Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The role of personalities: Reagan,
Thatcher and Pope John Paul II
- Reagan and the Triumphalists
- Triumphalist argument maintains that R's hard-line
approach to the USSR in early 80s imposed enormous
economic and military pressure on the Soviets
- As a result - USSR could no longer compete with US defence
spending - thus abandoned the arms race and the Cold War
- According to this interpretation, R's
successful anti-comm policies included
- 53% increase in the US defence budget - Oct 1981
- Announcement of SDI - March 1983
- Uncompromising anti-Soviet rhetoric
- Implementation of the Reagan doctrine
- Including US military and financial measures
to combat comm in Nicaragua, El Salvador,
Grenada and Afghan
- deployment of Cruise and Pershing II missiles in Europe
- Criticism of the Triumphalist interpretation
- oversimplifies a complex historical process and
exaggerates the impact of R's hardline approach
- 1982-1984 R's stance failed to extract concessions from
Soviet leader Andropov- USA's confrontational approach merely
prolonged Cold War by hardening Soviet approach
- R's offer to share SDI tech with USSR contradicts the argument
that the USA aimed to undermine USSR economically
- Soviet scientists concluded that SDI was impractical
- so it imposed limited pressure on USSR
- Reagan and Bush's policy of engagement with G after 1985 produced much
more significant results e.g INF treaty 1987 and 1991 START treaty
- Underestimates G's new thinking, long-standing internal
Soviet problems and growing discontent in Eastern Europe
- Margaret Thatcher
- Many triumphalists assert that Thatcher played an important, if
secondary role, in bringing Cold War to an end
- Thatcher supported R's anti-Soviet strategy of 'militarised counter-revolution'
- She later claimed that this US policy was the reason the West won
- Thatcher's support of Reagan's policies
- T reinforced R's anti-comm rhetoric
- e.g Oct 1982 she said that the Soviets'
"pitiless ideology only survives because it
is maintained by force"
- From Nov 1983 - T permitted USA to deploy cruise missiles in
UK - a key feature of R's plan to put pressure on USSR
- T also acted as R's unofficial envoy by promoting US
policy to other Western European govts
- T also pursued some less confrontational policies - which
contradicted her 'Cold War warrior' image
- e.g 1984 - invited G to London for talks before he came to power
- Established good working relationship with G -
"this is a man I can do business with"
- Then urged R to start dialogue with G
- Thatcher later endorsed perestroika and acted as an effective
diplomatic link between G and Presidents Reagan and Bush
- Pope John Paul II
- The Polish Pope - made a significant contribution to ending the Cold War
- By inspiring Catholics in Eastern Europe and providing
moral support for Polish trade union Solidarity
- Visits to Poland in 1979, 1983 and 1987 were very popular
- 12 million Poles saw pope on 1979 tour
- Visits clearly indicated that Catholicism - rather
than Communism - had public loyalty
- Pope rejected the Polish regime's claim that
the Catholic Church had no social role
- Jan 1981 - Walesa - Solidarity leader and
devout Catholic - was blessed by the Pope in
Rome
- Clear indicator of Pope throwing his weight behind solidarity
- Pope's speeches - e.g 'Do not be afraid' 1979 -
encouraged anti-communists and made the Polish people
more self-confident
- Despite his apparent importance - The Pope's influence had limits
- Catholicism had huge support in Poland and Baltic
States - but in Eastern Europe it had less impact
- Had to compete with Protestantism - Orthodox Church - Secularism