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The End of the Cold War

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Title: The End of the Cold War


1
The End of the Cold War
  • Chapter 15
  • Section 5

2
Inferior Russian Economy
  • The USSR emerged from WWII as a superpower
  • Soviet Union controlled many E. European
    satellite countries
  • For many people, the countrys superpower status
    brought few rewards and no increase in standard
    of living
  • Consumer goods were inferior and workers were
    poorly paid
  • Because workers had lifetime job security, there
    was little incentive to produce high-quality goods

3
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4
Technological Successes in the Soviet Union
  • Still, there were some important technological
    successes
  • One example was Sputnik I, the first artificial
    satellite, launched in 1957
  • Keeping up with the United States in an arms race
    also strained and drained the Soviet economy
  • Then, in 1979, Soviet forces invaded Afghanistan
    and became involved in a long war similar to
    Vietnam
  • The Soviets had few successes battling the
    mujahedin, or Muslim religious warriors, creating
    a crisis in morale in the USSR

5
Sputnik I
History changed on October 4, 1957, when the
Soviet Union successfully launched Sputnik I. The
world's first artificial satellite was about the
size of a basketball, weighed only 183 pounds,
and took about 98 minutes to orbit the Earth on
its elliptical path. That launch ushered in new
political, military, technological, and
scientific developments. While the Sputnik launch
was a single event, it marked the start of the
space age and the U.S.-U.S.S.R space race.
6
Afghanistan
7
New Soviet Leadership
  • A new Soviet leader named Mikhail Gorbachev
    emerged in 1985 who favored changes to the USSR
  • Gorbachev urged economic and political reforms
    for the USSR
  • He called for glasnost (openness) in Soviet
    society
  • Gorbachev ended censorship and encouraged people
    to discuss the countrys problems openly
  • Gorbachev also called for perestroika, or a
    restructuring of the government and the economy
  • His policies fueled unrest across other countries
    in the Soviet empire

8
Mikhail Gorbachev
9
Unrest in Eastern Europe
  • Eastern Europeans, thirsty for political and
    economic changes, demanded an end to Soviet rule
  • Previous attempts to defy Soviet authority had
    failed
  • Examples When Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia
    (1968) challenged communist rulers, the Soviets
    sent in military forces to crush the revolts

10
Democracy Movement in Eastern Europe
  • By the end of the 1980s, a powerful democracy
    movement was sweeping across Eastern Europe
  • In Poland, Lech Walesa led Solidarity, an
    independent, unlawful labor union demanding
    economic and political changes
  • When Gorbachev declared he would not interfere in
    Eastern European political and economic reforms,
    Solidarity was legalized
  • A year later, Walesa was elected president of
    Poland

11
Lech Walesa Leader of Solidarity Movement
12
Fall of Eastern European Dictatorships
  • Meanwhile, East German Communist leaders resisted
    reform, and thousands of East Germans fled to the
    west as the border between Hungary and Austria
    opened
  • In Czechoslovakia, Vaclav Havel, a dissident
    writer, was elected president
  • One by one, communist governments fell in Europe
  • Most changes happened peacefully, but Romanian
    dictator Nicolae Ceausescu refused to step down
    and he was executed (Dec. 25, 1989)
  • The Baltic states (Lithuania, Latvia, and
    Estonia) regained independence after 50 years of
    Soviet control

13
Nicolae CeausescuDictator of Romania
14
Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • President Ronald Reagan asked Mikhail Gorbachev
    to remove the Berlin Wall that separated West
    Berlin from East Berlin
  • Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall - these
    were the famous televised words that Reagan said
    to Gorbachev, the leader of the former Soviet
    Union, in reference to the Berlin Wall that had
    divided residents of West Berlin from East Berlin
    since the wall was constructed in 1961

15
Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • The fall of the Berlin Wall happened nearly as
    suddenly as its rise. There had been signs that
    the Communist bloc was weakening, but the East
    German Communist leaders insisted that East
    Germany just needed a moderate change rather than
    a drastic revolution. East German citizens did
    not agree. As Communism began to falter in
    Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia in 1988 and
    1989, new exodus points were opened to East
    Germans who wanted to flee to the West. Then
    suddenly, on the evening of November 9, 1989, an
    announcement made by East German government
    official Günter Schabowski stated, "Permanent
    relocations can be done through all border
    checkpoints between the GDR (East Germany) into
    the FRG (West Germany) or West Berlin."
  • People were in shock. Were the borders really
    open? East Germans tentatively approached the
    border and indeed found that the border guards
    were letting people cross. Very quickly, the
    Berlin Wall was inundated with people from both
    sides. Some began chipping at the Berlin Wall
    with hammers and chisels. There was an impromptu
    huge celebration along the Berlin Wall, with
    people hugging, kissing, singing, cheering, and
    crying.
  • The Berlin Wall was eventually chipped away, into
    smaller pieces (some the size of a coin and
    others in big slabs). The pieces have become
    collectibles and are stored in both homes and
    museums.
  • After the Berlin Wall came down, East and West
    Germany reunified into a single German state on
    October 3, 1990.

16
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17
Berlin Wall Speech (June 12, 1987)
  • Please watch President Reagans speech
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vWjWDrTXMgF8

18
Fall of Eastern European Dictatorships
  • By the end of 1991, the remaining Soviet
    republics had all formed independent nations
  • The Soviet Union ceased to exist after 69 years
    of communist rule
  • In 1992, Czechoslovakia was divided into two
    separate countries Slovakia and the Czech
    Republic
  • Additionally, some communist governments in Asia,
    such as China, instituted economic reforms only
    but no political reforms

19
Fall of Eastern European Dictatorships
  • North Korea is hardline communist with no
    political or economic reforms
  • Vietnam implemented some economic reforms
  • Cuba is still communist and has lost much
    economic support from the former Soviet Union

20
Powerpoint Questions (16 points)
  • 1. Why was the Soviet economy inferior? (provide
    examples)
  • 2. What did the Soviet Union launch in 1957?
  • 3. Who were the mujahedin?
  • 4. What country did the Soviet Union invade in
    Afghanistan
  • 5. Who became the new Soviet leader in 1985?
  • 6. What does glasnost mean?
  • 7. Explain perestroika.

21
Powerpoint Questions (16 points)
  • 8. What two countries challenged Soviet rule in
    the 1950s and 1960s? (2 points)
  • 9. What was Solidarity? Who was its leader? (2
    points)
  • 10. Who was the Romanian leader who refused to
    step down from power and who was ultimately
    executed?
  • 11. What action did President Ronald Reagan
    demand from Soviet leader Gorbachev?
  • 12. What happened to the Soviet Union by 1991?
  • 13. Into what two countries was Czechoslovakia
    divided? (2 points)

22
The End
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