The Transformation of the SU's International Position Flashcards

1
Q

What had the SU wanted in 1941 v what they were by 1945?

A

Not wanted to be a superpower - wanted to be left alone, allowing time for transformation of economy
By 1945 - war had built a military-industrial war machine so in May 1945 they had 7.5 million well equipped troops + increased territory

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2
Q

Where did the Red army remain in control of?

A

The nation states in east central Europe it had liberated (such as Romania, Hungary and Poland) and had occupied eastern Germany, including Berlin

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3
Q

What made the USSR seem stronger?

A

The European great powers had been seriously weakened by war so along-side the American super-power the USSR seemed ready to dominate the post-war world

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4
Q

What happened in the summer of 1943 when it became clear that the war would eventually be won?

A

A series of war-time summits took place (Britain, USSR + US) to decide what would happen when war was won
First summit including Stalin = Nov 1943
Churchill met Stalin in Moscow Oct 1944
Big three met at Yalta in Feb 1945
The three met at Potsdam in July 1945 when G had been defeated but while the war in the far east continued (becoming clear Britain was exhausted and bankrupt so would be over-shadowed by the two superpowers)

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5
Q

What did the US reveal in 1945 and why was it significant?

A

That it had developed an atomic bomb - it was used to end the war against Japan
Placed the USSR at an obvious disadvantage in terms of power so Stalin placed Beria in charge of accelerating the development of the Soviet atomic bomb

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6
Q

In what ways was the American rise to world power similar to that of the USSR?

A

Before 1941 - the US was broadly isolationist
The US was forced into war involuntarily and then build a huge war machine, using previously untapped potential and was then drawn into Europe to defeat Nazism
However, the US financed two wars of its own (In Europe and the Pacific, financed the wars of its allies and enabled a consumer boom at the same time)

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7
Q

When was the Soviet atomic bomb formed?

A

First successful test = August 1949 - possession of nuclear weapons finally confirmed the SU’s superpower status

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8
Q

What was the USSR’s status reflected in?

A

The United Nations, formed in 1945 in the hope that it would be more effective than the LoN had proved after 1919 - the USSR was one of the five permanent members of the UN security council

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9
Q

What did the soviet military domination of eastern and central Europe after the war lead to and what was it used to do?

A

The formation of a Soviet bloc as the territory of the USSR was extended so they used their military presence in the neighbouring national states and its political influence over local communist parties to encourage the formation of government that were ‘friendly’ to the SU

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10
Q

By 1948 what had most of the places involved in the soviet bloc become?

A

Satellite states closely linked with the USSR - this created a zone of buffer states which Stalin hoped would protect the USSR against future invasion from the west

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11
Q

What were satellite states and buffer states?

A

Satellite states - countries that retained their national identity but had pro-soviet governments - from 1949 = increasingly under soviet control
Buffer states - used to describe the satellite states of eastern Europe, which emphasised Stalin’s intention that these should provide security for the USSR’s western borders

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12
Q

What were the roots of the soviet bloc?

A

In 1939, under the terms of the Nazi-soviet pact, the USSR invaded and occupied eastern Poland and in 1940, by the secret protocols of the pact, Soviet forces occupied the Baltic States - these annexations were part of a long-term plan, ruthlessly implemented

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13
Q

What was a sign of the soviet-bloc plan before 1945?

A

April-May 1940, 22,000 captured Polish army officers were killed by the NKVD in the Katyn Forest Massacre, to eliminate Polish nationalist elements who might oppose communism
Sane aim applied in 1944 when the Red Army was ordered to halt its advance to allow time for the Warsaw uprising to be crushed by the Nazis

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14
Q

What was the Katyn forest massacre?

A

From September 1939 - Beria was responsible for about 40,000 Polish prisoners - those deemed ‘pro-soviet’ were allowed to live - the rest were killed to eliminate ‘nationalist counter-revolutionaries’ - 22,000 shot and put in mass graves
in 1943 these graves were ‘discovered’ bu Soviet forces so a propaganda campaign blamed the Nazis

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15
Q

What was the Warsaw uprising?

A

1st August 1944, as the advancing Red Army approached Warsaw, fighters in the home army launched an uprising to liberate the city from German occupation and to support the nationalist Polish Underground State

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16
Q

What was the Soviet reaction to the Warsaw uprising?

A

The soviet forces halted their advancement and did nothing to assist the AK (home army) and over 63 days the uprising was crushed and Warsaw was destroyed - motived behind red army = political

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17
Q

What happened in several states and what are examples|?

A

‘Friendly’ communist regimes were quickly established - from1930’s exiled communist groups had been trained in Moscow, ready to infiltrate post-war governments after liberation e.g. as soon as Red Army entered Poland a PG was set-up dominated by Pro-Moscow communists and in Yugoslavia, communist Partisans led by Tito gained control of the post-war government and Tito’s regime was expected to be an important part of the Soviet bloc

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18
Q

Where else were communist regimes established?

A

Bulgaria and Romania - the eastern region of Germany became a Soviet zone of occupation and a group of Moscow-trained communists gained political control by 1946

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19
Q

What took longer with the Soviet bloc and what was the instructions to solve this?

A

Extending it to east Central Europe- in countries were democratic national governments were elected, communist parties were told by Moscow to join with non-communists, especially socialists and ‘bourgeoise liberals’ in order to gain a political foothold that could be built on

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20
Q

What were the tactics of joining with other parties called and what did they enable ?

A

‘Salami tactics’ - enabled pro-Soviet government to gain power in Hungary in 1947 and Czechoslovakia in 1948, where it was suggested the communists had even stooped to the murder of the pro-western Minister Masaryk

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21
Q

What did expansion of the Soviet sphere of diplomatic influence cause?

A

Increasing diplomatic tensions and fears of open conflict between the USSR and the capitalist West

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22
Q

What were Salami tactics?

A

The idea of subverting ‘bourgeoise’ parties to gain power from within my small incremental steps e.g. quiet infiltration of trade unions, journalism and local government or sometimes targeting individuals by harassment or violence e.g. in 1948 the anti-Soviet foreign minister of Czechoslovakia died from a fall in a high window at Prague -its claimed it all part of Stalin’s game plan t to push communism to heart of Europe

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23
Q

What did the war-time summit conferences reflect?

A

The hidden disagreements between the US, Britain and the USSR e.g. at Tehran in 1943, the Allies agreed to demand unconditional surrenders from Germany, not because Britain and the US thought it a good idea (they didn’t) but to prevent any of them from making a separate peace with Hitler

24
Q

What were some of the problems the big three faced?

A

There were ideological differences - and Stalin was very critical of his Western allies not opening a ‘Second Front’ to relieve the pressure on the Red Army
The meeting between Stalin and Churchill in Moscow 1944 was plagued with disagreements over Poland’s future
The Yalta conference in Feb 1945 was dominated by conflicting ideas about post-war borders of Germany and Poland

25
Q

How did the Potsdam conference end In August 1945 and what had become clear?

A

With no final peace agreement - differences that had been smoothed over or delayed at Yalta became more urgent
Clear the USSR was asserting political control over the countries it had liberated

26
Q

In the Potsdam conference why was Stalin now the ‘senior partner’ of the three allies?

A

Roosevelt had died in April and been replaced by Truman
Churchill had lost power after the labour party won a landslide victory in Britain’s general election - Clement Attlee took over midway through the conference

27
Q

What happened 1946-49?

A

Conflict between the Soviet bloc and the capitalist West hardened into Cold War confrontation and attempts at diplomatic cooperation broke down into mutual suspicions and hostility over a series of disagreements

28
Q

What were three things that caused disagreements among the big three 1946-49?

A

Soviet expansionism and the USSR’s demand for recognition of its right to have a safe butter zone
The Long Telegram
Churchill’s ‘Iron curtain’ speech at Fulton in March 1946 warning of the extent of soviet power in east central Europe -

29
Q

What three other things caused disagreements among the big three 1946-49?

A

The announcement of Truman doctrine in March 1947, committing to a US policy of containment (halting the spread of Soviet communist influence)
The Marshall plan for US aid for European economic recovery and the hostile soviet response to the plan
The Berlin blockade 1948-9 hardening the division of Germany

30
Q

What final thing caused disagreements among the big three 1946-49?

A

The formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in 1949 - the establishment of this Atlantic alliance for the defence of Europe was seen by the USSR as a hostile act
By this time the cold war was fully formed

31
Q

What did Stalin do at the Yalta conference?

A

At the conference, arrangements were agreed for Germany to be placed under zones of occupation, but Stalin pushed hard for recognition of Soviet interests in Poland and new polish-Germany borders which recognised Soviet gains in what had formerly been part of Poland
Stalin played on divisions between Roosevelt (who was more conciliatory) and Churchill (it was clear at Yalta that Roosevelt was dying)

32
Q

What three stages of the cold war?

A

1) The Long telegram + Iron Curtain Speech
2) Containment and Marshall Plan
3) The Berlin blockade and Cold War divisions

33
Q

What was the Long telegram?

A

Us fear of soviet expansion = exacerbated by a telegram sent to Washington from Moscow by American diplomat (George Kennan) in Feb 1946, urging the US to take action against the spread of communism in Europe. Kennan had been sent to Moscow after the war (expert of Soviet affairs)

34
Q

What was the horror with which the Capitalist west viewed what was happening in eastern Europe become clear through?

A

The Iron Curtain speech delivered by ex-prime minister Churchill at Fulton USA in March 1946 - warning of the extent of soviet power in east central Europe - he claimed an ‘iron curtain’ had descended across Europe and advised strength when dealing with USSR

35
Q

Why was Western Europe in crisis by early 1947?

A

There were fears of complete economic collapse and of political instability (especially in Italy and France where communist parties were very strong and in Greece where there was a civil war)

36
Q

What did Truman do in March 1947 and then in June?

A

March - asserted the Truman Doctrine which asserted the new US policy of ‘containment’ and ‘rolling back communism’
June - US put forward the Marshall Plan ( a massive injection of aid to rebuild Europe) - the plan as supposedly a generous offer open to all European countries, east as well as west, but many historians believe the plan was a political weapon to extent US influence

37
Q

What was Stalin’s issue with the Marshall plan?

A

He believed it was hostile to Soviet interests and part of a drive towards US economic and political dominance
Stalin also expressed fears that the US would rebuild the industrial economy of Western Germany leading to a resurgence of German power so Soviet bloc countries were pressure to rejected Marshall aid

38
Q

What happened in Feb 1948 in Czechoslovakia and what were the views/ outcomes?

A

Kliment Gottwald, leader of communists in Czechoslovakia, took full control of the government
The west regarded it as a ‘communist coup’ backed by the USSR
For Stalin and the Czech communists it was ‘Victorian February’ and legitimate success of ‘anti-fascist policies’
The timing of the coup intensified splits between East and West over the Marshall plan

39
Q

What did the communist of Czechoslovakia set the context for?

A

The Berlin crisis of 1948

40
Q

What caused the Berlin caused?

A

There was a clear separation between the Soviet zone and the British-American-French zones in the West but Berlin was an ‘Island’ in the Soviet zone and had Stalin had always seen Berlin as a single city where Soviet interests should be paramount - he was frustrated by the way Soviet control of Berlin had slipped since 1945 and especially alarmed by the introduction of a separate currency in the Western zones in June 1948

41
Q

What was the Berlin crisis?

A

After the introduction of separate currency in Western zones in June 1948 - the next day Stalin launched a Berlin blockade, cutting off all road and rail links between Berlin and the West.

42
Q

How did Stalin believe the Berlin blockade would work?

A

He calculated that the Western powers were not willing to risk war and that the economic squeeze on West Berlin would force the US into settling the Berlin question on Soviet terms

43
Q

How did the Berlin crisis actually end?

A

Stalin’s plan defeated by the Berlin Aircraft, coordinated by the US military governor (General Lucius Clay) - a massive operation by allied aircraft flew essential supplies into West Berlin through the 1948-9 winter - Clay calculated rightly Stalin wouldn’t risk war by shooting the aircrafts down
The population of West Berlin resisted Soviet inducements and pressure an after 318 days, Stalin called off the blockade in May 1949

44
Q

What were the outcomes of the Berlin blockade?

A

It confirmed the division of Germany and of Berlin
This was the year the cold war became fully formed as the NATO was formed to defend Western Europe against Soviet aggression

45
Q

What two things increased suspicion towards the SU?

A

The first successful test of the Soviet atomic bomb was announced
In China, the long civil war ended with the victory of the Chinese Communist Revolution - this hardened anti-communist attitudes in the US. Stalin then met the Chinese leader (Mao Zedong) in Moscow to agree a treaty of alliance
Conflict between the USSR + its allies and the US + the capitalist west had become normal, not quite war and not quite peace, remained that way until 1989

46
Q

What was Stalin like by early 1953?

A

Increasingly unpredictable and seemingly ready to force through another wave of terror and repression as the backlash against the doctors plot was in full flow and since 1952 Party Congress it had been clear he was planning a purge of the ‘old guard’ (with Molotov, Mikoyan especially vulnerable + pressure on Beria) - this fear significant for context of S’s death

47
Q

What were the circumstances of Stalin’s death?

A

On 28th of Feb 1953 Stalin watched a film in his private cinema, then went back to his dacha for a long drinking session with his inner circle until 4 am
He never emerged from his room, he was eventually on the floor unable to move or speak after a bad stroke
The Party leaders all hurried to the dacha but didn’t call a doctor (ironic as best doctors in Russia were in prison awaiting execution) and he final passed away on 5th March

48
Q

What was one of the conspiracy theories of Stalin’s death but what was the reality?

A

That Beria had organised the murder of Stalin by poison - Beria had a motive (as did the others) - if Stalin didn’t die then they all probably would
But Stalin almost certainly died of natural causes as he was 73 and had suffered strokes previously (first in 1946)
His daughter stated in 1992 ‘that is what I call helping a man to die’

49
Q

What was Stalin’s funeral like?

A

It provided the occasion for one last manifestation of the Stalin cult
His body was embalmed and placed in an open coffin to be viewed by hysterical crowds
There was national grief accompanied by grovelling eulogies from the ruling elite
Behind the celebrations - there was political change

50
Q

What was the issue with Stalin’s death?

A

He had not nominated any successor - he had deliberately made it difficult for any potential contenders for the leadership (didn’t want anyone to become too powerful and didn’t want to show weakness) so his death led to an intense power struggle

51
Q

Who emerged from the power struggle as the new Soviet leader?

A

Nikita Khrushchev - from a peasant background - rose through party (supervised construction of Moscow metro and had a key role in the purges). He was a member of GKO in war , worked in Ukriane - returned to Moscow in 1949- after Stalin’s death won power struggle v Malenkov and Beria and dominated USSRntil 1964

52
Q

Why was Stalin’s legacy problematic?

A

The production of consumer goods had been underfunded and agriculture was failing to keep pace with industrial development
Also the issue of relations with the West and the violence and repression within the USSR
Change would be even more difficult given the cult that suggested everything Stalin did was perfect so wouldn’t need changing

53
Q

What was Stalin’s legacy abroad?

A

Cold war tensions, a dangerous nuclear arms race and pressure for reform in the satellite states in the Soviet bloc
Communist Yugoslavia had already broken with Stalin in 1948, after the 1956 Secret Speech unrest spread to East Germany, Poland and Hungary where reform of the communist system became violent revolution in the Budapest uprising where Stalin’s statue was symbolically demolished and the USSR had to impose massive military force to restore control

54
Q

What was the Secret Speech?

A

Khrushchev extended his control until the party congress of Feb 1956 when he was strong enough to openly attack Stalin’s legacy in his ‘secret speech’
It was a closed session of the Congress, without foreign journalists or delegates
The speech denounced Stalin’s great ‘crimes and errors’
It shocked party members used to adulation of the Stalin myth but it began to ‘de-Stalinise’ the USSR in order to reform the communist system

55
Q

What was Stalin’s daughter’s view on Stalin and what was Krushchev’s?

A

Daughter ‘ even Hitler did not kill his own people’ but she may have been influenced by her own stormy relationship with her father
Khrushchev ‘like Peter the great before him, Stalin fought barbarism with barbarism - but he was a great man’

56
Q

What positives should be remembered about Stalin’s legacy?

A

Transformed the USSR economy through 5 year plans
Victory in the war
USSR emerged as a super power under him
USSR no longer backwards