Leps 101
Leps 101
Leps 101
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The end of the Second World War led to the rise of two major
centres of power. The two pictures above symbolise the
victory of the US and the USSR in the Second World War.
1. American soldiers raising the US flag during the Battle of
Iwo Jima, Japan, on 23 February 1945
Credit: Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima,
Photograph by Joe Rosenthal/The Associated Press
2. Soviet soldiers raising the USSR flag on the Reichstag
building in Berlin, Germany, in May 1945
Credit: Reichstag flag, Photograph by Yevgeny Khaldei/TASS
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We are on a world tour! Will meet you in different countries. Feels good
to be around where events have happened.
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T h e C o l d Wa r w a s n o t
simply a matter of power
rivalries, of military alliances,
and of the balance of power.
These were accompanied by a
real ideological conflict as well,
a difference over the best and
the most appropriate way of
organising political, economic,
and social life all over the world.
The western alliance, headed by
t h e U S , re p r e s e n t e d t h e
ideology of liberal democracy
and capitalism while the
eastern alliance, headed by the
Soviet Union, was committed to
the ideology of socialism and
communism. You have already
studied these ideologies in
Class XI.
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While the Cold War was an
outcome of the emergence of the
US and the USSR as two
superpowers rival to each other,
it was also rooted in the
understanding that the destruction
caused by the use of atom bombs
is too costly for any country to
bear. The logic is simple yet
powerful. When two rival powers
are in possession of nuclear
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THE EMERGENCE OF
TWO POWER BLOCS
IRELAND
Dublin
Helsinki
Oslo
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SPAIN
Madrid
Stockholm
SWEDEN
North
Sea
DENMARK
Moscow
Copenhagen
NETH.
BRITAIN
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
London
USSR
Berlin
The Hague
BELG. Bonn
Brussels
Paris
FRANCE
3. By comparing this
map with that of
the European Union
map, identify three
new countries that
came up in the
post-Cold War
period.
FINLAND
NORWAY
NATO Members
Warsaw Pact Members
Other Communist Nations
Others
Lisbon
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PORTUGAL
1. Identify three
countries from each
of the rival blocs.
LUX.
Warsaw
EAST
GERMANY
Prague
POLAND
CZEC
WEST
HOS
LOV
AKIA
Bern GERMANY
Vienna
Budapest
AUSTRIA
SWITZ.
HUNGARY ROMANIA
ITALY
Rome
Yalta
Bucharest
Belgrade
YUGOSLAVIA
Black Sea
BULGARIA
Sofia
ALBANIA
Tirana
GREECE
Map showing the way Europe was divided into rival alliances during the Cold War
Ankara
TURKEY
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FIRST WORLD
SECOND WORLD
THIRD W ORLD
In the following
column, write
the names of
three countries,
which belong to:
Capitalist Bloc
________________
________________
________________
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Communist Bloc
________________
________________
________________
Non-Aligned
Movement
________________
________________
________________
ARENAS
OF THE
COLD W AR
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Locate the
flashpoints
of the Cold
War on a
world map.
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1956
1961
1962
1965
1968
1972
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1989
1990
Unification of Germany
1991
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POLITICAL SPRING China makes overtures to the USA.
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FOUNDER
FIGURES
OF NAM
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Jawaharlal Nehru
(1889-1964)
First Prime Minister
of India (1947-64);
made efforts for
Asian unity,
decolonisation,
nuclear
disarmament;
advocated
peaceful
coexistence for
securing world
peace.
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CHALLENGE
TO
BIPOLARITY
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FOUNDER
FIGURES
OF NAM
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NEW INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMIC ORDER
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Gamal Abdel
Nasser (1918-70)
Ruled Egypt from
1952 to 1970;
espoused the
causes of Arab
nationalism,
socialism and
anti-imperialism;
nationalised the
Suez Canal,
leading to an
international
conflict in 1956.
Sukarno (1901-70)
First President of
Indonesia (194565); led the
freedom struggle;
espoused the
causes of
socialism and
anti-imperialism;
organised the
Bandung
Conference;
overthrown in a
military coup.
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I NDIA AND
FOUNDER
FIGURES
OF NAM
THE
COLD WAR
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Kwame Nkrumah
(1909-72)
First Prime Minister
of Ghana (195266); led the
freedom
movement;
advocated the
causes of
socialism and
African unity;
opposed neocolonialism;
removed in a
military coup.
It is important to remember
that India chose to involve other
members of the non-aligned group
in this mission. During the Cold
War, India repeatedly tried to
So, NIEO was just an
activate those regional and
idea that never
international organisations, which
became an order.
were not a part of the alliances led
Right?
by the US and USSR. Nehru
Name any five reposed great faith in a genuine
countries,
commonwealth of free and
which were
cooperating nations that would
decolonised
play a positive role in softening, if
following the
not ending, the Cold War.
end of the
Second World
Non-alignment was not, as
War.
some suggest, a noble international
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Non-alignment as a strategy
evolved in the Cold War context.
As we will see in Chapter 2, with
the disintegration of the USSR and
the end of the Cold War in 1991,
non-alignment, both as an
international movement and as
the core of Indias foreign policy,
lost some of its earlier relevance
and effectiveness. However, nonalignment contained some core
values and enduring ideas. It was
based on a recognition that
decolonised states share a
historical affiliation and can
become a powerful force if they
come together. It meant that the
poor and often very small
countries of the world need not
become followers of any of the big
powers, that they could pursue an
independent foreign policy. It was
also based on a resolve to
democratise the international
system by thinking about an
alternative world order to redress
existing inequities. These core
ideas remain relevant even after
the Cold War has ended.
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STEPS
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Banned nuclear weapon tests in the atmosphere, in outer space and under water.
Signed by the US, UK and USSR in Moscow on 5 August 1963.
Entered into force on 10 October 1963.
Allows only the nuclear weapon states to have nuclear weapons and stops others from
aquiring them. For the purposes of the NPT, a nuclear weapon state is one which has
manufactured and exploded a nuclear weapon or other nuclear explosive device prior to 1
January 1967. So there are five nuclear weapon states: US, USSR (later Russia), Britain, France
and China. Signed in Washington, London, and Moscow on 1 July 1968.
Entered into force on 5 March 1970. Extended indefinitely in 1995.
The first round of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks began in November 1969. The Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev and the US President Richard Nixon signed the following in Moscow
on 26 May 1972 a) Treaty on the limitation of Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems (ABM Treaty); and
b) Interim Agreement on the limitation of strategic offensive arms.
Entered into force on 3 October 1972.
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The second round started in November 1972. The US President Jimmy Carter and the Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the Treaty on the limitation of strategic offensive arms in Vienna
on 18 June 1979.
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1.
3.
4.
5.
6.
a)
b)
c)
d)
E x e r c i s e s
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b)
c)
d)
b)
c)
d)
Here is a list of countries. Write against each of these the bloc they
belonged to during the Cold War.
a)
Poland
b)
France
c)
Japan
d)
Nigeria
e)
North Korea
f)
Sri Lanka
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The Cold War produced an arms race as well as arms control. What
were the reasons for both these developments?
Why did the superpowers have military alliances with smaller
countries? Give three reasons.
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E x e r c i s e s
7.
Sometimes it is said that the Cold War was a simple struggle for
power and that ideology had nothing to do with it. Do you agree
with this? Give one example to support your position.
8. What was Indias foreign policy towards the US and USSR during
the Cold War era? Do you think that this policy helped Indias
interests?
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9. NAM was considered a third option by Third World countries. How
did this option benefit their growth during the peak of the Cold
War?
10. What do you think about the statement that NAM has become
irrelevant today. Give reasons to support your opinion.