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The Early Cold War: WWI-1970 Ms. Susan M. Pojer and some changes by Ms. Snyder World War I - 1939 WW II Casualties: Europe Each symbol indicates 100,000 dead in the appropriate theater of operations Country Men in war Battle deaths Wounded Australia 1,000,000 26,976 180,864 Austria 800,000 280,000 350,117 Belgium 625,000 8,460 55,5131 40,334 943 4,222 339,760 6,671 21,878 Canada 1,086,3437 42,0427 53,145 China3 17,250,521 1,324,516 1,762,006 Czechoslovakia — 6,6834 8,017 Denmark — 4,339 — Finland 500,000 79,047 50,000 France — 201,568 400,000 20,000,000 3,250,0004 7,250,000 Greece — 17,024 47,290 Hungary — 147,435 89,313 India 2,393,891 32,121 64,354 Italy 3,100,000 149,4964 66,716 Japan 9,700,000 1,270,000 140,000 Netherlands 280,000 6,500 2,860 New Zealand 194,000 11,6254 17,000 75,000 2,000 — — 664,000 530,000 650,0005 350,0006 — 410,056 2,473 — — 6,115,0004 14,012,000 5,896,000 357,1164 369,267 16,112,566 291,557 670,846 3,741,000 305,000 425,000 Brazil2 Bulgaria Germany Norway Poland Romania South Africa U.S.S.R. United Kingdom United States Yugoslavia WW II Casualties 1. Civilians only. 2. Army and navy figures. 3. Figures cover period July 7, 1937 to Sept. 2, 1945, and concern only Chinese regular troops. They do not include casualties suffered by guerrillas and local military corps. 4. Deaths from all causes. 5. Against Soviet Russia; 385,847 against Nazi Germany. 6. Against Soviet Russia; 169,822 against Nazi Germany. 7. National Defense Ctr., Canadian Forces Hq., Director of History. Massive Human Dislocations The Creation of the U. N. The Nuremberg War Trials: Crimes Against Humanity 7 Future American Presidents Served in World War II The U.S. & the U.S.S.R. Emerged as the Two Superpowers of the later 20c The Bi-Polarization of Europe: The Beginning of the Cold War “Reconstruction & Confrontation” The Ideological Struggle Soviet & Eastern Bloc Nations [“Iron Curtain”] GOAL spread worldwide Communism METHODOLOGIES: US & the Western Democracies GOAL “Containment” of Communism & the eventual collapse of the Communist world. [George Kennan] « Espionage [KGB vs. CIA] « Arms Race [nuclear escalation] « Ideological Competition for the minds and hearts of Third World peoples [Communist govt. & command economy vs. democratic govt. & capitalist economy] “proxy wars” « Bi-Polarization of Europe [NATO vs. Warsaw Pact] The “Iron Curtain” From Stettin in the Balkans, to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent. Behind that line lies the ancient capitals of Central and Eastern Europe. -- Sir Winston Churchill, 1946 Truman Doctrine [March 1947] 1. Civil War in Greece. 2. Turkey under pressure from the USSR for concessions in the Dardanelles. 3. The U. S. should support free peoples throughout the world who were resisting takeovers by armed minorities or outside pressures…We must assist free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way. 4. The U.S. gave Greece & Turkey $400 million in aid. Marshall Plan [1948] 1. “European Recovery Program.” 2. Secretary of State, George Marshall 3. The U. S. should provide aid to all European nations that need it. This move is not against any country or doctrine, but against hunger, poverty, desperation, and chaos. 4. $12.5 billion of US aid to Western Europe extended to Eastern Europe & USSR, [but this was rejected]. The Division of Germany: 1945 - 1990 Post-War Germany Berlin Blockade & Airlift (194849) The Arms Race: A “Missile Gap?” } The Soviet Union exploded its first A-bomb in 1949. } Now there were two nuclear superpowers! North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1949) v United States v Luxemburg v Belgium v Netherlands v Britain v Norway v Canada v Portugal v Denmark v v France 1952: Greece & Turkey v Iceland v 1955: West Germany v Italy v 1983: Spain Warsaw Pact (1955) } U. S. S. R. } East Germany } Albania } Hungary } Bulgaria } Poland } Czechoslovakia } Rumania Premier Nikita Khrushchev About the capitalist states, it doesn't depend on you whether we (Soviet Union) exist. If you don't like us, don't accept our invitations, and don't De-Stalinization invite us to come Program to see you. Whether you like it our not, history is on our side. We will bury you. -- 1956 An Historic Irony: Sergei Khrushchev, American Citizen Who buried who? Mao’s Revolution: 1949 Who lost China? – A 2nd } Power! The Korean War: A “Police Action” (1950-1953) Kim Il-Sung Syngman Rhee “Domino Theory” The Suez Crisis: 1956-1957 Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty The Hungarian Uprising: 1956 Imre Nagy, Hungarian Prime Minister } Promised free elections. } This could lead to the end of communist rule in Hungary. Sputnik I (1957) The Russians have beaten America in space—they have the technological edge! Nixon-Khrushchev “Kitchen Debate” (1959) Cold War ---> Tensions <--- Technology & Affluence U-2 Spy Incident (1960) Col. Francis Gary Powers’ plane was shot down over Soviet airspace. Paris, 1961 Khrushchev & JFK meet to discuss Berlin and nuclear proliferation. Khrushchev thinks that JFK is young, inexperienced, and can be rolled. The Berlin Wall Goes Up (1961) Checkpoint Charlie ( August of 1961) First GDR border guard to escape to the West: From 19611989 2000 guards escaped to the west. Saying Goodbye Guard letting child through wired fence-Was immediately reassigned Ich bin ein Berliner! (1963) President Kennedy tells Berliners that the West is with them! (Or, I am a Doughnut) Brandenburg Gate 1965 Berlin Wall 1967 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Khruschev Embraces Castro, 1961 Bay of Pigs Debacle (1961) Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) We went eyeball-to-eyeball with the Russians, and the other man blinked! Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) Vietnam War: 1965-1973 “Prague Spring” (1968) Former Czech President, Alexander Dubček Communism with a human face! “Prague Spring” Dashed! Dissidents/playwrights arrested [like Vaclav Havel—future president of a free Czech Republic]. 4th French Republic: 1945-1958 1. Democratic, but politically unstable [27 governments!] 2. Universal suffrage. 3. Weak President; powerful legislature 4. Many political parties [coalition governments] 5. Failure to gracefully leave Indochina. 6. Botched the Suez War. 7. Failed to settle the Algerian Crisis. 5th French Republic (1958-Present) 1. Powerful President. * first: Charles DeGaulle 2. Weak Cabinet. 3. Weakened legislature. 4. Separation of powers. DeGaulle’s Achievements 1. Settled the Algerian Crisis. 2. Made France a nuclear power. 3. Sustained general prosperity. 4. Maintained a stable, democratic government. 5. Made France more politically independent. BUT, late ’60s student unrest and social changes challenged him. In 1968 he resigned & died of a heart attack in 1970. Student Riots in Paris (May, 1968) Clement Attlee & the Labor Party: 1945-1951 1. Limited socialist program [modern welfare state]. « Natl. Insurance Act « Natl. Health Service Act 2. Nationalized coal mines, public utilities, steel industry, the Bank of England, RRs, motor transportation, and aviation. 3. Social insurance legislation: “Cradle-to-Grave” security. 4. Socialized medicine free national health care. Clement Attlee & the Labor Party: 1945-1951 6. Britain is in a big debt! 7. The beginning of the end of the British Empire. § India – 1947 § Palestine – 1948 § Kenya Mau Mau uprising - 1955 Churchill Returns: 1951-1955 He never really tried to destroy the “welfare state” established by Attlee’s government. The Federated Republic of Germany 1. Created in 1949 with the capital at Bonn. 2. Its army limited to 12 divisions [275,000]. 3. Konrad Adenauer, a Christian Democrat, was its 1st President. § Coalition of moderates and conservatives. § Pro-Western foreign policy. § German “economic miracle.” 4. “Father of Modern Germany.” Italy After WW II 1. Alcide de Gasperi was Italy’s P.M. from 19481953 2. Coalition governments [short and unstable!] Part II: “European Union” European Economic Integration 1. 1947 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade [GATT] § 23 nations. § Became the foundation of postwar global commerce. § It set up procedures to handle commercial complaints. § It provided a framework for continuing negotiations [“rounds”]. § By 1990, 99 nations were participating. European Economic Integration 1952 European Coal & Steel Community [ECSC]. §HQ in Luxembourg. §“Inner Six”: Benelux nations, France, Italy, and W. Germany. §Placed their coal and steel industries under a form of supranational authority “The High Authority”. §Eliminated tariff duties and quotas on coal and steel. European Economic Integration 1957 European Economic Community [EEC] §HQ Brussels. §Treaties of Rome. European Economic Integration Treaties of Rome 1. European Economic Community [EEC] § France, W. Germany, Italy, Benelux. § Created a larger free trade area, or customs union. « Eliminate all trade barriers. « One common tariff with the outside world. « Free movement of capital & labor. European Economic Integration Treaties of Rome 2. European Atomic Energy Community [EURATOM] §The purposes of EURATOM are to create a specialist market for nuclear power and distribute it through the Community and to develop nuclear energy and sell surplus to non-Community States. European Economic Integration 1967 European Community [EC] Combines the ECSC & EEC § HQ Brussels. § European Parliament. « “Eurocrats.” « 518 members [elected by all voters in Europe-party affiliation not nation]. « Only limited legislative power. § Court of Justice. European Economic Integration 1973 New Countries Join EEC §Denmark §Ireland §United Kingdom European Economic Integration 1979 First Direct Elections 1981 Greece joins the EEC 1986 Spain and Portugal join the EEC 1995 Austria, Finland, and Sweden join the EEC European Economic Integration 1991-92 Maastricht Agreements §European Union [EU] created from the EC. « One currency, one culture, one social area, and one environment! § Create a “frontier-free” Europe a common EU passport. § One large “common market.” « Goods coming into the EU would have high tariffs placed on them. European Economic Integration THE EURO The euro – Europe's new single currency - represents the consolidation and culmination of European economic integration. Introduced on January 1, 1999, marked the final phase of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), a three-stage process that was launched in 1990 as EU member states prepared for the 1992 single market. European Economic Integration THE EURO 1999-2002: The Euro and the previous national currencies were concurrently used in participating states. 2002: The participating countries had their previous national currencies withdrawn permanently as legal tender. European Economic Integration THE EURO European Economic Integration ENLARGEMENT: 10 more countries become EU Member States in 2004 country - date of EU application Cyprus - 3 July 1990 Malta - 16 July 1990 Hungary - 31 March 1994 Poland - 5 April 1994 Slovakia - 27 June 1995 Latvia - 13 October 1995 Estonia - 24 November 1995 Lithuania - 8 December 1995 Czech Republic - 17 January 1996 Slovenia - 10 June 1996 European Economic Integration Applicant Countries whose requests for EU membership are still pending country - date of EU application Turkey - 14 April 1987 Croatia - 2003 European Economic Integration NORWAY? Norway has never been a member of the EU, but is ‘partners’ with EU for certain economic reasons. Their economy has historically been very good and they had no desire to ‘merge’ with lesser economies. As of 2002, the Norwegian economy began to decline. There is a now a developing majority of Norwegian that want Norway to join the EU. European Economic Integration Switzerland has never been a member of the EU, but is ‘partners’ with EU for certain economic reasons. SWITZERLAND? Switzerland Just joined UN in 2002. Swiss Government want Switzerland to join for economic reasons but the Swiss people continue to vote against joining the EU. European Economic Integration 25 CURRENT EU COUNTRIES Austria Belgium Bulgaria Czech Republic Cyprus Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta The Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden United Kingdom