Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 6: The End of the Cold War, 1985 - 1990
- What was Gorbachev's role in ending the Cold War?
- What was Gorbachev's role in ending the Cold War?
- Gorbachev abandoned the Brezhnev
Doctrine immediately
- This was a clear sign
of radical change
- The Cold War was draining so
much of the USSR’s wealth
- It was unable to develop
economically
- The falling standard of living was
creating unrest in the country
- Gorbachev wanted to reform the
Communist Party in the USSR
- He wanted to modernise
Soviet-style socialism
- He didn’t intend
to abandon it
- There were 3 important strategies
through which he ended the Cold War
- He initiated sweeping reforms
in the Communist Party
- He introduced perestroika (restructuring)
and glasnost (openness)
- He ended the arms
race with the USA
- He signed various arms
reduction agreements
- He stopped Soviet interference in
eastern European satellite states
- This included Poland and
Czechoslovakia
- How did Gorbachev's domestic policies help to reduce tension in the Cold War?
- Gorbachev wanted to maintain
the USSR’s role of Superpower
- He knew he had to win
over the Soviet people
- He needed to show the world that
he would not threaten world peace
- Gorbachev had been in power only
a month when he roamed around
an industrial district of Moscow
- He visited supermarkets, chatted with workers at a
truck factory, discussed computer training with
teachers, and nurses pay with the staff at a hospital
- He dropped into a young
couple’s apartment for tea
- When he visited the Baltic Shipyards in
Leningrad, a spokesman for the workers
began a monotone welcoming speech
- This expressed a wish that perestroika
would develop even faster
- Gorbachev interrupted with
playful cries of ‘Davai! Davai!
- This drew a big laugh
from the crowds
- Dissidents were
released from jail
- Banned books
were published
- The Soviet people learned of the
atrocities committed under Stalin
- Glasnost was a two-edged
sword for Gorbachev
- The more freedom people gained,
the more they wanted
- The more they began
to criticise Gorbachev
- This made it hard for the Communist
Party to keep power
- The economy had been damaged by the arms
race, space race and the war in Afghanistan
- This was all done by a system that
did not encourage incentive
- Perestroika and uskorenie (acceleration of economic
development) brought some considerable changes
- Certain aspects of a free
economy were introduced
- There were reforms in
the political system
- There were elections for a
local government
- This won
Gorbachev support
- It enabled him to be equally radical
in his dealings with the USA
- How did the arms race end?
- The 1986 summit meeting in Reykjavik
- The summit meeting collapsed after
Reagan would not restrict SDI
- In a news conference, Gorbachev painted a bleak picture
of US-Soviet relations leading up to the summit
- He said Reagan’s insistence on deploying SDI had ‘frustrated
and scuttled’ the opportunity for an agreement
- The Intermedia Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987
- A third summit was held
in December 1987
- A breakthrough was achieved with
the agreement of INF Treaty
- This treaty eliminated nuclear and conventional
ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles
with ranges of 500-5500km
- By the treaty’s deadline, 1 June 1991, a total
of 2692 of such weapons had been destroyed
- 846 by the USA
- 1846 by the USSR
- Under the treaty, both nations were able to
inspect each other’s military installations
- Under the INF, there were to be no
strict verification procedures to check
that nuclear weapons were destroyed
- Reagan described INF as the realisation
of ‘an impossible vision’
- Gorbachev stated it had ‘universal
significance for mankind’
- Both leaders stressed that INF
was only the first step towards
an even more radical agreement
- They aimed to half long-range
nuclear weapons
- This treaty was planned to be
signed in Moscow in 1988
- Gorbymania
- The final summit meeting was
held in Moscow in May 1988
- By this time, much of the West seemed
to be overtaken by Gorbymania
- It was evident that the wives of Reagan and
Gorbachev pushed the leaders together
- Crowds were happy to watch
them wherever they went
- The CFE Treaty
- At the Moscow summit, there
were more arms control talks
- There were troop reductions
in Europe in 1989
- Gorbachev’s promise to withdraw
troops from Afghanistan showed
his peaceful intentions
- The summit led
to the CFE Treaty
- This was signed by NATO and Warsaw Pact
representatives in November 1990
- The CFE Treaty reduced the number of tanks,
missiles, aircraft and other forms of non-nuclear
military hardware held by signatory states
- George Bush and Gorbachev announced that the
Cold War was over in a summit in Malta in 1989
- When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait
in 1990, the two nations acted closely
- They followed the
directives of the UN
- However, Gorbachev didn’t commit any USSR
troops to the Coalition Forces that invaded Iraq
- START Talks, 1990 - 1991
- At the Washington summit of 31 May – 3
June 1990, the two leaders discussed START
- On 31 July 1991, they
signed START I
- It called for both sides to reduce their
strategic nuclear forces over 7 years to
- 1600 SNDVs and
6000 warheads
- 4900 ballistic missiles
- Arms limitation talks were renewed
after it was clear that Gorbachev was
keen to change relations with the West
- A summit meeting between Gorbachev
and Reagan was held in Geneva over 2
days in November 1985
- At the meeting Reagan would not
give up his commitment to the SDI
- At the end of discussions both leaders
spoke of the world being a ‘safer place’
- The two leaders broke with convention and met
together without advisers to discuss issues on their own
- Though nothing concrete was decided.
The Geneva Accord was set out
- This committed the two countries to
- Speed up
arms talks
- Work towards the abolition
of chemical weapons
- Be more active on issues
of human rights
- Both leaders promised to meet
again in the near future
- A second meeting was set
for October 1986 in Iceland
- Why did the Soviet Union collapse so quickly
- East Germany
- 23 October 1989 - 300,000
people protest in Leipzig
- 4 November 1989 - 1mn people
protest in East Berlin
- 9 November 1989 -
Berlin Wall is opened
- 1991 - Germany reunified
into one country
- Poland
- 1988 - Strikes throughout
the country
- 1989 - Free trade union -
Solidarity wins elections
- 1989 - Mazowiecki becomes for non-communist
PM in eastern Europe
- Hungary
- 1988 - Gorbachev accepts that Hungary
can become a multi-party state
- 1990 - Democratic elections won
by Democratic Forum, an alliance
of anti-communist groups
- Czechoslovakia
- 17 November 1989 – Huge demonstration
against communism begins
- 24 November 1989 – Communist
government resigns
- 9 December 1989 – Vaclav Havel
becomes first non-communist
President of Czechoslovakia since 1948
- 1990 – Democratic elections won by Civic Forum
– an alliance of anti-communist groups
- Romania
- 16 December 1989 – Secret police
fire on demonstrators in Timisoara
- 21 December 1989 – Huge crowd in Bucharest boos
President Ceausescu, who flees but is later captured
- 22-24 December 1989 – Army joins rebellion
and fights secret police, killing hundreds
- 25 December 1989 – Ceausescu and
his wife are shot by a firing squad
- 1990 – Democratic elections won by National Salvation
Front, containing many ex-communists
- Bulgaria
- 1990 – Democratic elections won
by renamed Communist Party
- Changes in eastern Europe
- In May 1989, Hungary opened
its border with Austria
- This meant that there was now
a hole in the Iron Curtain
- This created a way for East Germans
to move to the West
- It brought into question whether the Berlin Wall
and the Iron Curtain could continue to exist
- Events in East and West Germany
- Demonstrations occurred
in East Germany in 1989
- There were calls for changes
to the system of government
- On 4 November, the largest demonstration
in East Germany’s history took place
- Over 1mn people in East Berlin demanded
democracy and free elections
- Gorbachev visited Eat Germany
in October 1989
- He informed political leaders that the USSR
would not become involved in its internal affairs
- On the evening of 9 November, the border
crossings into West Germany were opened
- The people began to dismantle
the Berlin Wall
- Within a few days, over 1mn people per
day had seized the change to see relatives
and experience life in the West
- West and East Germany were formally
reunited on 3 October 1990
- Tension in the world seemed to ease
by the day while the power of the
USSR seemed to decrease quickly
- The new Germany
joined NATO
- In 1991, the Warsaw
Pact was dissolved
- The collapse of the Soviet Union
- Events in eastern Europe had a
catastrophic impact on the USSR
- Many nationalities and ethnic groups
saw how the satellite states were
able to break away from Moscow
- In 1990, the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania declared themselves independent
- This was accepted
by Moscow in 1991
- This led to other demands for
independence within the USSR
- There were fears that the USSR
was about to disintegrate
- Gorbachev found that he was opposed
by most sections of the Soviet society
- There was an attempted
coup d’état in August 1991
- This was defeated
by Boris Yeltsin
- Although Gorbachev was put back in
power, he knew he had lost authority
- Gorbachev resigned
in December 1991
- The Soviet empire split into
several independent states
- The Cold War had officially
ended in 1989
- Now the USA was the
only Superpower left
- Assessment of Gorbachev
- By 1990, Gorbachev’s actions had
won him the Nobel Peace Prize
- Gorbachev and Reagan had become personal friends
and had made some significant agreements
- These agreements meant that the USA no
longer regarded the USSR as a major threat
- The INF Treaty was very important, as was the
removal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan, not
interfering in the anti-communist revolutions
in eastern Europe and glasnost
- These all combined to end the Cold War