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POST-WAR TRENDS IN THE “THIRD WORLD”. LIBERATION OF FORMER WESTERN COLONIES AND CREATION OF INDEPENDENT STATES UNFORTUNATE TENDENCY TOWARDS POLITICAL INSTABILITY IN NEW STATES INTERFERENCE BY SUPER POWERS LACK OF DEMOCRATIC TRADITIONS ECONOMIC PROBLEMS
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POST-WAR TRENDS IN THE “THIRD WORLD” • LIBERATION OF FORMER WESTERN COLONIES AND CREATION OF INDEPENDENT STATES • UNFORTUNATE TENDENCY TOWARDS POLITICAL INSTABILITY IN NEW STATES • INTERFERENCE BY SUPER POWERS • LACK OF DEMOCRATIC TRADITIONS • ECONOMIC PROBLEMS • GROWING ASSERTIVENESS, BASED ON BELIEF BY THIRD WORLD PEOPLE THAT THEY HAVE THE RIGHT AND ABILITY TO DETERMINE THEIR OWN FUTURES • REGARDLESS HOW WESTERN POWERS FEEL ABOUT IT
COLONIAL INDEPENDENCE • WORLD WAR II • Exhausted and weakened colonial powers • Japanese success in Asia increased nationalistic feelings among colonial people there by showing that Europeans could be defeated • COLD WAR • Both U.S. and Soviet Union competed for influence in Third World countries by supporting independence movements
AFRICAN INDEPENDENCE • GHANA • First African colony to achieve independence (1957) • Peaceful separation from Great Britain • KENYA • Britain insisted that white settlers keep their land after independence • Provoked bloody Mau Mau Rebellion (1953-1956) • Finally resolved through efforts ofJomo Kenyatta(early 1960s) Kwame Nkrumah 1st president of Ghana Jomo Kenyatta
SOUTH AFRICA I • Most white settlers were Afrikaners (of Dutch descent) • Established apartheid • Vicious segregationist policy aimed at suppressing black natives • Broke free of British control in early 20th century • Established Afrikaner-dominated state
SOUTH AFRICA II • World-wide protests against apartheid • Growing unrest by blacks in South Africa • Result • End of apartheid • Free elections • Creation of a black-dominated government led byNelson Mandella
THE FRENCH SCREW UP • FRANCE REFUSES TO GIVE INDEPENDENCE TO ALGERIA AND INDOCHINA • RESULT • Two vicious civil wars • Costs hundreds of thousands of lives • Millions of francs squandered • France lost both wars • CASE STUDY OF HOW TO NOT HANDLE DEMANDS FOR COLONIAL INDEPENDENCE
POLITICAL INSTABILITY • REASONS • Colonies often created without regard to the native people involved • Hostile tribes included in same colony • Colonial repression held them in check • Removal of colonial authorities allowed old hatreds to resurface • Cold War • U.S. and Soviet Union backed rival factions • Vietnam and Korea • Lack of Western Political Traditions • Tribal loyalties remain strong • Super powers backed rival tribes, thus making the situation worse • Angola Ho Chi Minh
LATIN AMERICA • Achieved independence long before World War II • Problem was United States • Considered Latin American its special sphere of influence • Encouraged establishment and maintenance of dictatorial regimes as best way to provide stable conditions for American investment and to prevent hostile foreign powers from gaining foothold in region • Long-term policy
MEXICO • American-backed dictator Porfirio Diaz overthrown in 1911 • Prolonged civil war • America invades Mexico in 1916 • Regime finally established that was not blatantly subservient to American business interests • Mexico still suffered from overpopulation and economic problems • Therefore still dependent on American aid, trade, and investment • U.S. still controls Mexico from behind the scenes
CUBA • Fidel Castro overthrows corrupt dictator Batista • Attempts to establish socialist state • U.S. responds • by imposing economic embargo and withdrawing diplomatic recognition • Supporting attempts to eliminate Castro and destabilize his regime • Sponsoring ill-fated invasion attempt – the “Bay of Pigs” invasion • Castro survives but only by linking himself closely with the Soviet Union
NICARAGUA • Sandinista revolutionary movement overthrows Somoza dictatorship in 1977 • U.S. fears another Cuba • U.S. responds with economic embargo and sponsorship of “Contra” rebels to destabilize regime • Sandinista forced to call an election in 1989. It is rigged by the CIA and they lose power
CHILE • Salvador Allende, a moderate socialist, is elected president in 1970 • Allende begins reform program that hurts U.S. business interests • President Nixon orders CIA to destabilize Allende regime • Allende regime is fatally weakened and he is overthrown in 1973 by right-wing military officers led by General Augusto Pinochet • Pinochet sets up brutal dictatorship and murders thousands – but the U.S. looks the other way
BACKGROUND • Versailles Treaty divides former Ottoman Empire into “mandates” • Great Britain received Palestine, among others, as a mandate • Two hostile communities within the British mandate of Palestine • Native Moslem Arabs (Palestinians) • Jewish immigrants from Europe (Zionists) • Zionism • Founded by Theodore Herzl • Argued that Palestine should be developed into Jewish homeland • Only way Jews could escape anti-Semitism
1947 • Jewish immigration to Palestine grows after 1890 • British vacillate – first encouraging, then discouraging Jewish immigration • After World War II, British give Palestine to United Nations • In 1947, United Nations present partition plan which gives part of Palestine to Zionists, part to Palestinians
WAR • Civil war between Palestinians and Jews erupts. Palestinians aided by Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq • Jews win and 750,000 Palestinians are forced to move to refugee camps in Lebanon, Jordan, and Syria
THE REFUGEE CAMPS • Birthplace of Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)
SIX DAY WAR (1967) • Israel wins and gets: • Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt • Golan Heights from Syria • West Bank and Jerusalem from Jordan • Israel would later return Sinai to Egypt • But it keeps Golan Heights, West Bank, Jerusalem, and Gaza Strip • Refuses full citizen ship to Palestinians in “occupied territories” in order to deprive them of political voice in Israel
YOM KIPPUR WAR • PLO begins terrorist campaign against Israel • Yom Kippur War (1973) • Israel caught by surprise and suffers initial reverses • Israel ultimately wins • Labour Party falls and is replaced by Likud Bloc (coalition of right-wing parties) led by Menacham Begin (1974)
MENACHAM BEGIN • Positive achievements of Begin • Camp David Accords (1979) • Negative achievements of Begin • Clung to Golan Heights, West Bank, and Gaza Strip • Settled Israeli families in these regions • Invaded Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon twice (1978 and 1982), damaging Israeli economy and morale
SHIFT IN U.S. POLICY • Riots in West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1987 damage Israeli morale and cause shift in U.S. attitude towards Israel • PLO offers concessions in its militant stand toward Israel
GOOD SIGNS IN 1980s AND 1990s • PLO and Israel begin to negotiate in 1991 about future of occupied territories • Yitzhak Rabinand Yassir Arafatsign peace agreement in 1993 creating limited autonomy for Palestinians in occupied territories and future establishment of Palestinian state
BAD SIGNS • Prime minister Rabin murdered by Israeli extremist in 1994 • Palestinians dissatisfied with limited gains and have stepped up terrorism • Israeli government refuses to alter its policy of promoting Jewish settlements in occupied territories • Suicide bombings have terrified Israelis and have derailed the peace process