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The Cold War, part 2

The Cold War, part 2. The “Thaw”. In early 1953, Stalin dies and Eisenhower is inaugurated. After brief struggle for power, Nikita Kruschev pursues warming of relations with the West (i.e. “ Peaceful C oexistence ”)

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The Cold War, part 2

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  1. The Cold War, part 2

  2. The “Thaw” In early 1953, Stalin dies and Eisenhower is inaugurated. After brief struggle for power, Nikita Kruschev pursues warming of relations with the West (i.e. “Peaceful Coexistence”) He also condemns Stalin’s purges in his “Secret Speech” before the 20th Party Congress

  3. Peaceful Coexistence In an effort to normalize relations, he authorized For. Min. Molotov to agree to the Austrian State Treaty ‘55, which guaranteed a free, independent and democratic Austria.

  4. “New Look” Though committed to containment, Eisenhower campaigned to roll back communism. His shift in foreign policy was known as “New Look”, which implied the use of force.

  5. Brinksmanship It was Eisenhower’s Sec. of State Dulles, who put forth the idea of brinksmanship He believed that only the capability and willingness to use massive retaliation would allow the West to effectively push the Commies back. This meant M.A.D., or mutually assured destruction!

  6. Tensions in the East After democratically elected Mohammed Moseddeghof Iran proposes nationalizing the nations oil reserves. CIA & MI6 orchestrate Operation Ajax, the overthrow of Moseddeghin 1953. In his place, the U.S. supported Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi, a despotic and brutal, though loyal, dictator.

  7. Tensions Rise When the U.S. fails to sign the Geneva Accord in ‘54, but rather creates SEATO (Sept. ‘54), the Vietnam War begins Followed by the Killian Report in Feb. ‘55, Eisenhower believes that there is a missile gap developing. With the creation of the Warsaw Pact in May ’55, Eisenhower begins massive nuclear build up. Arms race!

  8. Tensions Rise Beginning in 1948, Lt. Gen. Curtis LeMay, assumed control of SAC & relocated it to Nebraska. LeMay established the ability to strike anywhere in the world via in flight fueling Jet engines ICBMs Eisenhower proposes “Open Skies” initiative with Soviets in ‘55, but it is rejected.

  9. Tensions in the East Following Kruschev’s speech in Feb. ‘56, he facing increasing opposition from hard-liners, satellite states & China Emergence of the 3rd World after Bandung Conf. in ’55. The Suez & Hungarian Crises of ‘56 force U.S.S.R. to crack down and lead to “Eisenhower Doctrine” Kitchen Debate ‘59 also served to challenge Kruschev in public.

  10. Cold War heads west The 26th of July Movement (‘53) culminates in the overthrow of US-backed Batista gov’t on Jan. 1, 1959. Led by Latin American revolutionary, Ernesto “Che” Guevara & Fidel Castro, it marked the first “defeat” for the U.S. in the W. hemisphere

  11. Operation PBSUCCESS In March 1954, Eisenhower & Sec. of State Dulles,push for OAS states to sign the Caracas Declaration, which stated that Marxism was an alien ideology. With the “support” of the OAS, the CIA, led by Allen Dulles, plan the CIA backed overthrow of elected Pres. of Guatemala, JacoboArbenz. Colonel Armastakes over and begins a reign of anti-communist repression and oppressive rule.

  12. Sputnik I, U-2 & The Space Race The Soviets launch the first successful satellite in 1957, while US paranoia grows. The Soviet Union claims that they have the wreckage of a US spy plane May ’60. After repeated denials on the part of Eisenhower, the Soviets embarrassingly produce pilot Francis Gary Powers.

  13. “Flexible Response” Kennedy campaigns in 1960 on a noticeably “hawkish” platform. He warns the public that our military has fallen behind and needs to diversify our arsenal to include new technologically advanced conventional weapons. He also becomes an advocate of using covert ops and high tech weapons to fight “asymmetrical warfare”

  14. 1961 Kennedy and Kruschev meet in Vienna for a summit to discuss nuclear proliferation & the Berlin Crisis. Kruschev attempts to bully the young and inexperienced JFK, catching him off guard. Kennedy decides he needs to prove America’s resolve by committing to So. Vietnamese

  15. On August 13, 1961, Kruschev caves to pressure from the GDR & Walter Ulbricht, and allows for the permanent and complete closure of the border between East and West Berlin, as hundreds of thousands of East Germans flee to the West. There is a tense standoff in October called the “Meeting of the Tanks,” but thankfully cooler heads prevailed. The Berlin Wall

  16. Bay of Pigs The lack of air support by the US at the last minute dooms the exiles to death or capture, reflecting poorly on Kennedy. During the 1st few months of Kennedy’s presidency, the US backs an ill-fated invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs, by US trained and supplied Cuban exiles.

  17. Space Race In 1962, the Soviets launch the 1st manned satellite into orbit, Vostok I, with Russian cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin. It’s success embarrasses the USA, due to the lack of comparable technology, prompting Kennedy to promise that we would be competitive by putting the 1st man on the moon.

  18. Cuban Missile Crisis In Oct. 1962, Kruschev attempts to rapidly place intermediate range nukes in Cuba before the US can respond. Kennedy calls for a “quarantine” of Cuba and forces the Soviets to back down.

  19. Vietnam Moreover, the assassination of the So. Vietnamese president, Ngo Dihn Diem, left LBJ with no clear figure to support. While Ho Chi Minh had garnered great loyalty. With JFK’s assassination in Nov. of ‘63, LBJ inherits a challenging domestic scene and a morass in Vietnam, with growing concern over our objectives and methods, as guerilla warfare was failing.

  20. “Great Society” LBJ needs to end the Vietnam Conflict, so as to focus on his domestic agenda. He uses the Gulf of Tonkin Incident in Aug. of ‘64 to increase our involvement. Gives the order to initiate “Operation Rolling Thunder” and to deploy large numbers of US military personnel.

  21. Dêtente Kruschev is overthrown in 1964 by Soviet hard-liner Leonid Brezhnev. Conditions in Vietnam worsen, as the U.S. sees the horrors of war, the Tet Offensive occurs in 1968 & news of the My Lai Massacre follows. With the Soviet Union struggling with deteriorating conditions with China, both pursuing an “easing of tensions” with one another.

  22. “Ping Pong” Diplomacy On the advice of advisor, Henry Kissinger, Nixon begins to work towards improving relations with Communist China, and getting out of SE Asia via “Vietnamization.” Using the US national table tennis team as a diplomatic tool in 1971, the gesture results in US recognition of the Communist gov’t in China as the legitimate gov’t. Pres. Richard Nixon & Chairman Mao

  23. Jimmy and his brother Billy at a campaignstop in his hometown of Plains, GA Jimmy Carter On the heels of the Vietnam War, many Americans had become dissolutioned with the government’s interventionist policies. Whether it was his campaign promises, or his image as an average American (e.g. peanut farmer from Georgia), Carter wins.

  24. Human Rights Campaign Carter believed that our “inordinate fear of communism” led us to indirectly sponsor human rights violations. He wanted to get back our moral msg. 1977 Carter-Torrijos Treaty 1978 Camp David Peace Accords However, his presidency is viewed as soft and responsible for Iranian hostage crisis. Billy and his famous “Billy Beer”

  25. The Cold War Culminates Soviet military spending skyrockets and they suffer crippling economic stagnation. Ronald Reagan becomes president in 1980 and promises in his Reagan Doctrine to “get tough on communism” by increasing military expenditures and proposing SDI. The threat alone sends the USSR into an economic tailspin.

  26. Gorbachev Michael Gorbachev attempts drastic measures to reform the Soviet Union with his plans of democratizatsia, perestroika, and glasnost. His efforts result in an open flood gate of internal dissent that he is unable to hold back

  27. The Collapse of Communism? In 1986, the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl reveals the decaying USSR to the world. In 1989, the Chinese attempt to protest @ Tiananmen Square, only to have it forcefully put downby the Chairman of the Communist Party, Deng Xiopeng. In 1981, the Polish shipyard workers, led by Lech Walesa, form a union in protest, called Solidarity. Though initially repressed, it leads to further protests.

  28. Berlin Wall Collapses In 1989, perhaps inspired by Reagan’s famous speech, Berliners begin a protest at the wall and when the East German Stasi fail to respond decisively, the protest grows out of control with the Wall consequently being dismantled.

  29. Hardliner Coup Their coup is met with public opposition led by Boris Yeltsin. Defying Gorbachev, Yeltsin disbands the Communist gov’t and becomes the first pres. in the new Russia. As Gorbachev worked futilely to maintain his reform efforts, a group of hardliners attempt to stage a coup and seize control of the rapidly splintering Soviet Union.

  30. Overview Causes Containment NSC-68 New Look Flexible Response Détente Reagan Doctrine Collapse

  31. lessons

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