The document provides a detailed overview of major global political and military events from the late 19th century to the late 20th century. It summarizes the rise of ideologies like liberalism, conservatism, fascism, socialism, communism and their spread in different regions post-World War 1. It then focuses on key events of the Cold War era between Western nations led by the US and Eastern nations led by the Soviet Union, including various conflicts, arms races, space missions, reforms and negotiations between the two sides. Decolonization movements and new nations in Asia and Africa are also covered.
17. Totalitarian Democratic Totalitarian
The Political Spectrum Post-World War I
Liberalism
• Late 1700s in
American and
French Revolutions
• Civil liberties –
freedom of
expression
• Limited
government by
constitution
• Legal equality of all
social classes
• Benefited middle
class most
• Multi-party
democracy – US,
France, Britain
Conservatism
• Authoritarian
traditional social
order
• Dominance of
upper class social
elites – nobles,
church officials,
moneyed interests
• Maintain military
rule by kings or
dictators
• Pre-WWI: Germany,
Austria-Hungary,
Russia, Ottoman
Empire
Fascism
• 1920s
• Replace militaristic
king w/ militaristic
dictator
• Totalitarian state by
one-party
dictatorship
• Ultra-nationalist
• Anti-communist
• Social Darwinian
expansion
• Italy (1922)
Nazism
• Racial superiority
• Germany (1933)
Socialism
• Mid-1800s in
Industrial
Revolution
• Legal and economic
equality
• Benefited lower
working
class/proletariat
• Government
ownership of
means of
production –
factories, mines,
power,
transportation,
communication
• Legal reform and
labor union
activism
Communism
• Mid-1800s
• Complete economic
equality to create
classless system
• Anti-bourgeoisie
• Government
ownership of
means of
production –
factories, mines,
power,
transportation,
communication
• Totalitarian state by
one-party
dictatorship
• USSR (1917)
18. Feb. 1945: Churchill, Stalin, and Roosevelt met at Yalta Conference in USSR to
discuss post-war plans
19.
20. 1945: Soviets took Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Albania, and
East Germany in WWII.
21. 1945-9: 15 million people fled west while USSR plundered
$14 billion of industrial materials and established
communist satellite states.
22. July 1945: Truman, Churchill/Atlee, and Stalin met in Potsdam Conference in
Germany. Truman objected to pro-Soviet governments installed in Eastern
Europe without free elections
23. Germany divided into four occupation zones; USSR occupied Eastern Europe and
East Germany
24.
25.
26. Aug. 1945: US used atomic bombs (A-bomb) on Japan; USSR invaded Japanese-
occupied Manchuria; Japan surrendered
29. 1948: Universal Declaration of Human Rights
• All human beings are born free and equal
• Everyone has the right to life, liberty and
security; no one shall be held in slavery or
servitude or subjected to torture, arbitrary
arrest, detention or exile
• Freedom of movement, thought, conscience and
religion, opinion and expression, peaceful
assembly and association
• Right to take part in the government through
free elections by universal suffrage
• Right to an adequate standard of living and
education
30.
31.
32.
33.
34. 1948 UN Genocide Convention
Genocide is the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial
or religious group by:
a. Killing members of the group;
b. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
c. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring
about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
d. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
e. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
35.
36. Sept. 1945: Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam to
be an independent state; Korea divided at the
38th Parallel into an American-backed South
and Soviet-backed North
38. Feb. 1946: American diplomat in Moscow George Kennan
released the “Long Telegram” warning that the USSR
viewed peaceful coexistence with the capitalist West as
impossible
39. Mar. 1946: Churchill declared that an
“Iron Curtain” had descended across Europe
40. March 1947: Truman Doctrine gave US aid to fight communist expansion in
Greece and Turkey pursuing a policy of containment.
41. 1947: the Partition of India divided British Raj into Hindu-majority India and
Muslim-majority Pakistan; displaced 15+ million people and 1-2 million killed in
national/religious violence
1885: Indian National
Congress founded
1906: All-India Muslim
League founded
1915: Defense of India Act
1919: Rowlatt Acts and
Amritsar Massacre
1930: Salt March led by
Mohandas Gandhi
1940s: Quit India
Movement
42. • 1915-1916: Britain
promised Arab
independence in
McMahon-Hussein
Correspondence,
including Palestine
• 1916: Britain and
France agreed to
divide the Middle East
into colonial spheres of
influence in the Sykes-
Picot Agreement
43. • 1917: Britain promised
a “national home for
the Jewish people” in
Palestine in the
Balfour Declaration
• 1919: Palestine
becomes a League of
Nations mandate
under British authority
• 1920s-1940s: Jewish
settlers move to
Palestine and violently
clash with Palestinian
Arabs
44. • 1948: partition of
Palestine → creation
of Israel → First Arab-
Israeli War
• failure to implement
the Two-State Solution
45. June 1948: US began Marshall Plan to rebuild Western Europe; Berlin Airlift
bypassed communist blockade
46. June 1948: US began Marshall Plan to rebuild Western Europe; Berlin Airlift
bypassed communist blockade
53. Oct. 1949: Mao Zedong captured Beijing and established communist People’s
Republic of China
54. Feb. 1950: Red Scare in US led by Senator Joseph McCarthy
55. June 1950: Korean War began; United Nations defended South Korea from a
communist North Korean invasion led by Kim Il Sung backed by China and USSR.
57. 1952: Egyptian Revolution • Pan-Arab nationalist Free Officer
Movement military coup against King
Farouk I led by Gamal Abdel Nasser
58. 1953: Operation Ajax in Iran • prime minister Mohammad
Mosaddegh nationalized
British-owned Iranian oil
industry
• American CIA and British
MI6 overthrew Mosaddegh
and strengthened Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's
autocratic rule; cornerstone
of long-term Iranian
hostility to the U.S.
60. July 1953: Julius and Ethel Rosenberg executed for selling atomic secrets to the
Soviet Union; Korean War ended in armistice with pre-war 38th Parallel border
restored with demilitarized zone (DMZ)
72. Vietnam divided at 17th parallel at the
Geneva Accords
North
• Leader: Ho Chi Minh
• Left-wing communist dictatorship
• support from Soviet Union and
China
South
• Leader: Ngo Dinh Diem
• Right-wing anti-communist
dictatorship
• support from US
73. 1954-1962: Algerian War of Independence
• led to collapse of Fourth French Republic and establishment of Fifth
Republic, independence of Algeria, and mass exodus of refugees to France
75. Oct. 1956: Hungary called for free elections and appealed to US for help against
USSR; Soviets crushed Hungarian Uprising while America looked on
76. Nov. 1956: Suez Crisis/Second
Arab-Israeli War
• Egyptian dictator Gamal Nasser
nationalized Suez Canal
• Britain, France, and Israel
invaded Egypt
• U.S. and USSR condemned the
invasion
• Major loss of British prestige;
Britain falls from first-rate to
second-rate power
77. 1952: Treaty of Paris →
European Coal and Steel
Community
1957: Treaty of Rome →
European Economic
Community, or Common
Market
1992: Maastricht Treaty →
European Union
78.
79. Jan. 1957: Eisenhower Doctrine committed US aid to stop communist
expansion in Middle East
84. July 1959: US VP Richard Nixon visited USSR and engaged Soviet premier
Khrushchev in the Kitchen Debate
85. • 1957: Kwame Nkrumah led Ghana to
become first African colony to win
independence from Britain; pursued
Pan-Africanism
• 1960: Year of Africa - 17 African
nations won independence
86. • 1948: white Afrikaner National Party
imposed racial apartheid
• 1961: South Africa declares independence
from Britain
• 1962: Nelson Mandela led military wing of
the African National Congress; arrested and
imprisoned for 27 years
• 1970s: 3 million black South Africans
forcibly relocated to Bantustan homeland
reservations
87. • 1989: F.W. de Klerk ended
apartheid
• 1990: Mandela released and
became the first black prime
minister of SA in 1994
88.
89. 2018 World Bank report:
• top 1% of South
Africans own 70.9%
of national wealth
• bottom 60% controls
7% of national wealth
• 55.5% live below
poverty line
90. 1952-1963: violent Mau Mau Uprising in British East Africa
1963: Jomo Kenyatta of non-violent Kenya African Union
became first president of independent Kenya
91. 1960: Congo Crisis
• Patrice Lumumba led Congo
to independence from
Belgium; turned to USSR for
aid; survived failed American
assassination attempt
• Mobutu Sese Seko executed
Lumumba and established far-
right totalitarian regime in
Zaire from 1965-1997 with
strong support from U.S.,
France and Belgium;
embezzled $4-15 billion
92. 1971-1979: dictator
Idi Amin of Uganda
• expelled 60,000
middle-class
Ugandan Indian
and Pakistani
business owners
• killed 300,000-
500,000 in through
political
repression, ethnic
persecution, and
gross economic
mismanagement
98. Aug. 1961: Berlin Wall erected to stop flood of 3.5 million refugees defecting
from the communist East to the free West
99. Sept. 1961: India, Indonesia, Egypt, Ghana, and Yugoslavia began the
Non-Aligned Movement to preserve Cold War neutrality in the Third World
100.
101. Oct. 1962: Cuban Missile Crisis; US pursued brinksmanship diplomacy and
quarantined Cuba with a naval blockade in response to placement of Soviet
nuclear missiles in Cuba. World War III was narrowly averted.
102. 1963: Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty banned surface, atmospheric, and
underwater nuclear tests; underground only
103. 1964-2016: Colombian Civil War - communist FARC (Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia) fought a 52-year guerrilla campaign against the Colombian
government; employed terrorist tactics and financed by illegal drug trade
104. Domino theory: JFK saw Vietnam as focus
of U.S.-Soviet rivalry
• Sent 16,000 American military
"advisors”
105. 1964: Saigon on verge of collapse;
Tonkin Gulf Incident →
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
I’m not going to be the president who
saw Southeast Asia go the way China
went.” -LBJ
106. U.S. Troop Levels in Vietnam
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
1961 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968
U.S. Troops
107. • 1965: Sustained bombing of North
Vietnam
• Operation Rolling Thunder
• Carpet Bombing
• Napalm
• Agent Orange – defoliant
108. 1965-1966: Indonesian Genocide
• Sukarno overthrown by right-wing anti-
communist Suharto
• 500,000-3 million communists killed by the
Indonesian Army with U.S. government support
109. 1966-1976: Chinese Cultural Revolution
• permanent revolution of student
Red Guards launched by Mao
Zedong to purge remaining capitalist
and traditional Chinese elements
• up to 20 million killed
110. 1967-1970: Nigerian Civil War
• ethnic Igbo separatists sought independence from
Yoruba-controlled government
• up to 2 million died
111. 1967: Six-Day War/Third Arab-
Israeli War
• Israel defeated Jordan,
Syria, and Egypt
• Israel occupied the Sinai
Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West
Bank, and Golan Heights
113. 1968-1973: Vietnamization
“ … we shall furnish military and economic assistance when requested … But we
shall look to the nation directly threatened to assume the primary responsibility
of providing the manpower for its defense.”
– U.S. President Richard Nixon
114. 1970: US dropped over 500,000 tons
of ordinance on Cambodia
~ 600,000 Cambodians killed
115. 1975: Fall of Saigon → reunification of Vietnam under Communist rule
117. 1973: Yom Kippur War/Fourth Arab-
Israeli War
• Egypt and Syria launched surprise
attack on Jewish holy day
• U.S. supported Israel; Soviets
supported Arab forces nearly
provoking WWIII
• nearly led to Israeli nuclear strike
• paved way for peace treaty Arab-
Israeli peace
118.
119. 1973: OPEC Oil Embargo
• 400% increase in price of oil
+ decline of factories in U.S. and Western Europe and rise of foreign industrial
competition
= Economic stagnation + inflation = Stagflation and end of post-World War II
economic boom
120. Détente: reduction in Cold War tensions
Feb. 1972: Ping-Pong Diplomacy led to Nixon
visit to China
USSR: Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT I)
122. 1975: 35 states including USSR and US pledge to cooperate economically,
respect national boundaries, and promote human rights in the Helsinki Accords
123. 1970: democratically-elected
socialist president Salvador
Allende of Chile nationalized
industries and banks; sponsored
peasant and worker
expropriations of lands and
foreign-owned factories
1973: U.S.-backed right-wing
general Augusto Pinochet
overthrew Allende and
established dictatorship;
executed thousands of leftists
and critics
124. 1975-1983: Operation Condor
• U.S. supported right-wing South American
dictatorships
• at least 50,000 killed, 30,000 disappeared
and 400,000 imprisoned
125. 1975-2002: Angolan Civil War
• civil war between Soviet and Cuban-
backed communists and U.S.-backed
anti-communists
126. 1977-1989: Chinese Four Modernizations
Deng Xiaoping's plan to grow the
Chinese economy by introducing market
reforms and focusing on development of
1) agriculture,
2) industry,
3) defense, and
4) science and technology
127. 1979: U.S. President Jimmy Carter
negotiated Camp David Accords between
Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Menachem
Begin of Israel
128. 1979: Iranian Revolution
• U.S.-backed Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
by Shi'a Muslim ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini
• tried to eliminate western
influences and establish
purely Islamic
government
131. After Soviet withdrawal in 1989, the U.S.-backed Afghan Mujahideen:
• became the Taliban and seized power from 1996 to 2001
• established harsh Islamic Shariah law,
• supported Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda terror network,
• overthrown by 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan after 9/11
132. 1980-1988: Iran-Iraq War
• Saddam Hussein ordered Iraq (secular Arab
nationalist dictatorship) to seize oil fields
from revolutionary Iran (Shi’a Muslim
theocratic republic)
• stalemated in WWI-style trench warfare
133. 1980-1991: Peruvian Civil War • Communists supported by the
People's Republic of China won
control of large areas of Peru with
significant rural peasant and urban
poor support
134. 1980: Solidarity labor strikes in Poland
• anti-Soviet shipyard labor
union led by Lech Walesa
• influenced by Catholic
social justice teachings
• represented 1/3 of adult
Polish workers
136. 1981-1989: Reagan Foreign Policy
• Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)
• Added $2.5 Trillion to National Debt
137. 1982: Falklands War
• largely air-sea conflict
between Argentina and
Britain over disputed South
Atlantic islands
• “last hurrah” of the British
Empire
• led to downfall of military
junta dictatorship in
Argentina and restoration
of democracy
138. 1985: Mikhail Gorbachev introduced major Soviet reforms
• Glasnost - end political repression
• Perestroika - intro free markets in Soviet Union
1987: Reagan and Gorbachev sign INF Agreement and START I treaty
142. August 1989: Polish pro-democracy Solidarity party won first free election in
Eastern Europe since WWII; Communist Party rule ended in Hungary in October
156. 1989: Tiananmen Square Massacre, Beijing, China
• pro-democracy student protests crushed by military; unknown number killed
• Chinese Communist Party rule preserved