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Cold War Paper 2: Leaders' Impact on the Course and Development of the Cold War

This paper analyzes the impact of key leaders on the course and development of the Cold War, focusing on specific policies, decisions, and shifts in relationships that shaped this historical period. It also discusses the pitfalls of overgeneralization and the importance of examining individual crises.

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Cold War Paper 2: Leaders' Impact on the Course and Development of the Cold War

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  1. Cold War Paper 2

  2. Leaders • Impact on course and development of the Cold War. • Pit Falls • Loses focus on the leaders. • Fix: Stick with specific policies and decisions. Use leaders name instead of country. • Analysis doesn’t go beyond capitalism vs. communism = increased tension. • Fix: Pick up on shifts in relationships or policies that create change in course of Cold war. • Ex: Khrushchev’s Peaceful Coexistence shifted the relationship between the USSR and China leading to the Sino-Soviet split. • Ex: The Marshall Plan and subsequent European Recovery Program under Truman reinforced the division between East and West and established points of confrontation for ideological influence. • Timeline • Fix: Be careful with Truman and Stalin—keep focus primarily post WWII.

  3. Leaders: recommendations • Eisenhower • 1953-1961 • Rollback • New Look • Korean War Resolution • Guatemala • Suez Crisis • Taiwan Strait • Berlin Crisis • Khrushchev • 1953-1964 • Peaceful Coexistence • De-Stalinization • Summit Meetings • Hungarian Revolution • Suez Crisis • Berlin Crisis • Cuban Missile Crisis • Sino-Soviet Split • Mao • 1949-1976 • Support for Revolutionary movements • Rapprochement with US • Korean War • Taiwan Strait • Sino-Soviet Split

  4. Leader Recommendations • Truman • 1945-1953 • Containment • Truman Doctrine • Marshall Plan/ERP • NSC 68 • Potsdam • Atom Bomb • Berlin Airlift • NATO • Korean War • Stalin • 1929-1953 • Security in Europe through satellite states • Expansion of communist ideology • Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam • Comecon/Cominform • Berlin Blockade • Czechoslovak coup • Soviet-Yugoslav split • Soviet atom bomb • Korean War

  5. Impact on two leaders on the course and development of the Cold War • Evaluate • Discuss • Compare and contrast • Analyze • Examine • To what extent

  6. Crises • Examination and comparison of causes, impact and significance • Crisis: the turning point in a series of events that leads to a dangerous situation in need of resolution. Events that had the potential to escalate tensions or even lead to general war between the superpowers. • General Pitfalls • Losing the details of the crisis/over generalizing • I think this is the root of some inaccuracies showing up with specific crises • EX: The Soviet Union put nuclear weapons in Cuba because of US weapons in Turkey • EX: Role of Soviet Union in Korea and use of “US” in Korea • Too basic in comparisons—sticking strictly to what happened and not why it happened.

  7. How to choose • Consider short and long term causes • How do the causes reflect superpower relationships or policies? OR . .. • Does the impact set up a shift in superpower relationships or policies? • YOU NEED SOMETHING MORE THAN BOTH CREATE/SHOW TENSION

  8. Specific Crises • Berlin Blockade • Invasion of South Korea by North Korea • First and Second Taiwan Strait Crises • Hungarian Revolution • Berlin Crisis • Cuban Missile Crisis • Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan • Able Archer Crisis

  9. What Gregory likes • Hungarian Revolution and Cuban Missile Crisis • Why? Shift in leadership/Kennedy and Khrushchev • Hungarian Revolution and Taiwan Strait Crisis • Why? Khrushchev and Mao foreign policy • Berlin Crisis and Cuban Missile Crisis • Why? Khrushchev diverging from Peaceful Coexistence/Détente

  10. Rivalry, mistrust, and accord

  11. Origins of the Cold War: Perspectives • Orthodox: • Focused on Europe/ignores conflict in Asia. • Ethnocentric • Immediate historiographical perspective/reflective on mindset at the time. • Revisionist: • Considers historical trends like imperialism, providing insight in to motives continuity in policy. • Focused on the west—places less importance on role of leaders like Mao. • Doesn’t assess Soviet influence • Post Revisionist: • Benefit of hindsight • Accounts for clear differences in ideology • Broad/open to interpretation

  12. To what extent did economic interests rather than ideology lead to the breakdown of the grand alliance between 1943 and 1949? • Compare and contrast the roles of the US and USSR in the origins of the Cold War. • Examine the effect of the US policy of containment on relations with the USSR and the PRC from 1949 to 1962. • To what extent was Khrushchev’s policy of peaceful-coexistence responsible for the Sino-Soviet split of the 1960’s? • Discuss the impact of the Brezhnev Doctrine on the course of the Cold War. • Evaluate the impact of Gorbachev’s policies on two countries between 1985 and 1989. • To what extent did the war in Afghanistan contribute to the decline of the Soviet Union.

  13. Understand what the command term/question is askingand what it allows for scope. • BTSs should be argument points not topic sentences. • Needs to set up an argument. • Dig in to the how/why to support critical analysis • Connect everything back to prompt/thesis • Must address differing perspectives and one additional historical concept. • Use the language/terminology

  14. Be explicit about how you are answering the prompt—use language from the prompt. • Avoid the narrative • Big Facts vs. Specific Details • Define your terms • Set up the timeline • When in doubt work in chronological order. • Read prompts carefully for appropriate timeline.

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