1 / 24

POST-WAR EUROPE

POST-WAR EUROPE. “What is Europe now? A rubble heap, a breeding ground for pestilence and hate ” –Winston Churchill Problems Massive civilian and military casualties Economic conditions worse than they had been during Great Depression Millions of people who had lost everything

wyatt
Download Presentation

POST-WAR EUROPE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. POST-WAR EUROPE • “What is Europe now? A rubble heap, a breeding ground for pestilence and hate” –Winston Churchill • Problems • Massive civilian and military casualties • Economic conditions worse than they had been during Great Depression • Millions of people who had lost everything • What to do with defeated Germany

  2. POTSDAM CONFERENCE • (SUMMER 1945) • HELD IN GERMANY • Germany divided into four occupation zones • British • French • Soviet • American

  3. DIVISION OF GERMANY • Each occupying power had to: • Clean out ex-Nazis • Rebuild economy • Re-educate Germans • Reunify into a cleansed Germany • Soviet Union would not cooperate • Resulted in three western zones uniting in 1949 to create West Germany • Soviet zone becomes East Germany

  4. ECONOMIC RECOVERY • European Economic Recovery Plan (“The Marshall Plan”) 1948 • Massive amounts of American aid • No strings attached • European recipients encouraged to cooperate together George Marshall

  5. THE COMMON MARKET • Creation of European Economic Community (“Common Market”) 1957 • Single free trade zone • Guided by common economic policies • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 1949 • Peacetime military alliance • Led by U.S. • Economic recovery of Western Europe reduced threat of Communism in the region

  6. POST-WAR SOVIET UNION • Stalin re-imposes police state • Returned Soviet POWs sent to labor camps • Successful generals eliminated • Five-year plans restored • Soviet Union takes over “liberated” Eastern Europe • Despite earlier promises • Installs communist puppet regimes

  7. THE COLD WAR • Cold War with U.S. • Launched by Soviet action in Eastern Europe • Fueled by ideological differences, mutual mistrust, and desire to impose their systems on world • Possession of nuclear weapons by both threatened entire world

  8. RISE OF KHRUSHCHEV • Stalin dies in 1952 • Replaced by Valentii Molotov and Nikita Khrushchev • Both realized that changes had to be made • Molotov wanted slow and gradual change • Khrushchev wanted rapid and bold changes

  9. KHRUSHCHEV WINS • Khrushchev wins power struggle and emerges as sole master of Soviet Union in 1955 • Delivers anti-Stalin speech in 1956 • Accused Stalin of crimes, incompetence, and “egomania” • Begins “DeStalinization” program

  10. DESTALINIZATION • DeStalinization • Massive reform program • Removed most of Stalin’s worst henchmen from office • Gave higher priority to consumer production and housing in 5-Year Plans • Attempted to relax tensions with U.S.

  11. HUNGARY 1956 • Imgre Nagy put in power by demonstration in Budapest • Begins reform program designed to improve conditions • Soviet Union responds with invasion • Nagy executed, thousands killed, thousands more forced to flee

  12. FALL OF KHRUSHCHEV 1964 • REASONS • DeStalinization was stimulating criticism of the Communist regime within Russia– many feared this might get out of control • Serious foreign policy embarrassments at the hands of the U.S. • Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 • Publicly backed down before President John F. Kennedy U-2 photos of nuclear missile based in Cuba

  13. LEONID BREZHNEV1964-1982 • Began “ReStalinization” • Talked about Stalin’s “good points” • Persecuted anti-Stalin artists and writers • Massive arms buildup

  14. UNREST IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA • Led by new generation of tech experts and administrators who put Aton Dubcek in power (1968) • Initiates reforms designed to liberalize country • Soviet Union responds with military intervention and issue of the “Brezhnev Doctrine”

  15. AFTER BREZHNEV • Brezhnev dies after long illness in 1982 • Replaced by Yuri Andropv • Dies in 1983 • Replaced by Konstantin Chernynencko • Dies in 1984 • Replaced by Mikhail Gorbachev • March 1985 • Relatively young (54) Yuri Andropv Mikhail Gorbachev

  16. GORBACHEV • Inherits massive problems • Unproductive agriculture • Sluggish industrial plant • Huge and corrupt bureaucracy • Immense military budget • Legacy of repression • Unwinnable war in Afghanistan • Trick was how to transform Soviet economy and society without destroying the Soviet Union in the process

  17. PERESTROIKA • “Restructuring” • Eliminated centralized planning of economy • Ended subsidies to unprofitable industries • Allowed market to determine prices • Turned over much industry and agriculture to private enterprise • Encouraged private investment • Incentives for improved quality and productivity

  18. GLASNOST • “Openess” • Re-examine Soviet history • Free public discussion • Impact was enormous, people talked of: • Multi-party democracy • Opening Russia to missionaries • Right to emigrate • Criticized Marxism • Republics talked of independence

  19. END OF THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE • To ease Cold War tensions with U.S., Gorbachev allows Eastern Europe to “choose its own path and forms of development • All Eastern European countries break completely free of Soviet control by 1990

  20. BREAKUP Led by Baltic States of Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania Gorbachev initially attempts alternating concessions/repression to keep them in Soviet Union Ultimately forced to let them all go, one by one Non-Russian republics demand independence

  21. END OF SOVIET UNION • Problems • Republics breaking away • Economy in disarray • Forces of repression discredited • Military paralyzed • Rise of opportunistic politicians to challenge Gorbachev • Boris Yeltsin

  22. COUP • Coup of August 1991 • Organized by old Communist hardliners • Gorbachev put under house arrest • People of St. Petersburg and Boris Yeltsin save the day • Coup fails

  23. Gorbachev resigns in December 1991 Boris Yeltsin becomes president of the Republic of Russia Soviet Union ceases to exist

  24. POST-GORBACHEV • Explosion of criminal activity and the rise of vicious organized crime “families” • Prostitution, drugs, alcoholism, and vice run rampant • Racism and ethnic hatred also run rampant • Engineers and scientists are selling weapons to terrorists and dictators • Retirement of Yeltsin and electionofVladimir Putinas president has brought some improvement but Russia still has a long way to go

More Related