Cold War.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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With this, all the countries of Eastern Europe were under Communist control, and the creation of the Soviet bloc was complete.
The events of 1948 contributed to agrowing conviction among political leaders in both the United States and the USSR that the opposing power posed a broad and fundamental threat to their nation’sinterests.
The Berlin blockade and the spread of Communism in Europe led to negotiations between Western Europe, Canada, and the United States that resulted in the NorthAtlantic Treaty, which was signed in April 1949, thereby establishing the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
The Berlin crisis also accelerated the emergence of astate of West Germany, which was formally established in May 1949.
(The Communist republic of East Germany, comprising the remainder of German territory, wasformally proclaimed in October of that year.) And finally, the Berlin confrontation prompted the Western powers to begin thinking seriously about rearming their half ofGermany, despite the divisiveness of this issue among West Europeans.
The death of Joseph Stalin in 1953 had a significant impact on the course of the Cold War.
His successors, including Nikita Khrushchev, who ultimately replaced Stalin asSoviet leader, sought to ease some of the rigidities of Soviet policy toward the West, but without resolving the core issue: a divided Germany at the heart of a dividedEurope.
The Western powers responded cautiously but sympathetically to the softening of Soviet policy, and in the mid-1950s the USSR and the Western powersconvened the first of several summit conferences in Geneva, Switzerland, to address the key issues of the Cold War.
These issues now included not only the problem ofGerman reunification, but also the danger of surprise nuclear attack and, in the background, the momentarily quieted but still unresolved conflicts in Korea andIndochina (for more information, see The Cold War Outside Europe below).
The 1955 Geneva Conference achieved little progress on the central issues of Germany, Eastern Europe, and arms control.
However, on the eve of the conference the two sides resolved the issue of Austria, which had been united with Germany during thewar and divided into American, British, French, and Soviet occupation zones in its aftermath.
The signing of the State Treaty between Austria and the Allies establishedAustria’s neutrality, freed it of occupation forces, and reestablished the Austrian republic.
This period also saw fundamental change in one critical realm: Both the UnitedStates and the USSR came to recognize that nuclear weapons had produced a revolution in military affairs—making war among the great powers, while still a possibility,no longer a sane policy recourse.
Meanwhile, the struggle over Europe continued.
West Germany was recognized as an independent nation in 1955 and was allowed to rearm and join NATO.
In responseto this development, a group of Eastern European Communist nations led by the USSR formed the Warsaw Pact .
In the late 1950s Khrushchev launched a new seriesof crises over Berlin, and in 1961 the Soviet government built the Berlin Wall to prevent East Germans from fleeing to West Germany.
B The Cold War Outside Europe
In 1950 the superpowers’ involvement in Third World areas—limited previously to sporadic jousting—changed suddenly, as the USSR and the United States becameentangled in an Asian war.
In June of that year, Stalin appeared to endorse the plans of North Korean Communist leader Kim Il Sung to attack South Korea,assuming—according to documents that have since come to light—that the United States and other major powers would not get involved.
This mistaken assumption ledto the Korean War (1950-1953), which pitted American-led United Nations forces against the military forces of North Korea and China (which had become a Communistrepublic under the leadership of Mao Zedong in late 1949).
The first armed conflict of the Cold War, the Korean War led to a major increase in defense spending by theUnited States.
Because American leaders saw Stalin’s actions in Korea as a potential precursor to aggressive movements in Europe, the war helped prompt the UnitedStates to turn NATO into an ambitious and permanent military structure.
In 1954, following the military defeat of France in its bid to reclaim Vietnam in the First Indochina War (1946-1954), the great powers assembled in Geneva withrepresentatives from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia to negotiate an end to that conflict.
Among other provisions, the resulting agreement, known as the GenevaAccords, provided for the temporary partition of Vietnam into northern and southern portions, with the Viet Minh (a Communist group seeking Vietnameseindependence) concentrated in North Vietnam and the French and their Vietnamese supporters in the south.
To avoid permanent partition, the accords called fornational elections to reunify the country to be held in 1956.
When the South Vietnamese refused to hold the elections because Viet Minh leader Ho Chi Minh was favoredto win, the North Vietnamese began to seek the overthrow of the South Vietnamese government.
The Vietnam War, which began in 1959, pitted the Communist North Vietnamese and the National Liberation Front, a Vietnamese nationalist group based in SouthVietnam, against the South Vietnamese.
In 1965 the United States sent troops into Vietnam to fight alongside the South Vietnamese.
A long and bloody conflict, theVietnam War lasted until 1975.
Before it ended, it spread to the neighboring countries of Laos and Cambodia, where it continued long after 1975.
In Cambodia, the warbrought to power the Communist movement known as the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, whose regime inflicted a genocidal massacre on the Cambodian people.Meanwhile, by the mid-1960s the Communist world had been dramatically reconfigured as the result of an increasingly bitter and open split between the USSR andChina.
The dispute stemmed in part from ideological disagreements but also reflected the intense rivalry of two former empires.
The most serious Cold War confrontation between the United States and the USSR that took place in the Third World—one that raised the specter of nuclearwar—occurred in 1962.
In the summer of that year, the U.S.
government discovered that the Soviets were in the process of deploying nuclear missiles in CommunistCuba.
In October the United States moved to block Soviet ships carrying missiles to Cuba.
The resulting standoff, during which the world stood seemingly on the brinkof ultimate disaster, ended with Khrushchev capitulating to the demands of U.S.
president John F.
Kennedy.
From the Cuban missile crisis both sides learned that riskingnuclear war in pursuit of political objectives was simply too dangerous.
It was the last time during the Cold War that either side would take this risk.
In the early and mid-1960s the great powers even superimposed their competition on local conflicts in faraway Africa.
In newly independent nations such as theRepublic of the Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Nigeria, the United States and the USSR chose sides and lent military backing and otherassistance to groups or leaders thought to be sympathetic to their interests.
In the Middle East, the underlying conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors becameentangled with maneuvering by the superpowers to push one another out of the region.
The Arab-Israeli wars of 1956, 1967, and 1973 drew in the United States andthe USSR, creating the possibility of escalation to a direct confrontation between them.
In the early 1970s the tenor of the Cold War changed.
During the first administration of U.S.
president Richard Nixon (1969-1973), the United States and the USSRsought to put their relationship on a different footing.
While neither side abandoned its basic positions, the two superpowers tried to take the first steps towardcontrolling the costly nuclear arms race and finding areas for mutually advantageous economic and scientific collaboration.
Détente, as this policy came to be called,collapsed in the second half of the 1970s, when the American-Soviet competition in the Third World intensified once again, this time during the civil war in Angola andthe Somali-Ethiopian war over the Ogadēn region.
During this phase of the Cold War, Communist Cuba played a significant role alongside the USSR, while the Chinese,now deeply wary of the USSR, participated on the side of the United States.
IV END OF THE COLD WAR
The early 1980s witnessed a final period of friction between the United States and the USSR, resulting mainly from the Soviets’ invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 to propup a Communist regime and from the firm line adopted by U.S.
president Ronald Reagan after his 1980 election.
Reagan saw the USSR as an “evil empire.” He alsobelieved that his rivals in Moscow respected strength first and foremost, and thus he set about to add greatly to American military capabilities.
The Soviets initiallyviewed Reagan as an implacable foe, committed to subverting the Soviet system and possibly willing to risk nuclear war in the process..
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