Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The collapse of Communism
- Afghanistan
- The Soviets invaded
Afghanistan in December 1979
- Reasons for the invasion:
- Preserve the communist
government in Afganistan
- The USSR was concerned about the Muslim
revolution in Iran which could have spread
to the USSR areas in Afghanistan
- Afghanistan is close to Western
oil reserves - the soviets wanted
to develop their interests here
- Consequences
- 1 million Afghans died
- 20,000 Red army
soldiers died
- The USA became involved
- The USA secretly began to
send large shipments of
money, arms and
equipment to Pakistan for
the Mujahadin
- Carter was furious the invasion took
place and withdrew the US out of the
Moscow Olympics = tension between
the superpowers
- And he refused to sign the SALT II that
would have further limited the
number of weapons
- Carter cut trade with the USSR
- Effects
- It had worsened the
economic and political
problems of the USSR
- The USSR was locked in a costly, unwinnable war
- The economy was
weak with too
much spending on
the arms race and
the war
- Brezhnev had reverted
to Stalin's policy of
repression - no
constructive reform
- Collapse of the USSR
- February 1990 there was a huge
demonstration in Moscow
against the communist system
- Demanded freedom from the Soviet Union
- In Dec. 1991 the President of
the Russian republic formally
ended the Soviet Union and also
disbanded the Communist party
- Gorbachev resigned as Soviet
President as there was no
longer a Soviet left to control
- In 1991, East and West Germany
were reunited to become Germany
- Mikhail Gorbachev
- Gorbachev
became the new
leader of the
USSR in March
1985
- He set about reforming the
old Soviet system
- Perestroika
- Re-structuring the economy
- Changing some
economic policies to
allow more competition
and more incentives to
produce goods
- More socialist
- Glasnost
- Openness
- Openness in government.
Gorbachev thought people should be
allowed, within reason to say what
they believe with more open debate
- Allowed free speech
- He was a good leader
because
- 1. He recognised
the economy was
failing
- 2. Improved foreign
relations
- He accepted Reagan's invitation
to meet with him in Geneva in
Nov. 1985
- In 1987, after several meeting with
Reagan, they signed the
Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty
which removed all medium range nuclear
weapons from Europe
- Visited Washington in 1988
- 3. He set about reforms -
perestroika and glasnost
- 4. Recognised the soviet public
were unhappy
- 5. Wanted the USSR
out of Afghanistan
- Collapse in Eastern Europe
- Poland
- Free elections in 1989
- Lech Walesa became
first non-communist
leader since 1945
- East Germany
- 1000s fleeing every year
- Honecker's troops refused to
fire on demonstrators, forcing
him to bring about reforms
- Nov. 1989 Berlin Wall torn down
- Czechoslovakia
- Nov. 1989 involved huge
anti-communist
demonstrations
- New leader - Havel allowed free
elections
- Hungary
- Communist leader
accepted need for reforms
including free elections
- Romania
- In Dec. 1989 the unpopular
communist leader and his wife
were shot during a short bloody coup
- Bulgaria
- The communist leader
resigned in Nov. 1989
and free elections held
in 1990
- Baltic states
- 1990, they declared
themselves independent of
the Soviet Union
- Solidarity in Poland
- The formation of the first
independent trade union in Poland
- Initiated by workers in
Gdansk shipyard led by
Lech Walesa
- 9.5 million members at its peak
- Aims
- Free trade unions
- Right to strike
- Better standard of living
- In 1980, the government
conceded to all Solidarity
demands because:
- 1. Large membership
- 2. Lech Walesa was very popular
- 3. Had the support of the Catholic church
- Government reactions
- Brezhnev ordered
'training
manoeuvres on the
Polish border
- Walesa and 10,000 other
Poles were imprisoned
- 150,000 members
given 'preventative
and cautionary talks'
- In 1981, the new
leader declared
Solidarity was illegal
and set up martial law
- The Berlin Wall
- 9th November 1989,
the East German
government
announced much
greater freedom of
travel for East German
citizens, including
crossing the border
into West Germany