Edexcel History A The Cold War - Detente and the End of the Cold War

Descripción

The final section of Edexcel History A's Cold War unit. From detente to Afghanistan to the dissolution of the USSR
Natalia  Cliff
Fichas por Natalia Cliff, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Natalia  Cliff
Creado por Natalia Cliff hace más de 7 años
105
9

Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
Detente Treaties -1967 Outer Space treaty said no nuclear weapons were to be placed in space -1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty wouldn't help other states to develop nuclear missiles -1972 SALT 1 limited the nuclear capabilities of USA and USSR -1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission was a joint space mission -1975 Helsinki Agreements discussed security, co-operation and human rights -1979 SALT 2 agreed to further limitations of nuclear capabilities
SALT 1 -Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty -No further production of strategic ballistic missiles -Submarines carrying nuclear weapons would only be introduced when existing stocks of intercontinental ballistic missiles became obsolete -ABM (anti-ballistic missile) if developed could shoot down incoming missiles, each super power was limited to 2
SALT 2 Negotiations were difficult because: -West German government was worried that further arms reductions would leave them undefended -Right-wing American Congressmen thought detente had gone too far
Helsinki -Representatives from 35 different countries -All of Europe bar Albania and Andorra -Representatives from the USSR, USA and Canada
Helsinki: Security -All countries boundaries accepted -Disputes to be settled peacefully, not by force -No country would interfere in the international relations of another country -Countries would inform each other of any big military manoeuvres and would accept representatives from other countries to observe them
Helsinki: Co-operation -Economic cooperation through trade -Industrial cooperation through having the same standards and running joint projects -Scientific cooperation by sharing information for research -Educational cooperation (e.g. learning languages and exchange students)
Helsinki: Human Rights -Freedom of speech -Freedom of movement -Freedom of religion -Freedom of information
Kabul Revolution April 1978 -New Government was communist, president Taraki soon became a Soviet ally -Muslim leaders across the country didn't like the socialist reforms -Civil War broke out -Taraki forced to take the head of the army Amin as prime minister but they hated each other -October Amin assassinates Taraki and assumed the presidency
Soviet Invasion -Didn't trust Amin, thought he was an American spy -Amin was unpopular with Muslim leaders and Brezhnev feared that Muslim groups would try to take over -Concerned that if Afghanistan became an Islamic state nearby communist states would do the same -Karmal, an Afghani communist argued that he had enough support -Believed America would ignore an invasion like in the Prague Spring -Invasion was a disaster that lasted 10 years -1.5 million people died, including 15 000 Soviet soldiers
Carter Doctrine USA would not allow USSR to gain control of territory in the oil-rich middle east
Carter's Response -Alliance with China and Israel so support Afghan rebels, CIA provided weapons and funds for the Mujahideen -Economic sanctions -Ended diplomatic relations with the USSR -SALT 2 was never ratified in the USA -Increased defence spending's by 5% -These actions caused the end of detente
Olympic Boycott: Moscow Olympics -1980 boycott of Moscow Olympics -60 countries joined the boycott -Set up alternative Olympics -Press ridiculed Moscow Olympics, called the Russian Mascot Misha Bear Gulag Bear
Olympic Boycott: LA Olympics -USSR and 14 other communist countries boycotted -Organised an alternative friendship games
Reagan -Reagan became president in 1981 -Evil Empire speech -Said he could imagine a limited nuclear war in Europe -Said the Cold War was a fight between good and evil -He genuinely wanted to win the Cold War -Focused on SDI
SDI Strategic Defence Initiative -Also called Star Wars -Proposed a nuclear umbrella that would stop Soviet Missiles and destroy the, -Believed it would make Soviet nuclear missiles useless, forcing them to disarm -SDI broke the Outer Space treaty of 1967
SDI: Soviet Response -USSR couldn't compete with SDI -America won the race to the moon -USA had developed a new spacecraft the space shuttle in 1980s -USSR was behind USA with technology as in the 1980s the American computer market boomed, whereas USSR was concerned computers may be used to undermine their regime -Essentially, the USSR could no longer compete with the arms race
Gorbachev -Last leader of the Soviet Union, from 1985 to 1991 -Wanted to be communism's saviour -At first had a tenuous relationship with the West -Lied about the Chernobyl crisis in 1986
Gorbachev: New Thinking -Realised that communism faced many problems -Soviet economy was not nearly as efficient as the US economy -Americans had an excellent standard of living whereas Russian life was dominated by shortages -Soviet people had lost faith in the communist party -Perestroika - economic reforms designed to make the economy more efficient -Glasnost - censorship of the press was to be relaxed
Geneva Summit 1985 -Reagan was in the stronger position -Reagan wanted to persuade Gorbachev that he wanted peace -Gorbachev was hoping on dissuading the continuation of SDI -Gorbachev also wanted a working relationship -Sacked foreign minister Gromyko before the meeting to indicate an end of the aggressive foreign policy -Significant because they talked face to face, even though no agreements were reached
Reykjavik Summit 1986 -Reagan proposed scrapping all ballistic nuclear missiles -Gorbachev didn't agree as Reagan refused to drop SDI
Reagan's change of Mind -Public opinion was against another arms race -Didn't want America to seem like a big bully -Widespread approval of Gorbachev and his reforms -Got along with Gorbachev and believed that he genuinely wanted reforms and an end to the cold war
INF Treaty 1987 -Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces -Eliminated all nuclear missiles with a range of 500-5500 km -Important because it was the first treaty to reduce the number of nuclear missiles -SALT 1 merely limited the production of new missiles -Strict procedures and task inspectors set into place to ensure the treaty was followed
INF Treaty: Gorbachev's Change of Mind Refused the deal at Reykjavik but signed it a year later -Nuclear weapons were expensive to maintain but did nothing for security -Reagan persuaded him that he had no intention of invading -Economy could never recover spending that much on nuclear missiles -Disarmament would gain him popularity with the West to make trade deals -Political and economic measures would be more effective in protecting the USSR than military power
Moscow Summit 1988 -Agreed to work toward disarmament of nuclear and conventional arms -No specific targets but eased tensions caused by Afghanistan
Malta Summit 1989 -President Bush and Gorbachev -Laid the groundwork for CFE and START 1
CFE Agreement 1990 -Set limits to non-nuclear forces the Warsaw Pact and NATO could have -Process complicated by the fact that the USSR was falling apart, e.g. Hungary was part of the Warsaw Pact when agreements started but had left before the end
START 1 1991 -Signed with pens made from scrapped nuclear missiles -Both sides agreed to reduce their nuclear warheads by about a third -Covered most kinds of nuclear weapons
Eastern Europe: Gorbachev's Attitude -December 1988 declared that ideology would play a smaller role in soviet affairs, essentially USSR would no longer favour trade with communist states -Keen to allow Eastern European states enjoy Glasnost and Perestroika -Withdrew Soviet troops from Eastern bases to save bases -This unwittingly lead to the break up of the Eastern Bloc as the soviet army was no longer there to prop up pro-Moscow governments -Once reform had started he couldn't control it
Poland Communist government defeated in free elections held in 1989
Czech Republic/Slovakia Popular protests overthrew the communist regime in the "Velvet revolution"
Hungary Communist government promised democratic constitution in summer 1989 and free elections are held spring 1989
Germany -East Germans leave for West Germany through Hungary -Communist party declares free elections -Berlin Wall falls November 1989 -Communists defeated in free elections of 1990
Fall of the Berlin Wall -East Germany slow to accept Glasnost and Perestroika, even banned some Soviet publications -Once Hungary had free elections mass movement of East Germans travelling to the West through Hungary -Forced to allow freedom of travel -9th November announced that East Germans could cross the Wall -People started dismantling and chipping away at bits of the wall
Warsaw Pact -Once the Eastern Bloc disintegrated it was clear the Warsaw Pact wouldn't survive -Military cooperation ceased in 1990 -Formally dissolved in 1991
Soviet Coup -Gorbachev was popular in the West but mistrusted at home -Leading party members believed he had weaned communism -19th August 1991 group of senior officials organised a coup -Initially it was successful -Gorbachev was prevented from returning to Moscow -New government declared a state of emergency which allowed them to overturn glasnost and perestroika -New government lasted 3 days -Boris Yeltsin (Russian president) declared it illegal and called people of Moscow to resist the regime
Fall of the Soviet Union -21st August Gorbachev returned to Moscow -Still wanted to save communism -Coup had damaged his authority whilst making Yeltsin popular -Introduced a new constitution to give Soviet republics like Latvia and the Ukraine more power but they wanted independence -December 25th 1991 Gorbachev announced the dissolution of the Soviet Union -The Cold War was over
Mostrar resumen completo Ocultar resumen completo

Similar

History of Medicine: Ancient Ideas
James McConnell
Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Cominform and Comecon
Alina A
GCSE History – Social Impact of the Nazi State in 1945
Ben C
Conferences of the Cold War
Alina A
Bay of Pigs Invasion : April 1961
Alina A
The Berlin Crisis
Alina A
BELIEVING IN GOD- UNIT 1, SECTION 1- RELIGIOUS STUDIES GCSE EDEXCEL
Khadijah Mohammed
Weimar Revision
Tom Mitchell
Hitler and the Nazi Party (1919-23)
Adam Collinge
Unit 1: Business Studies GCSE
Libby Rose
MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH - UNIT 1, SECTION 2 - RELIGIOUS STUDIES GCSE EDEXCEL
Khadijah Mohammed