Cold War 1950's and 60's

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The Cold War in the 1950's and 60's were punctuated by wars and crises that arguably brought the world to the brink. The Korean War was the first war where the US and the USSR were engaged via proxies. Then there was the Berlin Wall crisis in 1961 followed by Cuban Missile crisis in 1962. Learn more in this study note that outlines the main events.
Andrew Burke
Note by Andrew Burke, updated more than 1 year ago
Andrew Burke
Created by Andrew Burke over 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Page 1

Crises and Confrontations: Korean War 1950

Korean War Communist North Korea invaded the democratic South Korea in 1950 South Korea was a US ally and the US, concerned about the 'domino effect', became involved in the war 'Domino effect' was the belief if South Korea fell, communism would spread to other Asian countries North Korea was backed by China and USSR US became involved in a costly war, that ended in a stalemate Showed that the US and USSR would fight each other but not directly The war lasted three years and led to 1.4 million deaths Truman sacked General Douglas MacArthur for requesting that nuclear weapons be used against China

Stalin passed away at the end of the Korean War and the new Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, criticised many of Stalin's actions and called for peaceful co-existence with the West. 

Page 2

Crisis 1: The Berlin Wall 1961

Background:  When Berlin was first divided up into four zones there was support for communism in the East Germany under the control of the Soviets Complaints from people were made about the Stasi (secret police) and corruption in the government East Germany had a low standard of living in comparison to West Germany In the 1950s, many East Germans travelled to West Berlin to access West Germany and never returned upon arriving The many Germans leaving Berlin boosted US propaganda Changing environment:  January 1961 - new president of the US, John F. Kennedy, was elected Kennedy backed a failed attempt to overthrow the communist president in Cuba, Fidel Castro, in April 1961  Khrushchev used Kennedy's failure as an opportunity to request US troops removal from Berlin Vienna, 1961 - Khrushchev and Kennedy meet  Kennedy refused Khrushchev's demands again and ordered 150,000 US reservist troops to be called for action in Germany Khrushchev claimed Kennedy was promoting conflict, using Berlin as a base for spies Within this tension, on the night of the 13 August, East German soldiers erected a barbed-wire fence along the border of East and West Berlin All crossing points were sealed up apart from Checkpoint Charlie The main reason for the wall was to stem the flow of people out of East Germany  What happened next?  West Berliners feared Soviet invasion and US withdrawal  17 August 1961 - West Berlin staged a demonstration; Kennedy sent more troops Soviets and East Germans continued to strengthen the wall  27 October - US and Soviet tanks faced off at Checkpoint Charlie, withdrawing the next day  Impact of the crisis:  Khrushchev ordered East German leader, Walter Ulbricht, to avoid any further tensions The wall remained in place and became a symbol of division Kennedy stood up to Khrushchev and made good propaganda of the situation 

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Crisis 2: The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962

Background:  1959 - Cuba was practically considered a US colony, under the leadership of anti-communist General Fulgenico Batista Batista was overthrown in a revolution led by communist Fidel Castro in 1959 Thousands of Cubans fled to the US and pressured the US to help get rid of Castro  US President at the time, Dwight D. Eisenhower, ordered the CIA to investigate a means of overthrowing Castro  US refused to trade with Cuba and began a propaganda campaign against Castro  Crisis develops:  Castro, fearing invasion from the US, turned to USSR for help Khrushchev agreed to a $100 million package of economic aid, military equipment and technical advisers to Cuba April 1961 - US president John F. Kennedy authorised a CIA-backed plan to help 1,400 Cuban exiles These exiles were to land in the Bay of Pigs in Cuba and overthrow Castro This attempt failed dramatically and strengthened relations between Castro and Khrushchev May 1962 -  the Soviet Union announced it was supplying Cuba with arms Kennedy's main concern over the arms was that the Soviet Union would locate nuclear arms in Cuba October 1962 - a US spy plane took detailed photographs that demonstrated there were nuclear missile sites in Cuba US spy planes reported that 20 Soviet ships were carrying missiles to Cuba

Why locate nuclear missiles in Cuba? There are a few suggestions as to why Khrushchev did this: To bargain with the USA - the US had missiles in Turkey and Khrushchev may have wanted to make a deal about them To close the missile gap - with a gap in the amount of weapons, locating missiles on Cuba would make the US less likely to launch a 'first strike' To defend Cuba - with an advantageous location and also communist state, Cuba would be an effective military base Strengthen his own position - success here would heighten his popularity To test the USA - the missiles were a test to see how strong the US really was The most intense period of the crisis occurred from 16 October - 28 October. On 28th October, Khrushchev wrote a letter to Kennedy agreeing to remove the missiles that he claimed were for defensive purposes.  Impacts:  Khrushchev kept Cuba communist and received a promise from the US they would not invade Castro was upset with the deal, but remained in power and nationalised American companies in time Kennedy appeared a strong figure afterwards, standing up to Khrushchev and own government However, he failed to oust Castro and removed US missiles from Turkey Improved relations occurred between the US and USSR:  'hotline' telephone link was established between the White House and Kremlin 1963 - Nuclear Test Ban Treaty signed (limited the testing of nuclear weapons)  From here, the US and USSR became involved in other conflicts around the globe (indirect fighting) i.e. proxy wars

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