18- Post-war central and eastern Europe (motives) Flashcards
Central and Eastern European states faced political and economic challenges in the interwar years and were vulnerable to ___ following WW2
Soviet influence
How was the vulnerability of central and eastern European states to Soviet influence after WW2 exploited?
It was exploited by Stalin who established Soviet dominated communist parties in the countries ‘liberated’ by the Red Army after 1943.
What was the situation in most states like Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and Romania before 1945?
For centuries most of these states had been part of the multinational Habsburg, Russian and Ottoman empires and they were less urbanised and industrialised than western European states.
How did the situation in states like Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and Romania change after WW1?
- After the First World War and the collapse of these empires, national boundaries in Europe were redrawn.
- In the Versailles Settlement, Germany and Austria ceded territory and ‘Anschluss’ was forbidden.
- One of the war aims of the Allied powers had been to pursue ‘self-determination’ for national groups.
When did Romania, Hungaria, and Bulgaria have their independence confirmed?
At the end of the war
After WW1, Poland regained independence for the first time since ___
Its partition in the 18th century.
How did Czechoslovakia, and the kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes change after WW1?
They became newly independent states.
These were called Yugoslavia from 1929.
How did the state of many eastern European countries change after the Bolshevik revolution in Russia and the subsequent civil war?
Ukraine and Belarus were taken under Soviet control but the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania declared independence.
When did Finland proclaim itself a republic?
In 1919
Describe the economic situation in the newly independent states, or ‘successor states’ after WW1
- They were vulnerable, economically and politically, to influence from both the Soviet Union and a resurgent Germany.
- Economically, most states, bar Hungary, redistributed the land from the aristocratic estates to the peasantry after the First World War.
- However, the majority of people remained subsistence farmers.
- Subsequently, as a result of population growth coupled with the global depression of the 1930s, there were acute economic pressures on these states.
Describe the territorial situation in the newly independent states, or ‘successor states’ after WW1
Territorial disputes and claims also led to instability in the region; however these tensions were exacerbated by the rather arbitrary drawing up of the borders of Poland, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia which had taken place after the First World War and which disregarded ethnic distributions.
Describe the situation for minorities in the newly independent states, or ‘successor states’ after WW1
- There were no guarantees for the safety of minorities in these new states, for example the German speakers in Czechoslovakia, and there was no history of democracy in these states.
- Indeed, in the inter-war period only Czechoslovakia remained a democracy before the outbreak of the Second World War.
How did different European states react to Hitler coming to power and beginning to rearm Germany?
- Germany’s surrounding countries of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Romania sought security in alliances with France.
- But Hungary moved to ally with Nazi Germany.
Describe the Munich Agreement and how it turned out
- In September 1938 the Czech Crisis led to the Munich Agreement in which British Prime Minister ceded Czech territory to Hitler’s Germany.
- This agreement was torn up by Hitler in March 1939 when he invaded and occupied the rest of Czechoslovakia.
How did the Nazi-Soviet Pact change the situation Eastern Europe?
- In September 1939, following the Nazi-Soviet Pact in August, Poland was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union.
- This pact also gave Stalin free rein to seize control of the Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
Which states allied with Hitler when he launched Operation Barbarossa- the invasion of the USSR?
Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania
When did Hitler launch Operation Barbarossa?
June 1941
What territories were under Nazi control by September 1942?
- Central and eastern Europe
- By September 1942 the Axis powers had occupied the territories in red on the map
Describe the meetings that Allies had during the war
- During the war the Allies - the US, Britain and the USSR - met three times, at Tehran in 1943, at Yalta February 1945 and Potsdam July 1945.
- At each of the meetings the fate of central and eastern Europe after the Second World War was discussed and agreements made.
What was agreed between the Allies at Yalta in 1943 about Germany (necessary?
- Focus on post-war settlement for Germany
- Influence over Germany was mutually key for both superpowers, thus no agreement was reached apart from a shared objective of an ‘unconditional surrender’
- The US agreed to open the -second front’ that Stalin had been demanding- invasion of northern France in summer of 1944
Need more info on Tehran 1943?
What was agreed between the Allies about Germany at Yalta in 1945?
- Germany would be disarmed, demilitarized, de-Nazified, and divided.
- It would be ‘temporarily’ divided into four zones of occupation between the USA, the USSR, the UK, and France.
- An Allied Control Council (ACC) would govern Germany.
- The Soviets wanted a large share of reparations. It was agreed that Germany would pay $20 billion and 50% would go to the USSR.
What was agreed between the Allies about Poland at Yalta in 1945?
- New frontiers of Poland were decided. The border between Poland and the USSR was to be drawn at the ‘Curzon Line’ and Poland was to be compensated with territoriy from Germany, east of the ‘Oder-Neisse Line’.
- The nature of the new government was disputed by the British who supported the claims of the ‘London Poles’, the pre-war government that fled to the UK in 1939.
- The Soviets backed the Communist-dominated Lublin Committee in Poland to form the new post-war government.
- The failure of the Soviets forces to assist the Polish underground in the Warsaw Uprising in August 1944 added to hostility in Poland towards the USSR.
What was agreed between the Allies about Eastern Europe at Yalta in 1945?
- Stalin agreed to ‘free elections’ across Eastern Europe in the ‘Declaration for Liberated Europe’.
- This pledged the big three to hold free elections to establish democratic governments in all European countries, including Eastern European countries.
Need info on Potsdam 1945?
When was the Yalta Conference?
February 1945
How could the motive for Soviet domination be seen as ideological?
- Orthodox Western historians writing on the origins of the Cold War argued that expansionism was inherent in its Marxist ideology.
- Marxism advocated spreading revolution and the need to ‘liberate’ the exploited workers of the world.