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The Collapse of the Soviet Union And the world watched with wonder …

The Collapse of the Soviet Union

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The Collapse of the Soviet Union. And the world watched with wonder …. Eastern Bloc. Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 15 Republics: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The Collapse of the Soviet Union

And the world watched with wonder …

Page 2: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Eastern Bloc

Union of Soviet Socialist Republics15 Republics: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan

7 SatelliteCountries:Bulgaria, Czech Republic, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia

Page 3: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Ideological DifferencesDemocratic

Capitalism v. TotalitarianCommunism

Military Strengt

hArms Race

Technologic

al Ambition

s

Space Race

Page 4: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Was the Collapse Due to Force? No

The Cold War cost more than $11 trillion. But the collapse of the Soviet Union and its satellites was not a result of force. No NATO tank fired a shot. No bomb fell on the

Kremlin.

Page 5: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

A Home-Grown Insurgency Instead, a massive, home-

grown insurgency, led by a number of different participants, contributed to the collapse: Workers Dissident intellectuals Advocates of national

self-determination Reformers

Page 6: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Polish Trade Union: Solidarity The downfall began in

1980 when striking Polish workers organized Solidarity, an independent trade union of nearly 10 million members.

Page 7: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Support from Catholic Church Solidarity, which had

strong support from the powerful Polish Catholic Church, demonstrated how a working-class movement could offer an entire nation moral and political leadership.

Page 8: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Solidarity’s Chairman: Lech Walesa

The Polish military drove Solidarity underground in 1981. However, in 1983, Solidarity’s chairman, Lech Walesa, won the Nobel peace prize. In 1990, he would be the first freely elected president of the Polish nation in more than sixty years.

Page 9: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The Gorbachev Revolution Mikhail Gorbachev, who

came to power in 1985 as the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), recognized that the Soviet Union could not remain politically and economically isolated and that the Soviet system had to be changed if it was to survive.

Page 10: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Gorbachev's Five-Point Plan The key pieces to Gorbachev's plan for the survival

of the Soviet Union were a series of reforms:1. Glasnost (openness) – greater freedom of

expression 2. Perestroika (restructuring) – decentralization of

the Soviet economy with gradual market reforms

3. Renunciation of the Brezhnev Doctrine (armed intervention where socialism was threatened) and the pursuit of arms control agreements

4. Reform of the KGB (secret service)5. Reform of the Communist Party

Page 11: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The Objective: Survival Gorbachev knew that the Soviet Union would have

to change if it was to survive. Central planning in a modern industrial

economy brought many inefficiencies. The factory management system provided little

incentive to make technological improvements and every incentive to hide factory capacities to ensure low quotas

The socialist farm system was inefficient – there were poor worker incentives and storage and transportation problems.

The Soviet State could no longer afford the high defense spending that accompanied the Cold War.

Page 12: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Insistent Calls for Change He believed that his

reforms were necessary and used his leadership and power to attempt to implement them.

The policy of glasnost (openness) made it possible for people to more freely criticize the government's policies. When people realized it was safe to speak out, the calls for change became more insistent.

Page 13: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Reforms Were Too Slow The gradual market reforms

and decentralization of the economy (perestroika) were too slow and failed to keep pace with the crisis and his people's demands.

The Soviet Union was suffering a deterioration of economic and social conditions and a fall in the GNP.

Page 14: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Party Reforms a Failure His attempts to reform

the Communist Party were a failure. Change was too slow to keep pace with events and he was continually hampered by his need to give in to the hard-liners in order to retain power. As communism collapsed in Eastern Europe, reform of communism in the Soviet Union became unlikely.

Page 15: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Release from Soviet Domination The renunciation of the

Brezhnev Doctrine (armed intervention in support of socialism) released the Eastern European states from Soviet domination.

The communist rulers of these states could not survive without the support of the Soviet Union.

The Brezhnev Doctrine was articulated in 1968 when the Soviet army occupied Czechoslovakia to end the Prague Spring, an attempt by Alexander Dubcek to build “socialism with a human face.”

Page 16: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union
Page 17: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Reagan’s Brandenburg Gate Speech President Ronald Reagan called upon

Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall: "In the Communist world, we see failure, technological backwardness, declining standards... Even today, the Soviet Union cannot feed itself. The inescapable conclusion is that freedom is the victor. General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace,if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

Page 18: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

President Reagan giving a speech at the Berlin Wall, Brandenburg Gate, Federal Republic of Germany. June 12, 1987

Page 19: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Wave of Demonstrations Beginning in September

1989, a wave of huge demonstrations shook Communist regimes across eastern Europe. A massive tide of East German emigrants surged through Czechoslovakia and Hungary to the West, undermining the authority of the Communist hard-liners who still clung to power in the German Democratic Republic (GDR).

Page 20: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

A tram is blocked by East German demonstrators in the center of the city in October 1989. Their banner reads: 'Legalization of opposition parties, free democratic elections, free press and independent unions.'

Page 21: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The Wall Came Down Finally, on the night of

November 9, 1989, ordinary Germans poured through the Berlin Wall. The GDR quickly disintegrated, and by the end of 1990, all of East Germany had been incorporated into the wealthy, powerful Federal Republic of Germany.

Page 22: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The Rise of Nationalism With the iron grip of the

centralized Soviet state relaxed and the growing failure of the state to adequately feed and clothe its people, nationalism in the republics surged and separatist movements threatened the very existence of the Soviet Union. Super Cute Protesters:

Moldova: The hot, angry face of nationalism - Apr 13, 2009

Page 23: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Events in Eastern Europe Communist governments

in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Bulgaria either tumbled or underwent reform.

The Communist dictatorship in Romania fell after a week of bloody street battles between ordinary citizens and police, who defended the old order to the bitter end.

Page 24: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Radical Change Radical change finally

reached the Soviet heartland in August 1991, when thousands of Russian citizens poured into the streets to defeat a reactionary coup d'état.

Page 25: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Independent Republics The Communist party

quickly collapsed, and the Soviet Union began the painful and uncertain process of reorganizing itself as a loose confederation of independent republics.

Page 26: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Boris Yeltsin Boris Yeltsin, who

headed the Russian Republic, replaced Gorbachev as president of a much- diminished state. Gorbachev found that there was no Soviet Union to lead and retired into private life.

Time magazine's July 15, 1996, issue, featured a 10-page spread about a squad of U.S. political pros who "clandestinely participated in guiding Yeltsin's campaign.“

Page 27: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Nobel Peace Prize Gorbachev won the 1989

Nobel Peace Prize. He brought a peaceful end to the cold war, and dramatic change to his country's economy, though not in the way he intended.

Page 28: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The End of the Cold War The Cold War was over,

brought to a close not by the missiles and tanks of the principal participants, but by the collective courage and willpower of ordinary men and women.

Page 29: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Ronald Reagan’s Role In the United States, partisans of

Ronald Reagan claimed much of the credit for ending the Cold War. Reagan's frank denunciation of the Soviet Union as an “evil empire," along with his administration's military buildup, were said to have inspired eastern bloc dissidents at the same time the arms race exhausted the productive capacity of the Soviet Union and other inefficient Communist regimes.

Page 30: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Nuclear Stockpiles, 1945-2006

Source data from: Robert S. Norris and Hans M. Kristensen, "Global nuclear stockpiles, 1945-2006," Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 62, no. 4 (July/August 2006), 64-66. Online at http://thebulletin.metapress.com/content/c4120650912x74k7/fulltext.pdf

Page 31: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

The National Debt

US Pop: 304,998,272Share of Debt/Person: $34,526.04Daily Increase: $3.84 billion

$438 billion deficit

Page 32: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Another Side to the Story According to U.S. diplomat

George Kennan, author of "The Sources of Soviet Conduct" (1947) and architect of the containment policy, the West's militarized posture helped the Communists to rationalize their authoritarian rule. The more U.S. policies followed a hard line, the greater was the tendency in Moscow to tighten the controls and to discourage liberalizing tendencies.

Page 33: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Lech Walesa'sSOLIDARITY

Gorbachev’sREFORMS

John Paul II’sCATHOLICCHURCH

GlasnostRonald Reagan’sFOREIGN POLICY

No BrezhnevDoctrine

Perestroika

ReformKGB

ReformComm Party

EVIL EMPIRESpeech

MILITARY BUILDUP

ARMS RACE

East GermanNATIONALISM

The Collapse of the Soviet Unionand the End of the Cold War

Ordinary MEN & WOMEN

WILL POWER

COURAGE

Eastern Bloc

Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

Page 34: The Collapse  of the Soviet Union

Remaining Communist Countries At its peak, communism was practiced in dozens of

countries: Soviet Union: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia,

Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan

Asian Countries: Afghanistan, Cambodia, Mongolia, and Yemen

Soviet Controlled Eastern bloc countries: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia.

The Balkans: Albania, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia.

Africa: Angola, Benin, Congo, Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea, and Mozambique.

Currently only a handful of countries identified as communist remain: Laos, North Korea, Vietnam, China, and Cuba.