Cette leçon contient 20 diapositives, avec diapositives de texte et 5 vidéos.
La durée de la leçon est: 50 min
Éléments de cette leçon
Slide 1 - Vidéo
welfare state
policy of controlled wages
wages explosion
consumer society
groninger gas field
youth culture
migrant worker
a. influenced by culture from America
b. closure of coal mines in Limburg
c. Loosen wage controls
d. television, car, washing machine
e. financial security for old people
f. stimulate economic growth
g. an effect of economic growth
Slide 2 - Diapositive
4.5 The End of the Cold War
Slide 3 - Diapositive
Slide 4 - Vidéo
What is this lesson about?
The Cold War was extremely expensive for the two superpowers. The Soviet Union, with its centrally planned economy, came on the brink of an economic disaster.
Simply said: they could no longer pay for an expensive arms race.
New Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev undertook reforms.
What changes did he bring? And what were the consequences for the Cold War?
Slide 5 - Diapositive
people in this lesson
Mikhail Gorbachev
leader
USSR
Ronald Reagan
president
USA
Helmut Kohl
chancellor
West Germany
Erich Honecker
president
East Germany
Slide 6 - Diapositive
The need for change
When Gorbachev rose to power in 1985, he recognised that the Soviet Union needed to change its policies. The Soviet Union was in economic crisis; people were starving while at the same time much money was spent to keep pace in the Cold War arms race. The costs associated with the space race were also excessive. So Gorbachev introduced two new reform policies. The first was called perestroika (‘rebuilding’ in Russian language) which turned the communist economy into a free market economy. To make this change possible, Gorbachev introduced glasnost (Russian for ‘openness’), his second new policy: this gave Russians greater freedom of speech. With these two policies, Gorbachev wanted to improve the economy of the Soviet Union and so improve the living conditions of its people.
Perestroika postage stamp, 1988
Slide 7 - Diapositive
But by allowing people to have freedom of expression, Gorbachev unleashed emotions and political feelings that had been restrained for decades. Moreover, the economic reforms did not have the results Gorbachev had hoped for. The new freedom of speech meant that Gorbachev was consequently criticized for his failure to improve the economy. This started a process that in a couple of years would lead to the end of the Soviet Union.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and East German President Erich Honecker (front row, center) celebrate the 40th anniversary of the German Democratic Republic in East Berlin. Gorbachev's wife, Raisa, is at right behind the military officer
Slide 8 - Diapositive
4.5 The End of the Cold War
Slide 9 - Diapositive
Slide 10 - Vidéo
Revolts in Eastern Bloc countries
Gorbachev also made changes internationally: he wanted a better relationship with the USA, so he met the American president Reagan a couple of times trying to ease strained superpower relations. He also announced that the Soviet army would no longer interfere if anti-Communist revolt broke out in Eastern Bloc countries.
So when in 1988, massive strikes broke out in Poland, there was no Soviet intervention and a new non-Communist government was promptly set-up. Also in Hungary, revolutionaries demanded a new non-Communist government, which was established in January 1989. In the year after, other Eastern European countries followed this path and installed democratic governments.
Time Magazine covered the Geneva Summit in 1985, where US president, Ronald Reagan, and the leader of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Mikhail Gorbachev met for the first time, during the " Cold War ".
When Gorbachev announced that the the Red Army would not crush demonstrations in Eastern Block countries, people in Poland, Eastern Germany, Czechoslovakia and Hungary went out into the streets to demonstrate fro more freedom.
in 1986 Reagan and Gorbachev met in Reykjavik. The two leaders developed a good relationship that would help end the Cold War.
Slide 11 - Diapositive
Germany reunites
The new Hungarian government opened its border with Austria and now there was a gap in the Iron Curtain. Within a few months, more than 70,000 East Germans fled to West Germany through this open Hungarian border. At the same time, the Peaceful Revolution in East Germany started. The East German people, knowing that the Soviet Union would not intervene, defied their government in mass protests and demanded to be allowed to go to West Germany.
On June 27, 1989 Hungary opened up its border with Austria, forever lifting the Iron Curtain.
East-Germans were allowed to travel freely to Hungary (also communist). But now they cross the opened Iron Curtain and escape into Austria. From there they travelled to West-Germany.
Slide 12 - Diapositive
On 9th November 1989, the DDR- leaders decided that all East Germans could cross the Berlin Wall to visit West Berlin. They only needed an exit visa. However, due to miscommunication on the television, people thought that the opening of the Berlin Wall was effective immediately. So that evening, tens of thousands of East Berliners gathered at the Berlin Wall. The guards were unprepared for this number of people and in the end, the commander decided to open the wall. The people could now enter West Berlin, where they were warmly welcomed by West Berliners with flowers and champagne, to celebrate their new freedom.
Slide 13 - Diapositive
After the so-called Fall of the Wall, talks began about a reunification of East and West Germany.
Although reluctant at first, Gorbachev dropped his objections for a reunited Germany in return for financial aid from West Germany for the Soviet Union. Already on 3rd October 1990, the German Reunification was a fact and Berlin was restored as Germany’s capital. West German chancellor Helmut Kohl became the first chancellor of a reunited Germany.
East German president Erich Honecker was arrested but he did no go to jail because he was very ill. He died in 1994.
Celebrations in front of the Reichstag building. People celebrate the reunification of Germany on Oct. 3rd, 1990
Slide 14 - Diapositive
Slide 15 - Vidéo
The end of the Soviet Union
According to a poll held in 2014, 57% of elderly Russians regretted that the Soviet Union had collapsed.
Six years after Gorbachev came to power, his new policies had not had the desired effect; they had led to shortages, rationing and endless queuing for scarce goods.
The Soviet Union was a federation, a union of states, but its government and economy were highly centralised. Frustrated with the economy and with the politics of Gorbachev, one by one the individual Soviet Republics declared independence. In four months, all states except for Georgia had seceded from the Soviet Union.
Lenin's statue is torn down as the Ukraine declares independence from the USSR.
Slide 16 - Diapositive
Gorbachev resigned on 25th December 1991.
The next day, a treaty was signed acknowledging the independence of all former Soviet Republics.
The largest of the fifteen Soviet republics of the Soviet Union got back its old name: Russia. The once-mighty Soviet Union had finally fallen. The fall of the Soviet Union also meant the end of the Cold War because the USA was now the only superpower left.
Cartoon about the end of the Soviet Union
The breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Slide 17 - Diapositive
When Gorbachev came to power, he changed the politics of the Soviet Union to create a better economy. However, his changes backfired: the economy did not improve but deteriorated. In 1989, peaceful revolutions broke out in Eastern Europe and most Eastern Bloc countries established a democratic government. In November 1989, the Berlin Wall fell and in 1990 the German reunification took place. One by one, the Soviet Republics declared their independence from the central communist government, which led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. This was the end of the Cold War.
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