1953Was it worth it?
War in Korea
Standoff at the 38th Parallel In 1950, North Koreans invade South Korea with
Soviet support
South Korea requests UN assistance; 15 nations send troops
Douglas MacArthur—leads UN forces against North Koreans
North Koreans controls most of the peninsula when MacArthur attacks
Half of North Korea’s army surrenders, the rest retreat
War in Korea
The Fighting Continues
UN troops push North Koreans almost to Chinese border
Chinese send 300,000 troops against UN forces and capture Seoul
MacArthur calls for nuclear attack and is removed from command
In 1953, cease fire signed and border established at 38th parallel
War in Korea
Aftermath of the WarNorth Korea builds collective
farms, heavy industry, nuclear weapons
South Korea establishes democracy, growing economy with U.S. aid
The Khrushchev Era & De-Stalinization
Stalin dies ’53
Nikita Khrushchev emerges
De-Stalinization Secret Speech ’56
Denounce Stalin
Remove Stalin supporters
Purge Memory of Stalin Destroy monuments
• Peaceful Competition
The Cold War Divides the World
The Threat of Nuclear War
Soviet Union explodes its first atomic bomb in 1949
U.S. and Soviet Union both develop the more powerful hydrogen bomb
Brinkmanship—policy of willingness to go to the edge of war
Increasing tensions lead to military buildup by U.S. and the Soviets
The Cold War Divides the World
The Cold War in the SkiesIn 1957, Soviets launch Sputnik,
first unmanned satellite. THE SPACE RACE BEGINS!
In 1960, Soviets shoot down American spy plane (a U-2), increasing tensions
A replica of Sputnik 1
U-2 spy plane similar to the one shot down over the U.S.S.R.
Francis Gary Powers with a model of a U-2 spy plane.
Wreckage of Gary Powers’ U-2
Cold War Crisis Points
Hungarian Uprising 1956 Imre Nagy
Sought greater independence from USSRSought coalition with non-communistsSought Hungarian neutrality
SeizureProtesters seize radio station… HELP!No US response…??
Soviet responseSoviet tanks crush uprisingNagy executed > New Pro-Soviet leader Janos Kadar
ResultCold War boundaries solidified in E. EuropeUS - Soviet spheres accepted in Europe
Cold War Crisis Points
Sputnik ’57 Soviet victory = Western fear Kitchen debates w/ Nixon
U-2 Incident US spy-plane shot down US lies > no apology > ↑ tension
Communist Split Soviet vs. Chinese
Doctrine & Spheres of Influence
Berlin Wall ’61 Vienna Conference w/ JFK US response > Wall
Cuban Missile Crisis ’62 Soviet nukes in Cuba > “Quarantine”
Khrushchev ‘resigns’
Confrontations in Latin America
Fidel Castro and the Cuban Revolution
Fidel Castro—leads revolt in Cuba against dictator supported by the U.S.
By 1959, Castro in power, nationalizes economy, takes U.S. property
In 1961, Castro defeats U.S. trained Cuban exiles at the Bay of Pigs
Fidel Castro
Confrontations in Latin America
Nuclear Face-off: the Cuban Missile Crisis
In 1962, U.S. demands removal of Soviet missiles in Cuba
Soviets withdraw missiles; U.S. promises not to invade Cuba
Cuban economy is left dependent on Soviet support
From Brinkmanship to Détente
Brinkmanship Breaks DownBrinkmanship cause
repeated crises; nuclear war a constant threat
John F. Kennedy—U.S. president during the Cuban Missile Crisis
Lyndon Johnson—president who increases U.S. involvement in Vietnam
From Brinkmanship to Détente
The United States Turns to Détente Vietnam-era turmoil fuels
desire for less confrontational policy
Détente—policy of reducing Cold War tensions to avoid conflict
Richard M. Nixon—U.S. president who launches détente
Détente grows out of philosophy known as realpolitik—”realistic politics”—recognizes need to be practical and flexible
Cold War Crisis PointsThe Brezhnev Era Policy Changes
↑repression ↓freedoms Arrest of A. Solzhenitsyn
Czechoslovakia 1968 A. Dubcek softens Czech communism Soviet invasion >> Brezhnev Doctrine
Détente Ike, JFK, LBJ = Brinkmanship Nixon = realpolitik + détente >> ↓ tension
Nixon visits China & USSR >> SALT I Treaty
Afghanistan 1979 Muslim revolt vs. Afghan Communist regime Soviet invasion >> 10 Year War >> Soviets leave ’89
Moscow Olympics boycotted by US & allies Ruins Soviet economy US supports Taliban & Osama Bin-Laden vs. USSR
From Brinkmanship to Détente
Nixon Visits Communist PowersNixon visits Communist China and
Soviet Union, signs SALT I TreatySALT—Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks—limits nuclear weapons
Nixon visiting China
The Collapse of Détente
Policy ChangesNixon and Gerald Ford improve
relations with Soviets and ChinaJimmy Carter has concerns about
Soviet policies but signs SALT IICongress will not ratify SALT II due
to Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
Confrontations in the Middle East The Superpowers Face Off in Afghanistan
Soviets invade Afghanistan to help Communist government against rebels
Muslim rebels fight guerilla war against Soviets with U.S. weapons
U.S. stops grain shipments to Soviet Union
Soviets eventually withdraw in 1989
Cold War Crisis Points Poland & 1980s Solidarity Movement Economic Failure of Communist Party
Food & Product Shortages Pope John Paul II – Polish Pope – Paves Way for Reform ↑ Meat Prices >> Protests >> STRIKES! Aug 80
Lech Walesa & Workers gained right to organize Independent union – Solidarity - formed
Sept 80 Polish Communist Leadership replaced Solidarity officially recognized Radio broadcast of Catholic Mass –WOW!
Summer 81 Secret Ballot Elections held… WOW!
Crackdown! Martial Law declared by Gen. Jaruzelski 1981 – 83 Avoided Soviet invasion
The Collapse of Détente
Reagan Takes an Anti-Communist Stance
Ronald Reagan—anti-Communist U.S. president takes office in 1981
Reagan increases military spending and proposes a missile defense program
In 1985, new Soviet leadership allows easing of Cold War tensions
Confrontations in Latin America
Civil War in NicaraguaAnastasio Somoza Debayle—Nicaraguan
dictator supported by the U.S.Daniel Ortega—leads Sandinista rebels who
take power in NicaraguaU.S. and Soviet Union both initially support
SandinistasSandinistas aid Communist rebels in El SalvadorU.S. helps anti-Communist Contras in Nicaragua
to assist El Salvador In 1990, Nicaragua holds first free elections,
Sandinistas lose
Daniel Ortega on Time magazine, March 31, 1986
Anastasio Somoza Debayle (U.S. supported president of Nicaragua from 1967-1980)
Cold War & De-ColonizationTransforming Colonies to CountriesGB & IndiaMohandas K Gandhi
Passive Resistance – Civil Disobedience1920s – 1940s >> Indian Independence
Indian National Congress Textile Boycott & Salt March
Indian Independence & Partition Muslim League – Muhammad Ali Jinnah
Pakistan = Muslim / India = Hindu
Tensions persist … Kashmir
France & Vietnam: Cold War by Proxy French Indochina
WW2 = J takes it! Post-WW2 F wants it back!
Ho Chi Minh + Vietminh seek independence
Dien Bien Phu = F lost Geneva Conference ’54
Split @ 17th ║ US backs Ngo Dinh Diem (SV) Ho Chi Minh (NV)
US involvement … ’61 thru ’73 Advisors > Air > Infantry Escalation >
Vietnamization > Withdrawal SV surrenders 4/30/75 Vietnam remains Communist
War Breaks Out in Vietnam
The Road to War Ho Chi Minh—
Vietnamese nationalist, later Communist leader
The Fighting Begins In 1954, French
surrender to Vietnamese after major defeat
Domino theory—U.S. theory of Communist expansion in Southeast Asia
Ho Chi Minh
The War in Vietnam, 1957-1973
Note the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos and Cambodia
War Breaks Out in VietnamVietnam—A Divided
CountryInternational peace
conference agrees on a divided Vietnam
Ngo Dinh Diem—leads anti-Communist government in South Vietnam
Vietcong—South Vietnamese Communist guerillas fighting against Diem
Ngo Dinh Diem
The United States Gets Involved
U.S. Troops Enter the Fight
In 1964, U.S. sends troops to fight Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
U.S. fights guerilla war defending increasingly unpopular government
Vietcong gains support from Ho Chi Minh, China, and Soviet Union
The United States Gets Involved
The United States Withdraws
War grows unpopular in the U.S.; in 1969, Nixon starts withdrawing troops
Vietnamization—Nixon’s plan to withdraw U.S. from war gradually
Last U.S. troops leave in 1973; South Vietnam overrun in 1975
Postwar Southeast Asia
Vietnam after the War
Saigon renamed Ho Chi Minh City; Vietnam united as Communist nation
About 1.5 million people flee Vietnam, some settling in the U.S. and Canada
In 1995, United States normalizes relations with Vietnam
Postwar Southeast Asia
Cambodia in Turmoil Khmer Rouge—
Communist rebels who take control of Cambodia in 1975
They slaughter 2 million people; overthrown by Vietnamese invaders
In 1993, Cambodia adopts democracy, holds elections with UN help
Pol Pot, leader of the Khmer Rouge (Cambodian Communist Party, literally “Red Khmers”) in 1977 at the height of his power
Postwar Southeast Asia
The Killing Fields were a number of sites in Cambodia where large numbers of people were killed and buried by the Khmer Rouge regime, during its rule of the country from 1975 to 1979, immediately after the end of the Vietnam War.
Postwar Southeast Asia
At least 200,000 people were executed by the Khmer Rouge (while estimates of the total number of deaths resulting from Khmer Rouge policies, including disease and starvation, range from 1.4 to 2.2 million out of a population of around 7 million).
A commemorative stupa filled with the skulls of the victims.
Cold War – Gorbachev Era – Soviet Collapse Soviet Internal Issues
Economic Stagnation Corruption Military Expenses
Gorbachev’s Reforms Perestroika = Restructuring
↓ Gov’t Role / ↑Free Market No economic ∆
’88 New Constitution… Open elections, autonomy?
Glasnost = Openness↓Censorship… ↑Free
Expression… ↑ Debate
The Results↓ Communist AuthorityFreedom NOW!
Cold War End
Reagan Administration ↑ Rhetoric
USSR is “Evil Empire”
“Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall”
↑ Military Spending
SDI or Star Wars = Space Based Defense
↓ Trade Embargo with USSR
Sold Wheat to USSR
1989 – A Big YearPoland
Solidarity wins elections!
Hungary Opens borders w/Austria
GermanyBerlin Wall comes down
Czechoslovakia Vaclav Havel’s Velvet Revolution
Romania Violent Revolt
USSR = No Soviet interferenceChina = Tiananmen Square
Post – Cold War USSR
Gorbachev 1990 Share political power
Old School –Yeltsin – Republics
The Break-Up 1991 Baltic States - Lithuania
August Coup Attempt
Yeltsin denounces
CIS created 12/91
Post- Cold War Yeltsin Era
Reforms > From Russia with Love Russian Democracy + Free Market
Privatization > Oligarchs
Turmoil in CIS
Yeltsin as a Survivor Impasse > Suspended P / Deposed Y
West & Army Supports Y
Resigns > V. Putin is successor
Internal Conflict Chechnya… Beslan Disaster
Collapse of Yugoslavia Creation of Yugoslavia Post WW1
Multi-ethnic regions Monarchy > Constitutional Monarchy >
Communist dictatorship Leadership
Marshall Tito = dictator Slobodan Milosevic = dictator
The Break-up 1990s Serbs reassert supremacy Croatia & Slovenia declare independence Civil War 1991 – Serbs v. Croats Civil War 1992
Division of Bosnia-Herzegovina Ethnic Cleansing / Genocide Bombing of Sarajevo > UN > NATO
The Result Dayton Accords…peace?? Ongoing Conflict >> Kosovo
Confrontations in the Middle East
Religious and Secular Values Clash in IranShah Reza Pahlavi
embraces Western governments and oil companies
Iranian nationalists overthrow shah, seize British oil company
U.S. restores shah to power, fearing Soviet encroachment
Shah Reza Pahlavi
Confrontations in the Middle East The United States
Supports Secular Rule Shah Reza Pahlavi
westernizes Iran with U.S. support
Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini—Iranian Muslim leader; lives in exile
In 1978, Khomeini sparks riots in Iran, Shah flees
Confrontations in the Middle EastKhomeini’s Anti-U.S. Policies
Islamic revolutionaries hold American hostages in Tehran (1979-1981) for 444 days
Muslim radicals take control in Iran, increasing tensions with Iraq
Saddam Hussein, fearing the spread of the Iranian Revolution into Iraq, attacks Iran.
Iran and Iraq fight an 8-year war; U.S. aids both sides, Soviets help Iraq
Blindfolded American hostages in Iran in 1979.
The Cold War & Radical Islam Rooted in Arab Nationalism
Reject Western ideas Create an Islamic Society
Wahhabism, Taliban, etc. Oil creates Haves & Have-nots
’79 Iran Revolution Ayatollah Khomeini vs. Westernization US Hostage Crisis – 444 Days Fundamentalist Regime
’79 Soviet – Afghan War Jihad vs. Soviets… US backs Taliban Taliban establishes Fundamentalist regime
‘91Persian Gulf War US bases on “holy” soil in Saudi Arabia Jihad vs. USA… Osama bin Laden
WTC – Embassies – USS Cole – 9/11 >>>
War on Terror
Cold War Timeline, 1946-1980