Лист за преговор: Cold War Superpower Rivalry

📋 Course Outline

  1. Cold War origins and superpower rivalry
  2. Containment, Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
  3. Iron Curtain, buffer states and Soviet control
  4. Berlin Blockade, Airlift and Berlin Wall
  5. NATO, Warsaw Pact and Cold War alliances
  6. Korean War and Cold War global conflict
  7. China’s Communist victory and Mao’s rule
  8. Vietnam War, Domino Theory and guerrilla warfare
  9. Arms race, brinkmanship and nuclear risk
  10. Space Race and Sputnik
  11. Cuban Missile Crisis and Kennedy’s response
  12. Détente and limits on Cold War peace

📖 1. Cold War origins and superpower rivalry

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Cold War : A period of intense tension and rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union without direct large-scale war between them.
  • Superpower : A country with major military, political, and economic influence that can shape events far beyond its borders.
  • Capitalism : An economic system where private businesses and free markets operate and individuals can profit.
  • Communism : A political and economic system where the government controls property and resources and typically uses one-party rule.
  • Iron Curtain : A symbolic division between Communist Eastern Europe and democratic Western Europe after World War II.

📝 Essential Points

  • After WWII, the U.S. and Soviet Union became the two major superpowers despite having fought together against Nazi Germany.
  • U.S. support for capitalism and democracy contrasted with Soviet support for communism and one-party rule, creating fear and mistrust.
  • Europe’s devastation after WWII included mass deaths, destroyed cities, collapsed economies, and large numbers of refugees.
  • Stalin created Communist governments in Eastern Europe to reduce the risk of future invasions.
  • Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” label described the separation between Eastern and Western Europe.

💡 Memory Hook

U.S. = capitalism/democracy; USSR = communism/one-party rule; the “Iron Curtain” marks the split after WWII.

📖 2. Containment, Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Containment : Containment is a Cold War strategy aimed at stopping the spread of communism by limiting Soviet influence.
  • Truman Doctrine : The Truman Doctrine is a U.S. policy that promised support to countries resisting communism.
  • Marshall Plan : The Marshall Plan was a U.S. program that provided aid to help rebuild Western Europe after World War II.
  • NATO : NATO is a Western alliance formed in 1949 that commits members to collective defense if one is attacked.
  • Warsaw Pact : The Warsaw Pact is a Soviet-led alliance formed in 1955 that linked Communist states in Eastern Europe.

📝 Essential Points

  • In 1949, the United States, Canada, and several Western European countries formed NATO to coordinate defense.
  • NATO members agreed that an attack on one member would trigger defense by all members.
  • In response to NATO, the Soviet Union created the Warsaw Pact with Communist countries in Eastern Europe.
  • The alliances split Europe into two hostile blocs during the Cold War.
  • The Soviet Union tested an atomic bomb in 1949, accelerating fears of nuclear war.
  • The United States adopted brinkmanship, threatening massive retaliation to deter continued Soviet aggression.

💡 Memory Hook

NATO = North Atlantic defense; Warsaw Pact = Soviet counter-alliance; both lock Europe into two opposing camps.

📖 3. Iron Curtain, buffer states and Soviet control

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Iron Curtain : A political boundary in Europe that separated Soviet-influenced areas from Western countries during the Cold War.
  • Buffer state : A country positioned between rival powers that can reduce direct conflict by acting as a protective zone.
  • Soviet control : Soviet influence over governments and policies in territories it dominated or strongly affected during the Cold War.
  • Cold War tensions : Ongoing rivalry between major powers that increased political pressure and risk of armed conflict.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Cold War rivalry in Europe and beyond increased tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union.
  • Soviet influence helped shape the political alignment of nearby states, supporting Communist positions.
  • Buffer states functioned as zones between opposing blocs to limit direct confrontation.
  • Cold War conflict in Asia (e.g., Korea and Vietnam) reflected the same superpower rivalry that drove European tensions.
  • The Soviet-backed side in Korea contrasted with U.S.-backed support for the opposite side, showing how control shaped outcomes.

💡 Memory Hook

Iron Curtain = “wall of influence”; buffer states = “shock absorbers” between blocs; Soviet control = “steering” nearby governments.

📖 4. Berlin Blockade, Airlift and Berlin Wall

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Berlin Blockade : A blockade is an action that stops goods or military forces from entering or leaving a specific area.
  • Berlin Airlift : An airlift is a large-scale delivery of supplies by aircraft used to bypass a blockade.
  • Berlin Wall : The Berlin Wall was a physical barrier built to stop movement between East and West Berlin during Cold War tensions.
  • Containment : Containment is a Cold War strategy that aims to prevent the spread of communism to new countries.

💡 Memory Hook

Blockade blocks roads/sea; airlift flies supplies; wall blocks people—three steps to control Berlin.

📖 5. NATO, Warsaw Pact and Cold War alliances

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • NATO : NATO is a Western military alliance formed to coordinate collective defense against Soviet aggression.
  • Warsaw Pact : The Warsaw Pact is the Soviet-led military alliance that coordinated defense among Eastern Bloc states.
  • Cold War alliances : Cold War alliances are blocs where countries align militarily and politically with either the United States or the Soviet Union.
  • Satellite states : Satellite states are countries controlled or strongly influenced by the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

📝 Essential Points

  • NATO was created in 1949 to defend Western nations against Soviet aggression.
  • The Cold War divided the world politically and militarily into competing blocs led by the superpowers.
  • Soviet control over Eastern Europe relied on satellite states, which limited their independence.
  • Local uprisings in Soviet-influenced areas were crushed when they threatened Soviet control, such as in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968).
  • The Cold War thaw reduced the chance of direct superpower conflict, but rivalry and mistrust still continued.
  • Superpowers used diplomacy, treaties, and negotiations more in later Cold War years to reduce nuclear-war risk.

💡 Memory Hook

NATO = North Atlantic defense; Warsaw Pact = Soviet counter-bloc—two sides, one Cold War standoff.

📖 6. Korean War and Cold War global conflict

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Korean War : The Korean War was a 1950 conflict that began when North Korea invaded South Korea and drew Cold War powers in.
  • NATO : NATO is a 1949 Western alliance formed to defend member nations against Soviet aggression.
  • Arms race : The arms race was the Cold War competition to build more nuclear weapons, which raised tensions between the superpowers.
  • Warsaw Pact : The Warsaw Pact was a Soviet-led alliance created to compete militarily with NATO.
  • Détente : Détente was a Cold War approach that reduced tensions through diplomacy and cooperation.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Korean War began in 1950 when North Korea invaded South Korea.
  • NATO was created in 1949 to defend Western nations against Soviet aggression.
  • Cold War arms race tensions increased because both superpowers competed to build more nuclear weapons.
  • Many Chinese peasants supported Mao Zedong during the Chinese Civil War because he promised land reform and social change.
  • The Communist victory in China increased fears of global Communist expansion, affecting Cold War attitudes.

💡 Memory Hook

Korea starts with North→South; NATO is 1949 defense; arms race = nuclear buildup; détente = diplomacy to cool it.

📖 7. China’s Communist victory and Mao’s rule

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Cold War : Cold War : a period of political tension between the United States and the Soviet Union after WWII without direct large-scale fighting.
  • Cultural Revolution : Cultural Revolution : Mao’s campaign in China aimed at strengthening his Communist control through mass political action.
  • Red Guards : Red Guards : student groups that supported Mao during the Cultural Revolution.
  • Collective farms : Collective farms : large farms where Mao forced many Chinese peasants to work together.

📝 Essential Points

  • The main goal of the Cultural Revolution was to strengthen Mao’s Communist control.
  • Mao forced many Chinese peasants to work together on large collective farms.
  • Red Guards were the student groups that supported Mao during the Cultural Revolution.
  • China’s Communist victory is linked in this unit to Mao’s rule and his domestic policies like collectivization and the Cultural Revolution.

💡 Memory Hook

Mao’s rule = “Control” (Cultural Revolution) + “Collect” (collective farms) + “Kids” (Red Guards).

📖 8. Vietnam War, Domino Theory and guerrilla warfare

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Domino theory : Domino theory is the belief that if one country becomes Communist, nearby countries will also follow.
  • Guerrilla warfare : Guerrilla warfare is a conflict style using surprise attacks and ambushes against stronger enemy forces.
  • Refugees : Refugees are people forced to flee their homes because of war or other conflict.

📝 Essential Points

  • Domino theory links one Communist victory to the expectation of further Communist spread in neighboring countries.
  • In Vietnam, Communist fighters often relied on surprise attacks and ambushes as guerrilla tactics.
  • Guerrilla warfare is used when smaller forces want to challenge a stronger military without direct conventional battles.
  • War and conflict can create refugees by forcing people to leave their homes for safety.
  • Domino theory is a Cold War idea used to explain fears about Communist expansion beyond one country.

💡 Memory Hook

Domino theory = one tile falls → neighbors fall; guerrilla warfare = hit fast, hide, ambush.

📖 9. Arms race, brinkmanship and nuclear risk

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Containment policy : Containment policy is a Cold War strategy meant to stop communism from spreading to new countries.
  • Domino Theory : Domino Theory is the belief that if one country becomes Communist, neighboring countries will follow.
  • Détente : Détente is a Cold War period of reduced tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union.
  • NATO : NATO is an alliance that supported Western democratic nations during the Cold War.
  • Warsaw Pact : Warsaw Pact is an alliance that united Communist countries under Soviet influence during the Cold War.

📝 Essential Points

  • The United States and the Soviet Union became rivals after WWII because they backed different political and economic systems.
  • The United States supported democracy and capitalism while the Soviet Union supported communism.
  • The United States adopted containment to stop the spread of communism.
  • Tensions spread to Asia after Mao Zedong established Communist rule in China in 1949.
  • The Korean War began in 1950 when North Korea invaded South Korea.
  • The Korean War ended with Korea still divided near the 38th parallel.

💡 Memory Hook

Containment blocks communism; Domino Theory predicts chain reactions; Détente cools superpower tensions.

📖 10. Space Race and Sputnik

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Sputnik : Sputnik is the Soviet satellite that helped kick off the Space Race by proving Soviet space capability.
  • Space Race : The Space Race was the Cold War competition between the United States and the Soviet Union to achieve major space milestones.
  • Cold War symbolism : Cold War symbolism is the idea that space achievements were treated as signs of national strength and ideology.

📝 Essential Points

  • Sputnik’s launch intensified U.S.–Soviet rivalry by demonstrating Soviet progress in space technology.
  • The Space Race functioned as a non-military arena where each superpower tried to show superiority.
  • Space achievements were used to influence public opinion by linking technological success to national power.
  • The competition increased pressure to fund and develop rockets, satellites, and related research.
  • Space milestones became part of broader Cold War tensions even without direct fighting.

💡 Memory Hook

Sputnik = “Soviet signal” that triggered the Space Race.

📖 11. Cuban Missile Crisis and Kennedy’s response

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Cuban Missile Crisis : A Cold War confrontation in which the United States and the Soviet Union faced a direct nuclear threat involving Cuba.
  • Kennedy’s response : The set of actions taken by President Kennedy to address the Soviet nuclear threat in Cuba and reduce the risk of war.
  • Nuclear threat : A situation where nuclear weapons could be used, creating extreme danger and urgency in international decision-making.
  • Cold War tensions : Ongoing political and military strain between the United States and the Soviet Union driven by rivalry and mistrust.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Cuban Missile Crisis centered on a direct nuclear threat that raised the possibility of nuclear war.
  • Kennedy’s response aimed to confront the Soviet threat while lowering the chance of escalation into open conflict.
  • The crisis reflects how Cold War competition could bring the superpowers into immediate, high-stakes danger.
  • Cold War tensions were intensified when both sides faced the risk of nuclear weapons being used.
  • The crisis demonstrates that ideological and military rivalry could quickly become a global security emergency.

💡 Memory Hook

Cuba = “nuclear close call”: Kennedy had to stop escalation fast.

📖 12. Détente and limits on Cold War peace

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Détente : Détente was a 1970s policy where the United States and the Soviet Union tried to ease Cold War tensions through diplomacy and cooperation.
  • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT : SALT were negotiations in which the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to limit the production of certain nuclear weapons.
  • Nixon–Brezhnev meetings : Nixon–Brezhnev meetings were high-level diplomatic encounters that increased communication and encouraged negotiation rather than direct confrontation.
  • Nuclear arms competition : Nuclear arms competition was the ongoing rivalry in weapons and technology that kept the Cold War dangerous even during détente.

📝 Essential Points

  • Détente aimed to reduce the risk of devastating nuclear war by improving communication and negotiation between the superpowers.
  • SALT limited the production of certain nuclear weapons, showing détente used arms control rather than only rhetoric.
  • Nixon and Brezhnev met to strengthen diplomatic cooperation and make peaceful bargaining more likely.
  • Détente did not end Cold War rivalry because competition continued in other regions beyond U.S.–Soviet diplomacy.
  • The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 increased tensions again and weakened détente’s momentum.
  • Both sides continued to maintain large nuclear arsenals, limiting how far détente could reduce overall danger.

💡 Memory Hook

Détente = “talks + limits” (SALT, meetings) but “still armed” (arsenals) and “still fighting elsewhere” (Afghanistan).

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
1945United Nations (UN) created to promote peace and cooperation
1949NATO formed; Soviet Union tested an atomic bomb
1950North Korea invaded South Korea, beginning the Korean War

📊 Synthesis Tables

Cold War alliances

AllianceLed byFormedPurpose
NATOUnited States1949Defend Western nations; collective defense if one member is attacked
Warsaw PactSoviet Union1955Unite Communist countries in Eastern Europe under Soviet influence

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Mixing up containment (U.S. policy to stop communism spreading) with détente (1970s diplomacy to reduce tensions).
  2. Confusing Iron Curtain (division in Europe) with Berlin Wall (a physical barrier in Berlin built in 1961).
  3. Thinking NATO and Warsaw Pact are the same kind of alliance; they are opposing blocs formed in different years and led by different superpowers.
  4. Saying the Korean War ended with Korea unified; it ended with Korea still divided near the 38th parallel.
  5. Believing the Domino Theory is about one country becoming Communist and then democracy spreading; it predicts nearby countries will also follow Communism.
  6. Forgetting that Mao’s Cultural Revolution involved Red Guards attacking teachers/intellectuals and that it aimed to strengthen Mao’s Communist control.
  7. Assuming détente ended the Cold War; the source says rivalry continued and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 increased tensions again.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Define Cold War, superpower, capitalism, communism, Iron Curtain, and buffer zone, and explain why Stalin created Communist governments in Eastern Europe.
  2. Explain how the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan related to containment and resisting communism, and link them to fear of Soviet influence.
  3. Describe the Berlin Blockade and Berlin Airlift as events where the U.S. and allies supplied West Berlin after Soviets blocked access routes.
  4. State why NATO was created in 1949 and what collective defense agreement members made, then explain why the Soviet Union created the Warsaw Pact in response.
  5. Explain how nuclear fear grew: Soviet atomic bomb test in 1949, hydrogen bombs, and the nuclear arms race.
  6. Define brinkmanship and explain why it increased global fear.
  7. Explain the Space Race using Sputnik (1957) and how it intensified U.S.–Soviet rivalry and funding pressure.
  8. Describe the Berlin Wall (built in 1961) as a symbol of ideological division and its impact on families and escape attempts.
  9. Explain China’s Communist victory: civil war context, People’s Republic of China in 1949, and Mao’s policies including collective farms.
  10. Identify the Great Leap Forward (1958) as Mao’s plan that led to famine and economic disaster, and explain the Cultural Revolution (1966) and Red Guards’ role.
  11. Explain the Korean War sequence: 38th parallel division, 1950 invasion, UN/U.S. support for South Korea, China’s entry, and the 1953 cease-fire leaving Korea divided near the 38th parallel.
  12. Explain Vietnam using Domino theory and guerrilla warfare, then describe U.S. involvement, heavy bombing/chemicals, and Vietnamization leading to Communist victory in 1975.
  13. Describe how the Cold War spread globally through Cuba (1959), the Bay of Pigs invasion (1961), and the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) with a naval blockade and missile removal agreement.
  14. Explain how NATO and the Warsaw Pact represented Cold War divisions beyond Europe, and define Third World and nonaligned nations as areas of competition and refusal to join blocs.

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1. What best describes the Cold War as it began after World War II?

2. Why did suspicion grow between the United States and the Soviet Union after World War II?

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Cold War — definition?

Tense rivalry between US and USSR without direct war.

Superpower — role?

Major influence in military, political, economic areas.

Iron Curtain — meaning?

Dividing line between Eastern and Western Europe.

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