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The End of the Cold War. Chapter 18, Section 5. The USSR Declines. Fears that USSR would dominate did not come true Signs of weakness were visible from the beginning Stalin filled labor camps with “enemies of the state” (Soviet-organized labor camps were called the “gulag”).
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The End of the Cold War Chapter 18, Section 5
The USSR Declines • Fears that USSR would dominate did not come true • Signs of weakness were visible from the beginning • Stalin filled labor camps with “enemies of the state” (Soviet-organized labor camps were called the “gulag”)
Have you ever been late to work? In the Stalin era, a person who arrived late to work three times could be sent to the Gulag for three years. Have you ever told a joke about a government official? In the Stalin era, many were sent to the Gulag for up to 25 years for telling an innocent joke about a Communist Party official. If your family was starving, would you take a few potatoes left in a field after harvest? In the Stalin era, a person could be sent to the Gulag for up to ten years for such petty theft.
Maria Tchebotareva Trying to feed her four hungry children during the massive 1932-1933 famine, the peasant mother allegedly stole three pounds of rye from her former field—confiscated by the state as part of collectivization. Soviet authorities sentenced her to ten years in the Gulag. When her sentence expired in 1943, it was arbitrarily extended until the end of the war in 1945. After her release, she was required to live in exile near her Gulag camp north of the Arctic Circle, and she was not able to return home until 1956, after the death of Stalin. Maria Tchebotareva never found her children after her release.
Ivan Burylov Seeking the appearance of democracy, the Soviet Union held elections, but only one Communist Party candidate appeared on the ballot for each office. Fear of punishment ensured that nearly all Soviet citizens “voted” by taking their ballot and ceremoniously placing it into a ballot box. In 1949, Ivan Burylov, a beekeeper, protested this absurd ritual by writing the word “Comedy” on his “secret” ballot. Soviet authorities linked the ballot to Burylov and sentenced him to eight years in camps for this “crime.”
Arrest of a so-called “rich peasant” in 1930. This peasant, Mikhailov, had attempted escape from a state-owned farm where he had been sent into exile.
Trial of so-called “rich peasants” in 1929. Stalin’s drive to seize all private land in the 1920s and 1930s met significant resistance. Some victims were shot, some were arrested and sent into the Gulag camps, and many were exiled to remote parts of the country.
Reforms Give Way to Repression • Khrushchev became the leader after Stalin • Allowed greater freedoms of speech • Freed political prisoners • Insisted on command economy
Hungary tried to break away – Khrushchev sent in tanks • Czechs tried to break away – Brezhnev sent in tanks (“Soviet Winter” overcame “Prague Spring”)
Command Economy Stagnates • Soviets rebuilt industry after WWII using equipment from Germany • Government poured resources into science and technology • Sputnik I – first artificial satellite 1957 • (First: “Space Race”, and then?...)
Russia had to import grain to feed its people (they used to export it) • Consumer goods were not as good as Western ones • Television sets, shoes, etc were inferior to Western ones • Cars, washing machines, etc were out of reach for most
Central economic planning lead to inefficiency and waste • Bureaucracy decided when and how much to produce • Consumers’ needs were not met • Workers made low wages but were guaranteed a job for life– no incentives to make better-quality goods
U.S. and Western Europe BOOMED in these times • U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe SUFFERED.
Cracking Under the Burden of Military Commitments • Soviet-American relations swung between confrontation and détente • Both sides maintained huge military budgets • U.S.S.R. could not keep up with Reagan’s “Star Wars”
War in Afghanistan • Soviet-supported government tried to modernize nation (What reforms would this entail?) • Afghan landlords / warlords and Muslim conservatives took up arms against government • Soviet troops moved in (1979)
Soviet troops battling mujahedin (Muslim religious warriors) in mountains of Afghanistan = U.S. troops battling guerrilla fighters in Vietnam
Mid-1980’s: U.S. begins to smuggle arms to mujahedin • Soviets struggled in war; morale was bad at home (sound familiar?...)
Mikhail Gorbechev • Came to power in 1985 • Wanted change for his country • Signed arms control treaties with U.S. • Pulled Soviet troops out of Afghanistan
He called for glasnost • (Openness) • Ended censorship • Encouraged people to discuss country’s problems openly
He urged perestroika • (Restructuring of the government and the economy) • Reduced size of bureaucracy • Backed limited private enterprise – allowed farmers to sell produce on free market • Put factory managers in charge, not central planners
An Empire Crumbles • Shortages grew worse • Prices soared • Factories closed– high unemployment • Critics demanded more changes
Eastern Europe Revolts • Baltic states declare independence (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) – 1991 • Poland, Bulgaria, others break away from U.S.S.R. • Soviet hard-liners try to overthrow Gorbachev, who decides to resign
Baltic Independence http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=DF85FF33-8713-44FD-9A71-558DAF755D97&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US
End of 1991, remaining Soviet republics separated to form 12 independent nations • (Largest is Russia) • (Next largest: Kazakhstan and Ukraine) • U.S.S.R. ceases to exist, after 69 years.
Gorbachev introduced glasnost and perestroika, and U.S.S.R. began to crumble • Eastern European nations again demanded an end to Soviet domination • This time they got it!
Nationalists Resented Russian Domination • 1950’s and 1960’s: revolts erupted in Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, elsewhere • 1980’s: demands for change erupted once again • This time, they are successful!
Hungary Quietly Reforms • Saw trouble in Czechoslovakia • Remained loyal to Warsaw Pact, were allowed to make modest economic reforms (1970’s: beginnings of market economy) • Economic trouble lead to greater discontent– under spirit of glasnost, began to openly criticize communist government
1988 – 1989: under public pressure, the communist government allowed greater freedoms • New political parties • Western border with Austria was opened
Poland Embraces Solidarity • Poland led the way in new surge of resistance • 1980: shipyard workers go on strike • Lech Walesa organized Solidarity (independent labor union / political party) • Soviets pressured Poland to arrest its leaders • Walesa became hero; Pope visited Poland
East Germans Demand Change • Government there did NOT want glasnost • 1988: Government banned Soviet publications (too subversive) • East Germans could see West German TV, knew what things were like on other side of Berlin Wall • Thousands fled to Austria when Hungary opened border
Communist Governments Fall • Late 1980’s: Gorbachev said he would not interfere with Eastern European reforms • Poland legalized Solidarity, had free elections in 1989 (Lech Walesa elected president) • Began transition to market economy
By 1989 everyone, everywhere took to streets demanding reform • One by one, communist governments fell • Vaclav Havel (human rights activist and writer) elected president in Czechoslovakia • Berlin Wall torn down; East began reunification with West
Most changes happened peacefully • Not in the case of Romania, where Nicolae Ceausescu refused to step down and was overthrown and executed
Nicolae Ceausescu http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=E2B923CB-1707-4FF8-9205-89D788CB7950&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US
Czechoslovakia Splits • Formed in 1918 at end of Austro-Hungarian empire • Czechs and Slovaks had lived separately, with Czechs dominating government • Divided by Nazis, reunified under communist control after war • 1989: Slovaks called for independence and got it in 1992 – Slovakia and Czech Republic