Chapter 33 Vocab Flashcards
- Yalta Conference
“they agreed to divide Germany into zones of occupation controlled by the Allied military forces. Germany also would have to pay the Soviet Union to compensate for its loss of life and property. Stalin agreed to join the war against Japan. He also promised that Eastern Europeans would have free elections. ”
- United Nations
“ an international peacekeeping organization founded in 1945 to provide security to the nations of the world. ”
- Iron Curtain
“during the Cold War, the boundary separating the Communist nations of Eastern Europe from the mostly democratic nations of Western Europe. ”
- Containment
“a U.S. foreign policy adopted by President Harry Truman in the late 1940s, in which the United States tried to stop the spread of communism by creating alliances and helping weak countries to resist Soviet advances. ”
- Truman Doctrine
“announced by President Harry Truman in 1947, a U.S. policy of giving economic and military aid to free nations threatened by internal or external opponents.”
- Marshall Plan
“a U.S. program of economic aid to European countries to help them rebuild after World War II.”
- Cold War
“the state of diplomatic hostility between the United States and the Soviet Union in the decades following World War II. ”
- NATO
“the North Atlantic Treaty Organization—a defensive military alliance formed in 1949 by ten Western European nations, the United States, and Canada.”
- Warsaw Pact
“a military alliance formed in 1955 by the Soviet Union and seven Eastern European countries. ”
- Berlin Airlift – pages 968 and 969
“The Soviet Union cut off highway, water, and rail traffic into Berlin’s western zones. The city faced starvation. Stalin gambled that the Allies would surrender West Berlin or give up their idea of reunifying Germany. But American and British officials flew food and supplies into West Berlin for nearly 11 months. In May 1949, the Soviet Union admitted defeat and lifted the blockade.”
- Brinkmanship
“a policy of threatening to go to war in response to any enemy aggression. ”
- Mao Zedong
“an assistant librarian at Beijing University, was among its founders. Later he would become China’s greatest revolutionary leader.
Mao Zedong had already begun to develop his own brand of communism.”
- Jiang Jieshi – (AKA Chiang Kai-shek)
“formerly called Chiang Kai-shek, headed the Kuomintang. ( ) was the son of a middle-class merchant. Many of his followers were bankers and businesspeople. Like ( ), they feared the Communists’ goal of creating a socialist economy modeled after the Soviet Union’s. ( ) had promised democracy and political rights to all Chinese. Yet his government became steadily less democratic and more corrupt. Most peasants believed that Jiang was doing little to improve their lives. As a result, many peasants threw their support to the Chinese Communist Party. ”
- communes
“in Communist China, a collective farm on which a great number of people work and live together.”
- Red Guards
“militia units formed by young Chinese people in 1966 in response to Mao Zedong’s call for a social and cultural revolution. ”