The Cold War Expands Section 2-Europe Feels the Heat of The Cold War

Similar documents
Even before WWII ended, what tensions already existed between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. (Soviet Union)?

Creation of the United Nations Present

DIVISION When you see the pencil appear, fill in the information in red on your infographic guided notes page.

SS5H7 The student will discuss the origins and consequences of the Cold War.

Aim: To evaluate how the Berlin Crisis mad relations between USA & USSR worse and its consequences.

THE BEGINNING OF THE COLD WAR. EQ: How can a war be cold? EQ: What were the Hotspots of the Cold War?

THE COLD WAR

The Initial East-West Split. By: Mikaela

The. Origins & Consequences. Brain Wrinkles

Peep under the Iron Curtain March 6, 1946

Germany: Cold War to Reunification

Copyright: sample material. Contents and revision planner. Key topic 1: The origins of the Cold War, Key topic 2: Cold War crises,

Gorbachev stopped sending in military forces to maintain communist control throughout Eastern European countries

Research Branch MR-32E. Mini-Review THE WARSAW PACT. Michel Rossignol Political and Social Affairs Division. 22 December 1988

There were five great powers in Europe at the start of the 20 th century:

World War II to Rome POL 134: IR IN WESTERN EUROPE

Documents on the Hungarian Position re: the Conference on European Security. 29 November - 2 December 1954

COMPONENT 2 - PERIOD STUDY 2B. THE DEVELOPMENT OF GERMANY

THE AGE OF EISENHOWER

Mark Scheme. Summer GCSE History A (5HA01/01) Unit 1: Peace and War: International Relations,

Introduction to Italian Law. Origin and development of European (Community) Union. prof. Angelo Venchiarutti

The Collapse of the Soviet Union

Pearson Edexcel Level 1/Level 2 Certificate Pearson Edexcel International GCSE History

The French Revolution CH

M16/3/HISTX/BP1/ENG/TZ0/S3/M. Markscheme. May History route 2. Higher and standard level. Paper 1 Communism in crisis

Napoleon s Rise and Fall. AP Euro SAHS 2017

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

World Events leading to formation of United Nations

AUSA BACKGROUND BRIEF

Treaty of Versailles Simulation*

Hitler s Germany. History. igcse Examination Technique. Paper 1. Cold War

Unit 5: World War I Vocabulary

Division remains in Germany 25 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall

COMPONENT 2 - PERIOD STUDY 2B. THE DEVELOPMENT OF GERMANY

German Unification. Nationalism in Europe Section 2. Preview

CHAPTER 8. Key Issue Three: why do states cooperate with each other?

Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire

Before viewing the film review and consider the following:

Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire

Nationalism in Europe Section 3

We don t propose to sit here in our rocking chair with our hands folded and let the Communists set up any government in the Western Hemisphere.

Versailles - A Flawed Peace

HSC Modern History World War 1 Notes

Journal 1/10/18. Should you always support a friend, no matter what he or she does? What might be the long term consequences of refusing to help?

Overview: National coal phase-out announcements in Europe

No ALBANIA, BULGARIA, HUNGARY, GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC, POLAND, ROMANIA, UNION OF SOVBET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS and CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Standard 7-3: The student will demonstrate an understanding of independence movements that occurred throughout the world from 1770 through 1900.

Western Europe and Political Democracy

Georgia Coffee County 6 th Grade Social Studies. Latin America CIVICS/GOVERNMENT UNDERSTANDINGS

ANNEXES EUROPEAN COUNCIL BRUSSELS CONCLUSIONS OF THE PRESIDENCY. 24 and 25 October 2002 ANNEXES. Bulletin EN - PE 323.

The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

Unit Five Going Global

Slide 1. The Russian Revolution

Letter from Chancellor Kohl to President Bush Bonn, 28 November 1989

April 28, 1953 Soviet Foreign Ministry Memorandum, 'Regarding Further Measures of the Soviet Government on the German Question'

Pearson Edexcel GCSE in History A (5HA01) Paper 01 Unit 1: International Relations: The Era of the Cold War,

Nationalism, the Franco-Prussian

SE6RE J THE WHITE HOUSE #8375 WASHINGTON. The President: The President. June 8, 1990, 7: 00-9: 15 pm Oval Office/Old Family Dining Room

CAP CONTEXT INDICATORS

AP U.S. History Chapter 27 The Cold War Guided Reading

32a A brief history of the Cold War Ronald W iltse May 2009

Element C: Explain the major decisions made in the Versailles Treaty, include: German reparations and the Mandate System that replaced Ottoman

The French Revolution

FIELD TRIP TO BERLIN INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE FOR GRADES 6-12

The Soviet Union and German Unification

Impossible demands made of government, which, if granted, would mean its end. Unsuccessful gov t attempts to suppress the revolutionaries

Wassenaar Arrangement. What is it all about? India s entry: What it means for us? What critics have to say?

HSC Modern History. Year 2015 Mark Pages 76 Published Feb 12, STATE-RANKING NOTES: Germany By Pola (99.

The End of the Cold War: East Germany Family

GRECO IN THE MIDST OF ITS FOURTH EVALUATION ROUND. Christian Manquet, Vice-President of GRECO

Napoleon Bonaparte. Ambition is never content even on the summit of greatness.

Henry6SS (H6SSGov) 1. An example of economic cooperation among European nations that occurred in the late 1900s was the

.,-; -: -r-.. an ; ~"!'::CB.~~~~ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON. June 11, 1990, 12:20 - Old Family Dining Room

THE EUROPEAN UNION A This is the EU facts and figures B Stages in the process of European integration

Mark Scheme. Summer Pearson Edexcel GCSE in History A (5HA01) Paper 01 Unit 1: International Relations: The Era of the Cold War,

Spain s Empire Philip II - son of V - seized control of - empire of vast Defender of Spanish destroyed by Protestant England

Making the Peace. Chapter 11 Section 4

Statement by John Foster Dulles (10 June 1955)

Welcome to Germany Explore, learn, discuss

membership, particularly because of its close ties to the United States. De Gaulle vetoed British admittance a second time in 1967.

prepared by the Secretariat

DECISION No SCALES OF CONTRIBUTIONS FOR

Unit 6 Lesson 7 NEW NATION GERMANY

RESOLUTION RES (2002) 3 ADOPTING THE REVISED STATUTE OF THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW

EEA CONSULTATIVE COMMITTEE

INTERNATIONAL GCSE History (9-1)

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Rise of Austria and Prussia

Pearson Edexcel International Advanced Level in History Qualification Outline

ASSESSING GOOD PRACTICES IN POLICIES AND MEASURES TO MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE. Elena Petkova

Address given by Nikita Khrushchev on the GDR and Berlin (Moscow, 10 November 1958)

Bringing democracy to your doorstep at the heart of our cities and our regions

POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF KYOTO PROTOCOL ON TURKISH ENERGY SECTOR

EUROPEAN COUNCIL Brussels, 31 May 2013 (OR. en)

ENERGY PRIORITIES FOR EUROPE

International Relations. Simulation: The Treaty of Versailles This activity accompanies slide 15 of The Treaty of Versailles (part 1).

The French and Indian War

Brief History of the Hanford Site. Michele S. Gerber, Ph.D.

The Unification of Germany

FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE - Secretariat CONVENTION - CADRE SUR LES CHANGEMENTS CLIMATIQUES - Secrétariat KEY GHG DATA

THE GREAT REVOLUTIONS

Transcription:

NAME: DATE: BLOCK: The Cold War Expands Section 2-Europe Feels the Heat of The Cold War The U-2 incident came at the end of a decade marked by increasingly tense U.S.-Soviet relations. Like players in a chess game, leaders on each side studied the other s moves. Each was alert to threats to its national security and stood ready to respond to such challenges. During this period, Europe was the Cold War s main battleground. The Soviet Union tried to consolidate its control of Eastern Europe, while the United States tried to contain the USSR and limit its power. The USSR Protests the Unification of West Germany One of the main issues causing Cold War tensions was the status of Germany. After the war, the Allies had divided Germany and its capital, Berlin, into four occupation zones. But they did not decide when and how the zones would be reunited. When three of the Allies took a step toward reunification, it prompted a Cold War crisis. In March 1948, the United States, Great Britain, and France announced plans to merge their occupation zones to form a new country, the Federal Republic of Germany. The three Allies agreed that this reunited Germany would have a democratic government and a capitalist economy. Their decision angered the Soviets, who controlled both eastern Germany and access to the former German capital Berlin, which lay within the Soviet occupation zone. On June 24, the Soviet Union imposed a blockade on Berlin, halting all land travel into the city from the Allied occupation zones. The Soviets believed that the Berlin Blockade [Berlin Blockade: the Soviet blockade of the German city of Berlin, implemented from 1948 to 1949 to halt land travel into the city in hopes of forcing the United States, Great Britain, and France to give up their plan to combine their occupation zones into a single, democratic West German state; the Allied nations resisted the blockade by airlifting food and supplies into Berlin] would force the Allies to give up either Berlin or their plans for a West German state. The United States did not respond as the Soviet Union expected. Instead, General Lucius Clay, the commander of U.S. forces in Germany, called for resistance to the Soviet blockade. If we mean... to hold Europe against communism, we must not budge, he said. The future of democracy requires us to stay. President Harry Truman agreed, fearing that the loss of Berlin would cause the fall of Germany to the communists. He ordered a massive airlift of food, fuel, and other vital supplies to defeat the Berlin Blockade. Over the next ten and a half months, pilots made more than 270,000 flights into West Berlin, carrying nearly 2.5 million tons of supplies. The Berlin Airlift kept the hopes of the city s 2 million residents alive and became a symbol of the West s commitment to resisting communist expansion. By the spring of 1949, the Soviets saw that their policy had failed. They ended the blockade, and Germany officially became two countries: communist East Germany and democratic West Germany. Berlin also remained divided into East and West. The Iron Curtain Falls on Czechoslovakia By the time of the Berlin crisis, the Soviet Union controlled most of Eastern Europe. Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary had all established pro-soviet communist governments. Just weeks before the Berlin crisis, Czechoslovakia became the last major country to fall. After World War II, the Czechs had formed an elected government dominated by communists but also including noncommunist parties. In February 1948, Joseph Stalin amassed Soviet troops on the Czech

border and demanded the formation of an all-communist government. Shortly afterward, communists seized control, ending the Czech experiment in postwar democracy. This sudden government takeover, or coup d état [coup d état: the sudden overthrow of a government by violent force], alarmed Truman. It showed that Stalin would not accept a government in which power was shared with noncommunists and that he was prepared to use force to achieve his ends. The Czech coup d état brought drastic changes to the country s political and economic life. Czechoslovakia was now a one-party state, and communist leaders arrested, tried, and jailed all those who opposed them. They suppressed basic rights, including freedom of the press and free speech, as well. They also forced farmers to give up their land and work on state-owned collective farms. Europe Is Divided: NATO Versus the Warsaw Pact Czechoslovakia was not the only country to feel Soviet pressure. In the late 1940s, the USSR tightened its grip on all its satellite nations [satellite nation: a country under another country's control], or countries under one nation s control. As divisions increased in Europe, the superpowers also formed new military alliances. In 1949, the United States, Canada, and 10 countries of Western Europe formed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization [North Atlantic Treaty Organization: as part of the Cold War, a military alliance formed in 1949 among the United States, Canada, France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, Iceland, Italy, Britain, Denmark, Norway, and Portugal and expanded to include Greece and Turkey in 1952 and West Germany in 1955 to establish collective security against the Soviet Union] (NATO). The founding European members of NATO were France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, Iceland, Italy, Britain, Denmark, Norway, and Portugal. Greece and Turkey joined NATO in 1952, and West Germany followed in 1955. NATO members agreed to a plan for collective security. They pledged to consider an attack on any member as an attack on all and formed a standing army to defend Western Europe in the event of a Soviet invasion. The United States played a key role in NATO, providing money, troops, and leadership. By joining this alliance, the United States took another step away from isolationism. The creation of NATO prompted the Soviet Union to form its own security alliance in 1955. Under the Warsaw Pact [Warsaw Pact: as part of the Cold War and in response to the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, an agreement signed in 1955 by the Soviet Union, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania to establish a military alliance for mutual defense], the Soviet Union, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania joined forces for mutual defense. NATO and Warsaw Pact members began to see each other as enemies. Europe was now formally divided into two armed camps.

Hungary Tests the Limits of Containment Not long after the signing of the Warsaw Pact, upheaval in Hungary tested the West s anticommunist resolve. In October 1956, thousands of Hungarians took part in a brief revolt against the communist government. The protesters marched through the streets of Hungary s capital, Budapest, waving flags and calling for democracy. The leaders of the revolt formed a government led by Imre Nagy, a reform-minded communist. He aimed to free Hungary from Soviet domination. He boldly declared that Hungary would withdraw from the Warsaw Pact and become a neutral country, and he appealed to Western nations to help stave off Soviet aggression. In a speech to the Hungarian people, he said, This fight is the fight for freedom... against the Russian intervention and it is possible that I shall only be able to stay at my post for one or two hours. The whole world will see how the Russian armed forces, contrary to all treaties and conventions, are crushing the resistance of the Hungarian people... Today it is Hungary and tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, it will be the turn of other countries because the imperialism of Moscow does not know borders. Imre Nagy, November 4, 1956 Soviet leaders moved quickly to crush the revolt by sending tanks and Red Army troops into Budapest. After killing thousands of protesters, the troops put Soviet-backed leaders back into power in Hungary. Nagy stood trial before the country s communist leaders, who then put him to death. Hungarians had counted on help from the United States. Before the revolt, many had listened faithfully to U.S.- sponsored radio broadcasts beamed into the country from Europe. There they heard speakers urging them to resist the spread of communism. Through these programs, Hungarians learned of the Eisenhower administration s goal of freeing captive peoples. Many Hungarians believed that the United States would support its bid for independence by sending troops and weapons to aid them in their fight against the Soviet Union. They were shocked when American forces failed to come. One Hungarian resident recalled, People had been watching from rooftops hoping to see U.S. planes arriving. Eisenhower, however, was unwilling to risk war with the Soviet Union to free one of its satellites.

Notebook Activity 1. The Soviet Union imposed a blockade on what section of the German capital? 2. In what country did communists stage a coup d'état because the government there contained noncommunists? 3. What two military alliances, formed to provide common defense for their members, effectively divided Europe in two? 4. In what country did an uprising of anticommunist protesters result in thousands of deaths? 5. Write a short description of what occurred during this time period for each of the locations or alliances. Each description must include the date(s) and one of these terms: blockade, coup d état, collective security, or protesters.