map review ib 20th-12yopj2 - IB 20th c. World History Y2
... *Panda Diplomacy (China gives pandas to their allies/people they want superficially good relations with) *Detente: improve relations between the US and USSR; easing of Cold War tensions. *Detente with the PRC was important for the US because the situation in Vietnam had led the United States to beli ...
... *Panda Diplomacy (China gives pandas to their allies/people they want superficially good relations with) *Detente: improve relations between the US and USSR; easing of Cold War tensions. *Detente with the PRC was important for the US because the situation in Vietnam had led the United States to beli ...
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY
... Early in 1962, Khrushchev offered Soviet nuclear missiles, under the control of Soviet technicians and troops, to Castro, who accepted and oversaw their secret installation. Khrushchev apparently believed that these would deter American plans to invade Cuba. Rather optimistically, he calculated that ...
... Early in 1962, Khrushchev offered Soviet nuclear missiles, under the control of Soviet technicians and troops, to Castro, who accepted and oversaw their secret installation. Khrushchev apparently believed that these would deter American plans to invade Cuba. Rather optimistically, he calculated that ...
Πανεπιστήμιο Πειραιώς
... China. During this period, the EC took for further integration steps, which could raise her international profile in both moral and material terms.(Arnhil and Spence,2005) The majority of EU members recognized the importance and the great impact of a gradual normalization of relations with China. b. ...
... China. During this period, the EC took for further integration steps, which could raise her international profile in both moral and material terms.(Arnhil and Spence,2005) The majority of EU members recognized the importance and the great impact of a gradual normalization of relations with China. b. ...
Primary Source Document with Questions (DBQs) JOINT
... United States Government does not challenge that position. It reaffirms its interest in a peaceful settlement of the Taiwan question by the Chinese themselves. With this prospect in mind, it affirms the ultimate objective of the withdrawal of all U.S. forces and military installation ...
... United States Government does not challenge that position. It reaffirms its interest in a peaceful settlement of the Taiwan question by the Chinese themselves. With this prospect in mind, it affirms the ultimate objective of the withdrawal of all U.S. forces and military installation ...
Name
... 19. What leader rose to power in North Vietnam in 1950 and what other country supported North Vietnam? Ho Chi Minh led North Vietnam and was supported by the USSR and China. 20. What other country supported South Vietnam? The United States 21. Describe both events. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution ...
... 19. What leader rose to power in North Vietnam in 1950 and what other country supported North Vietnam? Ho Chi Minh led North Vietnam and was supported by the USSR and China. 20. What other country supported South Vietnam? The United States 21. Describe both events. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution ...
Cold War in the 60`s and 70`s Guided Notes
... of communism so close to America b. After a failed attempt to _________________ Castro, Khrushchev secretly sent nuclear _______________ to Cuba c. The U.S. successfully ______________________________ Cuba & Khrushchev removed the ________________ in exchange for the removal of American ICBMs in Eur ...
... of communism so close to America b. After a failed attempt to _________________ Castro, Khrushchev secretly sent nuclear _______________ to Cuba c. The U.S. successfully ______________________________ Cuba & Khrushchev removed the ________________ in exchange for the removal of American ICBMs in Eur ...
C-33 S-5 - Madison County Schools
... C-33 S-5: The Cold War Thaws • The Cold War began to thaw as the superpowers entered into an era of uneasy diplomacy • The United States and the countries of the former Soviet Union continue to cooperate and maintain a cautious peace. ...
... C-33 S-5: The Cold War Thaws • The Cold War began to thaw as the superpowers entered into an era of uneasy diplomacy • The United States and the countries of the former Soviet Union continue to cooperate and maintain a cautious peace. ...
timeline of the cold war - Walshe
... TIMELINE COLD WAR –______________________– LBJ, Nixon, Carter, Reagan 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty 1964 Khrushchev was forced from power because of ____________________and the failure of________________________– succeeded by Brezhnev, an old time conservative – more acceptable than Khrushchev. _ ...
... TIMELINE COLD WAR –______________________– LBJ, Nixon, Carter, Reagan 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty 1964 Khrushchev was forced from power because of ____________________and the failure of________________________– succeeded by Brezhnev, an old time conservative – more acceptable than Khrushchev. _ ...
Cold War and 1950`s Study Guide
... 10. Define the Cold War? Who were the two super powers during this time period? Cold War was tension and rivalry but no fighting between the United States and the Soviet Union. The two superpowers were the United States and the USSR. 11. What was decided at the Yalta conference? Germany would be div ...
... 10. Define the Cold War? Who were the two super powers during this time period? Cold War was tension and rivalry but no fighting between the United States and the Soviet Union. The two superpowers were the United States and the USSR. 11. What was decided at the Yalta conference? Germany would be div ...
Cold War and 1950`s Study Guide
... 9. Define the Cold War? Who were the two super powers during this time period? Cold War was tension and rivalry but no fighting between the United States and the Soviet Union. The two superpowers were the United States and the USSR. 10. What was decided at the Yalta conference? Germany would be divi ...
... 9. Define the Cold War? Who were the two super powers during this time period? Cold War was tension and rivalry but no fighting between the United States and the Soviet Union. The two superpowers were the United States and the USSR. 10. What was decided at the Yalta conference? Germany would be divi ...
ORIGINS of the Cold War
... •In 1953, North and South Korea signed an armistice (cease fire) leaving Korea divided along the 38th parallel • Korean War ended in a stalemate ...
... •In 1953, North and South Korea signed an armistice (cease fire) leaving Korea divided along the 38th parallel • Korean War ended in a stalemate ...
Road to communism & Koren War
... • Headed the Nationalist Party after Sun Yixian died • Attempted reconciliation with the Communist party, but then turned on them & “eliminated” communist opposition. These two really didn’t get along!!! (“Chiang” Kai-shek) ...
... • Headed the Nationalist Party after Sun Yixian died • Attempted reconciliation with the Communist party, but then turned on them & “eliminated” communist opposition. These two really didn’t get along!!! (“Chiang” Kai-shek) ...
APUSH Unit 5 flash cards ch 26
... sympathizers in the US federal government; McCarthyism = anti-communist activities & today term is used more generally to reckless, unsubstantiated accusations against political opponents b) 1947-1957 ff c) US d) Relates to United States struggling to live up to its ideals while also being an intern ...
... sympathizers in the US federal government; McCarthyism = anti-communist activities & today term is used more generally to reckless, unsubstantiated accusations against political opponents b) 1947-1957 ff c) US d) Relates to United States struggling to live up to its ideals while also being an intern ...
China`s Foreign Policy China`s Diplomacy Part I Formulation of
... territory and sovereignty of the country, upholding of lasting international peace and friendly cooperation between the peoples of all countries, and opposition to the imperialist policy of aggression and war”. ...
... territory and sovereignty of the country, upholding of lasting international peace and friendly cooperation between the peoples of all countries, and opposition to the imperialist policy of aggression and war”. ...
World Politics in a New Era
... • In 1973, the fixed exchange rate system was ended • International economic relations took on a more multilateral cast ...
... • In 1973, the fixed exchange rate system was ended • International economic relations took on a more multilateral cast ...
Name Period _____ APWH Chapter 31 Bulliet Quiz 1. The North
... b. military alliance consisting of the USSR and eastern European countries. c. military alliance of newly freed African countries. d. military alliance of the recently defeated countries of World War II. e. military compact among the nonaligned states. 2. The Soviet-dominated counterpart to NATO was ...
... b. military alliance consisting of the USSR and eastern European countries. c. military alliance of newly freed African countries. d. military alliance of the recently defeated countries of World War II. e. military compact among the nonaligned states. 2. The Soviet-dominated counterpart to NATO was ...
SS5H7 The student will discuss the origins and
... He was able to release thousands of political prisoners whom Stalin had imprisoned in Siberian labor camps. He tried to raise the Soviet standard of living and expand his country’s space program. He also changed the Soviet foreign policy. He wanted to avoid war in the west and at the same time i ...
... He was able to release thousands of political prisoners whom Stalin had imprisoned in Siberian labor camps. He tried to raise the Soviet standard of living and expand his country’s space program. He also changed the Soviet foreign policy. He wanted to avoid war in the west and at the same time i ...
Escalation and Détente
... Vietnamese. Others left because of food shortages. However, most people moved on because they did not want to live under a communist government. Many of these “Boat People,” as the refugees were called, died at sea. Those who survived spent months in crowded camps, waiting for permission to settle p ...
... Vietnamese. Others left because of food shortages. However, most people moved on because they did not want to live under a communist government. Many of these “Boat People,” as the refugees were called, died at sea. Those who survived spent months in crowded camps, waiting for permission to settle p ...
Chapter 31 Reading Questions (And a Smidge from 29 as well
... 10. Describe the arms race during the Cold War, including efforts to decrease the number of nuclear weapons in the world and the role of space exploration within the arms race. Page 830-832; 839-840; 845; 858-862 11. Briefly describe the decolonization of Asia (including India/Pakistan) & S.E. Asia. ...
... 10. Describe the arms race during the Cold War, including efforts to decrease the number of nuclear weapons in the world and the role of space exploration within the arms race. Page 830-832; 839-840; 845; 858-862 11. Briefly describe the decolonization of Asia (including India/Pakistan) & S.E. Asia. ...
De-Stalinization File
... ◦ Secret police restricted, labor camps closed, more open political discussion allowed, and artists were given greater freedom ◦ Khrushchev moved Soviet foreign policy toward “peaceful coexistence” with the West ...
... ◦ Secret police restricted, labor camps closed, more open political discussion allowed, and artists were given greater freedom ◦ Khrushchev moved Soviet foreign policy toward “peaceful coexistence” with the West ...
During the course of the Cold War, tensions
... With the ice seemingly broken, Kissinger secretly visited Beijing in July 1971 and met Mao and Zhou Enlai. Such ongoing issues as Vietnam and Taiwan were discussed. To advance the process, the Chinese invited Nixon to visit, which he did in February 1972, publicly shaking hands with Mao, and being t ...
... With the ice seemingly broken, Kissinger secretly visited Beijing in July 1971 and met Mao and Zhou Enlai. Such ongoing issues as Vietnam and Taiwan were discussed. To advance the process, the Chinese invited Nixon to visit, which he did in February 1972, publicly shaking hands with Mao, and being t ...
Document
... 1948 Marshall Plan implemented to rebuild Western Europe and save it from communism 1948 Berlin Airlift begins as response to USSR blocking roads and railroads into West Berlin 1949 Chinese Communists (Mao Tse-tung) successfully defeat Nationalists 1949 Russians explode their first atomic bomb ...
... 1948 Marshall Plan implemented to rebuild Western Europe and save it from communism 1948 Berlin Airlift begins as response to USSR blocking roads and railroads into West Berlin 1949 Chinese Communists (Mao Tse-tung) successfully defeat Nationalists 1949 Russians explode their first atomic bomb ...
Sino-Soviet split
The Sino-Soviet split (1960–1989) was the worsening of political and ideological relations between the neighboring states of People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) during the Cold War. In the 1960s, China and the Soviet Union were the two largest communist states in the world. The doctrinal divergence derived from Chinese and Russian national interests, and from the régimes' different interpretations of Marxism–Leninism.In the 1950s and the 1960s, ideological debate between the communist parties of the USSR and China also concerned the possibility of peaceful coexistence with the capitalist West. Yet, to the Chinese public, Mao Zedong proposed a belligerent attitude towards capitalist countries, an initial rejection of peaceful coexistence, which he perceived as Marxist revisionism from the Soviet Union.Furthermore, since 1956 (when Nikita Khrushchev denounced the legacy of Stalin), China and the USSR had progressively diverged about Marxist ideology, and, by 1961, when the doctrinal differences proved intractable, the Communist Party of China formally denounced the Soviet variety of communism as a product of ""Revisionist Traitors"".The split concerned the leadership of world communism. The USSR had a network of communist parties it supported; China now created its own rival network to battle it out for local control of the left in numerous countries. Lorenz M. Lüthi argues:The Sino-Soviet split was one of the key events of the Cold War, equal in importance to the construction of the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Second Vietnam War, and Sino-American rapprochement. The split helped to determine the framework of the Second Cold War in general, and influenced the course of the Second Vietnam War in particular.The divide fractured the international communist movement at the time and opened the way for the warming of relations between the United States and China under Richard Nixon in 1971. Relations between China and the Soviet Union remained tense until the visit of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to Beijing in 1989.