Gaddis Chapter 5

Section 1: The UN

-Wilson wants the League of Nations to push legal constraints onto citizens.

-Truman wants global governance, carries Tennyson’s “Parliament of Man, Federation of World” passage.

-UN can only act when most powerful members agree. Ends up being debating society instead of helpful group.

-UN passes human rights declaration in December 1948.

Section 2: Spread of Red/CIA

-Americans confident they can beat SU.

-Italy’s election in April 1948, concerns about spread of red.

-CIA established, finances opposing parties in Italy, beat communists at polls.

-CIA grows. Kennan later regrets recommendation.

Section 3: Ethics of Espionage

-Doolittle Report wants Americans to become familiar with a SU philosophy.

-Rumors of American involvement in Iran and Guatemala.

-Shah of Iran consolidates repressive regime, US has no control.

-Ethics of espionage debates. Americans realize that their leaders lie.

-Johnson thinks Americans have to stay in Vietnam to beat Cold War. Postpones choosing between “Great Society” and Vietnam War.

Section 4: Credibility Gaps

-Nixon inherited situation, made it worse. “Without secrecy…no ending Vietman War” and other things like China, SALT. Uses secrecy to conduct foreign policy.

-Spring 1969, Nixon orders Cambodia bombing, keeps explanation secret.

-“Credibility gaps” for Johnson & Nixon.

-October 1970, Allende takes Chile. Nixon “respects”.

-June 1971, Ellsberg turns over Pentagon Papers to New York Times.

-Nixon puts together staff to fix, “Plumbers”. He resigns August 1974.

Section 5: Nixon & CIA

-Nixon doesn’t believe N. Vietnamese will willingly cease-fire.

-Watergate had weakened Nixon. Passed War Powers Act to limit military deployments with no Congressional consent.

-CIA director Colby says that CIA broke its own rules about international interference.

-Chile is a problem. Military coup September 1973. US acted there like they did in Iran and Guatemala.

-Congress prohibits potential “daylight tests” failures, not justifiable to public.

Section 6: Kissinger & Nuclear Risk

-White House, Pentagon, CIA not above own laws.

-Mutual Assured Destruction, inhumane to put civilians at risk of nuclear annihilation.

-US didn’t violate human rights like SU, Mao, other Europeans did.

-Détente was to lower nuclear risk, encourage relationship with Cold War rivals, recover.

-Kissinger keeps saying that legitimacy is not justice.

-Kant wants universal justice.

-SU makes emigrants pay to leave. Kissinger protests Trade Reform Act.

Section 7: Historical Infallibility

-Khrushchev reveals that Lenin/Stalin enslaved more than liberated, SU satellites are behind US and capitalists in terms of prosperity.

-Psychological effect: people in SU defer to Marxist-Leninist doctrine publicly but do not believe or follow it.

-Communists rule from “historical infallibility” but are losing it.

-Brezhnev says SU will continue but will concede NATO’s permanence. Wants NATO/US to ratify post-WWII stuff in Europe.

-Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, July 1975.

Section 8:

-People think Ford/Kissinger abandoned human rights causes.

-Helsinki is a liability because of leaked comments. Ford concerned about condemnations by Reagan and Carter. Helsinki is a “legal and moral trap”.

-Havel goes to prison, chronicles “disillusionment with communism”.

-Wojtyla was progressively a priest, arch-bishop, cardinal, and then pope (non-italian and young!). He is Pope John Paul II.

-“We want God!”

Paper 1 & Deng

  1. Describe the struggle for power following Mao, the emergence of Deng Xiaoping and the defeat of the gang of four.
    • Deng regime sent troops into Beijing to suppress pro-democracy movements, post-Mao’s death.
    • When Mao died, his widow and the Gang of Four continued to work. Deng led the “moderates”. Gang of Four blames Deng for problems. Zhou Enlai was in power but he died, power struggle for party began. Deng was in exile, needed to stay for Hua to be in control. Deng comes back, Hua is leader but underground struggle makes Deng eventual leader.
    • Moderates take over eventually, under Hua Guofeng and then Deng. Deng uses friends to get power & works behind the scenes.
    • Deng resigned in 1989 but is still a power.
  2. Describe some of the economic policies and Four Modernizations for China under Deng.
    • Four Modernizations to fix China, post-Cultural Revolution and other problems by Mao (4M: agricultural, industrial, technological, national defense). All of these had been destroyed by China’s history and were necessary to remain somewhat of a power.
    • Deng brought some capitalism in (instead of sticking to just communism).
    • Deng got rid of shared land (family communes) “responsibility system” & incentives (not communism!) to get work done, using production teams and shared land.
    • All based around weakening central planning, introducing material incentives, and pricing policies.
  3. What were the political changes and limits under Deng and how did these culminate in the Tiananmen Square conflict in 1989?
    • Foreign policy changes (Sino-Soviet/American/Japanese)
    • Deng tries to get rid of corrupt position-holders with education and salaries but ultimately this program collapses.
    • Encourages demonstrations but does not follow through & protesters are arrested. Everyone is angry. Revolts occur later when possible.
    • Public collected at Tiananmen to mourn Yaobang but it becomes a riot, and the army later attacks (famous photo).

Gaddis Chapter 4

Section 1: Decolonization & Liberation

-Decline of European colonialism, no continental unity

-Decolonization not a major issue in wars

-End of 1949, Soviet-American fight at a stalemate. Stalin played with Korea as a distraction.

-Khrushchev likes to travel. Americans are scared of him helping liberate countries.

-What new independent countries do matters to the power balance.

Section 2: Tito, Nehru, & Nasser

-Tito (Yugoslavia) wants to stay strong, use some assistance from US.

-He wants “non-alignment” all over the world.

-Nehru (India) resists US/Pakistan. Enlai (China) uses Mao’s reasons.

-Egypt was controlled by GB, Suez Canal is important. Nasser is in control there.

-Dulles worried about Nasser having control, domino reaction to other countries.

-Anglo-French-Israeli invasion almost breaks up NATO. Eisenhower is angry.

Section 3: Korea & Vietnam

-Korea is tumultuous post-Korean War.

-Mao jumps in and builds up military on an island. He defuses crises and then protests Americans landing in Lebanon.

-Khrushchev threatens Americans with nuclear when they threaten him.

-Vietnam isn’t doing well. Ho Chi Minh beat French in 1954, makes communist in north, Ngo Dinh Diem allies.

-Diem is a brutal totalitarian. Johnson in US decides to bomb North Vietnamese areas and sends in almost 200,000 American troops. Soviets are angry.

Section 4: Germany

-Postwar Germany is both strong and weak. They like to fake other countries into thinking that they are collapsing, to get what they want.

-Both East and West Germany are threatening (political party or regime collapse).

-Unrest in Poland/Hungary is used by Ulbricht to get materials and goods from SU.

-Khrushchev worried about controlling Mao, Ulbricht also concerned.

-Khrushchev confronts Kennedy with Berlin ultimatum at Vienna summit. Kennedy will defend W. Berlin, Khrushchev upset.

Section 5: France & China

-France/China benefit with superpower help. De Gaulle is unstable and does a lot of things wrong (nuclear war, relationship with US, will not reconcile). US has no control.

-Mao thinks Khrushchev is beginners luck, superficial, accuses him of losing revolutionary edge.

-Mao wants danger from US/SU could make China safer, no one would question him.

-De Gaulle & Mao push superpowers around, no fear left.

Section 6: Revolutions

-July 1967, Mao is under siege by young Red Guard.

-Mao & de Gaulle get authority, no motivation. Ulbricht in discomfort.

-Johnson not going for reelection. Nixon in charge. Kissinger makes quotes.

-Mao launches Cultural Revolution in 1966. He tries to regain control later.

Section 7: Fights/no fights

-March 1969: SU/Chinese fights along border. Mao doesn’t know what to do.

-Minimal communication with Mao and Nixon. Both want order back.

Section 8:

-Nixon/Mao want to unsettle Russians.

-Brezhnev orders invasion of Czechoslovakia & it does not go well.

-Brezhnev Doctrine threatens Soviets with the potential negative impacts.

-West Germans think that East Germany can be changed if no unification.

-Geopolitical stability necessary.

-Nixon/Kissinger were concerned about these policies. Nixon beats McGovern in new election.

History Terms Notes

The Congo Crisis:

-Patrice Lumumba (of National Congolese Movement) wants to be free of Belgium, becomes prime minister. The CIA keeps an eye on Congo (-1960s).

-Lumumba is outsted after military coup and murdered (January 1961). Prime minister of Sweden are killed (September 1961).

-UN investigates, finds that the Belgians are involved. Fighting continues, General Mobutu stages another military coup (Novemeber 1965). President is arrested, dies of heart attack in prison (June 1969).

-Motubu takes control, changes name back to Zaire (October 1971). Three months later, all European names are abolished. Motubu does what he wants (trades with foreign companies, gets support from US for a one-party, anti-communist dictatorship).

-Two more revolts (1977 and 1978) and Mobutu flees in 1997.


Fall of the Berlin Wall:

-Provisional wall and a real wall were built through Germany, splitting streets and the country)

-August 1989, Hungary removes borders with Austria and 13,000 East Germans go to Austria. This happens along a few borders and protests begin in September.

-Wall falls November. People show up with sledgehammers and regular hammers and chipped the wall off. The East German regime announces new border crossings and they open throughout 1990.

-The wall remained guarded but not very well and the military attempted to repair the wall damage but gives up quickly. The official fall begins June 1990, by the East German military.

-German reunification begins, everyone parties.