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UNIT 9 OUR COURSE OBJECTIVES 1. Analyze the various social changes that occurred post World War II. 2. Assess the level of responsibility of the US and the USSR for the major events of the Cold War 3. Compare and contrast politics, economics and society in postwar Western and Eastern Europe 4. Analyze the revolutions of 1989 and their impact on the world Chapter 30—The Cold War Era and the Emergence of the New Europe Key Concepts Cold War As World War II drew to a close, the two superpowers, the US and the USSR, moved from being cautious allies to being open enemies. Each gathered its allies into defensive organizations, NATO and the Warsaw Pact, as it struggled to gain ascendancy over the other. As well, each offered financial, military, and political aid to nations through the Marshall Plan, the Truman Doctrine, and Cominform. As the students study this maneuvering, it is essential for them to see this as a process of actions and reactions as each country’s fear of the other escalates the simmering Cold War. European Union The attempts at union of the peoples of Europe stretch back to the days of ancient Rome. This dream of one Europe continues with such leaders and nations as Charlemagne, the Holy Roman Empire, Napoleon, and Hitler. The first efforts at voluntary unification of any European nations in the post-World War II world was the Benelux Treaty of 1948, which focused on joint efforts of Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. However, the first efforts at voluntary unification of major European nations began in 1951 with the European Coal and Steel Community and were economic in nature. This movement grew into the European Economic Community (the EEC or Common Market) in 1957. The European Free Trade Area was begun in 1959 as a smaller version of the EEC. In 1993, the European Union was born from the EEC, with its most well-known achievement, the Euro, a single European currency, being launched in 1999. Collapse of European Communism With the rise of Khrushchev to power in the Soviet Union, Soviet leaders began to offer a more “liberal” view of authority, as Stalinism was officially denounced. However, as the Soviets attempted to spread their ideology of communism worldwide, they, as well, attempted to refine their internal brand of communism. In the 1950s and 60s in nations where the Soviets had placed their control, several outbreaks occurred and were promptly put down. When Brezhnev came to power there was, as well, a moderate return to internal repression and an invasion of neighboring Afghanistan. However, Brezhnev followed a policy of détente with the US and did sign the Helsinki Accords. Gorbachev, though never repudiating socialism, began rapid programs of change to end inefficiencies in the Soviet system and to improve the Soviet standard of living. These programs of glasnost and perestroika soon led to open, free elections. As the Soviet system softened within, so it did without as well. In 1989, as its satellite states moved toward more liberal governments, it did nothing to stop them. And so, with carte blanche, the domino effect of liberal revolutions moved across Eastern Europe, eventually rolling toward, and encompassing, the Soviet Union itself in 1991. ID’s Afghan War Decolonization Invasion of Hungary Alexander Dubcek Détente Iron Curtain Summit meeting Arab-Israeli Conflict Lech Walesa Superpowers Ethnic cleansing August 1991 Coup Baltic Republics Strategic Arms Limitation Agreement (SALT) Leonid Brezhnev European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) Supreme Soviet Marshal Tito Third World Berlin Airlift European Commission (EC) Marshall Plan Three Crises of 1956 Mikhail Gorbachev Berlin Blockade European Economic Community (EEC) NATO Tiananmen Square European Union (EU) Nicolae Ceaçescu Berlin Wall Boris Yeltsin Treaty of Maastricht Treaty of Rome Brezhnev Doctrine British Balfour Declaration Christian Democratic Party Gdansk strike Nikita Khrushchev Truman Doctrine German Democratic Republic Peaceful coexistence Vaclav Havel Perestroika Warsaw Pact Prague Spring Wojciech Jarulzelski German Federal Republic Glasnost Ronald Reagan Helmut Kohl Cold War Helsinki Accords Secret Speech of 1956 Common Market Imre Nagy Solidarity Containment Indochina War Sputnik Cuban Missile Crisis Invasion of Afghanistan Chapter 31—Faces of the Twentieth Century: European Social Experiences Key Concepts Changing Roles of Women Women during the early 20th century generally had more opportunities than did their mothers and grandmothers. In many countries they could attend universities and work in previously men-only professions. Eventually, because of their work during World War I, women began to expect rights in social and political arenas. Yet, in the totalitarian states of Russia, Germany, and Italy, the post World War I world brought a more restrictive role for women. They were expected to be the perfect women, wives, and mothers that these societies needed to produce their perfect worlds, fascist or communist. Changing Secular and Religious Thought During the turmoil of the early 20th century with two world wars and a major depression, thinkers rejected traditional ways of reasoning as they attempted to analyze their world. The irreconcilability of Soviet Communism and Marxism led to alternative communist governments or the redefinition of Marxism itself. Existentialism, with its criticism of reason and man’s rational achievements, showed an intellectual and ethical crisis that equaled the social, political, and economic crisis of the times. At the same time as existentialism offered its response to a world in turmoil, Christian churches offered faith in God and His ability to redeem man from his sin. This return to conservative Christianity did not end the liberal beliefs which had preceded it. These theologians believed that man should look for God in himself rather than in heaven. The Roman Catholic Church in the post-World War II period attempted some liberal changes in practices, such as masses being said in vernacular, however it stayed true to its foundational doctrines, such as clerical celibacy. ID’s Americanization German Social Democratic Party Neo-Orthodoxy Consumer society Greens Solidarity Cult of Motherhood Hegelian philosophy Sorbonne Decolonization Jean-Paul Sartre Soren Kierkegaard Enemy of the people John-Paul II Soviet Man European Union Marshall Plan Soviet Woman Existentialism NATO Treaty of Maastricht Feminism National Front Vatican II French Popular Front National Socialist Women’s movement Zionists