Book S 4 PDF
Book S 4 PDF
Book S 4 PDF
IGCSE
®
BEN WALSH
Modern
World
History
Option B: The 20th century
Modern
World
History
Option B: The 20th century
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Also available:
• GCSE Modern World History 1 International Relations Dynamic Learning 978 1 4441 1760 8
• GCSE Modern World History 2 Depth Studies Dynamic Learning 978 1 4441 1777 6
• GCSE Modern World History 3 Twentieth Century British History Dynamic Learning 978 1 4441 1778 3
Contents
vi How this book will help you to achieve your best in Cambridge IGCSE® History
viii Text acknowledgements
Depth Studies
186 8 Russia, 1905–41
226 9 Germany, 1918–45
270 10 The USA, 1919–41
316 Exam Focus: Depth Studies
SECTION 2
320 Glossary
324 Photo acknowledgements
326 Index
How this book will help you to achieve your best in
Cambridge IGCSE® History
A) It will help you to learn the content
SOURCE
19 Is your main worry when you prepare for an exam that you won’t know enough to answer the questions?
Many people feel that way and it is true that there is a lot to learn in Cambridge IGCSE History. This book
covers the Option B 20th century route for the Cambridge IGCSE syllabus. You will need good knowledge
of the main events and the detail. This book will help you acquire both.
The author text explains all the key content clearly and comprehensively. But it does not just drone
on about one thing after another. It helps you understand and investigate issues and establish links and
relationships between topics.
It’s full of brilliant sources. History is at its best when you can see what real people said, did, wrote,
An American cartoon commenting on sang, watched on film, laughed about, cried over, and got upset about. Sources can really help you to
Stalin’s take-over of eastern Europe. understand the story better and remember it because they help you to see the big concepts and ideas in
The bear represents the USSR. terms of what they meant to individuals at the time.
The Factfiles (key events) and Profiles (key people) are packed with hard facts and examples to
Factfile use in your own work to support your arguments.
The League of Nations
The League’s home was in Geneva in
Switzerland.
Despite it being the brainchild of the US
President, the USA was never a member of
the League.
Increased employment We use lots of diagrams and timelines. These help you to visualise, understand and remember
American loans helped
Europe recover from the Rebuilt industry Increased international trade
topics. We also encourage you to draw your own diagrams – that is an even better way to learn.
economic crisis after
the war:
More money
available
Increased profits
Sales
Many of the Focus Tasks deal with quite big issues that you will find easier if you have thought things
Think! through beforehand. So the Think! feature is designed to prepare you for the Focus Tasks. Sometimes
they are literally steps en route to a Focus Task as in Chapter 4; at other times they simply ask you to
think about an issue that is particularly important for understanding the period better.
There are Revision Tips. If the content seems overwhelming to you and you just don’t know where
Revision Tip to start this gives you an achievable target – just a couple of key points on each topic to identify and
remember. Think of it as a ‘First Aid’ kit.
Keywords. Every subject and topic has its own vocabulary. If you don’t know what these words mean
Keywords you won’t be able to write about the subject. So for each chapter we have provided a keyword list.
These are the kind of words or terms that could be used in sources or an exam question without any
explanation so you need to be able to understand them and use them confidently in your writing. They
are all defined in the glossary on page 000. But we also want you to create your own keyword list –
in a notebook or on your phone, write down each word with your own definitions.
Finally there is a content Summary at the end of every chapter or Key Question. This condenses all
Chapter Summary the content into a few points, which should help you to get your bearings in even the most complicated
content.
vi
B) It will help you to apply what you learn
Focus Task The second big aim of this book is to help you to work with the content and think about it so that you are
How did the Bolsheviks ready to apply what you learn. This is not an easy task. You will not suddenly develop this skill. You need
consolidate their rule? to practise studying an issue, deciding what you think, and then selecting from all that you know the
points that are really relevant to your argument.
It is January 1924. Lenin is dead.
Your task is to look back at the
measures he used to consolidate The main way we help you with this is through the Focus Tasks
Bolshevik rule. The title is a Focus Point or Key Question from the Cambridge IGCSE syllabus. Every Focus Point has
1 Draw a timeline from 1917 to its own Focus Task.
1924, and mark on it the events
of that period mentioned in the
Often we ask you to create a comparative or a summary chart or timeline as in this example. The
text.
2 Mark on the timeline:
completed chart will also be perfect for revision purposes.
a) one moment at which you They help you to apply your knowledge. One of the most important skills in history is the ability to
think Bolshevik rule was most select, organise and deploy (use) knowledge to answer a particular question.
threatened
b) one moment at which you
think it was most secure.
3 Write an explanation of how the
Bolsheviks made their rule more
secure. Mention the following:
♦ the power of the Red Army
♦ treatment of opposition The structure of the task helps you to focus on what is important and ignore what is not. There
♦ War Communism are bullet points or charts to help you to organise your thinking.
♦ the New Economic Policy
♦ the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
♦ the victory in the Civil War
♦ the promise of a new society
♦ propaganda.
And remember, to help you further, most Focus Tasks have a linked Revision Tip that gives you a
Revision Tip more basic target – just a couple of key points that you will be able to apply in your answers.
Exam Focus appears on page 168 (for the core content) and page 316 (for the depth studies). These
Exam focus pages take you step by step through the exam requirements for Paper 1 and Paper 2, and show you the
kinds of questions you might be asked. We also analyse and comment on some sample answers that
help you to see what a good answer might look like.
Exam practice. At the end of every chapter there are some exam-style questions for you to practise.
Exam Practice And in the Exam Focus sections there are plenty more examples of structured essays like in Paper 1
and questions on prescribed topics with sources and information like in Paper 2.
Source Analysis. Sources are an integral part of history. Historians use them to write history. We
Source Analysis u have used them to add colour and human detail to the stories of Modern World History. In Paper 2 of
Cambridge IGCSE History you will also have to use sources to examine an issue when you will need
to evaluate sources. So dotted throughout this book are Source Analysis questions that help you to
evaluate sources – for example, thinking about their message, their purpose or their usefulness for a
particular line of enquiry.
vii
Text acknowledgements
Acknowledgements Laszlo Beke: extracts from A Student’s Diary: Budapest October 16 -
November 1, 1956 (Hutchinson, 1957); Countee Cullen: ‘For A Lady I Know’ from On These I
Stand: An Anthology of the Best Poems of Countee Cullen (Harper & Bros., 1947), copyrights
held by Amistad Research Center, Tulane University, Administered by Thompson and Thompson;
Adolf Hitler: extracts from Mein Kampf, translated by Ralph Manheim (Hutchinson, 1969),
reproduced by permission of The Random House Group UK; Victor Klemperer: diary entries from
I Shall Bear Witness: The Diaries of Victor Klemperer, 1931-1941, Vol.1 (Phoenix, 1999),
translation copyright © 1998 Martin Chalmers.
Every effort has been made to secure copyright permission prior to publication. If contacted, the
publisher will be pleased to make any necessary revisions at the earliest opportunity.
Page 47, Source 12: the original caption was ‘KEEPING HER GOING’ Doctors Eden and Delbos.
“I’m afraid her constitution isn’t all it should be, but we mustn’t give up hope yet.”
viii
1
Core Content:
Option B The 20th
century: International
SECTION 1
Relations since 1919
The Inter-War
Years, 1919–39
PART 1
1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
2
Focus
Chapters 1–3 of this book cover a turbulent period of European history.
After the trauma of the First World War, citizens of European countries were
hoping for peace, prosperity and calm. Instead they got revolutions, economic
depression, international disputes, dictatorships, and in the end a Second World
War. How did this happen?
In Part 1:
♦ You will examine the peace treaties at the end of the First World War and
consider whether they were fair (Chapter 1). Some would say that the peace
treaties created problems for the future; others that they were the fairest
they could have been given the very difficult situation after the First World
War.
♦ The League of Nations was set up in 1920 to prevent war between countries.
In Chapter 2 you will evaluate its successes (it did have many) and its failures
(which tend to be remembered rather more than the successes) and reach
your own view on how we should remember the League – as a success or a
failure or something between.
♦ Finally in Chapter 3 you will examine the events of the 1930s which finally
tipped Europe back into war. It is common to blame Hitler and his foreign
policy for this slide to war but this chapter will help you to reach a balanced
view that sees what other factors played a part.
The events in this chapters overlap in time. The timeline below gives you an
overview of the main events you will be studying. It would be helpful if you
made your own copy and added your own notes to it as you study.
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940
1933 1937
Japan and Italy leaves
Germany the League
leave the of Nations
League of
Nations
1931–33 Jan 1933 1933–1935 1935–1936 Mar 1936 Oct 1938 1939
The Hitler Germany The German The policy of Aug: Hitler
Manchurian becomes rearms Abyssinian troops appeasement and Stalin
Crisis: Japan leader of crisis: Italy enter the ends with sign the
begins Germany invades Rhineland the Munich Nazi–Soviet
building a and pledges Abyssinia agreement Pact
Pacific empire to abolish giving Sept: They
the Treaty Czechoslovakia both invade
of Versailles to Germany Poland
3
4
1
Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
FOCUS POINTS
● What were the motives and aims of the Big Three at Versailles?
● Why did all the victors not get everything they wanted?
● What was the impact of the peace treaty on Germany up to 1923?
● Could the treaties be justified at the time?
However long or violent a war is, eventually the You will focus on
opposing sides must make peace. But because war is ♦ what the peacemakers were hoping to achieve
destructive and leaves a bitter legacy, the peacemaking ♦ how they worked
after a long conflict can be the hardest job of all. ♦ what they decided
The people who had that role in 1919 had a particularly ♦ why they decided it.
hard task. The First World War involved more countries, Then you will reach conclusions about the key question
using more powerful weapons, causing greater casualties – how ‘fair’were the treaties they came up with, which
and physical destruction, than any war before it. The war means thinking about:
had bankrupted some countries. It led to revolutions in
♦ whether people at the time thought the treaties were
others. There was bitterness and resentment.
fair, and why or why not
In this post-war atmosphere almost everyone agreed ♦ whether historians (with the benefit of hindsight)
that part of the job of the peacemakers was to avoid think they were fair.
another war like it – but no one agreed how to do that.
Any treaty is a balancing act. The peacemakers have to And remember…
keep the victors happy but ensure that the defeated the peace process was not just about Germany.
country accepts the terms of the peace. Was it really Between 1919 and 1923 the peacemakers drew up
possible to produce a treaty which all sides would have four treaties (one for each of the defeated powers)
seen as fair? That’s the key question you will have to although in this chapter you are going to focus most
think about in this chapter. on the Treaty which dealt with Germany: the Treaty of
You are going to investigate what happened when Versailles.
these peacemakers got together to draw up the peace
treaties.
t This British cartoon was published in 1919 shortly after the terms of
the Treaty of Versailles had been announced. A German man is holding the
treaty terms saying that Germany has to pay for the damage caused by the
war.
1 Does he think the Treaty is fair? Why or why not?
2 Does the cartoonist think the Treaty is fair? Why or why not?
3 What is the message of this cartoon?
5
High hopes for peace
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Profile
Woodrow Wilson
(President of the USA) Looking back it may seem that the peacemakers in 1919 had an impossible job. But that is not how
people saw it at the time. There was great optimism. One of the main reasons for these high hopes
was the American President Woodrow Wilson.
In 1918 Wilson made a speech outlining Fourteen Points (see Factfile), which were to
be the guidelines for a just and lasting peace treaty to end conflict.
When he arrived in Europe for the Paris Peace Conference, Wilson was seen almost as a saintly
figure. Newspaper reports described wounded soldiers in Italy trying to kiss the hem of his cloak
and in France peasant families kneeling to pray as his train passed by.
Wilson’s ideas
Background How did Wilson think the peacemakers could build a better and more peaceful world?
♦ Born 1856. ● Don’t be too harsh on Germany. Wilson did believe Germany should be punished. But he
♦ Became a university professor. also believed that if Germany was treated harshly, some day it would recover and want revenge.
♦ First entered politics in 1910.
♦ Became President in 1912 and was
He was also concerned that extremist groups, especially communists, might exploit Germans’
re-elected in 1916. resentment and communists might even seize power in Germany as they had in Russia in 1917.
♦ From 1914 to 1917 he concentrated ● Strengthen democracy in defeated countries. For Wilson the key to peace in Europe
on keeping the was to strengthen democracy in the defeated nations so that their people would not let their
USA out of the war.
♦ Once the USA had joined the war
leaders cause another war.
in 1917, he drew up the Fourteen ● Give self-determination to small countries that had once been part of the
Points as the basis for ending the war European empires. He wanted the different peoples of eastern Europe (for example, Poles,
fairly, so that future wars could be Czechs and Slovaks) to rule themselves rather than be part of Austria–Hungary’s empire.
avoided.
● International co-operation. Wilson also believed that nations should co-operate to
Character achieve world peace. This would be achieved through a ‘League of Nations’. Wilson believed
♦ An idealist and a reformer.
♦ As President, he had campaigned
this was the most important of his Fourteen Points.
against corruption in politics and You can see from these principles that Wilson was an idealist. However he was not a politician who
business. However, he had a poor could be pushed around. For example, he refused to cancel the debts owed to the USA by Britain
record with regard to the rights of and its Allies so that he could put pressure on them to accept his ideas.
African Americans.
♦ He was obstinate. Once he made his
mind up on an issue he was almost
impossible to shift. Focus Task
What were the motives and aims of the Big Three at Versailles?
Using the information and sources on pages 6–9, fill out a chart like the one
below summarising the aims of the three leaders at the Paris Peace Conference.
Leave the fifth column blank. You will need it for a later task.
Wilson
Lloyd George
Clemenceau
Revision Tip
Your completed chart should be perfect for revision on this topic. The basic
requirement is to be sure you can name:
♦ each of the Big Three
♦ one priority for each of them at the peace talks
♦ two issues that they disagreed about.
6
SOURCE
1
Source Analysis p
1 Study the main features of Source 1. Who is making the 2 Would you say Source 2 is optimistic about the prospects
soup? Who is helping him? What are they adding to the for peace? Make sure you can explain your answer by
mix? What is already in there? referring to specific features of the cartoon.
Factfile Factfile
THE FOURTEEN POINTS The Paris Peace Conference, 1919–20
(a summary) The Conference took place in the Palace of Versailles (a short
1 No secret treaties. distance from Paris).
2 Free access to the seas in peacetime or wartime. It lasted for twelve months.
3 Free trade between countries. Thirty-two nations were supposed to be represented, but no
4 All countries to work towards disarmament. one from the defeated countries was invited.
5 Colonies to have a say in their own future. Five treaties were drawn up at the Conference. The main
6 German troops to leave Russia. one was the Treaty of Versailles, which dealt with Germany.
7 Independence for Belgium. The other treaties dealt with Germany’s allies (see Factfile on
8 France to regain Alsace–Lorraine. page 19).
9 Frontier between Austria and Italy to be adjusted. All of the important decisions on the fate of Germany were
10 Self-determination for the peoples of eastern Europe (they should taken by Clemenceau (Prime Minister of France), Lloyd George
rule themselves and not be ruled by empires). (Prime Minister of Britain) and Wilson (President of the USA)
11 Serbia to have access to the sea. who together were known as ‘The Big Three’.
12 Self-determination for the people in the Turkish empire. The Big Three were supported by a huge army of diplomats and
13 Poland to become an independent state with access to the expert advisers, but the Big Three often ignored their advice.
sea.
14 League of Nations to be set up.
7
Did everyone share Wilson’s
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Profile
David Lloyd George
(Prime Minister of Britain) viewpoint?
Not surprisingly, when Wilson talked about lasting peace and justice other leaders agreed with him.
After all, who would want to stand up in public and say they were against a just and lasting peace?!
However, many were doubtful about Wilson’s ideas for achieving it. For example ‘self-
determination’: it would be very difficult to give the peoples of eastern Europe the opportunity to
rule themselves because they were scattered across many countries. Some people were bound to
end up being ruled by people from another group with different customs and a different language.
Some historians have pointed out that while Wilson talked a great deal about eastern and central
Europe, he did not actually know very much about the area.
There were other concerns as well. So let’s look at the aims and views of the other leaders at
Background the Paris Peace Conference: David Lloyd George (from Britain) and Georges Clemenceau (from
Born 1863.
First entered politics in 1890.
France).
He was a very able politician who
became Prime Minister in 1916 and
remained in power until 1922. Did Lloyd George agree with Wilson?
Character In public Lloyd George praised Wilson and his ideas. However, in private he was less positive.
A realist. As an experienced politician, He complained to one of his officials that Wilson came to Paris like a missionary to rescue the
he knew there would have to be European savages with his little sermons and lectures.
compromise. Thus he occupied the middle
He agreed with Wilson on many issues, particularly that Germany should be punished but not
ground between the views of Wilson and
Clemenceau. too harshly. He did not want Germany to seek revenge in the future and possibly start another war.
Like Wilson he was deeply concerned that a harsh treaty might lead to a communist revolution
like the one in Russia in 1917. He also wanted Britain and Germany to begin trading with each
other again. Before the war, Germany had been Britain’s second largest trading partner. British
people might not like it, but the fact was that trade with Germany meant jobs in Britain.
However, unlike Wilson, Lloyd George had the needs of the British empire in mind. He wanted
Germany to lose its navy and its colonies because they threatened the British empire.
SOURCE
2
We want a peace which will be just, but not vindictive. We want a stern peace
because the occasion demands it, but the severity must be designed, not for
vengeance, but for justice. Above all, we want to protect the future against a
repetition of the horrors of this war.
Lloyd George speaking to the House of Commons before the Peace Conference.
SOURCE
3
If I am elected, Germany is going to pay . . . I have personally no doubt we will
get everything that you can squeeze out of a lemon, and a bit more. I propose
that every bit of [German-owned] property, movable and immovable, in Allied
and neutral countries, whether State property or private property, should be
surrendered by the Germans.
Sir Eric Geddes, a government minister, speaking to a rally in the general election
campaign, December 1918.
Source Analysis p
1 In what ways are Sources 2 and 3 different?
2 Are there any ways in which they are similar?
8
Pressures on Lloyd George
Background
Born 1841 (he was aged 77 when the
Paris Conference began).
Think!
First entered French politics in 1871. One of the ideas put forward at the Paris Conference was that Germany should
Was Prime Minister of France from lose some of its key industrial areas. How would you expect Lloyd George to react
1906 to 1909. to a proposal like this? You could present your answer as a short speech by Lloyd
From 1914 to 1917 he was very George or in a paragraph of text.
critical of the French war leaders. In
November 1917 he was elected to lead
France through the last year of the
war.
Character Did Clemenceau agree with Wilson?
A hard, tough politician with a reputation In public, Clemenceau of course agreed with Wilson’s aim for a fair and lasting peace. However,
for being uncompromising. He had seen
he found Wilson very hard to work with. While he did not publicly criticise the Fourteen Points,
his country invaded twice by the Germans,
in 1870 and in 1914. He was determined Clemenceau once pointed out that even God had only needed Ten Commandments!
not to allow such devastation ever again. The major disagreement was over Germany. Clemenceau and other French leaders saw the
Treaty as an opportunity to cripple Germany so that it could not attack France again.
Pressures on Clemenceau
France had suffered enormous damage to its land, industry, people – and self-confidence. Over
two-thirds of the men who had served in the French army had been killed or injured. The war
affected almost an entire generation.
By comparison, Germany seemed to many French people as powerful and threatening as
ever. German land and industry had not been as badly damaged as France’s. France’s population
(around 40 million) was in decline compared to Germany’s (around 75 million).
The French people wanted a treaty that would punish Germany and weaken it as much as
possible. The French President (Poincaré) even wanted Germany broken up into a collection of
smaller states, but Clemenceau knew that the British and Americans would not agree to this.
Clemenceau was a realist and knew he would probably be forced to compromise on some
issues. However, he had to show he was aware of public opinion in France.
Think!
Here are some extracts from the demands made by France before the Peace
Conference started:
a) German armed forces to be banned from the bank of the River Rhine (which
bordered France).
b) Germany to pay compensation for damage done by German forces in lands
they occupied during the war.
c) Germany’s armed forces to be severely limited.
Which of these terms do you think made it into the final Treaty? Give each term a
percentage chance and keep a note of your guesses. You will find out if you were
right later in the chapter.
9
How did the peace-making process
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
actually work?
In theory, the major issues like borders and reparations (compensation for war damage) were
discussed in detail by all the delegates at the conference (see Source 4) – over 32 leaders with all
their officials and advisers! As Source 5 shows, it quickly became impossible to consult everyone.
SOURCE
4
An official painting showing the delegates at the Paris Peace Conference at work.
Source Analysis p
SOURCE
5
‘Wilson the Just’ quickly disappointed expectations. Everything about him served
Study Source 4 carefully and then
discuss these questions.
to disillusion those he dealt with. All too soon the President was qualifying the
1 Why was this picture published? Fourteen Points with ‘Four Principles’ and modifying them with ‘Five Particulars’.
2 What impression was it trying to Finding that one principle conflicted with another, he made compromising
give of the conference and the declarations about both. The Big Three abandoned Wilson’s principle of open
delegates? covenants openly arrived at, consulting others only when they needed expert
3 After studying Source 4 and the
advice. They were occasionally to be seen crawling round their maps on the
other information in this section,
do you think the impression is hearth rug. Sometimes they agreed and, according to one British official ‘were so
accurate? Make sure you can pleased with themselves for doing so that they quite forgot to tell anyone what
explain your view. the agreement was’. Sometimes they almost came to blows. Lloyd George made
4 If you were using this image to rapid, quick fire points but they were ineffective against Clemenceau’s granite
introduce a documentary on the obstinacy. Even Wilson’s self-important confidence crashed against the rock of
Treaty of Versailles, what main
points would you make in the
Clemenceau … Clemenceau was delighted when the American President fell ill.
commentary that the viewer would He suggested that Lloyd George should bribe Wilson’s doctor to make the
hear? illness last.
Historian Piers Brendon writing in 2006.
10
It soon became clear it would be impossible to agree terms that everyone would agree about.
Think!
Who said what about whom?
Here are some statements that were made by the Big Three at the Paris Peace Conference. Your task is to decide which leader
made the statement and also who he was talking about. You will need to be able to explain your answer.
Wilson
a) He is too anxious to preserve his empire to want self- g) If he is so anxious to make concessions to the Germans
determination for colonies. then they should look overseas and make naval or colonial
b) His country has been ruling the waves for too long to concessions.
accept the need for freedom of the seas. h) He is stuck in the past. If he gets his way Germany will be
c) He wants to wreck a country which in a few years could left bitter and vengeful and there will be another war in a
be a valuable trading partner and a source of vital jobs. few years.
d) Freedom of the seas is all very well but who or what will i) He is very happy to give concessions to Germany in areas
protect my country’s ships and trade? which do not threaten his country.
e) What does he know about colonies and how they should j) If you carry on annoying me I am going to punch you!
be ruled? He probably doesn’t know where most of them k) There are new, better ways of making a peace agreement.
are! He should accept that all states should disarm
f) How can I work with a man who thinks he is the first l) He must make concessions to the Germans, perhaps over
leader in 2000 years who knows anything about peace? the Rhineland or Alsace–Lorraine.
11
The terms of the Treaty of
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Versailles
None of the Big Three was happy with the eventual terms of the Treaty. After months of negotiation, each
of them had to compromise on some of their aims, otherwise there would never have been a treaty.
The main terms can be divided into five areas.
1 War guilt This clause was simple but was seen by the Germans as extremely harsh. Germany had to accept
the blame for starting the war.
2 Reparations The major powers agreed, without consulting Germany, that Germany had to pay reparations to
the Allies for the damage caused by the war. The exact figure was not agreed until 1921 when it
was set at £6,600 million – an enormous figure. If the terms of the payments had not later been
changed under the Young Plan in 1929 (see page 236), Germany would not have finished paying
this bill until 1984.
3 German territories and a) Germany’s European borders were very extensive, and the section dealing with German
colonies territory in Europe was a complicated part of the Treaty. You can see the detail in Source 6.
In addition to these changes, the Treaty also forbade Germany to join together (Anschluss) with its
former ally Austria.
SOURCE
6
Key
NORWAY
Land taken
away from
Germany
Lithuania, Estonia
and Latvia became
Demilitarised
independent states. ESTONIA
zone
SWEDEN Germany had taken
N these states from
Russia in 1918
LATVIA
Alsace–
Lorraine
To France Union between Austria and
Germany was forbidden
FRANCE
HUNGARY
SWITZERLAND AUSTRIA
Map showing the impact of the Treaty of Versailles on the borders of Europe.
12
1 Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
b) Germany’s overseas empire was taken away. It had been one of the causes of bad
relations between Britain and Germany before the war. Former German colonies such as
Cameroon became mandates controlled by the League of Nations, which effectively meant that
France and Britain controlled them.
4 Germany’s armed forces The size and power of the German army was a major concern, especially for France. The Treaty
therefore restricted German armed forces to a level well below what they had been before the war.
● The army was limited to 100,000 men.
● Conscription was banned – soldiers had to be volunteers.
● Germany was not allowed armoured vehicles, submarines or aircraft.
● The navy could have only six battleships.
● The Rhineland became a demilitarised zone. This meant that no German troops were allowed
into that area. The Rhineland was important because it was the border area between Germany
and France (see Source 6).
5 League of Nations ● Previous methods of keeping peace had failed and so the League of Nations was set up as an
international ‘police force’. (You will study the League in detail in Chapter 2.)
● Germany was not invited to join the League until it had shown that it was a peace-loving
country.
Focus Task A
Why did the victors not get everything they wanted?
1 Work in threes. Look back at the profiles of Clemenceau, Wilson and Lloyd
George on pages 6, 8 and 9. Choose one each. Study the terms of the Treaty
on these two pages. Think about:
♦ which terms of the Treaty would please your chosen leader and why
♦ which terms would displease him and why
♦ how far he seemed to have achieved his aims.
Report your findings to your partners.
2 Look back at the chart you compiled on page 6. There should be a blank fifth
column. Put the heading ‘How they felt about the Treaty’ and fill it in for each
leader with a one-sentence summary.
3 a) Choose one of the following phrases to finish off this sentence:
Revision Tip The victors did not all get what they wanted because . . .
♦ Clemenceau bullied Wilson and Lloyd George into agreeing to a harsh treaty.
The more you know about the Treaty ♦ the leaders’ aims were too different – they could not all have got what
of Versailles, the more it will help they wanted and someone was bound to be disappointed.
you. Make sure you can remember ♦ public opinion in their home countries affected the leaders’ decisions.
one or two key points under each of b) Write a paragraph to explain why you chose that phrase.
these headings: Blame, Reparations, c) Write two more paragraphs to explain whether there is evidence to support
Arms, Territory. the other two.
Focus Task B
Was the Treaty of Versailles fair?
It is important to make up your own mind about this key question and be able to back up your view with evidence and
arguments. So place yourself on this scale and write some sentences to explain your position. This is provisional. You will
return to it again.
The Big Three wasted a golden opportunity to The Big Three were in a no-win
achieve a fair and lasting peace settlement. situation from the start.
13
How did Germans react to the
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Treaty?
The terms of the Treaty were announced on 7 May to a horrified German nation.
● This ‘war guilt’ clause was Germans felt these terms were very
particularly hated. Germans did not unfair. An army of 100,000 was very
feel they had started the war. They small for a country of Germany’s
felt at the very least that blame size and the army was a symbol of
should be shared. German pride.
● They were bitter that Germany was Also, despite Wilson’s Fourteen
expected to pay for all the damage Points calling for disarmament, none
caused by the war even though of the Allies were being asked or
the German economy was severely forced to disarm in the same way.
weakened.
almost half of its iron and steel REACTIONS was given to countries such as
industry. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania,
German-speaking peoples were
This was a major blow to German being hived off into new countries
pride, and to its economy. Both such as Czechoslovakia to be
the Saar and Upper Silesia were ruled by non-Germans. Anschluss
important industrial areas. (union) with Austria was forbidden.
Meanwhile, as Germany was ● Germany felt further insulted by
losing colonies, the British and French not being invited to join the League
were increasing their empires by of Nations.
taking control of German territories
in Africa.
Non-representation
Germans were angry that their
government was not represented at
the peace talks and that they were
being forced to accept a harsh treaty
without any choice or even comment.
Germans did not feel they had lost
the war so they should not have been
treated as a defeated country.
The government that took Germany to war in 1914 was overthrown in a revolution and the new
democratic government in Germany was hoping for fair and equal treatment from the Allies. When
the terms were announced the new German government refused to sign the Treaty and the German
navy sank its own ships in protest. At one point, it looked as though war might break out again. But
what could the German leader Friedrich Ebert do? Germany would quickly be defeated if it tried to
fight. Reluctantly, Ebert agreed to accept the terms of the Treaty and it was signed on 28 June 1919.
14
SOURCE
7 The impact of the Treaty on Germany
time?
It was unfair! None of the Big Three was happy with the Treaty (although for different reasons) and some of the
diplomats who helped shape the Treaty were dissatisfied.
Some commentators at the time believed that the Treaty was unfair and unjust (see Source 9
for example).
SOURCE
9 Italy’s leader
Orlando (Italy).
Cannon fodder –
a reference to the
millions of men
mown down by The Big Three: Lloyd
guns in the First George (Britain);
World War. Clemenceau (France);
Wilson (USA).
The Tiger is
Clemenceau – he is
so blinkered that he
cannot see why the
child is weeping.
The child is the class of
1940 – children like him
will be the ones who
will fight in a future war
because of the Treaty.
SOURCE
10 Source 9 is probably the most famous cartoon produced about the Treaty of Versailles. The artist,
The historian, with every justification, Will Dyson, thought that the peacemakers were blind and selfish and as a result they produced a
will come to the conclusion that we disastrous treaty that would cause another terrible war. It is a powerful cartoon. Because history
were very stupid men . . . We arrived proved it right (the cartoonist even gets the date of the Second World War almost right) this cartoon
determined that a Peace of justice has been reproduced many times ever since, including in millions of school textbooks.
and wisdom should be negotiated; we Another powerful critic of the Treaty was a British economist, John Maynard Keynes. He wrote
left the conference conscious that the a very critical book called The Economic Consequences of The Peace published in 1919. This book
treaties imposed upon our enemies was widely read and accepted and has influenced the way people have looked at the Treaty.
were neither just nor wise. It is easy to think that everyone felt this way about the Treaty – but they did not!
Harold Nicolson, a British official who
attended the talks.
16
At the time German complaints about the Treaty mostly fell on deaf ears. There were celebrations
them to confess their guilt … Some Other states had raised taxes to pay for the war. The Kaiser’s government had not done this. It had
of the conditions, they affirm, are simply allowed debts to mount up because it had planned to pay Germany’s war debts by extracting
designed to deprive the German reparations from the defeated states.
people of its honour … They thought
little of the honour of the nations
SOURCE
12
whose territories they defiled with their
barbarous and inhuman warfare for
more than three awful years.
British newspaper The Times, 24 June
1919.
SOURCE
13
Terms of Treaty Better
Than Germany Deserves
WAR MAKERS MUST BE MADE
TO SUFFER
Germany’s chickens are coming home
to roost, and she is making no end of a
song about it. That was expected, but
it will not help her much … If Germany
had her deserts, indeed, there would
be no Germany left to bear any burden
at all; she would be wiped off the
map of Europe … Stern justice would
demand for Germany a punishment 10
times harder than any she will have to
bear …
The feeling in this country is not that
Germany is being too hardly dealt by,
but that she is being let off too lightly.
From the British newspaper The People,
May 1919.
Source Analysis
1 Study Source 12. On your own
copy, analyse Source 12 the way
we have analysed Source 9 on
page 16.
2 What does Source 13 reveal about
British opinions on the Treaty?
A British cartoon published in 1919.
17
How has the Treaty been seen with
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
hindsight?
Looking back at the Treaty from the present day we know that it helped to create the cruel Nazi
regime in Germany and helped cause the Second World War. We call this hindsight – when you
look back at a historical event and judge it knowing its consequences. You would expect hindsight
to affect historians’ attitudes to the Treaty and it has – but maybe not exactly as you might expect.
Some historians side with critics of the Treaty and its makers. Others point out that the majority
of people outside Germany thought that the Treaty was fair and that a more generous treaty would
have been totally unacceptable to public opinion in Britain and France. They highlight that the
peacemakers had a very difficult job balancing public opinion in their own countries with visions
of a fairer future. Some say that the Treaty may have been the best that could be achieved in the
circumstances.
SOURCE
14
The Treaty of Versailles has been repeatedly pilloried, most famously in John
Maynard Keynes’ pernicious but brilliant The Economic Consequences of
the Peace, published at the end of 1919 and still the argument underpinning
too many current textbooks … The Treaty of Versailles was not excessively
harsh. Germany was not destroyed. Nor was it reduced to a second rank
power or permanently prevented from returning to great power status … With
the disintegration of Austria-Hungary and the collapse of Tsarist Russia it left
Germany in a stronger strategic position than before the war … The Versailles
Treaty was, nonetheless, a flawed treaty. It failed to solve the problem of both
punishing and conciliating a country that remained a great power despite the four
years of fighting and a military defeat. It could hardly have been otherwise, given
the very different aims of the peacemakers, not to speak of the multiplicity of
problems that they faced, many of which lay beyond their competence or control.
Historian Zara Steiner writing in 2004.
SOURCE
15
The peacemakers of 1919 made mistakes, of course. By their offhand treatment
of the non-European world they stirred up resentments for which the West is
still paying today. They took pains over the borders in Europe, even if they did
not draw them to everyone’s satisfaction, but in Africa they carried on the old
practice of handing out territory to suit the imperialist powers. In the Middle East
they threw together peoples, in Iraq most notably, who still have not managed
to cohere into a civil society. If they could have done better, they certainly could
have done much worse. They tried, even cynical old Clemenceau, to build a
Focus Task better order. They could not foresee the future and they certainly could not
Look back at your work in Focus control it. That was up to their successors. When war came in 1939, it was a
Task B on page 13. Have you
result of twenty years of decisions taken or not taken, not of arrangements made
changed your views after reading the
information and sources on these in 1919.
three pages?
Historian Margaret MacMillan writing in Peacemakers, 2001.
18
The other peace settlements
SYRIA
Mediterranean Sea
IRAQ
PALESTINE TRANSJORDAN
0 1000 km
Focus Task
Were the peace treaties fair?
The key question for this topic is ‘Were the peace treaties fair?’ If you compare
the Treaty of Versailles with another treaty it should help you reach a judgement.
1 The table below lists various features of the Treaty of Sevres. Work in pairs or
small groups and discuss the features and fill out the centre columns of this
table to judge whether you think this feature was fair. Use a score of 1–5 where
1 is not at all fair; 5 is very fair.
2 Now think about the Treaty of Versailles. See if you can agree on whether Turkey
was treated in a similar way to Germany. Make a table with three headings:
‘Feature of Sevres’; ‘Fair? (Give reasons)’; and ‘Similar or different to treatment of
Germany? (Give examples)’. Consider the following features of Sevres:
♦ Allies wanted to punish Turkey ♦ Control of Turkey’s finances
♦ Allies wanted to achieve peace and ♦ Loss of territories
stability ♦ Loss of empire
Revision Tip ♦ Allies had differing aims and also ♦ Foreign forces controlling areas of
It will help you answer questions looked after their own interests Turkey
about the period if you can name ♦ Treaty terms were imposed on ♦ Resentment of Turkish people
at least one of the treaties; who it Turkish government ♦ Violent resistance against terms
affected; plus one way it was similar ♦ Strict controls on Turkish military ♦ Renegotiated.
and one way it was different from 3 Now reach your judgement: do you think that the Treaty of Sevres was more or
the Treaty of Versailles. less fair than the Treaty of Versailles? Make sure you can give reasons.
20
1 Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these The peace treaties after the First World War
terms mean and be able to define
them confidently. 1 The Paris Peace Conference was set up to sort out what would happen to the
defeated countries after the First World War.
Essential 2 The Conference was dominated by ‘The Big Three’: Wilson, Clemenceau and
♦ Anschluss Lloyd George representing the USA, France and Britain (the countries that
♦ Big Three won the war).
♦ demilitarised zone 3 The Big Three did not agree on many things. In particular they disagreed on
♦ democracy how to treat Germany, the League of Nations and Wilson’s Fourteen Points.
♦ disarmament 4 There were a number of Treaties – one for each of the defeated countries.
♦ Fourteen Points The Treaty of Versailles was the treaty that dealt with Germany.
♦ hyperinflation 5 The main terms of the Treaty of Versailles were that Germany accepted blame
♦ idealist/realist for starting the war; had to pay reparations; lost land, industry, population
♦ Kapp Putsch and colonies; and was forced to disarm.
♦ League of Nations 6 People in Germany were appalled by the Treaty but Germany had no choice
♦ mandates but to sign it.
♦ Paris Peace Conference 7 Germany had many post-war problems such as attempted revolutions and
♦ reparations hyperinflation, which they blamed on the Treaty. But the Treaty was not the
♦ Rhineland sole reason for these problems.
♦ Ruhr 8 The Treaty also set up a League of Nations whose role was to enforce the
♦ Saar Treaty of Versailles and to help prevent another war.
♦ self-determination 9 Opinion on the Treaty of Versailles varied at the time: some people thought it
♦ Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was too lenient on Germany, others that it was too harsh and would lead to
♦ Treaty of Versailles Germany wanting revenge.
♦ war guilt 10 The other treaties dealt with Germany’s allies and were built on similar
♦ Young Plan principles to the Treaty of Versailles.
Useful
♦ co-operation
♦ conscription
♦ free trade
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
♦ general strike
questions you might face.
♦ hindsight
1 (a) What were the main terms of the Treaty of Versailles? [4]
♦ public opinion
(b) What impact did the Treaty of Versailles have on Germany up to 1923? [6]
♦ right-wing
(c) ‘The Treaty of Versailles was fair on Germany.’ How far do you agree with
♦ secret treaties
this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
♦ territories
2 Study Source 12 on page 17. What is the message of the cartoonist? Explain
your answer by using details of the source and your own knowledge. [7]
3 Study Source 13 on page 17. Does this source prove that the Versailles
settlement was fair to Germany? Explain your answer by using details of the
source and your own knowledge. [7]
21
2
22
2
To what extent was the League of
Nations a success?
FOCUS POINTS
● How successful was the League in the 1920s?
● How far did weaknesses in the League’s organisation make failure inevitable?
● How far did the Depression make the work of the League more difficult?
You saw in Chapter 1 that setting up a League Nations So your key question in this chapter is to judge to
was one of Woodrow Wilson’s key ideas for preventing what extent the League succeeded. This is not a
another war. He saw the League as an organisation that question with a ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ answer. To tackle a ‘to what
would solve international disputes. He hoped that if the extent’ question you need to:
Great Powers had to talk to each other they would no ♦ weigh the League’s successes against its failures
longer need or even want to make secret alliances as ♦ compare the aims of the League with what it actually
they did before the First World War. He thought the achieved
League would protect smaller nations from aggression – ♦ assess whether the failures were the fault of the
if they had concerns then the League would be a place League or other factors and particularly:
where their case would be heard by the world. – how far the League’s organisation weakened it
Without spoiling the story Wilson’s original plan for – how far the League was let down by its own
the League never happened! This chapter will explain members and the other Great Powers
why. However, a scaled-down version of the League was – how far the League’s work was hampered by the
created. How well did it do? worldwide economic Depression that made the
On the one hand people argue that the League achieved 1930s a dark and dangerous time.
a lot. This chapter takes you step by step through those
♦ Its humanitarian agencies helped the sick, the poor questions so you can reach your own view on this key
and the homeless. question: ‘To what extent was the League of Nations
♦ Its financial agencies helped to stabilise several a success?’
economies after the war.
♦ The League handled 66 major international disputes
between the wars and was successful in half of them.
However, the League was unsuccessful in the larger
international disputes involving the major powers. The
League failed to stop the Japanese invasion of Manchuria
in 1931 and Italy’s invasion of Abyssinia in 1935, which
had disastrous consequences for international relations
in Europe.
t This picture was used as the menu card for a League of Nations
banquet in the 1930s. It shows Briand (one of the most influential
figures in the League) as Moses leading the statesmen of the world
towards the ‘Promised Land’. The sunrise is labelled ‘The United States of
Europe’. Discuss:
1 What impression does this picture give you of the League?
2 Does this picture surprise you? Why or why not?
23
2.1 How successful was the League in the 1920s?
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
24
SOURCE
4
SOURCE
5A SOURCE
5b
25
A body blow to the League
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Think!
Study Source 6. Write a ten-word
slogan summarising each reason for Back in the USA, however, Woodrow Wilson had problems. Before the USA could even join the
opposing the USA’s membership of League, let alone take a leading role, he needed the approval of his Congress (the American
the League. ‘Parliament’). And in the USA the idea of a League was not at all popular, as you can see from
Source 6.
SOURCE
6
The league was supposed If the League imposed
to enforce the Treaty sanctions (e.g. stopping
of Versailles yet some trade with a country
Americans, particularly the that was behaving
millions who had German aggressively) it might
ancestors, hated the Treaty be American trade and
itself. business that suffered
most!
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
7
1 What is the message of the
cartoon in Source 7?
2 Explain how the bridge in the
cartoon might have been seen by
a) supporters
b) opponents of the League.
An American cartoon reprinted in the British newspaper the Star, June 1919.
Together, the critics of Wilson’s plans (see Source 6) put up powerful opposition to the League.
They were joined by Wilson’s many other political opponents. Wilson’s Democratic Party had run
the USA for eight troubled years. Its opponents saw the League as an ideal opportunity to defeat
26
him. Wilson toured the USA to put his arguments to the people, but when Congress voted in 1919 he
A British cartoon from 1920. The figure in the white top hat represents the USA.
Still the Democrats did not give up. They were convinced that if the USA did not get involved in
Source Analysis p international affairs, another world war might follow. In the 1920 election Wilson could not run for
Source 8 is one of the most famous President – he was too ill – but his successor made membership of the League a major part of the
cartoons about the League of Democrat campaign. The Republican candidate, Warren Harding, on the other hand, campaigned
Nations. On your own copy of the for America to be isolationist (i.e. not to get involved in international alliance but follow its own
cartoon add annotations to explain
policies and self-interest). His slogan was to ‘return to normalcy’, by which he meant life as it
the key features. Then write your
own summary of the message of the was before the war, with the USA isolating itself from European affairs. The Republicans won a
cartoonist. landslide victory.
So when the League opened for business in January 1920 the American chair was empty. The
USA never joined. This was a personal rebuff for Wilson and the Democrats, but it was also a body
blow to the League.
27
The aims of the League
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Factfile
The League of Nations
The League’s home was in Geneva in A Covenant set out the aims of the League of Nations. These were:
Switzerland. ● to discourage aggression from any nation
Despite it being the brainchild of the ● to encourage countries to co-operate, especially in business and trade
US President, the USA was never a
● to encourage nations to disarm
member of the League.
The most influential part of the ● to improve the living and working conditions of people in all parts of the world.
League was the Council – a small
group representing the most
powerful members. But it was a vast Article 10
organisation with lots of different
The Covenant set out 26 Articles or rules, which all members of the League agreed to follow.
parts to fulfil different functions (see
chart on pages 30–31). Probably the most important Article was Article 10. ‘The members of the League undertake to
The League did not have its own army. preserve against external aggression the territory and existing independence of all members of
But it could call on the armies of its the League. In case of threat of danger the Council [of the League] shall advise upon the means
members if necessary.
by which this obligation shall be fulfilled.’ Article 10 really meant collective security. By acting
One of the jobs of the League was
to uphold and enforce the Treaty of together (collectively), the members of the League could prevent war by defending the lands and
Versailles.This included running some interests of all nations, large or small.
of the territories (mandates) that had
belonged to the defeated countries.
Forty-two countries joined the League
SOURCE
9
at the start. By the 1930s it had 59
members. One woman stands astride two
silent guns holding her baby
– a symbol of hope for the
future.
The five giants represent the five
continents of the Earth. The giants
are standing firm together.
Wall paintings by the famous Spanish artist José Maria Sert that decorate the Assembly Chamber in the League’s
Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. They were designed to show the aims and values of the League.
28
Membership of the League
Britain 1919
1945
Membership of the League of Nations. This chart shows only the most powerful
nations. More than 50 other countries were also members.
29
Organisation of the League
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Think!
1 Study the diagram. Which part of The Covenant laid out the League’s structure and the rules for each of the bodies within it – see the
the League would deal with the diagram below.
following problems:
a) an outbreak of a new
infectious disease
b) a border dispute between two
countries
c) accidents caused by dangerous
machinery in factories
d) complaints from people in
Palestine that the British were
not running the mandated
territory properly?
The Council
● The Council was a smaller group than the Assembly, which met more
often, usually about five times a year or more often in case of
emergency. It included:
● permanent members. In 1920 these were Britain, France, Italy and
The Assembly Japan.
● The Assembly was the League’s ● temporary members. They were elected by the Assembly for
Parliament. Every country in the League three-year periods. The number of temporary members varied
sent a representative to the Assembly. between four and nine at different times in the League’s history.
● The Assembly could recommend action to ● Each of the permanent members of the Council had a veto. This
the Council and could vote on: meant that one permanent member could stop the Council acting
● admitting new members to the League even if all other members agreed.
● appointing temporary members of the ● The main idea behind the Council was that if any disputes arose
Council between members, the members brought the problem to the Council
● the budget of the League and it was sorted out through discussion before matters got out of
● other ideas put forward by the Council. hand. However, if this did not work, the Council could use a range of
● The Assembly only met once a year. powers:
● Decisions made by the Assembly had to ● Moral condemnation: they could decide which country was ‘the
be unanimous – they had to be agreed by aggressor’, i.e. which country was to blame for the trouble. They
all members of the Assembly. could condemn the aggressor’s action and tell it to stop what it
was doing.
● Economic and financial sanctions: members of the League could
refuse to trade with the aggressor.
● Military force: the armed forces of member countries could be
used against an aggressor.
30
2 To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
Focus Task
Were there weaknesses in the
League’s organisation?
Here is a conversation which might
have taken place between two
diplomats in 1920.
31
The League and border disputes in
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Think!
Five of the problems shown in
Source 12 are described on pages the 1920s
33–4. They are highlighted in bold
text on the map on this page. As The treaties signed at the Paris Peace Conference had created new states and changed theborders
you read about each one, score the of others. Inevitably this led to disputes and was the job of the League to sort out border disputes.
League’s success on a scale of –5 (a
From the start there was so much to do that some disputes were handled by the Conference of
total failure) to +5 (a great success).
Ambassadors. Strictly this was not a body of the League of Nations. But it was made up of leading
politicians from the main members of the League – Britain, France and Italy – so it was very
closely linked to the League. As you can see from Source 12 the 1920s was a busy time.
SOURCE
12
N Aaland Islands dispute. FINLAND
Finland & Sweden, 1921 Prisoners of war
Aaland repatriated from
Is. Siberia, 1920–22
NORWAY
BULGARIA
A
TUG
SPAIN PERSIA
POR
ALBANIA
Mandate)
S IRAQ
TUNISIA e
Refugee problem or a (British
Mandate)
protection of Prevention of war
ethnic minorities between Greece &
PALESTINE
Bulgaria, 1925 (British Mandate)
Financial crisis ALGERIA
0 400 km
Other EGYPT
Scale
Problems dealt with by the League of Nations or the Conference of Ambassadors in the 1920s.
The problems in bold text are described on pages 33–4.
This map actually shows only a few of the disputes which involved the plebiscite (vote) and divided the region between Germany and
League in this period. We have highlighted some of the more important Poland. Both countries accepted the decision.
ones. For example: ● Also in 1921, the League ruled on a dispute between Finland and
● In 1920 Poland effectively took control of the Lithuanian capital Sweden over the Aaland Islands. Both sides were threatening to go
Vilna. Lithuania appealed to the League and the League protested to to war but in the end Sweden accepted the League’s ruling that the
Poland but the Poles did not pull out. France and Britain were not islands should belong to Finland.
prepared to act. We are now going to look at two other disputes in more detail.
● In 1921 a dispute broke out between Germany and Poland over the
Upper Silesia region. In the end, the League oversaw a peaceful
32
SOURCE
13 Corfu, 1923
33
SOURCE
15 Bulgaria, 1925
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Make only slight resistance. Protect Two years after Corfu, the League was tested yet again. In October 1925, Greek troops invaded
the refugees. Prevent the spread of Bulgaria after an incident on the border in which some Greek soldiers were killed. Bulgaria
panic. Do not expose the troops to appealed for help. It also sent instructions to its army (see Source 15).
unnecessary losses in view of the fact The secretary-general of the League acted quickly and decisively, calling a meeting of the
that the incident has been laid before League Council in Paris. The League demanded both sides stand their forces down and Greek
the Council of the League of Nations, forces withdraw from Bulgaria. Britain and France solidly backed the League’s judgement (and
which is expected to stop the invasion. it is worth remembering they were negotiating the Locarno Treaties at the same time – see the
Factfile on page 36). The League sent observers to assess the situation and judged in favour of the
A telegram from the Bulgarian Ministry Bulgarians. Greece had to pay £45,000 in compensation and was threatened with sanctions if it did
of War in Sofia to its army commanders,
22 October 1925. not follow the ruling.
The Greeks obeyed, although they did complain that there seemed to be one rule for the
large states (such as Italy) and another for the smaller ones (such as themselves). Nevertheless
Source Analysis the incident was seen as a major success for the League and many observers seemed to forget the
1 Read Source 15. Why do you think shame of the Corfu incident as optimism about the effectiveness of the League soared. Few pointed
Bulgaria was so optimistic about out that it was not so much the effectiveness of the machinery of League in this dispute but the fact
the League? that the great powers were united on their decision.
2 Look at Source 16. What
impression of the League does this
cartoon give you?
SOURCE
16
Focus Task
Did the weaknesses in the
League’s organisation make
failure inevitable?
Can you find evidence to support
or challenge each of the following
criticisms of the League’s
organisation:
♦ that it would be slow to act
♦ that members would act in their
own interests, not the League’s
♦ that without the USA it would be
powerless?
Use a table like this to record your
answers:
A cartoon about the Bulgarian crisis in Punch, 11 November 1925. The characters
are based on Tweedledee and Tweedledum, from the children’s book
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, who were always squabbling.
34
SOURCE
17 How did the League of Nations
Think! collecting statistical information and spreading good practice it sponsored research into
1 Study Sources 17A and 17B. What infectious diseases with institutes in Singapore, London and Denmark. These institutes were
aspects of the League’s work do important in helping to develop vaccines and other medicines to fight deadly diseases such
you think they show? as leprosy and malaria. It started the global campaign to exterminate mosquitoes, which
2 Why do you think the founders greatly reduced cases of malaria and yellow fever in later decades. Even the USSR, which
of the League wanted it to tackle was otherwise opposed to the League, took Health Committee advice on preventing plague
social problems?
in Siberia. The Health Committee is generally regarded as one of the most successful of the
3 The work of the League’s
commissions affected hundreds of League’s organisations and its work was continued by the United Nations Organisation after
millions of people, yet historians 1945 in the form of the World Health Organisation.
write very little about this side of ● Transport The League made recommendations on marking shipping lanes and produced
its work. Why do you think this is? an international highway code for road users.
● Social problems The League blacklisted four large German, Dutch, French and Swiss
companies which were involved in the illegal drug trade. It brought about the freeing of
200,000 slaves in British-owned Sierra Leone. It organised raids against slave owners and
Revision Tip traders in Burma. It challenged the use of forced labour to build the Tanganyika railway in
Border disputes Africa, where the death rate among the African workers was a staggering 50 per cent. League
Make sure you can: pressure brought this down to four per cent, which it said was ‘a much more acceptable figure’.
♦ describe one success in the 1920s
and explain why it was a success
♦ describe one failure in the 1920s Even in the areas where it could not remove social injustice the League kept careful records of what
and explain why it was a failure was going on and provided information on problems such as drug trafficking, prostitution and
and as a bonus: slavery.
♦ describe and explain one partial
success or failure.
The commissions
Make sure you can remember two
specific examples of work done
by the League’s commissions or
committees. Choose the ones that
you think affected the most people.
35
Disarmament
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Factfile
International agreements of
the 1920s In the 1920s, the League largely failed in bringing about disarmament. At the Washington
1921 Washington Conference: Conference in 1921 the USA, Japan, Britain and France agreed to limit the size of their navies, but
USA, Britain, France and Japan agreed that was as far as disarmament ever got.
to limit the size of their navies. The failure of disarmament was particularly damaging to the League’s reputation in Germany.
1922 Rapallo Treaty: The USSR and
Germany re-established diplomatic
Germany had disarmed. It had been forced to. But no other countries had disarmed to the same
relations. extent. They were not prepared to give up their own armies and they were certainly not prepared to
1924 The Dawes Plan: to avert a be the first to disarm.
terrible economic crisis in Germany, Even so, in the late 1920s, the League’s failure over disarmament did not seem too serious
the USA lent money to Germany to
help it to pay its reparations bill (see
because of a series of international agreements that seemed to promise a more peaceful world (see
this page). Factfile).
1925 Locarno treaties: Germany
accepted its western borders as set
out in the Treaty of Versailles. This
SOURCE
18
was greeted with great enthusiasm,
especially in France. It paved the way
for Germany to join the League of
Nations.
1928 Kellogg–Briand Pact: 65
nations agreed not to use force to
settle disputes. This is also known as
the Pact of Paris.
1929 Young Plan: reduced
Germany’s reparations payments.
Source Analysis u
1 What is Source 18 commenting
on?
2 Is the cartoonist praising or
criticising someone or something
in Source 18? Explain your answer.
SOURCE
19
There was a tendency for nations
to conduct much of their diplomacy
outside the League of Nations and to A Punch cartoon from 1925. The woman on the billboard represents Germany.
put their trust in paper treaties. After
the USA assisted Europe financially
there seemed to be more goodwill Economic recovery
which statesmen tried to capture in
pacts and treaties. Many of them, Another reason for optimism in 1928 was that, after the difficult days of the early 1920s, the
however, were of little value. They economies of the European countries were once again recovering. The Dawes Plan of 1924
represented no more than the hopes of had helped to sort out Germany’s economic chaos and had also helped to get the economies of
decent men. Britain and France moving again (see Source 20). The recovery of trading relationships between
these countries helped to reduce tension. That is why one of the aims of the League had been to
Written by historian encourage trading links between the countries. When countries were trading with one another, they
Jack Watson in 1984. were much less likely to go to war with each other.
36
SOURCE
20
Sales
How the Dawes Plan helped economic recovery in Europe.
Focus task
How successful was the League in the 1920s?
It is now time to draw some conclusions to this key question.
Stage 1: Recap your work so far
1 Look back at your table from page 34. What evidence have you found of success or failure in each objective?
2 Look back to your predictions for the League for the 1920s (page 25). Has the League performed better or worse than you
predicted? Redraw your prediction to show the balance of success and failure in the 1920s.
37
2.2 How successful was the League of Nations?
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Historians do not agree about how successful the League of Nations was in the 1920s. However, in
contrast, they almost all agree that in the 1930s the League of Nations was a failure. In the second
part of this chapter you are going to investigate the factors and
events that led to the failure of the League of Nations in the 1930s.
This diagram sums up the three main challenges the League faced
in the 1930s and how the League dealt with them.
Manchurian crisis 1931–33
Problem: Japan invaded Manchuria (in north-east China)
Response: After a long delay, no action was taken
Effect: Made the League seem weak and ineffective
DE
FI
N
DE
NC E Abyssinian crisis 1935–36
IN THE Problem: Italy invaded Abyssinia
L Response: League members could not
agree effective sanctions
EA
In the late 1920s there had been a boom in world trade. The USA was the richest nation in the
100
UK
world. American business was the engine driving the world economy. Everyone traded with the
Germany USA. Most countries also borrowed money from American banks. As a result of this trade, most
France countries were getting richer. You saw on page 37 how this economic recovery helped to reduce
Italy
international tension. However, one of the League’s leading figures predicted that political disaster
50
USA might follow if countries did not co-operate economically. He turned out to be right.
In 1929 economic disaster did strike. In the USA the Wall Street Crash started a long
depression that quickly caused economic problems throughout the world (see page 41). It damaged
0 the trade and industry of all countries (see Source 1). It affected relations between countries and
it also led to important political changes within countries (see diagram on page 39). Much of the
28
30
31
29
32
33
34
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
38
In the 1930s, as a result of the Depression much of the goodwill and the optimism of the late
Germany
The Depression hit Germany badly.
There was unemployment, poverty and
chaos. Germany’s weak leaders seemed
He’ll make
unable to do anything. As a result, Germany
Japan Germans elected Adolf Hitler to lead
The Depression threatened to great again.
them. He was not good news for
bankrupt Japan. Its main export was international peace. He openly
silk to the USA, gut the USA was planned to invade Germany’s
buying less silk. So Japan had less neighbours and to win back land that
money to buy food and raw materials. Germany had lost in the Great War.
Its leaders were all
army general. They
decided to build an
empire by taking over Italy
weaker countries In Italy economic problems encouraged
that had the raw Mussolini to try and build an overseas
materials Japan Plans for empire to distract people’s attention from
needed. They Japanese the difficulties the government faced.
started by invading empire
Machuria (part of
China) in 1931.
Focus task
How did the Depression make the work of the League harder?
Study these statements: f) ‘We need tough leaders who will not be pushed around
a) ‘I have not worked since last year.’ by the League of Nations or the USA.’
b) ‘I will support anyone who can get the country back to g) ‘We should ban all foreign goods. That will protect the
work.’ jobs of our workers.’
c) ‘If we had our own empire we would have the resources 1 suggest which country (or countries) they could have
we need. Economic depressions would not damage us so been made in during the Depression – USA, Britain,
much.’ France, Germany, Japan or Italy
d) ‘Reparations have caused this mess.’ 2 suggest why these views would worry the League of
e) ‘The bank has closed. We’ve lost everything!’ Nations.
39
How did the Manchurian crisis
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Revision Tip
Make sure you can explain:
♦ what the League decided should weaken the League?
happen in Manchuria
♦ why it was unable to force Japan The first major test for the League came when the Japanese invaded Manchuria in 1931.
to obey.
SOURCE
2
MONGOLIA
USSR N
Chine s e
Eas te
r nR MANCHURIA–
ail
The South Manchurian Railway. wa MANCHUKUO
This railway through Manchuria y
was built by the Japanese and Most of Japan is covered by
controlled by the Japanese army. high mountains.There is little
It carried Japanese goods into Changchun farm land to grow food. In the
Manchuria and the rest of China Vladivostok
1920s Japan depended on
and brought food and raw JEHOL importing food from China for
materials such as iron, coal and PROVINCE
its growing population.
timber back to Japan.
Mukden
Japan did not have raw materials
Antung such as iron ore and coal. These
Peking were imported from China.
AN
Sea of P Tokyo
CHINA Japan JA
KOREA
Kwantung–
formerly the Liaotung
Peninsula and leased
Key by Japan from China.
1931–32 invasion
1933 invasion 0 400 km
1932 sea attack
Scale
Japanese Empire in 1931 Shanghai
Background
Since 1900 Japan’s economy and population had been growing rapidly. By the 1920s Japan was
a major power with a powerful military, strong industries and a growing empire (see Source 2).
But the Depression hit Japan badly as China and the USA put up tariffs (trade barriers) against
Japanese goods. Army leaders in Japan were in no doubt about the solution to Japan’s problems
– Japan would not face these problems if it had an empire to provide resources and markets for
Japanese goods.
Invasion 1, 1931
In 1931 an incident in Manchuria gave them an ideal opportunity. The Japanese army controlled
the South Manchurian Railway (see Source 2). When Chinese troops allegedly attacked the railway
the Japanese armed forces used this as an excuse to invade and set up a government in Manchuoko
(Manchuria), which they controlled. Japan’s civilian government protested but the military were
now in charge.
China appeals
China appealed to the League. The Japanese argued that China was in such a state of anarchy that
they had to invade in self-defence to keep peace in the area. For the League of Nations this was a
serious test. Japan was a leading member of the League. It needed careful handling. What should
the League do?
40
SOURCE
3 The League investigates
Consequences
All sorts of excuses were offered for the failure of the League. Japan was so far away. Japan was a
special case. Japan did have a point when it said that China was itself in the grip of anarchy. However,
the significance of the Manchurian crisis was obvious. As many of its critics had predicted, the League
was powerless if a strong nation decided to pursue an aggressive policy and invade its neighbours.
Japan had committed blatant aggression and got away with it. Back in Europe, both Hitler and
Mussolini looked on with interest. Within three years they would both follow Japan’s example.
Source Analysis
SOURCE
4
1 Source 4 is a comment on this
Manchurian crisis. On your
own copy of this cartoon add
annotations to explain:
a) the key features
b) the message
c) what the cartoonist thinks of
the League.
2 Read Source 3. Does Beneš share
the same view of the League as the
cartoonist in Source 4?
Think!
1 Why did it take so long for the
League to make a decision over
Manchuria?
2 Did the League fail in this incident
because of the way it worked
or because of the attitude of its A cartoon by David Low, 1933. Low was one of the most famous cartoonists of the
members? 1930s. He regularly criticised both the actions of dictators around the world and the
ineffectiveness of the League of Nations.
41
SOURCE
5 Why did disarmament fail
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Disarmament Conference
In the wake of the Manchurian crisis, the members of the League realised the urgency of the
problem. In February 1932 the long-promised Disarmament Conference finally got under way. By
July 1932 it had produced resolutions to prohibit bombing of civilian populations, limit the size of
artillery, limit the tonnage of tanks, and prohibit chemical warfare. But there was very little in the
resolutions to show how these limits would be achieved. For example, the bombing of civilians was
to be prohibited, but all attempts to agree to abolish planes capable of bombing were defeated. Even
the proposal to ban the manufacture of chemical weapons was defeated.
German disarmament
It was not a promising start. However, there was a bigger problem facing the Conference – what to
Source Analysis q do about Germany. The Germans had been in the League for six years. Most people now accepted
1 What is the message of Source 6? that they should be treated more equally than under the Treaty of Versailles. The big question was
2 Why might this cartoon have whether everyone else should disarm to the level that Germany had been forced to, or whether the
been published in Germany in July Germans should be allowed to rearm to a level closer to that of the other powers. The experience
1933? of the 1920s showed that the first option was a non-starter. But there was great reluctance in the
League to allow the second option.
This is how events relating to Germany moved over the next 18 months.
SOURCE
6 July 1932: Germany tabled proposals for all countries to disarm down to its level. When
the Conference failed to agree the principle of ‘equality’, the Germans walked out.
September 1932: The British sent the Germans a note that went some way to agreeing
equality, but the superior tone of the note angered the Germans still further.
December 1932: An agreement was finally reached to treat Germany equally.
January 1933: Germany announced it was coming back to the Conference.
February 1933: Hitler became Chancellor of Germany at the end of January. He
immediately started to rearm Germany, although secretly.
May 1933: Hitler promised not to rearm Germany if ‘in five years all other nations
destroyed their arms’.
June 1933: Britain produced an ambitious disarmament plan, but it failed to achieve
support at the Conference.
October 1933: Hitler withdrew from the Disarmament Conference, and soon after took
Germany out of the League altogether.
42
By this stage, all the powers knew that Hitler was secretly rearming Germany already. They also
SOURCE
7
David Low’s cartoon commenting on the failure of the Disarmament Conference in 1934.
43
How did Mussolini’s invasion of
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
FRENCH EMPIRE
IN AFRICA ERITREA
Background
SUDAN The origins of this crisis lay back in the previous century. In 1896
Addis BRITISH Italian troops had tried to invade Abyssinia but had been defeated by a
Ababa SOMALILAND
Wal-Wal
poorly equipped army of tribesmen. Mussolini wanted revenge for this
Key ABYSSINIA humiliating defeat. He also had his eye on the fertile lands and mineral
Italian advance wealth of Abyssinia. However, most importantly, he wanted glory and
UGANDA
KENYA
ITALIAN
SOMALILAND
conquest. His style of leadership needed military victories and he had
Italian territory
often talked of restoring the glory of the Roman Empire.
French territory In December 1934 there was a dispute between Italian and
TANGANYIKA
0 500 km Abyssinian soldiers at the Wal-Wal oasis – 80 km inside Abyssinia.
British territory or
strong British influence Scale Mussolini took this as his cue and claimed this was actually Italian
territory. He demanded an apology and began preparing the Italian
British, French and Italian possessions in eastern Africa. army for an invasion of Abyssinia. The Abyssinian emperor Haile Selassie
appealed to the League for help.
44
Phase 2: sanctions or not?
Source Analysis u
1 Study Source 9. At what point in
the crisis do you think this might
have been published? Use the
details in the source and the text
to help you decide.
2 Here are three possible reasons
why this cartoon was drawn:
♦ To tell people in Britain what
British and French policy was
♦ To criticise British and French
policy
♦ To change British and French
policy.
Which do you think is the best A cartoon from Punch, 1935, commenting on the Abyssinian crisis. Punch was
usually very patriotic towards Britain. It seldom criticised British politicians over
explanation?
foreign policy.
45
The Hoare–Laval Pact
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Think! Equally damaging to the League was the secret dealing between the British and the French that was
1 How did:
a) the USA going on behind the scenes. In December 1935, while sanctions discussions were still taking place,
b) Britain the British and French Foreign Ministers, Hoare and Laval, were hatching a plan. This aimed to
undermine the League’s attempts give Mussolini two-thirds of Abyssinia in return for his calling off his invasion! Laval even proposed
to impose sanctions on Italy? to put the plan to Mussolini before they showed it to either the League of Nations or Haile Selassie.
2 Explain in your own words: Laval told the British that if they did not agree to the plan, then the French would no longer support
a) why the Hoare–Laval deal sanctions against Italy.
caused such outrage
However, details of the plan were leaked to the French press. It proved quite disastrous for the
b) how it affected attitudes to
the League League. Haile Selassie demanded an immediate League debate about it. In both Britain and France
c) how the USA undermined the it was seen as a blatant act of treachery against the League. Hoare and Laval were both sacked. But
League. the real damage was to the sanctions discussions. They lost all momentum. The question about
3 Look at Source 10. What event whether to ban oil sales was further delayed. In February 1936 the committee concluded that if
is the cartoonist referring to in they did stop oil sales to Italy, the Italians’ supplies would be exhausted in two months, even if the
‘the matter has been settled
Americans kept on selling oil to them. But by then it was all too late. Mussolini had already taken
elsewhere’?
over large parts of Abyssinia. And the Americans were even more disgusted with the ditherings
of the French and the British than they had been before and so blocked a move to support the
League’s sanctions. American oil producers actually stepped up their exports to Italy.
The outcomes
On 7 March 1936 the fatal blow was delivered. Hitler, timing his move to perfection, marched
his troops into the Rhineland, an act prohibited by the Treaty of Versailles (see page 12). If there
had been any hope of getting the French to support sanctions against Italy, it was now dead.
The French were desperate to gain the support of Italy and were now
SOURCE
10 prepared to pay the price of giving Abyssinia to Mussolini.
Italy continued to defy the League’s orders and by May 1936 had
taken the capital of Abyssinia, Addis Ababa. On 2 May, Haile Selassie
was forced into exile. On 9 May, Mussolini formally annexed the entire
country.
46
SOURCE
12 A disaster for the League and
SOURCE
14
After seeing what happened first in Manchuria and then in
Abyssinia, most people drew the conclusion that it was no
longer much use placing their hopes in the League . . .
Written by historian James Joll in 1976.
A cartoon from Punch, 1938. The doctors represent Britain
and France. SOURCE
15
The real death of the League was in 1935. One day it was
Think! a powerful body imposing sanctions, the next day it was
Write a caption for the cartoon in Source 12, showing an empty sham, everyone scuttling from it as quickly as
people’s feelings about the League after the Abyssinian crisis. possible. Hitler watched.
The real caption is on page 323.
Written by historian AJP Taylor in 1966.
Focus Task
SOURCE
16
Yes, we know that World War began in Manchuria fifteen
How far did weaknesses in the League’s
years ago. We know that four years later we could easily
organisation make failure inevitable?
have stopped Mussolini if we had taken the sanctions
1 When the League was set up its critics said there were
weaknesses in its organisation that would make it
against Mussolini that were obviously required, if we had
ineffective. On page 34 you drew up a table to analyse the closed the Suez Canal to the aggressor and stopped his oil.
effect of these weaknesses in the 1920s. Now do a similar
analysis for the 1930s. British statesman Philip Noel Baker speaking at the very last
session of the League in April 1946.
What evidence is there in the Manchurian crisis, the
disarmament talks and the Abyssinian crisis of the
following criticisms of the League:
♦ that it would be slow to act
♦ that members would act in their own interests
♦ that without the USA it would be powerless?
2 ‘The way the League was set up meant it was bound
to fail.’ Explain how far you agree with this statement.
Support your answer with evidence from the tables
you have compiled for this Focus Task and the one on
page 34.
47
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Focus task A
Why did the League of Nations fail in the 1930s?
Here is a diagram summarising reasons for the failure of the League of Nations in the 1930s. Complete your own copy of
the diagram to explain how each weakness affected the League’s actions in Manchuria and Abyssinia. We have filled in some
points for you. There is one weakness that you will not be able to write about – you will find out about it in Chapter 3.
In Manchuria In Manchuria,
In Abyssinia, they … this was a problem
they … because …
In Abyssinia,
the USA …
French and British
self-interest – they looked after
their own interests rather than Absent powers – key
the League’s. countries, particularly the USA,
Failure of were not in the League.
F the League
A
In Manchuria economic
problems led to Japan … In Abyssinia, …
E
Economic depression led I
to the rise of the dictators – and
made League members less willing to Ineffective sanctions –
impose sanctions for fear of harming sanctions either weren’t used
their own trade. or didn’t work.
L
R
Lack of armed forces
Reaching decisions – the League had no troops
too slowly – the League
took ages to act.
U of its own.
Revision Tip
The memory aid FAILURE should help
you remember these key points for
an exam. Focus Task B
To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
The last few pages have been all about failure. But remember there were
successes too. Look back over the whole chapter.
1 The League and its aims: give the League a score out of 5 on how far it
achieved its aims. Make sure you can support your score with examples.
2 Other factors which led to success: give these a score out of 5 to show their
importance – remember the examples.
3 Other factors which led to failure: Repeat step 2.
4 Weigh successes against failures: how does the League score out of 100?
5 Write a short paragraph explaining your mark out of 100.
48
2 To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these The League of Nations
terms mean and are able to define
them confidently. 1 The League of Nations was set up to solve problems between countries
before they led to war.
Essential 2 Its methods were mainly diplomacy (talking), trade sanctions, or if necessary
♦ Abyssinian crisis using the armies of their members.
♦ Disarmament 3 It was the big idea of President Wilson but his own country the USA never
♦ Economic depression joined but returned to its isolationist policy.
♦ Isolationism 4 The leading members were Britain and France but they had their own
♦ Manchurian crisis interests and bypassed the League when it suited them.
♦ Trade sanctions 5 The League’s structure made it slow to take decisions, which made it less
♦ Wall Street Crash effective in settling international disputes, but it did have some successes in
♦ Article 10 the 1920s.
♦ Assembly 6 The League’s agencies (committees and commissions) were set up to solve
♦ Collective security social problems such as post-war refugee crises, health problems and slavery/
♦ Commissions forced labour. It had many successes throughout the 1920s and 1930s.
♦ Conference of Ambassadors 7 The League was supposed to encourage disarmament but failed to get any
♦ Council countries to disarm.
♦ Covenant 8 In the 1930s the League’s work was made much harder by the economic
♦ Military force depression, which made countries less willing to co-operate and helped turn
♦ Moral condemnation previously democratic countries such as Germany into dictatorships.
♦ Secretariat 9 In 1931–32 the League condemned the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and
♦ Unanimous China but was helpless to do anything to stop it.
Useful 10 In 1936–37 the League tried to prevent Italy invading Abyssinia but it could
not agree what to do and never even enforced trade sanctions.
♦ Normalcy 11 From 1936 the League was seen as irrelevant to international affairs
♦ Tariffs although its agencies continued its humanitarian work.
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1 (a) Describe the main powers available to the League to sort out international
disputes. [4]
(b) Explain why the League of Nations did not impose sanctions against Italy
during the Abyssinian crisis. [6]
(c) ‘The League of Nations had failed before the Abyssinian crisis even started.’
How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
2 Study Source 17 on page 35. How useful are these two photographs for
finding out about the League of Nations? Explain your answer by using details
of the source and your own knowledge. [7]
49
3
50
3
Why had international peace
collapsed by 1939?
FOCUS POINTS
● What were the long-term consequences of the peace treaties of 1919–23?
● What were the consequences of the failures of the League in the 1930s?
● How far was Hitler’s foreign policy to blame for the outbreak of war in 1939?
● Was the policy of appeasement justified?
● How important was the Nazi–Soviet Pact?
● Why did Britain and France declare war on Germany in September 1939?
The image on the opposite page represents the most Here are some of the factors you will consider. They
famous moment of Appeasement – the policy followed are all relevant and they are all connected.Your task will
by Britain and France towards Hitler through the be to examine each one, then see the connections and
1930s. The British Prime Minister has returned from a weigh the importance of these different factors.
meeting with Hitler having agreed to give him parts of
Czechoslovakia, in return for which Hitler promised 1. Treaties after 2. The failures 3. The worldwide
peace. the First World War of the League of economic
particularly the Nations depression
If you know the story already then you will know that Treaty of Versailles
this agreement proved totally empty – ‘not worth the
paper it was written on’ as they say! Hitler did not keep
his word, and probably never meant to.
But just forget hindsight for a moment and try to join
with the people of Britain welcoming back a leader who
seemed to be doing his best to preserve a crumbling 4. The policy of 5. The Nazi-Soviet 6. Hitler’s actions
peace. Appeasement pact and particularly his
foreign policy
You can see from the newspaper there is a genuine
desire to believe in the possibility of peace. Chamberlain
had not given up on the possibility of peace; nor had
the British people. They did not think that war was
inevitable – even in 1938. They did all they could to
avoid it.
In this chapter your task is to work out why, despite all
the efforts of international leaders, and all the horrors
of war, international peace finally collapsed in 1939.
t Opposite is the front page of the Daily Sketch, 1 October 1938. Read it
carefully and select one or two phrases which suggest or prove that:
♦ the British people thought Chamberlain was a hero
♦ the newspaper approves of Chamberlain
♦ people in Britain genuinely feared a war was imminent in 1938
♦ Hitler was respected
♦ Hitler could be trusted
♦ this agreement would bring lasting peace.
51
Hitler's war
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Between 1918 and 1933 Adolf Hitler rose from being an obscure and demoralised member of
the defeated German army to become the all-powerful Führer, dictator of Germany, with almost
unlimited power and an overwhelming ambition to make Germany great once again. His is an
astonishing story which you can read about in detail in Chapter 9. Here you will be concentrating
on just one intriguing and controversial question: how far was Hitler responsible for the outbreak of
the Second World War.
Hitler’s plans
Hitler was never secretive about his plans for Germany. As early as 1924 he had laid out in his book
SOURCE
1 Mein Kampf what he would do if the Nazis ever achieved power in Germany.
We demand equality of rights for the
German people in its dealings with
other nations, and abolition of the
Abolish the Treaty of Versailles!
Peace Treaties of Versailles and St Like many Germans, Hitler believed that the Treaty of Versailles was unjust.
Germain. He hated the Treaty and called the German leaders who had signed it ‘The November Criminals’.
The Treaty was a constant reminder to Germans of their defeat in the First World War and their
From Hitler’s Mein Kampf, 1923–24. humiliation by the Allies. Hitler promised that if he became leader of Germany he would reverse it
(see Source 1).
By the time he came to power in Germany, some of the terms had already been changed. For
SOURCE
2 example, Germany had stopped making reparations payments altogether. However, most points
We turn our eyes towards the lands of
were still in place. The table on page 53 shows the terms of the Treaty that most angered Hitler.
the east . . . When we speak of new
territory in Europe today, we must
principally think of Russia and the
Expand German territory!
border states subject to her. Destiny The Treaty of Versailles had taken away territory from Germany. Hitler wanted to get that territory
itself seems to wish to point out the back. He wanted Germany to unite with Austria. He wanted German minorities in other countries
way for us here. such as Czechoslovakia to rejoin Germany. But he also wanted to carve out an empire in eastern
Europe to give extra Lebensraum or ‘living space’ for Germans (see Source 2).
Colonisation of the eastern frontiers
is of extreme importance. It will
be the duty of Germany’s foreign
Defeat Communism!
policy to provide large spaces for the A German empire carved out of the Soviet Union would also help Hitler in one of his other
nourishment and settlement of the objectives – the defeat of Communism or Bolshevism. Hitler was anti-Communist. He believed that
growing population of Germany. Bolsheviks had helped to bring about the defeat of Germany in the First World War. He also believed
that the Bolsheviks wanted to take over Germany (see Source 3).
From Hitler’s Mein Kampf.
SOURCE
3
We must not forget that the Bolsheviks are blood-stained. That they overran a
Think! great state [Russia], and in a fury of massacre wiped out millions of their most
It is 1933. Write a briefing paper for
the British government on Hitler’s
intelligent fellow-countrymen and now for ten years have been conducting the
plans for Germany. Use Sources 1–3 most tyrannous regime of all time. We must not forget that many of them belong
to help you. to a race which combines a rare mixture of bestial cruelty and vast skill in lies,
Conclude with your own assessment and considers itself specially called now to gather the whole world under its
on whether the government should bloody oppression.
be worried about Hitler and his plans.
In your conclusion, remember these The menace which Russia suffered under is one which perpetually hangs over
facts about the British government: Germany. Germany is the next great objective of Bolshevism. All our strength is
♦ Britain is a leading member of the needed to raise up our nation once more and rescue it from the embrace of the
League of Nations and is supposed international python . . . The first essential is the expulsion of the Marxist poison
to uphold the Treaty of Versailles,
from the body of our nation.
by force if necessary.
♦ The British government does not From Hitler’s Mein Kampf.
trust the Communists and thinks
that a strong Germany could help
to stop the Communist threat.
52
Hitler’s actions
DATE ACTION
1933 Took Germany out of the League of Nations; began rearming Germany
1934 Tried to take over Austria but was prevented by Mussolini
1935 Held massive rearmament rally in Germany
1936 Reintroduced conscription in Germany; sent German troops into the Rhineland; made an anti-Communist alliance with Japan
1937 Tried out Germany’s new weapons in the Spanish Civil War; made an anti-Communist alliance with Italy
1938 Took over Austria; took over the Sudetenland area of Czechoslovakia
1939 Invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia; invaded Poland; war
War
SOURCE
4 Other factors
Any account of the origins and course When you see events leading up to the war laid out this way, it makes it seem as if Hitler planned
of the Second World War must give it all step by step. In fact, this view of events was widely accepted by historians until the 1960s.
Hitler the leading part. Without him a In the 1960s, however, the British historian AJP Taylor came up with a new interpretation. His view
major war in the early 1940s between was that Hitler was a gambler rather than a planner. Hitler simply took the logical next step to see
all the world’s great powers was what he could get away with. He was bold. He kept his nerve. As other countries gave in to him
unthinkable. and allowed him to get away with each gamble, so he became bolder and risked more. In Taylor’s
interpretation it is Britain, the Allies and the League of Nations who are to blame for letting Hitler
British historian Professor Richard Overy, get away with it – by not standing up to him. In this interpretation it is other factors that are as
writing in 1996.
much to blame as Hitler himself:
● the wordwide economic depression
● the weaknesses of the post-war treaties
● the actions of the leading powers – Britain, France, the USA and the USSR.
As you examine Hitler’s actions in more detail, you will see that both interpretations are possible.
You can make up your own mind which you agree with.
Revision Tip
Think! The details in this chart will be very
useful for your exam. So add pictures
Hitler and the Treaty of Versailles and highlights to help you learn the
1 Draw up a table like this one to show some of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles information.
that affected Germany.
2 As you work through this chapter, fill out the other columns of this ‘Versailles chart’.
Terms of the Treaty of Versailles What Hitler did The reasons he The response from
and when gave for his action Britain and France
53
SOURCE
5 Rearmament
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
20 23.0 Versailles, but he guessed correctly that he would get away with rearmament. Many other countries
15 16.6 were using rearmament as a way to fight unemployment. The collapse of the League of Nations
10 12.4 11.8 Disarmament Conference in 1934 (see pages 42–43) had shown that other nations were not
5 7.4 prepared to disarm.
0 Rearmament was a very popular move in Germany. It boosted Nazi support. Hitler also knew
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 that Britain had some sympathy with Germany on this issue. Britain believed that the limits put on
Germany’s armed forces by the Treaty of Versailles were too tight. The permitted forces were not
The proportion of German spending that
went into armaments, 1935–40. enough to defend Germany from attack. Britain also thought that a strong Germany would be a
good buffer against Communism.
Britain had already helped to dismantle the Treaty by signing a naval agreement with Hitler in
Source Analysis 1935, allowing Germany to increase its navy to up to 35 per cent of the size of the British navy. The
French were angry with Britain about this, but there was little they could do. Through the rest of
How far do Sources 6 and 7 prove
Source 5 to be wrong? the 1930s Hitler ploughed more and more spending into armaments (see Sources 6 and 7).
SOURCE
7
Warships Aircraft Soldiers
1932 (36)
(100,000)
(30)
Think!
1 Fill out the first row of your
‘Versailles chart’ on page 53 to
summarise what Hitler did about
rearmament. 1939
2 What factors allowed Hitler to get
away with rearming Germany?
Look for: (95)
a) the impact of the Despression
b) the Treaty of Versailles
c) the League of Nations (8,250) (950,000)
d) the actions of Britain and
France.
German armed forces in 1932 and 1939.
54
The Saar plebiscite
Source Analysis
1 Explain in your own words what
is happening in Source 8. For
example, who are the people
on horseback? Why are people
saluting?
2 Do you trust Source 8 to be an
accurate portrayal of the feelings
of the people of the Saar in
January 1935?
3 What is the message of the
cartoon in Source 9? Explain your
answer using details of the source
and your knowledge. Following the plebiscite in 1935, people and police express their joy at
returning to the German Reich by giving the Nazi salute.
SOURCE
9
55
SOURCE
10 Remilitarisation of the Rhineland
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
0 100 km
N
In March 1936, Hitler took his first really big risk by moving troops into the Rhineland area of
Scale
Germany. The Rhineland was the large area either side of the River Rhine that formed Germany’s
NETHERLANDS western border with France and Belgium.
North
Sea The demilitarisation of the Rhineland was one of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. It was
GERMANY
designed to protect France from invasion from Germany. It had also been accepted by Germany in
Cologne the Locarno Treaties of 1925. Hitler was taking a huge gamble. If he had been forced to withdraw,
BELGIUM
he would have faced humiliation and would have lost the support of the German army (many of the
generals were unsure about him, anyway). Hitler knew the risks, but he had chosen the time and
LUXEMBOURG place well.
● France had just signed a treaty with the USSR to protect each other against attack from
Germany (see Source 11). Hitler used the agreement to claim that Germany was under threat.
e
FRANCE
in
He argued that in the face of such a threat he should be allowed to place troops on his own
Rh
Key
frontier.
January 1935: ● Hitler knew that many people in Britain felt that he had a right to station his troops in the
Saar returned
to Germany Rhineland and he was fairly confident that Britain would not intervene. His gamble was over
after a SWITZERLAND France. Would France let him get away with it?
plebiscite
March 1936:
German forces
SOURCE
12
re-enter the ITALY
Rhineland
The Rhineland.
SOURCE
11
Think!
An American cartoon entitled ‘Ring-Around-the-Nazi!’ Fill out row 2 of your ‘Versailles chart’ on page 53 to
published in March 1936 showing the encirclement of summarise what happened in the Rhineland.
Germany by France and the USSR.
56
SOURCE
13 As the troops moved into the Rhineland, Hitler and his generals sweated nervously. They had orders
Source Analysis
1 Does Source 11 prove that Hitler
was correct when he argued
that Germany was under threat?
Explain your answer.
2 What do Sources 13 and 14
disagree about? Why might they
disagree about it?
3 Why has the cartoonist in Source
15 shown Germany as a goose?
4 Look at the equipment being
carried by the goose. What
does this tell you about how the
cartoonist saw the new Germany?
5 Would you regard reoccupation
of the Rhineland as a success for
Hitler or as a failure for the French
and the British? Explain your
answer by referring to the sources. A British cartoon about the reoccupation of the Rhineland, 1936.
Pax Germanica is Latin and means ‘Peace, German style’.
57
The Spanish Civil War
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Source Analysis q
1 What can we learn from Source 16 about:
♦ What happened at Guernica? In 1936 a civil war broke out in Spain between supporters of the
♦ The views of French people on Guernica? Republican government and right-wing rebels under General Franco.
♦ The views of the magazine which published the A civil war in a European state would have been an important event
photograph and caption?
anyway, but this one became extremely significant because it gained an
2 Use your thinking in Question 1 to write an answer to
the question:
international dimension.
How useful is Source 16 to a historian studying the Stalin’s USSR’s supported the Republican government (in the form
Spanish Civil War? of weapons, aircraft and pilots). Thousands of volunteers from around
50 countries joined International Brigades to support the Republicans.
At the same time, Hitler and Mussolini declared their support for General
SOURCE
16 Franco. He seemed to be a man who shared their world view.
The governments of Britain and France refused to intervene directly
although France did provide some weapons for the Republicans.
Germany and Italy also agreed not to intervene but then blatantly did so.
Mussolini sent thousands of Italian troops, although officially they were
‘volunteers’. Germany sent aircraft and pilots who took part in most of the
major campaigns of the war. They helped transport Franco’s forces from
North Africa to Spain. Later they took part in bombing raids on civilian
populations in Spanish cities (see Source 16 for example). Thanks
partly to Hitler’s help the Nationalists won the war and a right-wing
dictatorship ruled Spain for the next 36 years.
The conflict had important consequences for peace in Europe. It
gave combat experience to German and Italian forces. It strengthened
the bonds between Mussolini and Hitler. Historian Zara Steiner argues
that Britain’s non-intervention in Spain convinced Hitler that he could
form an alliance with Britain or persuade them (and France) to remain
neutral in a future war. At the same time the devastating impact of
modern weapons convinced Chamberlain and many others that war had
to be avoided at all costs. Thus, the Spanish Civil War further encouraged
Hitler in his main plan to reverse the Treaty of Versailles. At the same
time, the USSR became increasingly suspicious of Britain and France
because of their reluctance to get involved in opposing fascism.
58
Anschluss with Austria, 1938
59
Appeasement: for and against!
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
If Britain and France were not prepared to defend the Treaty of Versailles, would they let Hitler
have more of his demands? The short answer is yes, and Britain’s policy at this time is known as
Appeasement. Neville Chamberlain is the man most associated with this policy (see Profile page 63)
although he did not become Prime Minister until 1937. Many other British people (probably the
majority), including many politicians, were also in favour of this policy. However, there were some
at the time who were very critical. Here are the main arguments for and against.
itler
Trusting H
made
w move he Fear of Communism
After each ne was all he wanted. e
Hitler said th is those Hitler was not the only concern of Memories of th
went back on Great War
Yet he often easement was Britain and its allies. He was not German arm
promises. A
pp nch leaders, s
e mistaken
idea that even their main worry. They were Both British and Fre pulation, Germany w
as
based on th tworthy. more concerned about the spread and much of the ir po and quickly rearming publicly
Hitler was tr
us the horrific year by year
of Communism and particularly vividly remembered st World War. claimed he .H
was trying to itler
the dangers to world peace posed nc es of the Fir
experie with other co ca
oid another war untries, but tch up
by Stalin, the new leader in the They wished to av could see th
at Germany
others
USSR. Many saw Hitler as the at almost any co st. armed than w
buffer to the threat of spreading Britain or Fr as better
ance.
Communism.
British arms
The British empire
The British government believed The USA
that the armed forces were not For Britain to fight a war against
n support had been The Treaty of Versailles
ready for war against Hitler. Britain America ccess in the
Germany it needed to be sure it
only began rearming in 1935 vital to Britain’s su had the support of the countries Many felt that the Treaty of
Fir st W orl d War. Britain could in its empire or Commonwealth. Versailles was unfair to Germany.
and intelligence suggested the face up to
British were some way behind the not be sure it could guarantee It was not a guaranteed certainty Some of Hitler’s demands were
y wi tho ut the
Germans. German that they would all support a war. not unreasonable. They assumed
But since
of American help. that once these wrongs were
d followed a
1919 the USA ha put right then Germany would
ism. American
policy of isolation become a peaceful nation again.
leaders we re
determined not
to be dragged
into another
European war.
60
3 Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
Focus Task
Why did Britain and France follow a policy of Appeasement?
The cards on page 60 show various arguments that were 4 Make notes under the following headings to summarise
advanced for or against Appeasement. Study the cards, then: why Britain followed a policy of appeasement:
1 Sort them into arguments for and arguments against a) military reasons
Appeasement. If there are any you are not sure about b) economic reasons
leave them aside as you can come back to them. c) fear
2 On each card write a ‘for’ or ‘against’. d) public opinion
3 Sort the cards into those that: 5 Use your notes to write a short paragraph to explain in
a) would have been obvious to British and French leaders your own words why the British government followed a
at the time policy of Appeasement.
b) would only be clear with hindsight.
One of the most famous critics was David Low, cartoonist with the popular newspaper the London
Think! Evening Standard. You have seen many of Low’s cartoons in this book already. Low was a fierce
Most people in Britain supported the critic of Hitler, but also criticised the policy of Appeasement. Source 19 shows one of his cartoons on
policy of Appeasement. Write a letter the issue, but if you visit the British Cartoon Archive web site you can see all of Low’s cartoons.
to the London Evening Standard
justifying Appeasement and pointing
out why the cartoonist is wrong.
SOURCE
19
Your letter should be written in either
1936 or 1938 and it will need to be
different according to which source
you pick. You can use some of the
arguments from the Focus Task on
page 53 in your letter.
Revision Tip
Make sure you can explain:
♦ what Appeasement was
♦ two examples of Appeasement in
action.
Be sure you can describe:
♦ one reason why Chamberlain
followed the policy of
Appeasement
♦ one reason why people criticised
the policy. A cartoon by David Low from the London Evening Standard, 1936. This was a
popular newspaper with a large readership in Britain.
Source Analysis p
Fill out a table like this to analyse Source 19. On page 64, fill out a second
column to analyse Source 27 in the same way.
Source 19 Source 27
Date published
Critical or supportive?
Of what/whom?
61
The Sudetenland, 1938
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
After the Austrian Anschluss, Hitler was beginning to feel that he could not put a foot wrong. But
his growing confidence was putting the peace of Europe in increasing danger.
SOURCE
20
LITHUANIA
N
Baltic Sea
North Sea
GERMANY
Danzi
USSR
GREAT
BRITAIN
Berlin
NETHERLANDS
POLAND
BELGIUM GERMANY
Rhinela
t e nla
de nd
Su
nd
LUXEMBOURG
CZECH
OSLO
VAKIA
Munich
FRANCE Vienna
SWITZERLAND AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
ROMANIA
0 300 km
ITALY
Scale
YUGOSLAVIA
SOURCE
21 Czech fears
I give you my word of honour that Unlike the leaders of Britain and France, Edvard Benes̆, the leader of Czechoslovakia, was horrified
Czechoslovakia has nothing to fear by the Anschluss. He realised that Czechoslovakia would be the next country on Hitler’s list for
from the Reich. takeover. It seemed that Britain and France were not prepared to stand up to Hitler. Benes̆ sought
guarantees from the British and French that they would honour their commitment to defend
Hitler speaking to Chamberlain in 1938.
Czechoslovakia if Hitler invaded. The French were bound by a treaty and reluctantly said they
would. The British felt bound to support the French. However, Chamberlain asked Hitler whether he
had designs on Czechoslovakia and was reassured by Hitler’s promise (Source 21).
Hitler's threats
Despite what he said to Chamberlain, Hitler did have designs on Czechoslovakia. This new state,
created by the Treaty of Versailles, included a large number of Germans – former subjects of
Austria–Hungary’s empire – in the Sudetenland area. Henlein, who was the leader of the Nazis in
the Sudetenland, stirred up trouble among the Sudetenland Germans and they demanded to be part
of Germany. In May 1938, Hitler made it clear that he intended to fight Czechoslovakia if necessary.
Historians disagree as to whether Hitler really meant what he said. There is considerable evidence
Think! that the German army was not at all ready for war. Even so the news put Europe on full war alert.
Write a series of newspaper
headlines for different stages of the
Sudetenland crisis, for example: Preparations for war
♦ March 1938 Unlike Austria, Czechoslovakia would be no walk-over for Hitler. Britain, France and the USSR
♦ May 1938 had all promised to support Czechoslovakia if it came to war. The Czechs themselves had a modern
♦ early September 1938 army. The Czechoslovak leader, Benes̆, was prepared to fight. He knew that without the Sudetenland
♦ 30 September 1938.
and its forts, railways and industries, Czechoslovakia would be defenceless.
Include headlines for:
♦ a Czech newspaper All through the summer the tension rose in Europe. If there was a war, people expected that
♦ a British newspaper it would bring heavy bombing of civilians as had happened in the Spanish Civil War, and in cities
♦ a German newspaper. around Britain councils began digging air-raid shelters. Magazines carried advertisements for air-
raid protection and gas masks.
62
SOURCE
22 SOURCE
23
Profile
Neville Chamberlain
Crisis talks
In September the problem reached crisis point. In a last-ditch effort to avert war, Chamberlain flew
to meet Hitler on 15 September. The meeting appeared to go well. Hitler moderated his demands,
Born 1869. saying he was only interested in parts of the Sudetenland – and then only if a plebiscite showed that
He was the son of the famous radical the Sudeten Germans wanted to join Germany. Chamberlain thought this was reasonable. He felt
politician Joseph Chamberlain.
He was a successful businessman in
it was yet another of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles that needed to be addressed. Chamberlain
the Midlands before entering politics. seemed convinced that, if Hitler got what he wanted, he would at last be satisfied.
During the First World War he served On 19 September the French and the British put to the Czechs their plans to give Hitler the
in the Cabinet as Director General of parts of the Sudetenland that he wanted. However, three days later at a second meeting, Hitler
National Service. During this time he
saw the full horrors of war.
increased his demands. He said he ‘regretted’ that the previously arranged terms were not enough.
After the war he was Health Minister He wanted all the Sudetenland.
and then Chancellor. He was noted for
his careful work and his attention to
detail. However, he was not good at
SOURCE
24
listening to advice. The Sudetenland is the last problem that must be solved and it will be solved. It is
He was part of the government the last territorial claim which I have to make in Europe.
throughout the 1920s and supported
the policy of Appeasement towards
The aims of our foreign policy are not unlimited . . . They are grounded on the
Hitler. He became Prime Minister determination to save the German people alone . . . Ten million Germans found
in 1937, although he had little themselves beyond the frontiers of the Reich . . . Germans who wished to return
experience of foreign affairs.
to the Reich as their homeland.
He believed that Germany had real
grievances – this was the basis for his
policy of Appeasement.
Hitler speaking in Berlin, September 1938.
He became a national hero after the
Munich Conference of 1938 averted To justify his demands, he claimed that the Czech government was mistreating the Germans in the
war. Sudetenland and that he intended to ‘rescue’ them by 1 October. Chamberlain told Hitler that his
In 1940 Chamberlain resigned as
demands were unreasonable. The British navy was mobilised. War seemed imminent.
Prime Minister and Winston Churchill
took over.
The Munich Agreement
With Mussolini’s help, a final meeting was held in Munich on 29 September. While Europe held its
breath, the leaders of Britain, Germany, France and Italy decided on the fate of Czechoslovakia.
On 29 September they decided to give Hitler what he wanted. They announced that
Czechoslovakia was to lose the Sudetenland. They did not consult the Czechs, nor did they consult
the USSR. This is known as the Munich Agreement. The following morning Chamberlain and Hitler
published a joint declaration (Source 26) which Chamberlain said would bring ‘peace for our time’.
63
SOURCE
25 Consequences
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
People of Britain, your children are Hitler had gambled that the British would not risk war. He spoke of the Munich Agreement as ‘an
safe. Your husbands and your sons will undreamt-of triumph, so great that you can scarcely imagine it’. The prize of the Sudetenland
not march to war. Peace is a victory for had been given to him without a shot being fired. On 1 October German troops marched into the
all mankind. If we must have a victor, Sudetenland. At the same time, Hungary and Poland helped themselves to Czech territory where
let us choose Chamberlain, for the Hungarians and Poles were living.
Prime Minister’s conquests are mighty The Czechs had been betrayed. Benes̆ resigned. But the rest of Europe breathed a sigh of relief.
and enduring – millions of happy Chamberlain received a hero’s welcome back in Britain, when he returned with the ‘piece of paper’
homes and hearts relieved of their – the Agreement – signed by Hitler (see Profile, page 63).
burden.
The Daily Express comments on the
SOURCE
27
Munich Agreement, 30 September
1938.
SOURCE
26
We regard the Agreement signed last
night . . . as symbolic of the desire of
our two peoples never to go to war with
one another again. We are resolved
that we shall use consultation to deal
with any other questions that may
concern our two countries, and we are
determined to continue our efforts to
assure the peace of Europe.
The joint declaration of Chamberlain
and Hitler, 30 September 1938.
November 1938 to
March 1939 Berlin The Polish
Slovak border areas Corridor
and Ruthenia taken POLAND
by Hungary
March 1939
Remainder of AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
Czechoslovakia taken SWITZERLAND
under German control
ROMANIA
0 200 km
German border
in 1939 Scale
SOURCE
31
Think! German troops entering Prague, the capital of Czechoslovakia, in March 1939.
1 Choose five words to describe the
attitude of the crowd in Source There was no resistance from the Czechs. Nor did Britain and France do anything about the
31. situation. However, it was now clear that Hitler could not be trusted. For Chamberlain it was a step
2 Why do you think that there was too far. Unlike the Sudeten Germans, the Czechs were not separated from their homeland by the
no resistance from the Czechs?
3 Why do you think Britain and
Treaty of Versailles. This was an invasion. If Hitler continued unchecked, his next target was likely
France did nothing in response to to be Poland. Britain and France told Hitler that if he invaded Poland they would declare war on
the invasion? Germany. The policy of Appeasement was ended. However, after years of Appeasement, Hitler did
not actually believe that Britain and France would risk war by resisting him.
65
The Nazi–Soviet Pact, 1939
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Look at your ‘Versailles chart’ from page 53. You should have only one item left. As Hitler was
gradually retaking land lost at Versailles, you can see from Source 31 that logically his next target
was the strip of former German land in Poland known as the Polish Corridor. He had convinced
himself that Britain and France would not risk war over this, but he was less sure about Stalin and
the USSR. Let’s see why.
Stalin’s fears
Stalin had been very worried about the German threat to the Soviet Union ever since Hitler came to
power in 1933. Hitler had openly stated his interest in conquering Russian land. He had denounced
Communism and imprisoned and killed Communists in Germany. Even so, Stalin could not reach
any kind of lasting agreement with Britain and France in the 1930s. From Stalin’s point of view, it
was not for want of trying. In 1934 he had joined the League of Nations, hoping the League would
guarantee his security against the threat from Germany. However, all he saw at the League was its
powerlessness when Mussolini successfully invaded Abyssinia, and when both Mussolini and Hitler
intervened in the Spanish Civil War. Politicians in Britain and France had not resisted German
rearmament in the 1930s. Indeed, some in Britain seemed even to welcome a stronger Germany as
a force to fight Communism, which they saw as a bigger threat to British interests than Hitler.
Stalin’s fears and suspicions grew in the mid 1930s.
● He signed a treaty with France in 1935 that said that France would help the USSR if Germany
invaded the Soviet Union. But Stalin was not sure he could trust the French to stick to it,
particularly when they failed even to stop Hitler moving his troops into the Rhineland, which
was right on their own border.
● The Munich Agreement in 1938 increased Stalin’s concerns. He was not consulted about it.
Stalin concluded from the agreement that France and Britain were powerless to stop Hitler or,
even worse, that they were happy for Hitler to take over eastern Europe and then the USSR.
SOURCE
32 Stalin’s negotiations
Despite his misgivings, Stalin was still prepared to talk with
Britain and France about an alliance against Hitler. The three
countries met in March 1939, but Chamberlain was reluctant to
commit Britain. From Stalin’s point of view, France and Britain
then made things worse by giving Poland a guarantee that
they would defend it if it was invaded. Chamberlain meant the
guarantee as a warning to Hitler. Stalin saw it as support for one
of the USSR’s potential enemies.
Negotiations between Britain, France and the USSR
continued through the spring and summer of 1939. However,
Stalin also received visits from the Nazi foreign minister
Ribbentrop. They discussed a rather different deal, a Nazi–
Soviet Pact.
Stalin’s decision
In August, Stalin made his decision. On 24 August 1939, Hitler
and Stalin, the two arch enemies, signed the Nazi–Soviet Pact
and announced the terms to the world. They agreed not to
attack one another. Privately, they also agreed to divide Poland
between them.
66
Why did Stalin sign the Pact?
1 In groups decide which statements fit best under each of these headings
67
Was Appeasement justified?
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Focus Task
Was the policy of
Appeasement justified? Chamberlain certainly believed in Appeasement. In June 1938 he wrote in a letter to his sister: ‘I am
completely convinced that the course I am taking is right and therefore cannot be influenced by the
The right policy at
the right time. attacks of my critics.’ He was not a coward or a weakling. When it became obvious that he had no
choice but to declare war in 1939 he did.
The wrong policy, but On page 60 you studied the main reasons Chamberlain followed this policy and the reasons
only with hindsight.
why people opposed him. However, remember that Chamberlain was not alone. There were many
A betrayal of the people more politicians who supported him in 1938 than opposed him. It looked pretty clear to them in
of Czechoslovakia. 1938 that the balance fell in favour of Appeasement.
Yet when Hitler broke his promises and the policy did not stop war, the supporters of
A risky policy that
purchased valuable time. Appeasement quickly turned against the policy, some claiming that they had been opposed all
along. Appeasers were portrayed as naïve, foolish or weak – Source 34 is one of hundreds of
1 Work in pairs or groups. Collect examples which parody the policy and the people who pursued it. Historians since then and
evidence from pages 60–69 to
popular opinion too have judged Chamberlain very harshly. Chamberlain’s ‘Peace for our time’
support each of the above views.
2 Choose one viewpoint that you
speech is presented as self-deception and a betrayal. Chamberlain and his cabinet are seen as
most agree with and write some ‘second-rate politicians’ who were out of their depth as events unfolded before them. On the other
well-argued paragraphs to explain hand the opponents of Appeasement such as Winston Churchill are portrayed as realists who were
your choice: far-sighted and brave.
a) what the viewpoint means – in
your own words
b) what evidence there is to
SOURCE
34
support it
c) what evidence there is against
it and why you have rejected
that evidence
d) your conclusion as to why this
is a good verdict.
Think!
1 What is Source 34 trying to say
about the policy of Appeasement?
2 Make a list of the reasons why
Appeasement has generally been
seen in negative terms.
3 Churchill once remarked to
President Roosevelt ‘History will
judge us kindly because I shall
write the history’. Read Source 35.
How should this affect our
viewpoints on Appeasement?
SOURCE
35
The Gathering Storm has been one of
the most influential books of our time. A cartoon by the American artist Dr Seuss published on 13 August 1941 (before the
It is no exaggeration to claim that it USA entered the Second World War).
has strongly influenced the behaviour
of Western politicians from Harry S. It really has been a very one-sided debate. Yet this debate matters because the failure of
Truman to George W. Bush. Appeasement to stop Hitler has had a profound influence on British and American foreign policy
… It is a good tale, told by a master ever since. It is now seen as the ‘right thing’ to stand up to dictators. You will find an example
story-teller, who did, after all, win the of this in Chapter 7 when you study the Gulf War. This is a lesson that people have learned from
Nobel prize for literature; but would history. One of the reasons why people study history is to avoid making the same mistakes from the
a prize for fiction have been more past but before we leap so quickly to judgement on this issue, let’s run this argument through two
appropriate? different checks.
Professor John Charmley of the
University of East Anglia writing about
Churchill’s account of the 1930s called
68 The Gathering Storm.
SOURCE
36 Check 1: If Chamberlain had stood up to
SOURCE
37
A Soldiers B Ships C Aircraft
130 80 In the 1930s, aircraft were generally seen as
January 1938
the most important weapon.
120 (before the
Munich crisis) 70
110 9000
1936
August 1939
Army divisions ready to fight
100
Number of craft in navy, 1939
50 6000
70
60 5000
40
50 4000
40 30
3000
30
20 2000
20
1000
10
10
0 0
Germany Britain Germany Britain
(regular army 0
and reserves) Germany Britain
The armaments build-up in the 1930s.
69
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Focus Task
Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
1 Treaties after
You have covered a lot of material in the last two chapters. In this task you are the First World War 2 The failures of
going to make sure that you have the important events and developments clear particularly the the League of
in your mind. Treaty of Versailles Nations
1 Work in groups of six. Each take a blank sheet of paper and write a heading like
the ones on the right. On your sheet summarise the ways in which this factor 3 The worldwide
helped to bring about the war. economic
2 Now come back together as a group and write your own summary of how the Depression
4 The policy of
war broke out. You can use this structure, but set yourself a word limit of Appeasement
75 words per paragraph, less if you can. 5 The Nazi–So viet
Pact
6 Hitler's actions
and particularly his
foreign policy
Paragraph 1: There were important long-term factors which help to explain why war broke
(This is the place to explain how resentment out in 1939. One factor was the Versailles Treaty. It was important because …
against the Versailles Treaty brought Hitler
to power in the first place and guided his
actions in the 1930s.)
Paragraph 2: The failure of the League of Nations in the 1930s also contributed towards
(Here you should explain how the failure the outbreak of war. This was because …
of the League encouraged Hitler and made
him think he could achieve his aims.)
Paragraph 3: Economic factors also played an important role. The worldwide economic
(Here you should explain how the Depression …
Depression was an underlying cause of the
failure of the League, Japan’s aggression
and Hitler’s rise to power.)
Paragraph 4: Another factor which helps to explain the outbreak of war was the policy of
(Here you should briefly describe what Appeasement. Appeasement …
Appeasement was, and how instead of
stopping Hitler it encouraged him. You
could also point out the links between
Appeasement and the Depression.)
Paragraph 5: There were also key short-term factors which actually sparked off the war.
(Here you should explain how the Nazi– One of these was …
Soviet Pact led to the invasion of Poland
and how that in turn led to war. You could
also point out that these short-term factors
probably could not have happened if there
had not been a policy of Appeasement.)
Paragraph 6: Some people describe the Second World War as Hitler’s war. I think this is a
(Here you should comment on Hitler’s overall GOOD/POOR description because…
responsibility. How far do you agree that
Hitler wanted war, planned for it, and if so
does that mean he caused the war?)
Paragraph 7: All of these factors played important roles. However, [INSERT YOUR
(Here you should indicate which factor(s) CHOICE OF FACTOR(S)] was / were particularly important because …
you think were most important. This is
where you should bring in any of the factors
you discussed in stage 5 of the Focus Task.)
70
3 Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
Chapter Review Focus Task
Reaching a judgement Stage 1: Understand and evaluate each factor
Almost there! In the last task you wrote a clear explanation There are six major factors. The cards analyse why each one
of the various reasons why peace collapsed by 1939. might be seen as:
Unfortunately, this is not enough! You also need to be able ♦ a critical factor (i.e. the war probably would not have
to compare the importance of these reasons (or factors) and happened without it) or just
see the links between them. For example, if you were asked ♦ one of several important factors (i.e. the war could still
this question: possibly have happened without it).
‘The Nazi Soviet Pact of 1939 was more important than the a) Read the cards carefully to make sure you understand the
policy of Appeasement in causing the Second World War.’ arguments.
How far do you agree with this statement? b) For each of the ‘killer sources’ 1-6 (on page 72) decide
what would you say? Most students find it hard to explain whether this supports the argument that this factor was
what they think and end up giving information about critical or just one of several important factors.
each factor (describing events) rather than making a
judgement and supporting it. This review task helps you
to overcome this problem.
Factor 1: The Treaty of Versailles Factor 2: The failure of the League of Nations
♦ Critical? Versailles and the other Treaties created a situation in ♦ Critical? The League of Nations’ job was to make sure that
Europe which made war inevitable. It was only a matter of time disputes were sorted out legally. In the 1920s it created a spirit
before Germany tried to seek revenge, overturn the Treaty and of cooperation. But, in Manchuria 1931 and Abyssinia 1935–36
start another war. Many commentators felt at the time that it the League completely failed to stand up to aggression by
was only a question of when war might come not whether it Japan and Italy. This encouraged Hitler’s aggression from 1936
would. onwards since he believed no one would try to stop him.
♦ Important? The Treaties contributed to the tensions of the ♦ Important? The League never really fulfilled the role of
time but they did not create them. Politicians in the 1930s peacekeeper – even in the 1920s it gave in to Italy over Corfu.
could have defended the treaties or changed them. It was The failure of the League in the 1930s was important because
political choices in the 1930s which caused war not the it encouraged Hitler but even if the League had been stronger
treaties. Hitler would still have tried to overturn the Treaty of Versailles
and to destroy Communism.
71
part 1 the interwar years, 1919–39
Stage 2: Investigate connections between factors
From Stage 1 it should be clear to you that these factors are connected to each other. Let’s investigate these connections.
a) Make six simple cards with just the factor heading.
b) Display your cards on a large sheet of paper and draw lines connecting them together. Some links are already mentioned
on the cards on page 71 but you may be able to think of many more.
c) Write an explanation along each link. For example between ‘the policy of Appeasement’ and ‘The Nazi-Soviet Pact’ you
might write:
‘The policy of Appeasement helped cause the Nazi-Soviet Pact. It alarmed Stalin so that he felt he had to make his own
deal with Hitler thinking that France and Britain would just give him whatever he wanted.’
d) Take a photo of your finished chart.
Stage 3: Rank the factors
Which of these factors is most important? In Stage 2 you will already have started to draw your own conclusions about this. It
will be really helpful when you come to answering questions about relative importance if you have already decided what you
think! Remember there is no right answer to which is most important but whatever your view you must be able to support it
with key points and with evidence. So:
a) Take your cards and put them in a rank order of importance.
b) To justify your order, in the space between each card you need to be able to complete this sentence:
‘X was more important than Y because…’
Stage 4: Compare two factors
Back to the question we started with:
‘The Nazi Soviet Pact of 1939 was more important than the policy of Appeasement in causing the Second World War.’ How
far do you agree with this statement?
With all the thinking that you have done you should have already made up your mind on what you think, but to help you
structure and support your argument you could complete a chart like this. NB if you can include the killer source in your
written answer all the better.
Policy of Appeasement
Nazi-Soviet Pact
Source
1 Source
3
When war came in 1939, it was a result of twenty years If new accounts by historians show that statesmen were
of decisions taken or not taken, not of arrangements made able to use the League to ease tensions and win time in
in 1919. the 1920s, no such case appears possible for the 1930s.
Indeed, the League’s processes may have played a role in
Historian Margaret Macmillan writing in 2001
that deterioration. Diplomacy requires leaders who can
speak for their states; it requires secrecy; and it requires
Source
2 the ability to make credible threats. The Covenant’s
The failure of the World Disarmament Conference not security arrangements met none of those criteria.
only crushed the hopes of many supporters of the League
Historian Susan Pedersen writing in 2007
of Nations and the disarmament movements but also
strengthened the ranks of those who opted for appeasement
or some form of pacifism. Pressures for collective action
Source
4
gave way to policies of self-defence, neutrality and isolation. We turn our eyes towards the lands of the east . . .
Against such a background, the balance of power shifted When we speak of new territory in Europe today, we must
steadily away from the status quo nations in the direction principally think of Russia and the border states subject to
of those who favoured its destruction. The reconstruction her. Destiny itself seems to wish to point out the way for
of the 1920s was not inevitably doomed to collapse by us here. Colonisation of the eastern frontiers is of extreme
the start of the 1930s. Rather, the demise of the Weimar importance. It will be the duty of Germany’s foreign policy
Republic and the triumph of Hitler proved the motor force to provide large spaces for the nourishment and settlement
of destructive systemic change. of the growing population of Germany.
Historian Zara Steiner writing in 2011 Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1923
72
3 Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
Source
5 Source
7
The vindictiveness of British and French peace terms The effects of the depression encouraged not only
helped to pave the way for Nazism in Germany and a the emergence of authoritarian and interventionist
renewal of hostilities. World War 2 resulted from the very governments but led to the shattering of the global
silly and humiliating punitive peace imposed on Germany financial system. Most European states followed ‘beggar-
after World War 1. thy-neighbour’ tactics. Germany, Hungary, and most
of the East European states embarked on defensive
Historian George Kennan writing in 1984
economic policies – often at cost to their neighbours.
Source
6 Historian Zara Steiner writing in 2011
73
The Cold War
and the Gulf,
1945–2000
PART 2
1950 1960
1958 1968
Overthrow Saddam Hussein
Events in the Gulf of and Baath
(Chapter 7) monarchy party take
in Iraq power in Iraq
74
Focus
The Second World War led to a decisive change in the ♦ While the USA was trying to contain Communism,
balance of power around the world. The countries that the Soviet Union was trying to shore it up in its east
had dominated European affairs from 1919 to 1939 such European neighbours. This was no easy task. They faced
as France, Britain or Germany were now much poorer or frequent protests and problems. In Chapter 6 you will
less powerful. World history was much more affected by consider how they did this, how far they succeeded
what the leaders of the new ‘superpowers’ (the USA and and why in the end it all came crashing down with the
the USSR) believed and did. So the big story of Part 2 is demolition of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the
how the superpowers became enemies, how they clashed Soviet Union itself.
(directly or indirectly) during the Cold War and how they ♦ Finally, in Chapter 7 you will shift your focus to the
tried to influence the affairs of other countries. Persian Gulf and the intertwined fates of two countries
♦ In Chapter 4 you will examine the short-term causes of Iraq and Iran.You will examine how they developed in
the Cold War. Why did the USA and the USSR, who had the period 1970–2000 and why they came into conflict
fought together as allies against Hitler, fall out and enter with each other and with the western powers.
a 40-year period of tension and distrust? The events in these chapters overlap. The timeline below
♦ One of the USA’s obsessions in this Cold War period gives you an overview of the main events you will be
was to hold back the spread of Communism. Chapter 5 studying. It would be helpful if you made your own copy
examines why they so feared the spread of Communism, and added your own notes to it as you study.
how they tried to contain it and helps you to judge how
successful they were.
75
4
76
4
Who was to blame for the Cold War?
FOCUS POINTS
● Why did the USA–USSR alliance begin to break down in 1945?
● How had the USSR gained control of eastern Europe by 1948?
● How did the USA react to Soviet expansionism?
● What were the consequences of the Berlin Blockade?
● Who was the more to blame for starting the Cold War: the USA or the USSR?
In May 1945 American troops entered Berlin from the Here are some of the factors that you will study in this
west, as Russian troops moved in from the east. They chapter. At the end you will be asked to become an
met and celebrated victory together.Yet three years expert in one of them so you could help yourself by
later these former allies were arguing over Berlin and making notes about each one as you read the chapter.
war between them seemed a real possibility.
What had gone wrong? The situation The personal The conflicting
before the relationships beliefs of the
In this chapter you will consider: Second World between various superpowers
War leaders
♦ how the wartime alliance between the USA and the
USSR broke down
♦ how the Soviet Union gained control over eastern
Europe and how the USA responded
♦ the consequences of the Berlin Blockade in 1948.
The key question you will be returning to at the end is The war damage Stalin’s take- Marshall Aid for
who is most to blame for this increasing tension (which suffered by the over of eastern Europe
became known as ‘The Cold War’). USSR Europe
♦ Was it the USSR and Stalin with his insistence on
taking over and controlling eastern Europe?
♦ Or was it the USA and President Truman with the
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Aid?
♦ Or should they share the blame? In the post-war
chaos in Europe they both saw it as their role to The Berlin
extend their influence, to proclaim the benefits of Blockade
their own political system and denounce the other
side. So maybe they should share the blame.
♦ Or was the Cold War inveitable – beyond the control
of either country?
t It is not just cartoons that can have messages. Photos can too. This
photo shows American and Soviet soldiers shaking hands in April 1945.
1 What is the message of the photo?
2 How far do you trust it to show relations between the USA and the
USSR in 1945?
77
Allies against Hitler
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Think!
Create your own version of the
timeline on pages 74–75. You will be During the Second World War the Allies produced many images showing friendly co-operation
adding events and comments to it between American, British and Soviet forces and peoples. In fact the real story is rather different.
throughout the chapter to help you Hitler was the common danger which united President Roosevelt (USA), Winston Churchill
in your final Focus Task.
(Britain) and Communist leader Josef Stalin of the Soviet Union (the USSR). This is shown in
To start, extend the timeline back
to 1917 and use the information on
Source 1. It was a strategic wartime alliance not a bond of brotherhood. This becomes clear when
these two pages to mark any events we look back further into history.
or developments that might affect
relationships between the USA and
SOURCE
1
the Soviet Union.
Source Analysis
1 Cartoons often criticise particular
people or their actions. Sometimes
they praise. Sometimes they simply
comment on a situation. Would
you say Source 1 is criticising,
praising or commenting? Explain
how the points in the cartoon
helped you to decide.
2 Spot the loaded language! What
words and phrases in Source 2
tell us that this source is hostile to
Communism and the USSR?
A British cartoon from 1941, with the caption ‘Love conquers all’.
The two sides were enemies long before they were allies. The USSR had been a Communist country
for more than 30 years. The majority of politicians and business leaders in Britain and the USA
hated and feared Communist ideas (see the Factfiles on page 79). In the past they had helped the
enemies of the Communists. This made the USSR wary of Britain and the USA. And Britain and the
USA were just as wary of the USSR. In the 1920s suspected Communists had been persecuted in a
‘Red Scare’. In 1926 the British government reacted harshly to a General Strike partly because it
was convinced that the Strike was the work of agents of the USSR.
SOURCE
2 ● Relations between Britain and the USSR were harmed in the 1930s by the policy of
Like a prairie-fire, the blaze of Appeasement (see page 60). It seemed to Stalin that Britain was happy to see Germany grow in
revolution was sweeping over every power so that Hitler could attack him.
American institution of law and order ● Stalin responded by signing a pact with Hitler (see page 66) – they promised not to attack each
a year ago. It was eating its way into other, and divided Poland between them! To the western nations this seemed like a cynical act
the homes of the American workmen . on Stalin’s part.
. . crawling into the sacred corners of So in many ways the surprising thing is that the old enemies managed a war-time alliance at all.
American homes . . . But they did and the course of the war in Europe was decisively altered when Germany invaded
Robbery, not war, is the ideal of the USSR in 1941. The Soviets mounted a fierce defence of their country against the power of the
Communism . . . Obviously it is the German forces from 1941 to 1945. It was Soviet determination and Soviet soldiers that turned
creed of any criminal mind, which the tide of the European war against Germany. Churchill and Roosevelt admired the Soviets and
sent vital supplies but tension remained. Stalin wanted his allies to launch a second military front
acts always from motives impossible
against Germany and was bitter that this did not happen until June 1944.
to understand for those with clean
thoughts.
Extract from a statement by Mitchell
Palmer, Attorney General of the USA,
April 1920.
78
4 Who was to blame for the Cold War?
Factfile
A clash of ideologies
The USA was capitalist. Business and property were privately The USSR was Communist. All industry was owned and run by the
owned. state.
It was a democracy. Its government was chosen in free democratic It was a one-party dictatorship. Elections were held, but all
elections. candidates belonged to the Communist Party.
It was the world’s wealthiest country. But as in most capitalist It was an economic superpower because its industry had grown
countries, there were extremes – some great wealth and great rapidly in the 1920s and 1930s, but the general standard of
poverty as well. living in the USSR was much lower than in the USA. Even so,
unemployment was rare and extreme poverty was rarer than in the
USA.
For Americans, being free of control by the government was more For Communists, the rights of individuals were seen as less
important than everyone being equal. important than the good of society as a whole. So individuals’ lives
were tightly controlled.
Americans firmly believed that other countries should be run in the Soviet leaders believed that other countries should be run in the
American way. Communist way.
People in the USA were alarmed by Communist theory, which Communism taught that the role of a Communist state was to
talked of spreading revolution. encourage Communist revolutions worldwide. In practice, the
USSR’s leaders tended to take practical decisions rather than be led
by this ideology.
Americans generally saw their policies as ‘doing the right thing’ Many in the USSR saw the USA’s actions as selfishly building its
rather than serving the interests of the USA. economic empire and political influence.
Revision Tip
You need to know these things so
make your own copies of the diagrams
on the right and then use the
Factfile to make notes around them USSR
summarising the two systems.
USA
Superpowers
The USA and the USSR had emerged from the war as the two ‘superpowers’. After the Second
World War powers like Britain and France were effectively relegated to a second division. US
leaders felt there was a responsibility was attached to being a superpower. In the 1930s, the USA
had followed a policy of isolation – keeping out of European and world affairs. The Americans
might have disapproved of Soviet Communism, but they tried not to get involved. However, by the
1940s the US attitude had changed. Roosevelt had set the Americans firmly against a policy of
isolation and this effectively meant opposing Communism. In March 1945 he said to the American
Congress that America ‘will have to take the responsibility for world collaboration or we shall have
to bear the responsibilities for another world conflict’. There would be no more appeasement of
dictators. From now on, every Communist action would meet an American reaction.
79
The Yalta Conference, February
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Revision Tip
Make sure you can remember at least
two examples of agreement at Yalta 1945
and one (the main!) disgreement.
In February 1945 it was clear that Germany was losing the European war, so the Allied leaders met
at Yalta in the Ukraine to plan what would happen to Europe after Germany’s defeat. The Yalta
Conference went well. Despite their differences, the Big Three – Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill –
agreed on some important matters.
It seemed that, although they could not all agree, they were still able to negotiate and do
business with one another.
Agreements Disagreements
Think!
SOURCE
4
I want to drink to our alliance, that it should not lose its . . .
1 The photo on page 1 of this book shows the Big Three
intimacy, its free expression of views . . . I know of no such
at the Yalta Conference. Imagine you were describing
the scene in this photo for a radio audience in 1945. close alliance of three Great Powers as this . . . May it be
Describe for the listeners: strong and stable, may we be as frank as possible.
♦ the obvious points (such as people you can see)
♦ the less obvious points (such as the mood of the Stalin, proposing a toast at a dinner at the Yalta Conference,
scene) 1945.
♦ the agreements and disagreements the Big Three had
come to.
80
4 Who was to blame for the Cold War?
Source Analysis
Behind the scenes at Yalta
The war against Hitler had united Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill and at the Yalta Conference they appeared to get on well.
But what was going on behind the scenes? Sources 5–10 will help you decide.
SOURCE
5 SOURCE
6
In the hallway [at Yalta] we stopped I have always worked for friendship with Russia but, like you, I feel deep anxiety
before a map of the world on which because of their misinterpretation of the Yalta decisions, their attitude towards
the Soviet Union was coloured in Poland, their overwhelming influence in the Balkans excepting Greece, the
red. Stalin waved his hand over the difficulties they make about Vienna, the combination of Russian power and
Soviet Union and exclaimed, ‘They the territories under their control or occupied, coupled with the Communist
[Roosevelt and Churchill] will never technique in so many other countries, and above all their power to maintain
accept the idea that so great a space very large Armies in the field for a long time. What will be the position in a year
should be red, never, never!’ or two?
Milovan Djilas writing about Yalta Extract from a telegram sent by Prime Minister Churchill to President Truman
in 1948. in May 1945.
SOURCE
7 SOURCE
8
Perhaps you think that just because The Soviet Union has become a danger to the free world. A new front must be
we are the allies of the English we created against her onward sweep. This front should be as far east as possible.
have forgotten who they are and A settlement must be reached on all major issues between West and East in
who Churchill is. There’s nothing they Europe before the armies of democracy melt.
like better than to trick their allies.
Churchill writing to Roosevelt shortly after the Yalta Conference. Churchill ordered
During the First World War they his army leader Montgomery to keep German arms intact in case they had to be
constantly tricked the Russians and used against the Russians.
the French. And Churchill? Churchill
is the kind of man who will pick your
pocket of a kopeck! [A kopeck is a
SOURCE
9
low value Soviet coin.] And Roosevelt? Once, Churchill asked Stalin to send him the music of the new Soviet Russian
Roosevelt is not like that. He dips in anthem so that it could be broadcast before the summary of the news from
his hand only for bigger coins. But the Soviet German front. Stalin sent the words [as well] and expressed the
Churchill? He will do it for a kopeck. hope that Churchill would set about learning the new tune and whistling it
to members of the Conservative Party. While Stalin behaved with relative
Stalin speaking to a fellow Communist, discretion with Roosevelt, he continually teased Churchill throughout the war.
Milovan Djilas, in 1945. Djilas was a
supporter of Stalin. Written by Soviet historian Sergei Kudryashov after the war.
SOURCE
10 1 Draw a simple diagram
like this and use Sources
[At Yalta] Churchill feared that 5–10 to summarise
Roosevelt was too pro-Russian. what each of the leaders
He pressed for a French zone to thought of the other.
be added to the other three to add 2 How do Sources 5–10
another anti-Russian voice to the affect your impression of
Stalin the Yalta Conference?
armies of occupation. 3 How far do you trust
these sources to tell you
Written by Christopher Culpin in a
school textbook, The Modern World, what the leaders actually
1984. thought of each other?
Churchill Roosevelt
81
SOURCE
11 The Potsdam Conference,
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
SOURCE
12 1 Stalin’s armies were occupying most of eastern
Unless Russia is faced with an iron fist Europe
and strong language another war is Soviet troops had liberated country after country in eastern Europe, but instead of withdrawing his
in the making. Only one language do troops Stalin had left them there. Refugees were fleeing out of these countries fearing a Communist
they understand – ‘how many [army] take-over. Stalin had set up a Communist government in Poland, ignoring the wishes of the
divisions have you got?’ … I’m tired of majority of Poles. He insisted that his control of eastern Europe was a defensive measure against
babying the Soviets. possible future attacks.
82
The ‘iron curtain’
SOURCE
13 SOURCE
14
A shadow has fallen upon the scenes so lately lighted by The following circumstances should not be forgotten. The
the Allied victory. From Stettin on the Baltic to Trieste on Germans made their invasion of the USSR through Finland,
the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended. Behind that Poland and Romania. The Germans were able to make
line lie all the states of central and eastern Europe. The their invasion through these countries because, at the time,
Communist parties have been raised to power far beyond governments hostile to the Soviet Union existed in these
their numbers and are seeking everywhere to obtain countries. What can there be surprising about the fact that
totalitarian control. This is certainly not the liberated Europe the Soviet Union, anxious for its future safety, is trying to see
we fought to build. Nor is it one which allows permanent to it that governments loyal in their attitude to the Soviet
peace. Union should exist in these countries?
Winston Churchill speaking in the USA, in the presence of Stalin, replying to Churchill’s speech (Source 13).
President Truman, March 1946.
SOURCE
15 SOURCE
16
Think!
Some historians say that Churchill is as much to blame for the post-war distrust
between the Soviet Union and the West as Roosevelt, Truman or Stalin. What
evidence is there on pages 80–83 to support or challenge this view?
83
Stalin strengthens his grip
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Source 17 shows how Stalin extended Soviet power across eastern Europe. With Communist
governments established throughout eastern Europe, Stalin gradually tightened his control in each
country. The secret police imprisoned anyone who opposed Communist rule.
SOURCE
17
Key Cominform
Communist-controlled The Allies had given the USSR After the war the Communists joined
governments control of the eastern sector of a coalition government, then became N In October 1947,
Germany. It was run by the USSR outright leaders in 1947 when they Stalin set up
effectively under Red Army control forced the non-Communist leader into the Communist
Countries which were
exile.
enemies of the USSR until the creation of the German Information
during the Second World Democratic Republic in 1949. Bureau, or
War Communists became the largest Cominform, to co-
single party in the 1947 elections.
They imprisoned opposition
ordinate the work
politicians, and attacked Church of the Communist
GREAT leaders. Parties of eastern
BRITAIN
Europe. Cominform
USSR regularly brought
EAST POLAND the leaders of each
In 1945 a Communist
GERMANY
was elected Prime
Communist Party
Minister within a to Moscow to be
A left-wing coalition won elections in WEST
left-wing coalition. In briefed by Stalin
1945. In 1946 Communists became GERMANY 1947 the Communists and his ministers.
the largest single party, but still in a CZECHOSLOVAKIA also abolished the This also allowed
coalition. In 1948, when their position monarchy.
Stalin to keep
was threatened, they banned other
parties and made Czechoslovakia a
a close eye on
Communist, one-party state. them. He spotted
AUSTRIA
independent-
SWITZERLAND HUNGARY
minded leaders and
FRANCE ROMANI A replaced them with
people who were
completely loyal
Black Sea to him. The only
Communist leader
YUGOSLAVIA
who escaped this
ITALY BULGARIA close control was
SPAIN Tito in Yugoslavia.
He resented being
controlled by
ALBANIA
A left-wing coalition won Cominform and
Both France and Italy had strong elections in 1945. The was expelled for his
Communist parties which Communist members of the hostility in 1948.
belonged to Cominform . coalition then executed the
GREECE
leaders of the other parties.
TURKEY
Sicily
Britain and the USA spported
Communists gained power immediately after the war. the royalist side in a civil war
Marshal Tito had led war-time
There was little opposition as during the war Communist which defeated the Communist
resistance to the Nazis. He was
and nationalist resistance movements had opposed the opposition.
elected President in 1945. However,
he was determined to apply Italian and later German occupation forces. As the war
Communism in his own way and was ended, the strong Communist movement had the backing 0 400 km
expelled from Cominform in 1948. of Communist Yugoslavia and the USSR.
Scale
Focus Task
How did the USSR gain control of eastern Europe?
1 Study Source 17. Find examples of the Communists:
a) banning other parties
b) killing or imprisonng opponents
c) winning democratic elections
2 Find examples of how these factors helped the USSR take control
a) the Red Army
b) Communist involvement in resistance movements
c) agreements at Yalta
3 ‘The only important factor in the Communist take-over of eastern Europe was
armed force.’ How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer
carefully.
84
The reaction of the USA
SOURCE
18 SOURCE
19
After all the efforts that have been made and the
appeasement that we followed to try and get a real friendly
settlement, not only is the Soviet government not prepared
to co-operate with any non-Communist government in
eastern Europe, but it is actively preparing to extend its
hold over the remaining part of continental Europe and,
subsequently, over the Middle East and no doubt the Far
East as well. In other words, physical control of Europe and
Asia and eventual control of the whole world is what Stalin
is aiming at – no less a thing than that. The immensity of
the aim should not betray us into thinking that it cannot be
achieved.
Extract from a report by the British Foreign Secretary to the
British Cabinet in March 1948. The title of the report was
‘The Threat to Civilisation’.
By 1948, Greece and Czechoslovakia were the only eastern European countries not controlled by
Revision Tip Communist governments. It seemed to the Americans that not only Greece and Czechoslovakia but
Make sure you can remember two even Italy and France were vulnerable to Communist take-over. Events in two of these countries
examples of methods that the USSR were to have a decisive effect on America’s policy towards Europe.
and the Communist parties used
to take power in Eastern Europe,
and one reason why Greece was Greece, 1947
important in the Cold War.
When the Germans retreated from Greece in 1944, there were two rival groups – the monarchists
and the Communists – who wanted to rule the country. Both had been involved in resistance
against the Nazis. The Communists wanted Greece to be a Soviet republic. The monarchists wanted
the return of the king of Greece. Churchill sent British troops to Greece in 1945 supposedly to help
restore order and supervise free elections. In fact, the British supported the monarchists and the
king was returned to power.
In 1946, the USSR protested to the United Nations that British troops were a threat to peace in
Greece. The United Nations took no action and so the Communists tried to take control of Greece
by force. A civil war quickly developed. The British could not afford the cost of such a war and
announced on 24 February 1947 that they were withdrawing their troops. Truman stepped in.
Paid for by the Americans, some British troops stayed in Greece. They tried to prop up the king’s
government. By 1950 the royalists were in control of Greece, although they were a very weak
government, always in crisis.
85
SOURCE
20 The Truman Doctrine
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
I believe that it must be the policy American intervention in Greece marked a new era in the USA’s attitude to world politics, which
of the United States to support free became known as ‘the Truman Doctrine’ (see Source 20).
peoples who are resisting attempted Under the Truman Doctrine, the USA was prepared to send money, equipment and advice
subjugation by armed minorities or by to any country which was, in the American view, threatened by a Communist take-over. Truman
outside pressures . . . The free peoples accepted that eastern Europe was now Communist. His aim was to stop Communism from
of the world look to us for support in spreading any further. This policy became known as containment.
maintaining those freedoms. Others thought containment should mean something firmer. They said that it must be made
If we falter in our leadership, we may clear to the Soviet Union that expansion beyond a given limit would be met with military force.
endanger the peace of the world.
President Truman speaking on The Marshall Plan
12 March 1947, explaining his decision Truman believed that Communism succeeded when people faced poverty and hardship. He sent
to help Greece.
the American General George Marshall to assess the economic state of Europe. What he found was
a ruined economy. The countries of Europe owed $11.5 billion to the USA. There were extreme
shortages of all goods. Most countries were still rationing bread. There was such a coal shortage in
the hard winter of 1947 that in Britain all electricity was turned off for a period each day. Churchill
described Europe as ‘a rubble heap, a breeding ground of hate’.
Cost of rebuilding
damaged homes
Damage caused by
war to infrastructure
(roads, bridges, etc.)
Shortage of fuel
Debts from cost of war effort
Marshall suggested that about $17 billion would be needed to rebuild Europe’s prosperity. ‘Our
policy’, he said, ‘is directed against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos.’
In December 1947, Truman put his plan to Congress. For a short time, the American Congress
refused to grant this money. Many Americans were becoming concerned by Truman’s involvement
in foreign affairs. Besides, $17 billion was a lot of money!
Czechoslovakia, 1948
Americans’ attitude changed when the Communists took over the government of Czechoslovakia.
Czechoslovakia had been ruled by a coalition government which, although it included Communists,
Think! had been trying to pursue policies independent of Moscow. The Communists came down hard in
Explain how events in March 1948. Anti-Soviet leaders were purged. One pro-American Minister, Jan Masaryk, was found
a) Greece
b) Czechoslovakia
dead below his open window. The Communists said he had jumped. The Americans suspected he’d
affected American policy in Europe. been pushed. Immediately, Congress accepted the Marshall Plan and made $17 billion available
over a period of four years.
86
Marshall Aid
SOURCE
21 SOURCE
22
87
The Berlin Blockade
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
By 1948 the distrust between the USA and the USSR was so great that leaders were talking in public
about the threat of war between the two countries. Instead of running down arms expenditure, as
you would expect them to after a war, the two sides actually increased their stock of weapons.
Each side took every opportunity to denounce the policies or the plans of the other. A
propaganda war developed. Despite all the threatening talk, the two sides had never actually fired
on one another. But in 1948 they came dangerously close to war.
SOURCE
23
The Western zones
N French Berlin recover
Sector
After the war, Germany was divided into four
British Soviet
Sector zones (see Source 23). Germany had become
Sector
a real headache for the Western Allies. After
US Sector the destruction of war, their zones were in
Berlin
economic chaos. Stalin feared a recovering
British
Soviet Germany and wanted to keep it crippled. But it
Zone
Zone was clear to the Allies that Germany could not
POLAND
feed its people if it was not allowed to rebuild its
0 200 km
industries. Although they themselves were wary
of rebuilding Germany too quickly, Britain,
Scale
French
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
France and the USA combined their zones
US in 1946 to form one zone which was called
Zone
Trizonia to start with but became known in
FRANCE Zone Key
Main airports 1949 as West Germany. In 1948 they reformed
controlled by the the currency and within months there were
Western Allies
signs that Germany was recovering.
Germany in 1948.
SOURCE
24
Berlin shoppers look at goods in shop windows a few days after the new currency was brought in. The notices say ‘Our new
prices’. Before the new currency, shops had few goods on display and there had been a thriving black market.
88
SOURCE
25 The blockade
89
SOURCE
29 The consequences of the Berlin
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
A powerful symbol
Germany would stay a divided country for 41 years. Throughout that time Berlin would remain a
powerful symbol of Cold War tensions – from the American point of view, an oasis of democratic
freedom in the middle of Communist repression; from the Soviet point of view, an invasive cancer
growing in the workers’ paradise of East Germany.
SOURCE
30
Think!
It is difficult to give an exact date for
when the Cold War actually started.
♦ Some might say that it was at
Yalta, as Stalin, Churchill and
Roosevelt argued over Poland.
♦ Others might say that it started in
1948 with the Berlin Blockade.
♦ There are other possible starting
dates as well between 1945 and
1948.
What do you think? As a class, list
all the possible starting dates you
can think of. Then choose three to
compare. Whatever your choice, A 1958 Soviet cartoon. A
support it with evidence from this Soviet doctor is injecting
chapter. the cancer (the ‘Occupation
regime’ of the Western Allies)
with a medicine called ‘Free
City Status for West Berlin’.
A flashpoint
Berlin was more than a symbol, however. It was also a potential flashpoint. As you study the story
of the Cold War, you will find that the USA’s and the USSR’s worries about what might happen in
Berlin affected their policies in other areas of the world. You will pick up the story of Berlin again in
Chapter 6, page 133.
90
SOURCE
31 NATO and the Warsaw Pact
SOURCE
32 SOURCE
33
USA
USSR
Key
Members of NATO
A cartoon by David Low, 1949, entitled ‘Your play, NATO and the Soviet satellites of eastern Europe. With the establishment
Joe’. Western leaders wait to see how Stalin will of NATO, Europe was once again home to two hostile armed camps, just
react to the formation of NATO. as it had been in 1914.
SOURCE
34 Focus Task
The Soviet government did everything it could
What were the consequences of the Berlin Blockade?
to prevent the world from being split into two
Here are some consequences of the Berlin Blockade.
military blocks. The Soviet Union issued a special ♦ The Soviet Union and the West both claimed a victory.
statement analysing the grave consequences ♦ The Western Allies set up a military alliance called NATO.
affecting the entire international situation ♦ Many westerners left Berlin for good.
that would follow from the establishment of a ♦ The airlift showed the West’s commitment to Berlin.
military alliance of the Western powers. All these ♦ The airlift kept Berlin working.
♦ Berlin became a symbol of Cold War tension.
warnings failed, however, and the North Atlantic
♦ It ended the four-power administration of Germany and Berlin and
Alliance came into being. split Germany into two blocs. Germany remained a divided country
for 40 years.
Stalin commenting on the formation
♦ There was no fighting – the dispute ended peacefully.
of NATO, 1949.
♦ It heightened fear of the Soviet Union in the west.
♦ The airlift improved relations between Germans and the Allies (who
had so recently been at war).
Source Analysis Write each consequence on a card then:
1 What evidence is there in Sources 31–34 to a) divide the cards into short-term and long-term consequences
indicate that NATO was a purely defensive b) choose two which you think are the most significant
alliance? consequences and explain your choice.
2 Read Source 34. What ‘grave consequences’
do you think Stalin had in mind?
91
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Focus Task
Who was more to blame for the Cold War?
Revision Tip
It is useful to think about big questions like ‘who was most to blame…’ but it is
also useful to think about the role of specific factors so turn your research for
question 2 into revision cards and share them with your fellow students.
92
4 Who was to blame for the Cold War?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these The beginnings of the Cold War
terms mean and are able to define
them confidently. 1 The USSR was a Communist country with a one-party state; the USA was
a capitalist democracy. They had very different ideas about how a country
Essential should be run and had been enemies throughout the 1930s. However,
♦ Atomic bomb because they had a shared enemy (Hitler) they were allies during the Second
♦ Alliance World War.
♦ Appeasement 2 When it was clear that Germany was going to be defeated their leaders met
♦ Berlin airlift together at Yalta (in the USSR) to plan what would happen after the war.
♦ Berlin Blockade The US and Soviet leaders, Roosevelt and Stalin, appeared to get on well,
♦ Capitalism although behind the scenes there were tensions and disagreements.
♦ Cominform 3 They agreed that after the war Germany (and its capital Berlin) would be
♦ Communism divided into four sectors run by Britain, the USA, France and the USSR, and
♦ Democracy that eastern Europe would be a Soviet ‘sphere of influence’.
♦ Dictatorship 4 After the war ended the countries met again at Potsdam in Germany but
♦ Iron curtain by this time much had changed: Roosevelt had been replaced as President
♦ Isolationism by Truman; Stalin’s troops were occupying most of eastern Europe and the
♦ Marshall Aid Americans had dropped an atomic bomb.
♦ Marshall Plan 5 Relations between the USA and USSR quickly deteriorated and a Cold War
♦ NATO started (a Cold War is the threat of war and deep mistrust but no outright
♦ Potsdam Conference fighting).
♦ Russia 6 All the countries of eastern Europe elected or had forced on them a
♦ Soviet sphere of influence Communist government that was allied to the USSR. The division between
♦ Superpower Communist east and capitalist west became known as the iron curtain.
♦ The Soviet Union 7 The USA wanted to stop Communism spreading – the Truman Doctrine said
♦ The West/The Western Powers that America would help any country that was resisting outside pressure
♦ Truman Doctrine (by which Truman meant Communism). This marked a decisive end to US
♦ Yalta Conference isolationism.
8 The USA offered financial help (Marshall Aid) to countries in western Europe
to rebuild.
9 The USSR saw Marshall Aid and the Truman Doctrine as a threat to the USSR,
which might lead to an attack on the USSR itself.
10 Berlin became the first focus of Cold War tension when it was blockaded
by Stalin to prevent supplies getting into the US/British/French sectors. The
western allies responded with the Berlin airlift.
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1 (a) What was agreed by the Allied leaders at the Yalta Conference? [4]
(b) Why had relationships between the USA and the USSR changed by the
time of the Potsdam Conference? [6]
(c) ‘The Cold War was caused by the Soviet take-over of eastern Europe.’
How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
2 Study Source 3 on page 80 and Source 7 on page 81. Why are these sources
so different? Explain your answer using the sources and your knowledge. [7]
3 Study Source 15 on page 83. What is the message of the cartoonist? Explain
your answer. [7]
4 Study Sources 26, 27 and 28 on page 89. Which of Sources 26 or 27 would
the cartoonist in Source 28 agree with? Explain your answer using the sources
and your own knowledge. [8]
93
5
94
5
How effectively did the USA contain
the spread of Communism?
FOCUS POINTS
This key question will be explored through case studies of the following:
● the Korean War, 1950–53
Although the USA was the world’s most powerful There was already a strong anti-Communist feeling in
nation, in 1950 it seemed to President Truman that the USA. These developments made it stronger. There
events were not going America’s way, particularly with was no doubt in the minds of American leaders (indeed
regard to Communism. most American people) that this spread should be
♦ As you have seen in Chapter 4 most of eastern resisted. If they could have done, they would have liked
Europe had fallen under the influence of the to turn back the Communist advances but that was
Communist USSR 1945–48. unrealistic. So from 1947 onwards the USA followed
♦ China became Communist in 1949. The Americans the policy of Containment – holding back Communism
had always regarded China as their strongest ally so it did not spread any further. But as the 1950s
in the Far East. Between 1946 and 1949 they gave dawned this looked like a serious challenge.
billions of dollars of aid to the Nationalist government In this chapter you will investigate:
in China, largely to prevent a Communist takeover. ♦ the different methods the USA used to try to contain
That had failed. Suddenly a massive new Communist the spread of Communism
state had appeared on the map. ♦ how successful these methods were during the
♦ Also in 1949 the Soviet leader Stalin announced that Korean War, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam
the USSR had developed its own atomic bomb. The War – using these case studies you will make up your
USA was no longer the world’s only nuclear power. own mind
♦ Furthermore American spies reported to ♦ how successful the policy was in the years 1950–75:
President Truman that Stalin was using his network how effectively did the USA contain the spread of
(Cominform) to help Communists win power in Communism?
Malaya, Indonesia, Burma, the Philippines and Korea.
The USA had visions of the Communists overrunning
all of Asia, with country after country being toppled
like a row of dominoes.
95
Case study 1: The Korean War
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Think! Background
The situation in Korea has sometimes Korea had been ruled by Japan until 1945. At the end of the Second World War the northern half
been compared to the situation in was liberated by Soviet troops and the southern half by Americans. When the war ended:
Germany in 1945 (which you studied ● The North remained Communist-controlled, with a Communist leader who had been trained
in Chapter 4). Explain: in the USSR, and with a Soviet-style one-party system.
a) how these situations were ● The South was anti-Communist. It was not very democratic, but the fact that it was anti-
similar
Communist was enough to win it the support of the USA.
b) how they were different.
There was bitter hostility between the North’s Communist leader, Kim Il Sung, and Syngman Rhee,
President of South Korea. Reunification did not seem likely. In 1950 this hostility spilled over into
open warfare. North Korean troops overwhelmed the South’s forces. By September 1950 all except a
small corner of south-east Korea was under Communist control (see Source 5, map 1).
As you have already seen in Chapter 4, US President Truman was determined to contain
Communism – to stop it spreading further. In his view, Korea was a glaring example of how
Communism would spread if the USA did nothing (see Source 2). Remember that for Truman
and for many Americans, containment was not so much a policy they wanted as a policy they
had to make do with. If they could have done they would have liked to turn back the spread of
Communism but that would have risked an all-out war with the USSR. So from the US point of
SOURCE
1 view, it was not so much that they believed in containment, it was that they believed that they could
The UN will render such assistance not accept anything less.
to the republic of Korea as may be
necessary to restore international
peace and security to the area. USA or United Nations?
President Truman immediately sent advisers, supplies and warships to the waters around Korea.
Resolution 84 passed by the United But he was aware that if he was going to take action it would look better to the rest of the world if
Nations in 1950.
he had the support of other countries, especially if he had the support of the United Nations. In fact
the ideal situation would be a UN intervention in Korea rather than an American one.
SOURCE
2 Truman put enormous pressure on the UN Security Council to condemn the actions of the
Korea is a symbol to the watching North Koreans and to call on them to withdraw their troops. The USA was the single biggest
world. If we allow Korea to fall within contributor to the UN budget and was therefore in a powerful position to influence its decisions.
the Soviet orbit, the world will feel we However, this did not mean the USA always got its own way and it would probably have failed
have lost another round in our match this time except for some unusual circumstances. In the Cold War atmosphere of 1950, each
with the Soviet Union, and our prestige superpower always denounced and opposed the other. Normally, in a dispute such as this, the
and the hopes of those who place their Soviet Union would have used its right of veto to block the call for action by the UN. However, the
USSR was boycotting the UN at this time over another issue (whether Communist China should be
faith in us will suffer accordingly.
allowed to join the UN). So when the resolution was passed the USSR was not even at the meeting
The US State Department, 1950. to use its veto. So Truman was able to claim that this was a UN-sponsored operation, even if Soviet
newspapers and other media claimed that the decision was not valid.
Under the resolution (see Source 1) the UN committed itself to using its members’ armies to
SOURCE
3 drive North Korean troops out of South Korea. Eighteen states (including Britain) provided troops
If the UN is ever going to do anything, or support of some kind, mostly allies of the USA. However, the overwhelming part of the UN force
this is the time, and if the UN cannot that was sent to Korea was American. The commander, General MacArthur, was also an American.
bring the crisis in Korea to an end
then we might as well just wash up the September 1950 – the UN force advances
United Nations and forget it.
United Nations forces stormed ashore at Inchon in September 1950 (see Source 5, map 1). At the
American Senator Tom Connally speaking same time, other UN forces and South Korean troops advanced from Pusan. The North Koreans
in 1950. He was a Republican and were driven back beyond their original border (the 38th parallel) within weeks.
strongly anti-Communist.
96
SOURCE
4
SOURCE
5
Map 1: September 1950 Map 2: October 1950 Map 3: January 1951 Map 4: July 1953
C H I N A C H I N A C H I N A C H I N A
u
lu alu Yal alu
r Ya rY r rY
Rive Rive Rive Rive
Pusan
Key
Land controlled by North Land controlled by South Communist UN advances
Koreans and Chinese Koreans, Americans and advances
UN forces
The 38th parallel was the border between North and South Korea from 1945 to June 1950.
97
SOURCE
6 October 1950 – the UN force presses on
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Had they [the Chinese] intervened MacArthur had quickly achieved the original UN aim of removing North Korean troops from South
in the first or second months it would Korea. But the Americans did not stop. Despite warnings from China’s leader, Mao Tse-tung, that
have been decisive, [but] we are no if they pressed on China would join the war, the UN approved a plan to advance into North Korea.
longer fearful of their intervention. Now By October, US forces had reached the Yalu River and the border with China (see Source 5, map 2).
that we have bases for our Air Force The nature of the war had now changed. It was clear that MacArthur and Truman were after a
in Korea, there would be the greatest bigger prize, one which went beyond containment. As the UN forces advanced and secured their
slaughter. positions (see Source 6), Truman and MacArthur saw an opportunity to remove Communism from
Korea entirely. Even Mao’s warnings were not going to put them off.
General MacArthur speaking in October
1950.
November 1950 – the UN force retreats
MacArthur underestimated the power of the Chinese. Late in October 1950, 200,000 Chinese troops
Profile (calling themselves ‘People’s Volunteers’) joined the North Koreans. They launched a blistering
General Douglas MacArthur attack. They had soldiers who were strongly committed to Communism and had been taught by
(1880–1964) their leader to hate the Americans. They had modern tanks and planes supplied by the Soviet
Union. The United Nations forces were pushed back into South Korea.
Conditions were some of the worst the American forces had known, with treacherous cold and
blinding snowstorms in the winter of 1950–51. The Chinese forces were more familiar with fighting
in the jagged mountains, forested ravines and treacherous swamps – as the landscape was similar
to many areas of China.
SOURCE
7
Even the reports to the UN were censored by [American] state and defence
departments. I had no connection with the United Nations whatsoever.
Born 1880. His father was a successful
army leader. From General MacArthur’s memoirs.
Trained at West Point, the top
American military academy.
Fought in the First World War. Became March 1951 – MacArthur is sacked
the youngest commander in the
American army in France. Received 13
At this point, Truman and MacArthur fell out. MacArthur wanted to carry on the war. He was ready
medals for bravery. to invade China and even use nuclear weapons if necessary. Truman, on the other hand, felt that
During the Second World War he was saving South Korea was good enough. His allies in the UN convinced Truman that the risks of
the commander of the war against attacking China and of starting a war that might bring in the USSR were too great, and so an attack
the Japanese. He devised the ‘island-
hopping’ strategy that allowed the
on China was ruled out.
Americans to defeat the Japanese. However, in March 1951 MacArthur blatantly ignored the UN instruction and openly
In 1945 he personally accepted the threatened an attack on China. In April Truman removed MacArthur from his position as
Japanese surrender, and from 1945 commander and brought him back home. He rejected MacArthur’s aggressive policy towards
to 1951 he virtually controlled Japan,
helping the shattered country get back
Communism. Containment was underlined as the American policy. One of the American army
on its feet. leaders, General Omar Bradley, said that MacArthur’s approach would have ‘involved America in
He was aged 70 when he was given the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time, and with the wrong enemy’. Truman agreed
command of the UN forces in Korea. with Bradley and was effectively returning to the policy of containment and accepting that he could
He tried unsuccessfully to run for US
President in 1952.
not drive the Communists out of North Korea.
98
SOURCE
8 SOURCE
9
780,000
500,000 North Korean
South Korean and Chinese
civilians soldiers
and civilians
Civilian casualty in the early stages of the Korean War as South Koreans fled from the
advancing North Koreans.
Focus Task
Was the Korean War a success for containment?
Draw up your own copy of this table. You will use it to compare the three case studies. At this stage, just focus on the Korean
War. You are going to revisit this task at the end of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam War as well. We have started it
off for you. Your completed chart will be a useful revision tool.
Case study Why were the What methods What What was the Success or failure
Americans did the Americans problems outcome? (out of 10) with
worried? use to contain did they reasons supported
Communism? face? by evidence
Korea Communist
North Korea
invaded capitalist
South Korea
99
Methods of containment
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
There was no doubt at all in the minds of American leaders that Communism had to be resisted.
The question was how to do it. The Korean War showed the Americans that they could not just send
their soldiers to fight a war whenever they saw a problem. It was too expensive and it did not really
work very well. Containment needed other methods.
Alliances
The USA created a network of anti-Communist alliances around the The USSR saw these alliances as aggressive. They accused the USA
world: SEATO in South East Asia and CENTO in central Asia and the of trying to encircle the Communist world. In 1955 the Soviet Union
Middle East. The USA gave money, advice and arms to these allies. In set up the Warsaw Treaty Organisation, better known as the Warsaw
return, the leaders of these countries suppressed Communist influence Pact. This included the USSR and all the Communist east European
in their own countries. countries except Yugoslavia.
SOURCE
10 SOURCE
11
We shall never have a secure peace
and a happy world so long as Soviet
Communism dominates one-third of all
the world’s people and is in the process
of trying to extend its rule to many USA
others. Therefore we must have in mind
the liberation of these captive peoples.
Now liberation does not mean war. USSR
Arms race
At the same time both the USSR and the USA were engaged in an ‘arms of money on new weapons. They spied on one another to steal
race’. technological secrets. The USSR tended to use spies such as Rudolf
The Americans had developed their first atomic bomb in 1945. They Abel. He worked in New York until he was arrested in 1957. The USA
did not share the secret of their bomb with the USSR, even while they favoured hi-tech spying such as the U2 plane – a spy plane which flew
were still allies. When the USA dropped the first bombs on Hiroshima so high it could not be shot down but took incredibly detailed photos of
and Nagasaki in August 1945, 70,000 people were killed instantly. The the ground. It could read a newspaper from 14 miles up in the sky!
awesome power of the explosions and the incredible destruction caused Each side perfected nuclear bombs that could be launched from
by the bombs made Japan surrender within a week. It was clear to submarines or planes. The USA placed short-range nuclear weapons in
both the USA and the USSR that atomic bombs were the weapons of Turkey (one of their CENTO allies). Both sides developed ICBMs, which
the future. could travel from continent to continent in half an hour.
Over the next decade the USA and USSR developed ever bigger,
more deadly and more flexible weapons. They spent vast amounts
100
The impact of the arms race
Think! Fear
Create a diagram that shows how the Leaders might see their nuclear weapons as a deterrent, but others worried that the world was
following facors were connected:
moving into a very dangerous time. For example, an American B-47 bomber crashed in Norfolk,
♦ alliances
♦ nuclear arms race England in 1957. The resulting fire came within minutes of setting off two nuclear bombs that
♦ propaganda would have devastated all of East Anglia. In 1962, a US radar station mistook one of its own
♦ spying. satellites for an incoming Soviet missile and was minutes away from triggering a full nuclear
The author recommends a Venn ‘response’ attack on the USSR. Of course, governments did not tell their people about these
diagram but you might prefer a incidents – both Soviet and US leaders were very secretive. But they could not hide the big issue
spider diagram or some other format. – that the nuclear arms race seemed to have raised the stakes so high that one suicidal leader,
Or try different formats and see
one poor decision or (most worryingly of all) one small and innocent mistake could trigger a
which works well for you.
catastrophe that could destroy Europe, the USA and the Soviet Union within minutes.
Fear of ‘the bomb’ was a common feature of life in 1950s’ and 1960s’ America. The arms race
was a topic of everyday conversation. Children were taught at school what do if there was a nuclear
Revision Tip attack. Some people protested against the arms race. Robert Oppenheimer, the man who led the
Make sure you can remember: team that developed the atom bomb, opposed the H-bomb. He felt it was wrong to develop a more
♦ one example of the USA creating powerful bomb in peacetime. Others protested at the vast amounts being spent on weapons. But the
an alliance to contain Communism most common feelings were of helplessness and fear. People wondered whether this was the end.
♦ one example of it using Were they the last generation to walk this planet? Would nuclear warfare signal the end of the world?
arms technology to contain
It was against the background of the nuclear arms race that Cuba became the next major
Communism.
flashpoint of the Cold War.
101
Case study 2: The Cuban Missile Crisis
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Revision Tip
From these two pages you should
make sure you remember:
♦ one reason why the USA disliked
Castro’s government
♦ how the USA initially tried to
contain Communism on Cuba.
A 1960 Soviet cartoon. The notice held by the US Secretary of State says to Castro
in Cuba: ‘I forbid you to make friends with the Soviet Union.’
102
SOURCE
15 As early as June 1960, US President Eisenhower authorised the US Central Intelligence Agency
103
SOURCE
17 Khrushchev arms Castro
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
SOURCE
18
N
es
mil siles
0 00 mis
2 ge
an s
g-r e
f lon inut
o m
e 20
ng
Ra
ships
ng
Ra
Cape Canaveral
New (space research)
Orleans
Havana
CUBA Guantanámo
(US base)
Bay of
Pigs
Map showing the location of Cuba and the range of the Cuban missiles.
104
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
Think!
How should President Kennedy deal with the Cuban crisis?
On Tuesday 16 October, President Kennedy was informed of the
discovery. He formed a special team of advisers called Ex Comm.
They came up with several choices.
Work in groups. You are advisers to the President. You have
Option 2 Surgical air attack?
to reduce Ex Comm’s five options to just two for the President An immediate selected air attack to destroy the nuclear bases
themselves.
to choose between.
When you have made your decision explain why you have For: It would destroy the missiles before they were
rejected the three you have. ready to use.
Against: 1 Destruction of all sites could not be guaranteed.
Even one left undamaged could launch a counter-
Option 1 Do nothing? attack against the USA.
2 The attack would inevitably kill Soviet soldiers.
For: The Americans still had a vastly greater nuclear power The Soviet Union might retaliate at once.
than the Soviet Union. The USA could still destroy 3 To attack without advance warning was seen as
the Soviet Union, so – the argument went – the USSR immoral.
would never use these missiles. The biggest danger to
world peace would be to overreact to this discovery.
Against: The USSR had lied about Cuban missiles. Kennedy
had already issued his solemn warning to the USSR.
To do nothing would be another sign of weakness.
Option 3 Invasion?
All-out invasion of Cuba by air and sea.
For: An invasion would not only get rid of the missiles but
Castro as well. The American forces were already trained
and available to do it.
Against: It would almost certainly guarantee an equivalent Soviet
response, either to protect Cuba, or within the Soviet
sphere of influence – for example, a take-over of Berlin.
105
What happened next?
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Tue 16 October......................... President Kennedy was informed of the missile build-up. Ex Comm formed.
Sat 20 October.......................... Kennedy decided on a blockade of Cuba.
Mon 22 October......................... Kennedy announced the blockade and called on the Soviet Union to withdraw its missiles. He
addressed the American people:
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
19
Good Evening, My Fellow Citizens:
1 What words and phrases in
Source 19 reveal how serious This government, as promised, has maintained the closest surveillance of
Kennedy believed the situation was the Soviet military build-up on the island of Cuba. Within the past week,
in October 1962? unmistakable evidence has established the fact that a series of offensive missile
2 Kennedy was renowned as a sites is now in preparation on that imprisoned island. The purpose of these bases
skilled communicator. How did he
convince his audience that he was
can be none other than to provide a nuclear strike capability against the Western
in the right? Hemisphere. . .
Acting, therefore, in the defence of our own security and of the entire Western
Hemisphere, and under the authority entrusted to me by the Constitution as
endorsed by the resolution of the Congress, I have directed that the following
initial steps be taken immediately:
First: To halt this offensive build-up, a strict quarantine on all offensive military
equipment under shipment to Cuba … Second: I have directed the continued
and increased close surveillance of Cuba and its military build-up. . . . I have
directed the Armed Forces to prepare for any eventualities . . . Third: It shall be
the policy of this nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba against
any nation in the Western Hemisphere as an attack on the United States,
requiring a full retaliatory response upon the Soviet Union.
Extract from President Kennedy’s TV broadcast to the American people on
22 October 1962.
Tue 23 October......................... Kennedy received a letter from Khrushchev saying that Soviet ships would not observe the
blockade. Khrushchev did not admit the presence of nuclear missiles on Cuba.
Wed 24 October......................... The blockade began. The first missile-carrying ships, accompanied by a Soviet submarine,
approached the 500-mile (800-km) blockade zone. Then suddenly, at 10.32 a.m., the twenty Soviet
ships which were closest to the zone stopped or turned around.
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
20
1 Source 20 is a British cartoon.
British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent © Solo Syndication/
A cartoon by Vicky (Victor Weisz) from the London Evening Standard, 24 October
1962.
106
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
Thu 25 October......................... Despite the Soviet ships turning around, intensive aerial photography revealed that work
on the missile bases in Cuba was proceeding rapidly.
Fri 26 October.......................... Kennedy received a long personal letter from Khrushchev. The letter claimed that the
missiles on Cuba were purely defensive, but went on: ‘If assurances were given that the USA would
not participate in an attack on Cuba and the blockade was lifted, then the question of the removal
or the destruction of the missile sites would be an entirely different question.’ This was the first time
Khrushchev had admitted the presence of the missiles.
Sat 27 October a.m...................... Khrushchev sent a second letter – revising his proposals – saying that the condition for
removing the missiles from Cuba was that the USA withdraw its missiles from Turkey.
An American U-2 plane was shot down over Cuba. The pilot was killed. The President was
advised to launch an immediate reprisal attack on Cuba.
Sat 27 October p.m...................... Kennedy decided to delay an attack. He also decided to ignore the second Khrushchev letter,
but accepted the terms suggested by Khrushchev on 26 October. He said that if the Soviet Union did
not withdraw, an attack would follow.
SOURCE
21
It was a beautiful autumn evening, the height of the crisis, and I went up to the
open air to smell it, because I thought it was the last Saturday I would ever see.
Robert McNamara talking about the evening of 27 October 1962. McNamara was
one of Kennedy’s closest advisers during the Cuban Crisis.
Sun 28 October......................... Khrushchev replied to Kennedy: ‘In order to eliminate as rapidly as possible the conflict
which endangers the cause of peace . . . the Soviet Government has given a new order to dismantle
the arms which you described as offensive and to crate and return them to the Soviet Union.’
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
22
Does Source 22 give the impression
that either Khrushchev or Kennedy
has the upper hand? Explain whether
you think the events of the Crisis on
these pages support that view.
Think!
Kennedy described Wednesday 24 October and Saturday 27 October as the
darkest days of the crisis. Use the information on this page to explain why.
107
Why did the Soviet Union place
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
To bargain with the USA To test the USA To trap the USA
If Khrushchev had missiles on Cuba, he could In the strained atmosphere of Cold War Khrushchev wanted the Americans to find
agree to remove them in return for some politics the missiles were designed to see how them and be drawn into a nuclear war. He did
American concessions. strong the Americans really were – whether not even try to hide them.
they would back off or face up.
Think!
SOURCE
23
1 Which of the explanations above
From the territory of the Soviet Union, the medium-range missiles couldn’t
do Sources 23 and 24 support? possibly reach the territory of the USA, but deployed on Cuba they would
2 Talking in private Khrushchev become strategic nuclear weapons. That meant in practical terms we had a
called the missiles ‘a hedgehog in chance to narrow the differences between our forces.
Uncle Sam’s pants’. Which of the
explanations does this statement General Anatoly Gribkov, commander, Soviet forces, Cuba.
support?
3 Which explanation do you think
Khrushchev’s actions on 26
SOURCE
24
and 27 October support (see In addition to protecting Cuba, our missiles would have equalized what the West
page 107)? likes to call the ‘balance of power’. The Americans had surrounded our country
4 Choose the explanation(s) that with military bases and threatened us with nuclear weapons, and now they would
you think best fit what you have
found out about the crisis. Explain
learn just what it feels like to have enemy missiles pointing at you …
your choice.
Khrushchev writing in his memoirs in 1971.
108
The outcomes …
109
Case study 3: The Vietnam War
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Although Americans were relieved at the outcome of the Cuban Crisis it did not reduce their fear
of Communism. Very soon they found themselves locked in a costly war in Vietnam, which put a
massive question mark over the very policy of containment.
SOURCE
25 Origins of the Vietnam War
A poor feudal nation had beaten a
Vietnam had a long history of fighting outsiders.
great colonial power … It meant a lot;
not just to us but to people all over the
world. Fighting the Japanese
Before the Second World War, Vietnam (or Indochina as it was called then) had been ruled by
Viet Minh commander Vo Nguyen Giap
commenting on the victory over France
France. During the war the region was conquered by the Japanese. They treated the Vietnamese
in 1954. people savagely. As a result, a strong anti-Japanese resistance movement (the Viet Minh) emerged
under the leadership of Communist Ho Chi Minh.
Ho was a remarkable individual. He had lived in the USA, Britain and France. In the 1920s he
SOURCE
26 had studied Communism in the USSR. In 1930 he had founded the Indochinese Communist Party.
It was generally agreed that had an He inspired the Vietnamese people to fight the Japanese.
election been held, Ho Chi Minh would When the Second World War ended, the Viet Minh entered the northern city of Hanoi in 1945
have been elected Premier … at the and declared Vietnam independent.
time of the fighting, possibly 80 per
cent of the population would have
voted for the communist Ho Chi Minh
Fighting the French
as their leader. The French had other ideas. In 1945 they came back wanting to rule Vietnam again, but Ho was
not prepared to let this happen. Another nine years of war followed between the Viet Minh who
President Eisenhower writing after the controlled the north of the country and the French who controlled much of the south.
Vietnam War. From 1949 Ho was supported by China, which had became a Communist state in 1949. You
have already studied how the USA dealt with a similar situation in Korea (pages 96–99) so how
SOURCE
27 would you expect the USA to react to this development? In this case rather than sending troops or
getting a UN resolution the USA poured $500 million a year into the French war effort. Despite this
the French were unable to hold on to the country and pulled out of Vietnam in 1954.
A peace conference was held in Geneva and the country was divided into North and South
Vietnam until elections could be held to decide its future (see Source 25).
110
Financial support for Diem’s regime
Hue
kon
Da Nang help the South Vietnamese army fight the Viet Cong (see Source 29). However, Kennedy said he was
gR
determined that the USA would not ‘blunder into war, unclear about aims or how to get out again’.
ive
THAILAND
He was a keen historian himself and had studied the USA’s past successes and failures. He was well
r
aware from the Korean war ten years earlier what could and could not be achieved by military
intervention.
SOUTH
VIETNAM
However President Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. His successor, Lyndon Johnson, was
CAMBODIA more prepared than Kennedy to commit the USA to a full-scale conflict in Vietnam to prevent the
spread of Communism.
Saigon In August 1964, North Vietnamese patrol boats opened fire on US ships in the Gulf of Tonkin.
In a furious reaction, the US Congress passed the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, which gave the President
Mekong Delta
power to ‘take all necessary measures to prevent further aggression and achieve peace and
0 200 km
security’. It effectively meant that Johnson could take the USA into a full-scale war if he felt it was
Scale
necessary, and very soon he did.
Key ● In February 1965 the US started Operation Rolling Thunder – a gigantic bombing
Communist-controlled areas in campaign against North Vietnamese cities, factories, army bases and the Ho Chi Minh Trail,
the mid 1960s which continued for three years.
Ho Chi Minh trail ● On 8 March 1965, 3,500 US marines, combat troops rather than advisers, came ashore at
Da Nang.
Vietnam in the mid 1960s The USA was now officially at war in Vietnam.
111
SOURCE
29 Why did US send troops to Vietnam?
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
First is the simple fact that South The answer to this question may seem obvious! It was because of the policy of containment and the
Vietnam, a member of the free ‘domino theory’. That is certainly how the President and his advisers explained it (see Source 29 for
world family, is striving to preserve its example). However there is a more controversial view held by some historians that powerful groups
independence from Communist attack. within the USA wanted a war.
Second, South East Asia has great In 1961 President Eisenhower himself warned that America had developed a powerful
significance in the forward defence of ‘military–industrial complex’. The government gave huge budgets to the military commanders.
the USA. For Hanoi, the immediate These budgets were spent on weapons made by some of America’s biggest companies. Thus, both
object is limited: conquest of the south the armed forces and business actually gained from conflict. Eisenhower did not accuse business
and national unification. For Peking, and military leaders of anything, but in his last speech as President he warned the American people
however, Hanoi’s victory would only be not to let these groups become too influential. Some historians believe that this was a factor in
a first step towards eventual Chinese American involvement in Vietnam, but it is hotly disputed by others.
dominance of the two Vietnams
and South East Asia and towards
SOURCE
30
exploitation of the new strategy in 600 Mainly Mainly
other parts of the world. US troops and advisers in Vietnam (thousands) advisers combat troops
US dead (thousands)
used in 1950 about Korea?
10
100
5
0 0
1960 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74
Kennedy Johnson Nixon
US troops and deaths in Vietnam, 1960–74. US troops were not the only foreign
soldiers in the war. About 46,000 Australian and New Zealand troops fought too.
Focus Task A
Why did the USA get increasingly involved in Vietnam?
1 Draw a timeline of the period 1945–65.
2 Mark on it increasing American involvement using the following headings:
♦ No direct American involvement
♦ Financial support
Revision Tip ♦ Political involvement
Make sure you can recall: ♦ Military involvement
♦ two reasons why Communism was 3 Write annotations to show the date on which each of these phases started and
becoming stronger in Vietnam what events triggered the increasing involvement.
♦ two measures taken by the USA to 4 Choose two events that you think were critical in increasing the USA’s
resist the spread of Communism. involvement in the war in Vietnam. Explain your choice.
112
Tactics and technology in the
Focus Task B
Why couldn’t the Americans win?
Stage 1 – Understand the tactics
1 Work in pairs. Take either the Viet Cong or the Americans. Use page 114 or 115 to find out about the your
side’s tactics. Create a diagram by following these steps:
♦ In the inner circle record the tactics.
♦ In the outer circle the reason for using those tactics.
♦ Draw lines to show how the tactics and reasons are connected.
Compare your diagram with your partner’s.
Stage 2 – Thinking it through
2 Make your own table like this, then using your research from stage 1 record in columns 2 and 4 how far each
side had these qualities. You can add further rows if you think of other important qualities.
Well-trained soldiers
Effective tactics
Other
3 Next, in each row of column 3, draw some scales to show which way the balance falls for this quality. Did the
USA or the Viet Cong have the advantage?
4 Now think about the overall picture – how the strengths and weaknesses work together.
a) Were the armies finely balanced? Or was the balance strongly weighted to one side or the other?
b) Which quality was most important in determining who won the war? Was one so important that being
ahead in that area meant that other advantages or disadvantages did not matter?
Stage 3 – Explaining your conclusions
5 Now write up your answer. You could use this structure:
a) Describe how the failure of the US army was a combination of its own weaknesses and Viet Cong strengths.
b) Give balanced examples of US successes and failures.
c) Give balanced examples of Viet Cong successes and failures.
d) Choose one American weakness and one Viet Cong strength that you think were absolutely vital in
preventing the USA from beating the Viet Cong and explain the significance of the points you have chosen.
Revision Tip
Find five reasons why the USA could not defeat the Viet Cong. Make sure you can recall:
♦ two or three strengths of the Viet Cong (with examples)
♦ two or three weaknesses of the USA (with examples).
113
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Viet Cong tactics Civilians
In early 1965 the Viet Cong had about 170,000 soldiers. They were Ho knew how important it was to keep the population on his side. The
heavily outnumbered and outgunned. They were no match for the Viet Cong fighters were expected to be courteous and respectful to the
US and South Vietnamese forces in open warfare. In November 1965 Vietnamese peasants. They helped the peasants in the fields during busy
in the La Dreng Valley, US forces killed 2,000 Viet Cong for the loss of periods. However, the Viet Cong could be ruthless – they were quite
300 troops. However, this did not daunt Ho Chi Minh. prepared to kill peasants who opposed them or who co-operated with
their enemies. They also conducted a campaign of terror against the
police, tax collectors, teachers and any other employees of the South
Guerilla warfare
Vietnamese government. Between 1966 and 1971 the Viet Cong killed an
Ho had been in China and seen Mao Tse-tung use guerrilla warfare to estimated 27,000 civilians.
achieve a Communist victory. The principles of guerrilla warfare were
simple: retreat when the enemy attacks; raid when the enemy camps;
attack when the enemy tires; pursue when the enemy retreats. Ho had
Supplies
successfully used these guerrilla tactics himself to drive out the French. The Viet Cong depended on supplies from North Vietnam that came
Guerrilla warfare was a nightmare for the US army. Guerrillas did along the Ho Chi Minh trail. US and South Vietnamese planes bombed
not wear uniform. They were hard to tell apart from the peasants in the this constantly, but 40,000 Vietnamese worked to keep it open whatever
villages. They had no known base camp or headquarters. They worked the cost.
in small groups with limited weapons. They attacked then disappeared
into the jungle, into the villages or into tunnels (see Source 32). Commitment
Guerrilla attacks aimed to wear down enemy soldiers and wreck The total of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese dead in the war has been
their morale. US soldiers lived in constant fear of ambushes or booby estimated at 1 million – far higher than US losses. However, this was
traps such as pits filled with sharpened bamboo stakes. One of the a price that Ho Chi Minh was prepared to pay. Whatever the casualties,
least popular duties for US soldiers was going ‘on point’, which there were replacement troops available. The greatest strength of the
meant leading the patrol checking for booby traps – 11 per cent of US Viet Cong fighters was that they simply refused to give in.
casualties were caused by booby traps. Another 51 per cent were from
ambushes or hand-to-hand combat. The Viet Cong favoured close-
quarter fighting because it knew that the Americans would not use their Think!
superior guns for fear of hitting their own troops. This was known as 1 One Viet Cong leader said: ‘The people are the water.
‘hanging on to the American belts’. Our armies are the fish.’ What do you think he meant?
2 Find evidence on pages 114–115 to support the view
that:
♦ the VietCong had the support of the people
♦ they did not.
SOURCE
31 SOURCE
32
I remember sitting at this wretched
little outpost one day with a couple Concrete
trapdoors
of my sergeants. We’d been manning
this thing for three weeks and running
patrols off it. We were grungy and
sore with jungle rot and we’d suffered
about nine or ten casualties on a Kitchen
recent patrol. This one sergeant of Tripwire
mine
mine said, ‘You know, Lieutenant, I Smoke Sleeping
outlets Booby quarters
don’t see how we’re ever going to win trap
Ventilation
this.’ And I said, ‘Well, Sarge, I’m not shaft
supposed to say this to you as your
officer – but I don’t either.’ So there Rest of
tunnel
was this sense that we just couldn’t complex
see what could be done to defeat Tunnel hospital
Booby trap
for seriously
these people. wounded Water-filled U-bend Well
to stop spread of
gas leaks
Philip Caputo, a lieutenant in the
Marine Corps in Vietnam in 1965–66, Storage cache for food,
speaking in 1997. weapons and explosives
A Viet Cong tunnel complex. To avoid the worst effects of American air power, the Viet
Cong built a vast network of underground tunnels, probably around 240 km of them.
114
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
US tactics US troops
In the early stages of the war most US troops were professional soldiers.
Bombing Morale was good and they performed well. However, as the war
The main US tactic was bombing. For seven years from 1965–72 the intensified the US needed more soldiers so they introduced the draft
USA bombed military and industrial targets in North Vietnam; they (conscription). As soon as young men left school or college they could
bombed towns and cities in North and South Vietnam; they bombed be called up into the US army. So from 1967:
the Ho Chi Minh trail; they bombed Vietnam’s neighbours Laos and ● Many soldiers were young men who had never been in the military
Cambodia (who were sympathetic to the Viet Cong). before. The average age of US troops was only 19.
To some extent bombing worked. ● In theory American troops came from all walks of life. In reality
● It damaged North Vietnam’s war effort and it disrupted supply routes. the majority of combat troops were from poor and immigrant
● From 1970 to 1972, intense bombing of North Vietnam forced them backgrounds.
to negotiate for peace. ● The conscripts knew little about Vietnam – and some cared little
However, air power could not defeat the Communists. It could only about democracy or communism. They just wanted to get home
slow them down. Even after major air raids on North Vietnam in 1972, alive. In contrast the Viet Cong were fighting for their own country,
the Communists were still able to launch a major assault on the South. and a cause many of them believed in.
Even more important, civilian casualties helped turn the Vietnamese ● Morale among the US conscripts was often very low. To tackle this
people against the Americans. problem the generals introduced a policy of giving troops just a
one-year term of service. This backfired because as soon as the
Search and destroy soldiers gained experience they were sent home.
To combat guerrilla warfare the US commander General Westmoreland
developed a policy of search and destroy. He set up heavily defended US
bases in South Vietnam near to the coasts. From here helicopters full of
troops would descend on a village and search out and destroy any Viet
Cong forces they found. Soldiers had to send back reports of body counts. SOURCE
34
Search-and-destroy missions did kill Viet Cong soldiers, but there
were problems.
● The raids were often based on inadequate information.
● Inexperienced US troops often walked into traps.
● Innocent villages were mistaken for Viet Cong strongholds. For
every Viet Cong weapon captured by search and destroy, there was a
body count of six. Many of these were innocent civilians.
● Search-and-destroy tactics made the US and South Vietnamese
forces very unpopular with the peasants. It pushed them towards
supporting the Viet Cong.
SOURCE
33
You would go out, you would secure a piece of terrain during
the daylight hours, [but at night] you’d surrender that –
and I mean literally surrender … you’d give it up, because
… the helicopters would come in and pick you up at night A ten-year-old Vietnamese girl, Phan Thi Kim, runs naked
and fly you back to the security of your base camp. after tearing her burning clothes from her body following a
napalm attack in 1972. This photograph became one of the
Lieutenant Colonel George Forrest, US Army. most enduring images of the war.
Chemical weapons
SOURCE
35
The US also used chemical weapons to combat the Viet Cong. In the end anybody who was still in that country was
● Agent Orange was a highly toxic ‘weedkiller’ sprayed from
the enemy. The same village you’d gone in to give them
planes to destroy the jungle where the Viet Cong hid. The medical treatment … you could go through that village
Americans used 82 million litres of Agent Orange to spray later and get shot at by a sniper. Go back in and you
thousands of square kilometres of jungle. would not find anybody. Nobody knew anything. We were
● Napalm was another widely used chemical weapon. It destroyed trying to work with these people, they were basically doing
jungles where guerrillas might hide. It also burned through skin to a number on us. You didn’t trust them anymore. You didn’t
the bone. trust anybody.
● Many civilians and soldiers were also killed or harmed by these
Fred Widmer, an American soldier, speaking in 1969.
chemical weapons.
115
The Tet Offensive
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Despite these problems the official American view of the war from 1965 to 1967 was that it was
going reasonably well. The US and South Vietnamese forces were killing large numbers of Viet
Cong. Although they were struggling against guerrilla tactics they were confident that the enemy
was being worn down. The press reports reflected this positive view.
This confidence was shattered early in 1968. During the New Year holiday, Viet Cong fighters
attacked over 100 cities and other military targets. One Viet Cong commando unit tried to capture
the US embassy in Saigon. US forces had to fight to regain control room by room. Around 4,500
Viet Cong fighters tied down a much larger US and South Vietnamese force in Saigon for two days.
In many ways the Tet Offensive was a disaster for the Communists. They had hoped that the
people of South Vietnam would rise up and join them. They didn’t. The Viet Cong lost around
10,000 experienced fighters and were badly weakened by it.
However, the Tet Offensive proved to be a turning point in the war because it raised hard
questions in the USA about the war.
● There were nearly 500,000 troops in Vietnam and the USA was spending $20 billion a year on
the war. So why had the Communists been able to launch a major offensive that took US forces
completely by surprise?
● US and South Vietnamese forces quickly retook the towns captured in the offensive, but in the
process they used enormous amounts of artillery and air power. Many civilians were killed. The
ancient city of Hue was destroyed. Was this right?
SOURCE
36 The media
Until this point media coverage of the war was
generally positive, although some journalists
were beginning to ask difficult questions in 1967.
During the Tet Offensive the gloves came off.
CBS journalist Walter Cronkite (see Source 36)
asked ‘What the hell is going on? I thought we
were winning this war’. Don Oberdorfer of The
Washington Post later wrote (in 1971) that as a
result of the Tet Offensive ‘the American people
and most of their leaders reached the conclusion
that the Vietnam War would require greater
effort over a far longer period of time than it was
worth’.
SOURCE
37
The Tet Offensive was the decisive
battle of the Vietnam War because
of its profound impact on American
attitudes about involvement in
Southeast Asia. In the aftermath of Tet,
many Americans became disillusioned
… To the American public and even
to members of the administration,
the offensive demonstrated that
US intervention … had produced
a negligible effect on the will and
capability of the Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese.
Extract from The Tet Offensive:
CBS News journalist Walter Cronkite reporting in Vietnam in February 1968. He was Intelligence Failure in War
regarded as the most trusted man in America. by James Wirtz.
116
SOURCE
38 The peace movement in the USA
117
SOURCE
41 The My Lai massacre
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Investigation
Soon after, Life magazine, one of the most influential magazines in the USA, published
photographs of the massacre at My Lai (see Source 42) that had been taken by an official army
photographer. This triggered an investigation that ended in the trial for mass murder of Lieutenant
William Calley. He was an officer in Charlie Company. He had personally shot many of the people
in the irrigation ditch at My Lai. In September 1969 he was formally charged with murdering 109
people. Ten other members of the company and the commanding officers were also charged.
Aftermath
A photograph taken at My Lai on
16 March 1968 by Ron Haeberle
The revelations were deeply shocking to the American people. The charges were also too much for
(see Source 43). the army. They placed responsibility on Calley. They denied that Calley was acting under orders. His
senior officers were acquitted. After a long court case surrounded by massive media attention and
publicity, Calley was found guilty of the murder of 22 civilians. In August 1971 he was sentenced to
Think! 20 years’ hard labour. In November 1974 he was released.
1 Why do you think it took twelve
months for anyone to do anything
SOURCE
43
about the massacre? I think I was in a kind of daze from seeing all these shootings and not seeing any
2 Why was the massacre so returning fire. Yet the killing kept going on. The Americans were rounding up the
shocking to the American public?
people and shooting them, not taking any prisoners … I was part of it, everyone
who was there was part of it and that includes the General and the Colonel flying
above in their helicopters … Just as soon as I turned away I heard firing. I saw
people drop. They started falling on top of each other, one on top of the other.
I just kept on walking. I did not pay any attention to who did it. By that time I
knew what the score was. It was an atrocity … I notice this one small boy had
been shot in the foot … he was walking toward the group of bodies looking for his
mother … then suddenly I heard a crack and … I saw this child flip on top of the
Source Analysis u pile of bodies. The GI just stood and walked away. No remorse. Nothing.
1 Source 43 was written by someone
who worked for the US Army. Does Ron Haeberle, the US Army official photographer. His black and white pictures
that make it a trustworthy source? for the Army and his colour photographs taken with his own private camera had a
dramatic public impact.
118
Ending the war in Vietnam
A new President
In November 1968 Richard Nixon was elected President. From 1969 to 1973 he and his National
Security Adviser Henry Kissinger worked to end US involvement in Vietnam. This was not easy
because the bigger question of how to contain world Communism – the one that had got the USA
into Vietnam in the first place – had not gone away. They did not want to appear simply to hand
Vietnam to the Communists. They used a range of strategies.
Improved relations with USSR and China Peace negotiations with North Vietnam
In 1969 the USSR and China fell out. It seemed possible that there From early 1969, Kissinger had regular meetings with the chief Vietnamese
would even be a war between these two powerful Communist peace negotiator, Le Duc Tho.
countries. As a result, both the USSR and China tried to improve
relations with the USA.
‘Vietnamisation’ of the war effort Increased bombing
In Vietnam Nixon began handing responsibility for the war to South At the same time Nixon increased bombing campaigns against North
Vietnamese forces and withdrawing US troops. Between April 1969 Vietnam to show he was not weak. US and South Vietnamese troops also
and the end of 1971 almost 400,000 US troops left Vietnam. invaded Viet Cong bases in Cambodia, causing outrage across the world,
and even in the USA.
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
44
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
1 Describe the attitude of Source 44
to the agreement of January 1973. … the nation began at last to extricate itself from a quicksandy war that had
2 Are you surprised by this source? plagued four Presidents and driven one from office, that had sundered the
country more deeply than any event since the Civil War, that in the end came to
be seen by a great majority of Americans as having been a tragic mistake.
… but its more grievous toll was paid at home – a wound to the spirit so sore
that news of peace stirred only the relief that comes with an end to pain. A war
that produced no famous victories, no national heroes and no strong patriotic
songs, produced no memorable armistice day celebrations either. America was
too exhausted by the war and too chary of peace to celebrate.
Reaction to the agreement of January 1973 in the influential American news
magazine Newsweek, 5 February 1973.
119
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Focus Task A
Why did US policy fail in Vietnam?
Despite all the money they spent and the effort they put in, the US failed to contain the spread of Communism to South
Vietnam. You are now going to consider the reasons for this.
1 Make cards like these. On each card write an explanation or paste a source which shows the importance of the reason, i.e.
how it damaged the policy of containment. Add other cards if you think there are reasons you should consider.
2 Lay your cards out on a large sheet of paper and add lines to show connections between the reasons. Write an explanation
of the connection.
US military tactics in The unpopularity of The experience of the Opposition in the Other countries’
Vietnam the South Vietnamese Viet Cong and the USA support for the Viet
regime inexperience of the Cong
American soldiers
Revision Tip How did the Vietnam War affect the policy
Use these cards for your revision. of containment?
Take a photo of your completed
The American policy of containment was in tatters.
layout showing and annotating the
● It had failed militarily. The war had shown that even the USA’s vast military strength could
connections. This will be a good
essay plan if you have to write on not stem the spread of Communism.
this topic for an assignment. Make ● It had also failed strategically. Not only did the USA fail to stop South Vietnam going
sure you can remember one piece of Communist, but the heavy bombing of Vietnam’s neighbours, Laos and Cambodia, actually
evidence to go with each point. helped the Communist forces in those countries to win support. By 1975 both Laos and
Cambodia had Communist governments. Instead of slowing down the domino effect in the
region, American policies actually speeded it up.
● It was also a propaganda disaster. The Americans had always presented their campaign
against Communism as a moral crusade. But atrocities committed by American soldiers
and the use of chemical weapons damaged the USA’s reputation. In terms of a crusade for
‘democracy’ the Americans were seen to be propping up a government that did not have the
support of its own people.
Theses failures greatly affected the USA’s future policies towards Communist states. After the war,
the Americans tried to improve their relations with China. They ended their block on China’s
membership of the UN. The President made visits to China. The USA also entered into a period of
greater understanding with the Soviet Union. In fact, during the 1970s both the Soviet Union and
China got on better with the USA than they did with each other.
The Americans also became very suspicious of involving their troops in any other conflict
that they could not easily and overwhelmingly win. This was an attitude that continued to affect
American foreign policy into the twenty-first century.
Focus Task B
How successful was the USA’s policy of containment in Vietnam?
1 Look back at your chart from page 109. Complete it for the Vietnam War.
2 You have now looked at three very different case studies of the USA’s attempts
to contain Communism. Using the work you have done for the Focus Tasks on
pages 99, 109 and this page, explain:
♦ how far did the policy of containment succeed
♦ what the main reasons for its success or failure were.
Revision Tip
All these case studies are important because they each show different aspects
of containment in action. Make sure you are equally confident about each
one and can explain in your own words whether it was a success or failure for
containment.
120
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these Containment
terms mean and be able to define
them confidently. 1 The USA was anti-Communist and wanted to limit the spread of
♦ Agent Orange Communism around the world – this policy was called containment.
♦ Armistice Korea
♦ Arms race 2 When a Communist government tried to take over in Korea in 1950 the USA
♦ Atomic bomb/H bomb sent troops to help prevent Korea falling to the Communists.
♦ Bay of Pigs 3 The result was a stalemate and in 1953 Korea was divided into a Communist
♦ Blockade north (friendly towards China) and a capitalist south (friendly towards the
♦ Capitalism USA).
♦ CENTO
♦ Cold War
Cuba
♦ Cominform 4 Cuba turned Communist in 1959. Cuba is a large island very close to the
♦ Communism USA.
♦ Containment 5 In the 1960s there was a nuclear arms race between the USA and USSR with
♦ Conventional weapons ever more dangerous nuclear weapons being developed and tested by both
♦ Democracy sides.
♦ Dictator 6 The Soviet leader Khrushchev sent nuclear weapons to Cuba. The USA and
♦ Diplomatic relations much of the world were worried that this might lead to the first nuclear war
♦ Domino theory with dreadful consequences.
♦ Draft 7 The US President Kennedy ordered a blockade of Cuba to prevent the
♦ Guerrilla warfare weapons arriving and the crisis was averted. Better relations between the
♦ Ho Chi Minh Trail two leaders followed.
♦ ICBM Vietnam
♦ Indochina
8 The next area of worry was South-east Asia where Communism was very
♦ Intelligence (as in CIA)
strong. The USA believed in the domino theory – if one country turned
♦ Landlord/peasant
Communist then the neighbouring countries would follow so they wanted to
♦ MAD
stop any country turning Communist.
♦ Missile gap
9 In 1954 following a civil war Vietnam was divided into a Communist north
♦ Napalm
and a capitalist south but the north, with the help of Communist China, tried
♦ Nuclear deterrent
to take over the south too.
♦ Operation Rolling Thunder
10 The USA decided to help the south to resist the threat of the Communist
♦ Satellite state
north by first sending money and advisers then combat troops.
♦ Search and destroy
11 They got more and more involved, to the point where hundreds of
♦ SEATO
thousands of US troops were fighting in Vietnam (the US introduced
♦ Surveillance
conscription to provide enough soldiers), and thousands were being killed
♦ Tet Offensive
each year.
♦ United Nations
12 Despite all this investment the US was not winning this war. The war lost
♦ US sphere of influence
support at home and the USA decided to withdraw from Vietnam and leave
♦ Viet Cong
South Vietnam to its fate. It finally fell to the Communists in 1975.
♦ Viet Minh
♦ Vietnamisation
♦ Warsaw Pact
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1 (a) Describe the Domino Theory. [4]
(b) Explain why the USA sent troops to Vietnam in the mid 1960s. [6]
(c) ‘The Americans failed in Vietnam because they used the wrong tactics.’
How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
2 Study Source 15 on page 103. How reliable is this source? Use the source and
your knowledge to explain your answer. [7]
3 Study Sources 19 and 20 on page 106. How similar are these two sources?
Use the source and your knowledge to explain your answer. [8]
121
Before
6
After
122
6
How secure was the USSR’s control
over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
FOCUS POINTS
● Why was there opposition to Soviet control in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968,
and how did the USSR react to this opposition?
● How similar were events in Hungary in 1956 and in Czechoslovakia in 1968?
● Why was the Berlin Wall built in 1961?
● What was the significance of ‘Solidarity’ in Poland for the decline of Soviet influence in
eastern Europe?
● How far was Gorbachev personally responsible for the collapse of Soviet control over eastern
Europe?
In Chapter 4 you saw how the Soviet Union took So which of these graphs do you think is the best
control of eastern Europe.You are now going to return representation of Soviet control through this period?
to that story and see how far the Soviet Union was able
to maintain that control.
You will investigate:
♦ how the Soviet Union took control in eastern Europe
and how it tried to maintain control
♦ why and how some people challenged Soviet control
and what happened to them when they did
1948 1989 1948 1989 1948 1989
♦ how, finally, changes in the Soviet Union led to the
collapse of all the Communist regimes in eastern And remember…
Europe and indeed the collapse of the Soviet Union. This chapter overlaps with Chapter 5 (see timeline on
The key question you will consider is ‘how secure’ was pages 74–75). So you will get a more rounded view of
this control. the period if you remember that both chapters take
The Soviet Union almost certainly did not feel it their place within the tense Cold War environment. For
was secure. It kept up constant pressure on the example:
governments and people of eastern Europe. It was really ♦ while the USA was fighting the Korean War to push
only the threat of sending in the Red Army that propped back Communism in the early 1950s, the USSR was
up some of the Communist regimes in the region long sending troops to East Germany to keep Communism
after their people had lost faith in their government. in place
In the end it was Mikhail Gorbachev’s unwillingness ♦ in 1968 when the USA was facing fierce criticism
to prop them up any longer with Soviet troops that at home against its policy of containment and the
signalled the end of Soviet domination. Vietnam War in particular, the Soviet Union was trying
to keep the lid on the anti-Soviet ideas that were
developing in Czechoslovakia in the Prague Spring.
t Here are two version of the same photo. The first shows the leader
of Czechoslovakia, Alexander Dubček. The second is the same photo
used by the Communist-controlled media after Dubček had been ousted
from power by Soviet troops in 1968.
1 How has the photo been changed?
2 Why might the photo have been changed?
3 What does this tell you about Communist control of Czechoslovakia
in 1968?
123
How did the Soviet Union seize
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Factfile
Cominform
Cominform stands for the Communist
control in eastern Europe?
Information Bureau.
Stalin set up the Cominform in 1947 As you saw in Chapter 4, after the Second World War the Communists quickly gained control of
as an organisation to co-ordinate the eastern Europe (see Source 17, page 84). The chaotic situation in many of the countries helped
various Communist governments in
them.
eastern Europe.
● After the war there was a political vacuum in many countries in eastern Europe. The Soviet
The office was originally based in
Belgrade in Yugoslavia but moved to leader Stalin helped the Communist parties in them to win power. Through Cominform (see
Bucharest in Romania in 1948 after Factfile) he made sure that these eastern European countries followed the same policies as the
Yugoslavia was expelled by Stalin Soviet Union. They became one-party states. The Communist Party was the only legal party.
because it would not do what the
Soviet Union told it to do. Secret police arrested the Communists’ opponents.
Cominform ran meetings and sent ● There was also a need to restore law and order. This provided a good excuse to station
out instructions to Communist Soviet troops in each country.
governments about what the Soviet ● The economies of eastern Europe were shattered. To rebuild them, the governments followed
Union wanted them to do.
the economic policies of the Soviet Union. They took over all industry. Workers and farmers
were told what to produce. Through Comecon (see Factfile) Stalin made sure that the countries
of eastern Europe traded with the USSR. He promised aid to countries that co-operated with
Factfile the Soviet Union.
Comecon ● Stalin’s public reason for wanting to control eastern Europe was to defend the Soviet Union
Comecon stands for the Council for from invasion from the west. However his subsequent policies showed that he also wanted to
Mutual Economic Assistance. benefit from the wealth and resources of eastern Europe.
It was set up in 1949 to co-ordinate
the industries and trade of the eastern
European countries.
The idea was that members of
Comecon traded mostly with one
SOURCE
1
another rather than trading with the
West.
Comecon favoured the USSR far more
than any of its other members. It
provided the USSR with a market to
sell its goods. It also guaranteed it a
cheap supply of raw materials. For
example, Poland was forced to sell its
coal to the USSR at one-tenth of the
price that it could have got selling it on
the open market.
It set up a bank for socialist countries
in 1964.
Think!
Stalin used a ‘carrot and stick’
approach to control eastern Europe.
Explain what this means and refer to
the information on this page in your
answer.
Source Analysis u
The cartoonist who drew Source 1
was a critic of Stalin. How is he David Low comments on Stalin’s control of eastern Europe, 2 March 1948. The
criticising Stalin in this cartoon? person spinning the globe is Molotov, Stalin’s foreign minister. On the desk is a photo
of General Marshall (see page 86 to see what he proposed for Europe).
124
SOURCE
2 How did Soviet control affect the
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Twenty years ago we jumped head first
into politics as though we were jumping
into uncharted waters . . . There was
people of eastern Europe?
a lot of enthusiasm . . . You’re like For some people of eastern Europe to start with the Communists brought hope. The Soviet Union
this when you are young and we had had achieved amazing industrial growth before the Second World War. Maybe, by following Soviet
an opportunity, which had long been methods, they could do the same. Soviet-style Communism also offered them stable government
denied, to be there while something and security because they were backed by one of the world’s superpowers. Faced by shortages and
new was being created. poverty after the war, many people hoped for great things from Communism (see Source 2).
However, the reality of Soviet control of eastern Europe was very different from what people
Jir̆ i Ruml, a Czech Communist, writing
in 1968.
had hoped for.
● Freedom Countries that had a long tradition of free speech and democratic government
suddenly lost the right to criticise the government. Newspapers were censored. Non-
Communists were put in prison for criticising the government. People were forbidden to travel
to countries in western Europe.
● Wealth Such repression and loss of freedom might have been more accepted if Communism
had made people better off. Between 1945 and 1955 eastern European economies did recover.
Wages in eastern Europe fell behind the wages in other countries. They even fell behind the
wages in the Soviet Union. Eastern Europe was forbidden by Stalin to apply for Marshall Aid
from the USA (see page 87) which could have helped it in its economic recovery.
● Consumer goods Long after economic recovery had ended the wartime shortages in western
Europe, people in eastern Europe were short of coal to heat their houses, short of milk and
meat. Clothing and shoes were very expensive. People could not get consumer goods like
radios, electric kettles or televisions which were becoming common in the West. Factories did
not produce what ordinary people wanted. They actually produced what the Soviet Union
wanted.
In addition, they had little chance to protest. In June 1953 there were huge demonstrations across
East Germany protesting about Communist policies. Soviet tanks rolled in and Soviet troops killed
40 protesters and wounded over 400. Thousands were arrested and the protests were crushed.
Similar protests in Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Romania were dealt with in the same way.
Think!
SOURCE
3
1 Study Source 3. Why do you
think Tito wished to remain
independent of the Soviet Union?
2 Why do you think the Soviet
Union was worried about Tito’s
independence?
3 Look at Source 17 on page 84. A 1949 Soviet cartoon.
Does this help to explain why Marshal Tito, leader of
the Soviet Union allowed Tito to Yugoslavia, is shown
remain independent? accepting money from
4 On a scale of 0–10, how secure the Americans. His cloak
do you think Soviet control was in is labelled ‘Judas’ – ‘the
1953? betrayer’. Yugoslavia was
the only Communist state
to resist domination by
Stalin. The Soviet Union
kept up a propaganda
Revision Tip battle against Tito. Despite
Make sure you can explain in your the Cold War, there
own words: were more cartoons in
♦ the role of Cominform the official Communist
♦ the role of the Red Army newspapers attacking Tito
than cartoons criticising
in keeping control of eastern Europe.
the USA.
125
The rise of Khrushchev
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Profile
Nikita Khrushchev
Stalin was a hero to millions of people in the USSR. He had defeated Hitler and given the USSR an
empire in eastern Europe. He made the USSR a nuclear superpower. When he died in 1953, amid
the grief and mourning, many minds turned to the question of who would succeed Stalin as Soviet
leader. The man who emerged by 1955 was Nikita Khrushchev. Khruschev seemed very different
from Stalin. He
● ended the USSR’s long feuds with China and with Yugoslavia
● talked of peaceful co-existence with the West
● made plans to reduce expenditure on arms
● attended the first post-war summit between the USSR, the USA, France and Britain in July 1955
● said he wanted to improve the living standards of ordinary citizens.
126
SOURCE
6
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Think!
Look at Source 6.
1 Make a list of the features of the
cartoon that show Khrushchev as
a new type of leader.
2 Design another cartoon that
shows him relaxing the Soviet grip
on eastern Europe. Think about:
♦ how you would show
Khrushchev
♦ how you would represent the
states of eastern Europe (as
maps? as people?)
♦ how you would represent Soviet
control (as a rope? getting
looser? tighter?).
You could either draw the cartoon
or write instructions for an artist to
do so.
Focus Task
How secure was Soviet
control?
On page 123 we showed you three A 1959 Soviet cartoon. The writing on the snowman’s hat reads ‘cold war’.
graphs. At the end of this chapter Khrushchev is drilling through the cold war using what the caption calls ‘miners’
methods’. The cartoon uses very strong visual images like Khrushchev’s modern style
you will decide which is the most
of clothing to emphasise his new ideas. And of course he is breaking up the Cold War!
accurate way to represent Soviet
control 1945–90.
Through the rest of this chapter
you are going to examine a number The Warsaw Pact
of different case studies of Soviet One aspect of Stalin’s policy did not change, however. His aim in eastern Europe had always been to
control. Each is to be studied in create a buffer against attack from the West. Khrushchev continued this policy. In 1955 he created
its own right but you are also
the Warsaw Pact. This was a military alliance similar to NATO (see page 91). The members would
going to use them to to build your
understanding of the bigger picture. defend each other if one was attacked. The Warsaw Pact included all the Communist countries of
Here are some features of the Polish eastern Europe except Yugoslavia, but it was dominated by the Soviet Union (see Source 17, page 84).
uprising of 1956:
♦ workers go on strike for more
wages
Challenges to Soviet control in
♦ 53 rioters killed by Polish army
♦ Polish army loses control eastern Europe
♦ Khrushchev moves troops to the
Polish border Khrushchev’s criticism of Stalin sent a strong signal to opposition groups in eastern Europe that
♦ a new leader is appointed who they could now press for changes. The question was: how far would Khrushchev let them go? The
is more acceptable to the Polish first opposition Khrushchev had to deal with as leader was in Poland.
people
In the summer of 1956 demonstrators attacked the Polish police, protesting about the fact
♦ Communists agreed to stop
persecuting the Catholic Church. that the government had increased food prices but not wages. Fifty-three workers were killed
For each feature decide whether it by the Polish army in riots in Poznan. The Polish government itself was unable to control the
suggests that Soviet control was demonstrators. Alarmed, Khrushchev moved troops to the Polish border.
strong or weak. There may be some By October 1956 Poland was becoming more stabilised. A new leader, Wladyslaw Gomulka,
events that could be used to support took charge on 20 October. During the Nazi occupation Gomulka had been a popular leader of
either view. Make sure you can Communist resistance. However, he was also a nationalist. He had not seen eye to eye with many
explain your decisions.
Polish Communists, who were totally loyal to Stalin. Khrushchev accepted Gomulka’s appointment
– a popular move in Poland for the next couple of years.
There was also an agreement that the Communists would stop persecuting members of the
Catholic Church. The Red Army moved away from the Polish border and left the Polish army and
government to sort things out.
Khruschev was soon put to the test again in Hungary in October 1956.
127
Case study 1: Hungary, 1956
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
From 1949 to 1956 Hungary was led by a hard-line Communist called Mátyás Rákosi. Hungarians
hated the restrictions which Rákosi’s Communism imposed on them. Most Hungarians felt bitter
about losing their freedom of speech. They lived in fear of the secret police. They resented the
presence of thousands of Soviet troops and officials in their country. Some areas of Hungary even
had Russian street signs, Russian schools and shops. Worst of all, Hungarians had to pay for Soviet
forces to be in Hungary.
SOURCE
7 SOURCE
8
Living standards were declining and . . . wearing clothes patterned after Western styles, showing interest in Jazz,
yet the papers and radio kept saying expressing liberalism in the arts – was considered dangerous in the eyes of the
that we had never had it so good. people’s democracy. To cite a small example, let us take the case of my university
Why? Why these lies? Everybody knew colleague, John. He showed up at lectures one day several weeks before the
the state was spending the money on revolution in a new suit and a striped shirt and necktie, all of which he had received
armaments. Why could they not admit from an uncle in the United States through gift-parcel channels. His shoes were
that we were worse off because of the smooth suede and would have cost one month’s wages in Hungary. After classes
war effort and the need to build new John was summoned by the party officer. He received a tongue-lashing and was
factories? . . . I finally arrived at the expelled.
realisation that the system was wrong
Written by László Beke, a student who helped lead the Hungarian uprising
and stupid. in 1956, in A Student’s Diary: Budapest October 16–November 1, 1956.
A Hungarian student describes the mood
in 1953.
What happened?
In June 1956 a group within the Communist Party in Hungary opposed Rákosi. He appealed to
Focus Task Moscow for help. He wanted to arrest 400 leading opponents. Moscow would not back him. The
Why was there opposition to Kremlin ordered Rákosi to be retired ‘for health reasons’.
Soviet control in Hungary? The new leader, Ernö Gerö, was no more acceptable to the Hungarian people. Discontent came
1 Use the text and Sources 7 to a head with a huge student demonstration on 23 October, when the giant statue of Stalin in
and 8 to list reasons why some Budapest was pulled down.
Hungarians were opposed to The USSR allowed a new government to be formed under the well-respected Imre Nagy on
Communist control – for example, 24 October. Soviet troops and tanks stationed in Hungary since the Second World War began to
they resented the presence of
withdraw. Hungarians created thousands of local councils to replace Soviet power. Several thousand
Soviet troops.
2 List the changes proposed by
Hungarian soldiers defected from the army to the rebel cause, taking their weapons with them.
Nagy’s government. Nagy’s government began to make plans. It would hold free elections, create impartial courts,
3 Which of these proposed changes restore farmland to private ownership. It wanted the total withdrawal of the Soviet army from
do you think would be most Hungary. It also planned to leave the Warsaw Pact and declare Hungary neutral in the Cold War
threatening of the USSR? Give struggle between East and West. There was widespread optimism that the new American President
reasons. Eisenhower, who had been the wartime supreme commander of all Allied Forces in western Europe,
would support the new independent Hungary with armed troops if necessary.
128
SOURCE
9 SOURCE
10
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
In Hungary thousands of people have We have almost no weapons, no heavy guns of any kind. People are running up
obtained arms by disarming soldiers to the tanks, throwing in hand grenades and closing the drivers’ windows. The
and militia men . . . Soldiers have been Hungarian people are not afraid of death. It is only a pity that we cannot last
making friends with the embittered and longer. Now the firing is starting again. The tanks are coming nearer and nearer.
dissatisfied masses . . . The authorities You can’t let people attack tanks with their bare hands. What is the United
are paralysed, unable to stop the Nations doing?
bloody events.
A telex message sent by the Hungarian rebels fighting the Communists. Quoted in
From a report in a Yugoslav newspaper. George Mikes, The Hungarian Revolution, 1957.
Yugoslavia, although Communist, did not
approve of Soviet policies. SOURCE
11
October 27, 1956. On my way home I saw a little girl propped up against the
Source Analysis doorway of a building with a machine gun clutched in her hands. When I tried
1 How do Sources 9 and 10 differ to move her, I saw she was dead. She couldn’t have been more than eleven or
in the impression they give of the twelve years old. There was a neatly folded note in her pocket she had evidently
Hungarian uprising? meant to pass on through someone to her parents. In childish scrawl it read:
2 Why do you think they differ? ‘Dear Mama, Brother is dead. He asked me to take care of his gun. I am all
3 Does the photo in Source 12 give
the same impression as either
right, and I’m going with friends now. I kiss you. Kati.’
Source 9 or Source 10?
Written by László Beke, a Hungarian student.
4 Work in pairs. Study Sources 9–12
and choose one source. Try to
convince your partner that your
source is the most useful source
SOURCE
12
for studying events in Hungary in
1956.
Think!
1 Look back at Source 17 in
Chapter 4. Why do you think
Hungary’s membership of the
Warsaw Pact was so important to
the Soviet Union?
2 Why do you think the Hungarians
received no support from the
West?
3 Explain which of these statements
you most agree with:
The Western powers protested to the USSR but sent no help; they were too preoccupied with a crisis
The severity of the Red Army of their own (the Suez crisis in the Middle East)!
in dealing with Hungary in 1956
shows how fragile the Soviet hold on
Hungary really was. Outcomes
Khrushchev put János Kádár in place as leader. Kádár took several months to crush all resistance.
Around 35,000 anti-Communist activists were arrested and 300 were executed. Kádár cautiously
introduced some of the reforms being demanded by the Hungarian people. However, he did not
waver on the central issue – membership of the Warsaw Pact.
129
Case study 2: Czechoslovakia and the Prague
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Spring, 1968
SOURCE
13 Twelve years after the brutal suppression of the Hungarians, Czechoslovakia posed a similar
challenge to Soviet domination of eastern Europe. Khrushchev had by now been ousted from power
In Czechoslovakia the people who
were trusted [by the Communist in the USSR. A new leader, Leonid Brezhnev, had replaced him.
government] were the obedient ones,
those who did not cause any trouble, What happened?
who didn’t ask questions. It was the In the 1960s a new mood developed in Czechoslovakia. People examined what had been happening
mediocre man who came off best. in twenty years of Communist control and they did not like what they saw. In 1967 the old Stalinist
In twenty years not one human leader was replaced by Alexander Dubc̆ek. He proposed a policy of ‘socialism with a human face’:
problem has been solved in our less censorship, more freedom of speech and a reduction in the activities of the secret police. Dubc̆ek
country, from primary needs like flats, was a committed Communist, but he believed that Communism did not have to be as restrictive as
schools, to the more subtle needs it had been before he came to power. He had learned the lessons of the Hungarian uprising and
such as fulfilling oneself . . . the need reassured Brezhnev that Czechoslovakia had no plans to pull out of the Warsaw Pact or Comecon.
for people to trust one another . . . The Czech opposition was led by intellectuals who felt that the Communists had failed to
development of education. lead the country forward. As censorship had been eased, they were able to launch attacks on the
Communist leadership, pointing out how corrupt and useless they were. Communist government
I feel that our Republic has lost its ministers were ‘grilled’ on live television and radio about how they were running the country and
good reputation. about events before 1968. This period became known as ‘The Prague Spring’ because of all the new
From a speech given by Ludvik Vaculik,
ideas that seemed to be appearing everywhere.
a leading figure in the reform movement, By the summer even more radical ideas were emerging. There was even talk of allowing
in March 1968. another political party, the Social Democratic Party, to be set up as a rival to the Communist Party.
SOURCE
14
SOURCE
15
The Director told them they would All the different kinds of state in which the Communist Party has taken power have
produce 400 locomotives a year. They gone through rigged trials . . . There must be a fault other than just the wrong
are making seventy. people were chosen. There must be a fault in the theory [of Communism] itself.
And go look at the scrapyard, at all Written by Lubos̆ Dubrovsky, a Czech writer, in May 1968.
the work that has been thrown out.
They built a railway and then took it
down again. Who’s responsible for all How did the Soviet Union respond?
this? The Communist Party set up the The Soviet Union was very suspicious of the changes taking place in Czechoslovakia.
system. Czechoslovakia was one of the most important countries in the Warsaw Pact. It was centrally
We were robbed of our output, our placed, and had the strongest industry. The Soviets were worried that the new ideas in
wages . . . How can I believe that in Czechoslovakia might spread to other countries in eastern Europe. Brezhnev came under pressure
five years’ time it won’t be worse? from the East German leader, Walter Ulbricht, and the Polish leader, Gomulka, to restrain reform in
Czechoslovakia.
Ludvik Vaculik quotes from an interview The USSR tried various methods in response. To start with, it tried to slow Dubc̆ek down. It
he had with the workers in a locomotive argued with him. Soviet, Polish and East German troops performed very public training exercises
factory run by the Communists. right on the Czech border. It thought about imposing economic sanctions – for example, cancelling
wheat exports to Czechoslovakia – but didn’t because it thought that the Czechs would ask for help
from the West.
Focus Task In July the USSR had a summit conference with the Czechs. Dubc̆ek agreed not to allow a new
Why was there opposition Social Democratic Party. However, he insisted on keeping most of his reforms. The tension seemed
to Soviet control in to ease. Early in August, a conference of all the other Warsaw Pact countries produced a vague
Czechoslovakia? declaration simply calling on Czechoslovakia to maintain political stability.
Use the text and Sources 13–15 to Then seventeen days later, on 20 August 1968, to the stunned amazement of the Czechs and the
list the reasons for opposition to outside world, Soviet tanks moved into Czechoslovakia.
soviet control in Czechoslovakia.
There was little violent resistance, although many Czechs refused to co-operate with the Soviet
troops. Dubc̆ek was removed from power. His experiment in socialism with a human face had not
failed; it had simply proved unacceptable to the other Communist countries.
130
SOURCE
16 SOURCE
18
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Yesterday troops from the Soviet Union, Poland, East
Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria crossed the frontier of
Czechoslovakia . . . The Czechoslovak Communist Party
Central Committee regard this act as contrary to the basic
principles of good relations between socialist states.
A Prague radio report, 21 August 1968.
SOURCE
17
The party and government leaders of the Czechoslovak
Socialist Republic have asked the Soviet Union and other
allies to give the Czechoslovak people urgent assistance,
including assistance with armed forces. This request was
brought about . . . by the threat from counter revolutionary
forces . . . working with foreign forces hostile to socialism.
A Soviet news agency report, 21 August 1968. Czechs burning Soviet tanks in Prague, August 1968.
Source Analysis
SOURCE
19
1 Explain how and why Sources 16
and 17 differ in their interpretation
of the Soviet intervention.
2 What is the message of Source 19?
SOURCE
20 Outcomes
When internal and external forces Unlike Nagy in Hungary, Dubc̆ek was not executed. But he was gradually downgraded. First he was
hostile to socialism attempt to turn the sent to be ambassador to Turkey, then expelled from the Communist Party altogether. Photographs
development of any socialist country in showing him as leader were ‘censored’ (see page 122).
the direction of the capitalist system, Before the Soviet invasion, Czechoslovakia’s mood had been one of optimism. After, it was
when a threat arises to the cause of despair. A country that had been pro-Soviet now became resentful of the Soviet connection. Ideas
socialism in that country, a threat that could have reformed Communism were silenced.
to the socialist commonwealth as a Dubc̆ek always expressed loyalty to Communism and the Warsaw Pact, but Brezhnev was very
whole – it becomes not only a problem worried that the new ideas coming out of Czechoslovakia would spread. He was under pressure
for the people of that country but also from the leaders of other Communist countries in eastern Europe, particularly Ulbricht in East
a general problem, the concern of all Germany. These leaders feared that their own people would demand the same freedom that Dubc̆ek
socialist countries. had allowed in Czechoslovakia.
131
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
Focus Task A
How similar were the uprisings of 1956 and 1968?
One question which historians often consider is how similar the uprisings of 1956 in Hungary and 1968 in Czechoslovakia
actually were. The table below gives you a number of ways to compare the two events. Work through pages 128–31, make
your own copy then complete the table.
Aims of rebels
Casualties
Eventual outcome
Here are a few points to help you get the table started, but you will have to decide where they fit and add your own as well.
♦ Abolish secret police
♦ Around 200,000 fled the country
♦ Because of the threat to leave Warsaw Pact
♦ Dubček downgraded Revision Tip
♦ Fear that other states would demand the same freedoms You don't need to learn this whole table but be sure you
♦ Less censorship can explain:
♦ Pitched battles in the streets ♦ two ways in which the Hungarian and Czech uprisings
♦ Wanted a more human form of Communism were similar
♦ Wanted free elections with more than one party ♦ two ways in which they were different.
♦ Withdraw Soviet troops
Focus Task B
How secure was Soviet control of Hungary and Czechoslovakia?
Here are various events from the two invasions. For each event decide where it should go on this line. Does it suggest that
Soviet control was weak, strong or somewhere in between?
Weak control Strong control
0 5 10
There may be some events that you think could be used to support either view. Whatever you decide you must include notes
to explain your decision.
Hungary Czechoslovakia
♦ Imre Nagy forms new government ♦ Censorship eased in Czechoslovakia
♦ Khruschev sends in troops ♦ Czech Communist leaders were heavily criticised for corrupt and incompetent rule
♦ Nagy imprisoned and executed ♦ Plans to set up Social Democratic Party
♦ Nagy’s plans ♦ USSR argued with Dubček to slow down the pace of reform
♦ Opposition to Rákosi ♦ Troops carried out training exercises on the border of Czechoslovakia
♦ Rákosi not supported by Moscow ♦ The USSR considered sanctions against Czechoslovakia but feared they would not
♦ Rákosi removed work
♦ Rebellion ♦ Tanks moved into Prague on 20 August 1968
♦ Soviet tanks move in and then ♦ There was little violent resistance in Czechoslovakia
withdraw ♦ Dubček was removed
♦ Two weeks of fierce street fighting ♦ The Brezhnev Doctrine
132
Case study 3: The Berlin Wall
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
SOURCE
21 You have already seen how Berlin was a battleground of the Cold War (see
Source 22). In 1961 it also became the focus of the Soviet Union’s latest
attempt to maintain control of its east European satellites.
The problem
The crushing of the Hungarian uprising (see page 128) had confirmed
for many people in eastern Europe that it was impossible to fight the
Communists. For many, it seemed that the only way of escaping the
repression was to leave altogether. Some wished to leave eastern Europe
for political reasons – they hated the Communists – while many more
wished to leave for economic reasons. As standards of living in eastern
Europe fell further and further behind the West, the attraction of going to
live in a capitalist state was very great.
The contrast was particularly great in the divided city of Berlin.
Living standards were tolerable in the East, but just a few hundred metres
away in West Berlin, East Germans could see some of the prize exhibits
of capitalist West Germany – shops full of goods, great freedom, great
wealth and great variety. This had been deliberately done by the Western
powers. They had poured massive investment into Berlin. East Germans
could also watch West German television.
In the 1950s East Germans were still able to travel freely into West
Berlin. From there they could travel on into West Germany. It was very
A 1959 Soviet cartoon – the caption was: ‘The socialist stallion tempting to leave East Germany, with its harsh Communist regime and its
far outclasses the capitalist donkey’.
hardline leader, Walter Ulbricht. By the late 1950s thousands were leaving
and never coming back (see Source 23).
Source Analysis p
1 Look at Source 21. What is the aim
SOURCE
23
of this cartoon?
2 How might someone living in a 300
Communist country react to it?
250
SOURCE
22 200
Defectors (thousands)
133
The solution
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
In 1961 the USA had a new President, the young and inexperienced John F Kennedy. Khrushchev
thought he could bully Kennedy and chose to pick a fight over Berlin. He insisted that Kennedy
withdraw US troops from the city. He was certain that Kennedy would back down. Kennedy refused.
However, all eyes were now on Berlin. What would happen next?
At two o’clock in the morning on Sunday 13 August 1961, East German soldiers erected
a barbed-wire barrier along the entire frontier between East and West Berlin, ending all free
movement from East to West. It was quickly replaced by a concrete wall. All the crossing points
from East to West Berlin were sealed, except for one. This became known as Checkpoint Charlie.
Families were divided. Berliners were unable to go to work; chaos and confusion followed.
Border guards kept a constant look-out for anyone trying to cross the wall. They had orders to
shoot people trying to defect. Hundreds were killed over the next three decades.
SOURCE
24
A B
SOURCE
25 SOURCE
26
The Western powers in Berlin use it as a centre of
subversive activity against the GDR [the initial letters
of the German name for East Germany]. In no other
part of the world are so many espionage centres to
be found. These centres smuggle their agents into
the GDR for all kinds of subversion: recruiting spies;
sabotage; provoking disturbances.
The government presents all working people of the
GDR with a proposal that will securely block subversive
activity so that reliable safeguards and effective
control will be established around West Berlin,
including its border with democratic Berlin.
A Soviet explanation for the building of the wall, 1961.
East German
security guards
recover the body
of a man shot
attempting to cross
the wall in 1962.
134
Outcomes
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
For a while, the wall created a major crisis. Access to East Berlin had been guaranteed to the Allies
since 1945. In October 1961 US diplomats and troops crossed regularly into East Berlin to find out
how the Soviets would react.
On 27 October Soviet tanks pulled up to Checkpoint Charlie and refused to allow any further
access to the East. All day, US and Soviet tanks, fully armed, faced each other in a tense stand-off.
Then, after eighteen hours, one by one, five metres at a time, the tanks pulled back. Another crisis,
another retreat.
The international reaction was relief. Khrushchev ordered Ulbricht to avoid any actions that
would increase tension. Kennedy said, ‘It’s not a very nice solution, but a wall is a hell of a lot better
than a war.’ So the wall stayed, and over the following years became the symbol of division – the
division of Germany, the division of Europe, the division of Communist East and democratic West.
The Communists presented the wall as a protective shell around East Berlin. The West presented it
as a prison wall.
SOURCE
27 SOURCE
28
There are some who say, in Europe
and elsewhere, we can work with the
Communists. Let them come to Berlin.
President Kennedy speaking in 1963
after the building of the Berlin Wall.
A Soviet cartoon from the 1960s. The sign reads: ‘The border of the GDR (East
Germany) is closed to all enemies.’ Notice the shape of the dog’s tail.
135
Case study 4: Solidarity in Poland, 1980–81
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
SOURCE
29 Throughout the years of Communist control of Poland there were regular protests. However, they
were generally more about living standards and prices than attempts to overthrow Communist
• More pay
government.
• End to censorship
During the first half of the 1970s Polish industry performed well so the country was relatively
• Same welfare benefits as police and
calm. But in the late 1970s the Polish economy hit a crisis and 1979 was the worst year for Polish
party workers
industry since Communism had been introduced. This is what happened next.
• Broadcasting of Catholic church
services July 1980 The government announced increases in the price of meat.
• Election of factory managers August 1980 Workers at the Gdansk shipyard, led by Lech Walesa, put forward
Some of Solidarity’s 21 demands. 21 demands to the government, including free trade unions and the
right to strike (see Source 29). They also started a free trade union
called Solidarity. Poland had trade unions but they were ineffective in
challenging goverment policies.
Profile 30 August 1980 The government agreed to all 21 of Solidarity’s demands.
Lech Walesa
September 1980 Solidarity’s membership grew to 3.5 million.
October 1980 Solidarity’s membership was 7 million. Solidarity was officially
recognised by the government.
January 1981 Membership of Solidarity reached its peak at 9.4 million – more than a
third of all the workers in Poland.
136
SOURCE
30 In February 1981 the civilian Prime Minister ‘resigned’ and the leader of the army, General
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Inequality and injustice are Jaruzelski, took over. From the moment he took office, people in Poland, and observers outside
Poland, expected the Soviet Union to ‘send in the tanks’ at any time, especially when the Solidarity
everywhere. There are hospitals that
Congress produced an ‘open letter’ saying that they were campaigning not only for their own rights
are so poorly supplied that they do not
but for the rights of workers throughout the Communist bloc. It proclaimed that the Poles were
even have cotton, and our relatives
fighting ‘For Your Freedom and For Ours’.
die in the corridors; but other hospitals
Jaruzelski and Walesa negotiated to form a government of national understanding but when
are equipped with private rooms and that broke down in December, after nine months of tense relationships, the Communist government
full medical care for each room. We acted. Brezhnev ordered the Red Army to carry out ‘training manoeuvres’ on the Polish border.
pay fines for traffic violations, but some Jaruzelski introduced martial law. He put Walesa and almost 10,000 other Solidarity leaders in
people commit highway manslaughter prison. He suspended Solidarity.
while drunk and are let off . . . In some
places there are better shops and
superior vacation houses, with huge Reasons for the crushing of Solidarity
fenced-in grounds that ordinary people Military dictators are not required to give reasons for their actions. But if they did what might
cannot enter. Jaruzelski have to say?
● Solidarity was acting as a political party. The government declared that it had
Extract from ‘Experience and the Future’, a secret tapes of a Solidarity meeting setting up a new provisional government – without the
report drawn up in 1981 by Polish writers
and thinkers who were not members of the Communist Party.
Communist Party. They are describing the ● Poland was sinking into chaos. Almost all Poles felt the impact of food shortages.
inequality in Poland between Communist Rationing had been introduced in April 1981. Wages had increased by less than inflation.
Party members and ordinary people. Unemployment was rising.
● Solidarity itself was also tumbling into chaos. There were many different factions.
Some felt that the only way to make progress was to push the Communists harder until they
Think! cracked under the pressure. Strikes were continuing long after the Solidarity leadership had
Between August 1980 and December ordered them to stop.
1981, Solidarity went through some
rapid changes. Choose two moments
The Soviet Union had seen enough. It thought the situation in Poland had gone too far. If Poland’s
in this period that you think were leaders would not restore Communist control in Poland, then it would. This was something the
particularly important in the rise and Polish leaders wanted to avoid.
fall of Solidarity and explain why they The Communist government had regained control of Poland but in December 1981, looking
were important. back on the past eighteen months, two things were obvious:
● The Polish people no longer trusted the Communists leadership.
● The only thing that kept the Communists in power was force or the threat of force backed by the
SOURCE
31 USSR. When Jaruzelski finally decided to use force, Solidarity was easily crushed. The lesson was
100 clear. If military force was not used, then Communist control seemed very shaky indeed.
90
% of people with confidence in this institution
0 Focus Task
y
ur lic
r ty t
m
Ch tho
ar
ch
Ar
u
lid
m
Ca
m
Co
Gorbachev made it very clear to the countries of eastern Europe that they were responsible for their
own fates. However, most of the Warsaw Pact leaders were old style, hardline Communists. To them,
Think! Gorbachev’s ideas were insane and they simply did not believe he meant what he said.
Why do you think the Warsaw Pact
leaders did not believe Gorbachev ‘You have to reform’
when he told them the Soviet Union
Gorbachev also made it clear that they needed to reform their own countries. He did not think
would no longer interfere in the
internal affairs of other communist Communism was doomed. In fact he felt the opposite was true. Gorbachev believed the Communist
countries? system could provide better healthcare, education and transport. The task in the USSR and eastern
Europe was to renew Communism so as to match capitalism in other areas of public life. However,
they did not believe him on this count either.
In the next few year these leaders would realise they had made a serious error of judgement.
Revision Tip
Identify two problems in the USSR
that led to Gorbachev’s new policy Gorbachev’s reforms
towards eastern Europe.
He had to be cautious, because he faced great opposition from hardliners in his own government,
but gradually he declared his policies. The two key ideas were glasnost (openness) and perestroika
(restructuring).
● Glasnost: He called for open debate on government policy and honesty in facing up to
problems. It was not a detailed set of policies but it did mean radical change.
● In 1987 his perestroika programme allowed market forces to be introduced into the Soviet
economy. For the first time in 60 years it was no longer illegal to buy and sell for profit.
138
SOURCE
33 Defence spending
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
A
He also began to cut spending on defence. The nuclear arms race was an enormous drain on the
Polish, Hungarian and Romanian Soviet economy at a time when it was in trouble anyway.
dogs get to talking. ‘What’s life like in After almost 50 years on a constant war footing, the Red Army began to shrink.
your country?’ the Polish dog asks the
Hungarian dog. International relations
‘Well, we have meat to eat but we At the same time, Gorbachev brought a new attitude to the USSR’s relations with the wider world.
can’t bark. What are things like where ● He withdrew Soviet troops from Afghanistan, which had become such a costly yet unwinnable
you are from?’ says the Hungarian dog war.
to the Polish dog. ● In speech after speech, he talked about international trust and co-operation as the way forward
‘With us, there’s no meat, but at for the USSR, rather than confrontation.
least we can bark,’ says the Polish dog.
‘What’s meat? What’s barking?’ Gorbachev and President Reagan
asks the Romanian dog. Ronald Reagan became US President in January 1981. He was President until 1988. He had
only one policy towards the USSR – get tough. He criticised its control over eastern Europe and
B increased US military spending.
East German leader Erich Honecker In a way, Reagan's toughness helped Gorbachev.
is touring East German towns. He ● It was clear by the late 1980s that the USSR could not compete with American military
is shown a run-down kindergarten. spending. This helped Gorbachev to push through his military spending cuts.
● Reagan got on quite well with Gorbachev himself. As superpower relations improved, the USSR
The staff ask for funds to renovate
the institution. Honecker refuses. felt less threatened by the USA. This meant there was less need for the USSR to control eastern
Next he visits a hospital, where the Europe.
doctors petition him for a grant to buy
new surgical equipment. Honecker
SOURCE
A
34
refuses. The third place on Honecker’s The Soviet Union would remain a one party state even if the Communists allowed
itinerary is a prison. This is pretty an opposition party to exist. Everyone would join the opposition party.
dilapidated, and here too the governor
asks for money to refurbish. This time B
Honecker immediately pulls out his When American college students are asked what they want to do after
cheque book and insists that not only graduation, they reply: ‘I don’t know, I haven’t decided’. Russian students answer
should the cells be repainted but the same question by saying: ‘I don’t know, they haven’t told me’.
that they should be fitted with new
mattresses, colour televisions and Anti-Communist jokes told by US President Reagan to Mikhail Gorbachev at their
sofas. Afterwards an aide asks him why summit meetings in the late 1980s.
he said no to a school and a hospital,
but yes to a prison. Honecker says, Implications for eastern Europe
‘Where do you think we will be living in
As Gorbachev introduced his reforms in the USSR the demand rose for similar reforms in eastern
a few months’ time?’
European states as well. Most people in these states were sick of the poor economic conditions and
Examples of anti-Communist jokes the harsh restrictions that Communism imposed. Gorbachev’s policies gave people some hope for
collected by researchers in eastern reform.
Europe in the 1980s.
‘Listen to your people’
In July 1988 Gorbachev made a speech to the leaders of the Warsaw
Source Analysis Pact countries. He planned to withdraw large numbers of troops, tanks
1 Why do you think President Reagan was so fond of jokes
and aircraft from eastern Europe. Hungary was particularly eager to
like those in Source 34A and B?
2 Do you think it is strange that Gorbachev was upset by
get rid of Soviet troops and, when pressed, Gorbachev seemed to accept
these jokes? Explain your answer. this. In March 1989 he made clear again that the Red Army would
3 Can jokes really be useful historical sources? Explain your not intervene to prop up Communist regimes in eastern Europe. What
answer. followed was staggering.
4 If you think jokes are useful sources, do you think the
jokes in Source 33 are more or less useful than the jokes
in Source 34? Explain your answer.
139
The collapse of Communism in eastern Europe
part 2 the COLD war and the gulf, 1945–2000
June 2
1 In Poland, free elections are
May 1989 held for the first time since the
Hungarians begin dismantling the Second World War. Solidarity
barbed-wire fence between Hungary wins almost all the seats it
and non-Communist Austria. contests. Eastern Europe gets
its first non-Communist leader,
President Lech Walesa.
N
September 3
Thousands of East Germans on
FINLAND holiday in Hungary and
Czechoslovakia refuse to go
home. They escape through
NORWAY
Austria into West Germany.
SWEDEN October 4
There are enormous
Estonia demonstrations in East German
cities when Gorbachev visits
the country. He tells the East
German leader Erich Honecker
Latvia to reform. Honecker orders
10 troops to fire on demonstrators
but they refuse.
Lithuania Gorbachev makes it clear that
Soviet tanks will not move in to
U S S R ‘restore order’.
5
Berlin 2 November 5
4 Warsaw East Germans march in their
EAST thousands to the checkpoints
GERMANY POLAND at the Berlin Wall. The guards
throw down their weapons and
WEST join the crowds. The Berlin
GERMANY Wall is dismantled.
Prague CZEC 6
HOSL
OVAK
IA 6
November
FRANCE
There are huge demonstrations
3 Budapest in Czechoslovakia. The Czech
AUSTRIA government opens its borders
SWITZERLAND 1 HUNGARY 8 with the West, and allows the
ROMANIA formation of other parties.
7
Bucharest
Black December 7
Belgrade Sea In Romania there is a short but
very bloody revolution that
9 ends with the execution of the
YUGOSLAVIA BULGARIA
ITALY Communist dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu.
Key
ALBANIA The Communist Party in 8
Territory taken over by
USSR at end of Hungary renames itself the
Second World War Socialist Party and declares that
TURKEY free elections will be held in 1990.
Soviet-dominated
Communist In Bulgaria, there are huge 9
governments demonstrations against the
Communist government.
0 200 km
Other Communist
governments Scale March 1990 10
Latvia leads the Baltic republics
in declaring independence
from the USSR.
140
People power
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
The western media came up with a phrase to explain these events – people power. Communist
control was toppled because ordinary people were not prepared to accept it any longer. They took
control of events. It was not political leaders guiding the future of eastern Europe in 1989 but
ordinary people.
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
35
Study Source 35. We are going to
study the story in the source.
1 What is the man in the foreground
doing?
2 Would this have been possible at
an earlier date? Why?
3 Who are the men watching from
above? Why is it significant that
they are just watching?
4 How would you summarise this
scene: joyful? sad? powerful?
other words?
Now let’s think about the story of
the source:
5 What is significant about the fact
that the photographer was even
able to take this picture?
6 The photographer was probably
a freelance photographer who
hoped to sell this picture to as
many different newspapers as he
could. Do you think he would have
been successful? Why?
7 Which countries would have
been most likely to publish this
photograph? Why?
SOURCE
36
For most west Europeans now alive,
the world has always ended at the East
German border and the Wall; beyond
lay darkness . . . The opening of the
frontiers declares that the world has
no edge any more. Europe is becoming
once more round and whole.
The Independent, November 1989. A demonstrator pounds away at the Berlin Wall as East German border guards look
on from above, 4 November 1989. The wall was dismantled five days later.
Reunification of Germany
Revision Tip With the Berlin Wall down, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl proposed a speedy reunification
Remember two examples of ‘people of Germany. Germans in both countries embraced the idea enthusiastically.
power’ weakening Communist Despite his idealism, Gorbachev was less enthusiastic. He expected that a new united Germany
control of eastern Europe in
would be more friendly to the West than to the East. But after many months of hard negotiations,
1989–90.
not all of them friendly, Gorbachev accepted German reunification and even accepted that the new
Germany could become a member of NATO. This was no small thing for Gorbachev to accept. Like
all Russians, he lived with the memory that it was German aggression in the Second World War that
had cost the lives of 20 million Soviet citizens.
On 3 October 1990, Germany became a united country once again.
141
The collapse of the USSR
part 2 the COLD war anD the guLf, 1945–2000
Even more dramatic events were to follow in the Soviet Union itself.
1990
Gorbachev visited the Baltic state of Lithuania – part of the Soviet Union. Its leaders put their
views to him. They were very clear. They wanted independence. They did not want to be part of the
USSR. Gorbachev was for once uncompromising. He would not allow this. But in March they did it
anyway.
MARCH
Almost as soon as he returned to Moscow from Lithuania, Gorbachev received a similar
demand from the Muslim Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan. What should Gorbachev do now? He
sent troops to Azerbaijan to end rioting there. He sent troops to Lithuania. But as the summer
approached, the crisis situation got worse.
The Russian Republic, the largest within the USSR, elected Boris Yeltsin as its President. Yeltsin
MAY made it clear that he saw no future in a Soviet Union. He said that the many republics that made up
the USSR should become independent states.
1991
APRIL The Republic of Georgia declared its independence.
The USSR was disintegrating. Reformers within the USSR itself demanded an end to the
Communist Party’s domination of government. Gorbachev was struggling to hold it together, but
members of the Communist elite had had enough.
Hardline Communist Party members and leading military officers attempted a coup to take
over the USSR. The plotters included Gorbachev’s Prime Minister, Pavlov, and the head of the
armed forces, Dimitry Yazov. They held Gorbachev prisoner in his holiday home in the Crimea.
AUGUST They sent tanks and troops on to the streets of Moscow. This was the old Soviet way to keep control.
Would it work this time?
Huge crowds gathered in Moscow. They strongly opposed this military coup. The Russian
President, Boris Yeltsin, emerged as the leader of the popular opposition. Faced by this resistance,
the conspirators lost faith in themselves and the coup collapsed.
This last-ditch attempt by the Communist Party to save the USSR had failed. A few days later,
Gorbachev returned to Moscow.
Gorbachev might have survived the coup, but it had not strengthened his position as Soviet leader.
He had to admit that the USSR was finished and he with it.
DECEMBER In a televised speech on 25 December 1991, Gorbachev announced his own resignation and the
end of the Soviet Union (see Source 37).
Think!
Think of a suitable headline for each
of the six episodes in the collapse of
the USSR summarised in the table.
142
The end of the Cold War
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Think!
SOURCE
37
A sense of failure and regret came through his [Gorbachev’s] Christmas Day
Read Source 37 carefully. Three
statements are in bold.
abdication speech – especially in his sorrow over his people ‘ceasing to be citizens
Do you agree or disagree with of a great power’. Certainly, if man-in-the-street interviews can be believed, the
each statement? For each statement, former Soviet peoples consider him a failure.
write a short paragraph to: History will be kinder. The Nobel Prize he received for ending the Cold
a) explain what it means, and
b) express your own view on it.
War was well deserved. Every man, woman and child in this country should be
eternally grateful.
His statue should stand in the centre of every east European
capital; for it was Gorbachev who allowed them their independence. The same
is true for the newly independent countries further east and in Central Asia. No
Russian has done more to free his people from bondage since Alexander II who
freed the serfs.
SOURCE
38 From a report on Gorbachev’s abdication speech, 25 December 1991, in the US
newspaper the Boston Globe.
He had no grand plan and no
predetermined policies; but if
Gorbachev had not been Party General
SOURCE
39
Secretary, the decisions of the late
1980s would have been different. The
USSR’s long-lasting order would have
endured for many more years, and
almost certainly the eventual collapse
of the order would have been much
bloodier than it was to be in 1991.
The irony was that Gorbachev, in trying
to prevent the descent of the system
into general crisis, proved instrumental
in bringing forward that crisis and
destroying the USSR.
Extract from History of Modern Russia
by historian Robert Service, published
2003. In this extract he is commenting
on the meeting in March 1985. Mikhail Gorbachev after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, 15 October 1990.
SOURCE
40
Focus Task B
How secure was Soviet control of eastern Europe?
You now know a lot about Soviet control of eastern Europe:
♦ how and why Communists seized control of each country in the 1940s (Chapter 4)
♦ how the Soviet Union successfully crushed opposition and threats to control from the 1950s to the 1980s
♦ how the Communist regimes of eastern Europe and the USSR collapsed so suddenly in 1989–90.
Here are the three graphs from page 123. Which do you think best represents the story of Soviet control of eastern Europe?
If you pick this graph, you think Soviet control stayed steady for years, then collapsed in 1989.
1948 1989
If you pick this graph, you think Soviet control gradually decreased over time.
1948 1989
If you pick this graph, you think Soviet control fluctuated in response to various crises.
1948 1989
If you think none of them is right then draw your own. Explain your graph using evidence from this chapter. You could refer
back to your work for the Focus Tasks on pages 127, 132 and 137.
144
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these The USSR and eastern Europe
terms mean and are able to define
them confidently. 1 After the Second World War, Communist governments were elected or
♦ Berlin Wall forced on most countries of eastern Europe.
♦ Brezhnev Doctrine 2 They were not directly ruled by the USSR but their Communist governments
♦ Censorship did what the USSR wanted and when they did not the USSR sent troops and
♦ Checkpoint Charlie tanks (the Red Army) to force them to follow the USSR’s wishes.
♦ Co-existence 3 Life in these countries was tightly controlled with censorship, a secret police
♦ Comecon and all industry directed to meeting the needs of the Soviet Union rather
♦ Cominform than making goods for ordinary people.
♦ Communism 4 The countries formed a military alliance called the Warsaw Pact – the
♦ Communist bloc members would defend each other if any member was attacked.
♦ De-Stalinisation 5 In Hungary in 1956 the Communist government was very unpopular and
♦ Freedom of speech the people resented the lack of freedom. There were demonstrations and
♦ Glasnost protests. A new leader was chosen (with Soviet approval) who promised
♦ Iron curtain greater freedom but when he also decided to leave the Warsaw Pact the
♦ Martial law USSR changed and sent the Red Army to crush the rising.
♦ NATO 6 In 1961 an increasing number of people in Communist East Germany were
♦ Nobel Peace Prize leaving by crossing into capitalist West Germany. The USSR responded by
♦ One-party state building the Berlin Wall – and stopping all movement from East to West
♦ People power Berlin. It stayed in place for 28 years and became a symbol of Cold War
♦ Perestroika tension.
♦ Politburo 7 In Czechoslovakia in 1968 after mass protests the Communist government
♦ Red Army tried to introduce more freedom for its people. Again, the Soviet Union sent
♦ Reunification the Red Army to crush the protests.
♦ Secret police 8 In 1980 a trade union in Poland called Solidarity led a protest movement
♦ Socialism against Communist control that was tolerated to start with until the army
♦ Solidarity took over in Poland and Solidarity was crushed.
♦ Soviet republics 9 In 1985 Gorbachev became leader of the USSR. He believed the USSR
♦ Summit meeting needed to change and he introduced two key ideas: glasnost (openness) and
♦ Superpower perestroika (restructuring).
♦ The Prague Spring 10 He also told the Communist governments of eastern Europe that the USSR
♦ Trade union was no longer going to intervene to prop them up. They were on their own.
♦ Warsaw Pact In 1988 he began to withdraw Soviet troops from eastern Europe.
11 The impact of this was not immediately clear but by 1989 people in eastern
Europe began to test what this meant in practice. First of all Hungarians
began to dismantle the barbed-wire fence between Hungary and the west.
Over the rest of the summer of 1989 people acted similarly throughout
eastern Europe, culminating with the dismantling of the Berlin Wall (while
troops looked on) in November.
12 Gorbachev was awarded the Nobel Peace Price for helping to end the Cold
War between the USA and the USSR but he was not popular in the USSR. The
USSR fragmented and he resigned as leader on Christmas Day 1991.
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1(a) What were glasnost and perestroika? [4]
(b) Explain why Mikhail Gorbachev changed Soviet policy towards eastern
Europe. [6]
(c) ‘Gorbachev almost singlehandedly ended Communist control of eastern
Europe.’ How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer.
[10]
2 Study Source 26 on page 134. How far do you think Source 26 is a reliable
source? Explain your answer using the source and your own knowledge. [7]
3 Study Source 28 on page 135. Why was this source published at this time?
Explain your answer using details of the source and your knowledge. [7]
145
7
146
7
Why did events in the Gulf matter,
● What were the causes and consequences of the Iran–Iraq War, 1980–88?
Iran Iraq
Focus Early 20th century: British control
In Chapters 4–6 you have been studying the development of the Cold of oil industry in both countries
War and the impact of the superpowers on countries and events around
the world. This chapter shifts the focus away from the superpowers onto
the oil-rich states around the Persian Gulf (see map on page 148).
1951 1950
The region has seen rapid change over the past 40 years. There is a lot of
Nationalisation of
political tension within and between the Gulf states that has caused some Iranian oil industry
costly and ferocious wars, especially the Iran–Iraq War of 1980–88. It
has also drawn into the conflict many outside nations: the First Gulf War 1953
Overthrow of
of 1991 saw a multinational force of 35 different countries at war with Mossadeq’s 1958
Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. government by Iraqi army
the Shah overthrow
Your first task in this chapter will be to understand why the Gulf 1960 monarchy
has been the source of such tension. It would easy to focus it all on
individuals such as Saddam Hussein (pictured opposite) or on the
importance of oil. As you will see those are both very important but
there are also factors at work.
Your second task is to think about why these events matter so much to 1978 1968
so many people. It should be obvious that they matter to people living Strikes and Baathists seize
demonstrations power
in the region, but they have also mattered a lot to people living far away against Shah’s 1970
from the Gulf states. Western powers have got involved in wars much government 1972
more readily than they have in conflicts in other parts of the world. Why Nationalisation of
1979 Iraqi oil industry
did events in the Gulf matter to them? Revolution and
Islamic republic
Timeline proclaimed
The timeline on the right gives you an overview of the main events you 1979 1979
US embassy staff Saddam Hussein
will be studying in this chapter. You will be focusing on two countries in taken hostage 1980 becomes President
particular, Iran and Iraq.
1980–1988: Iran–Iraq War
1988
Massacre of Kurds
by Iraqi army
t This is the front cover of Punch magazine in August 1990. Punch was a 1990
satirical news magazine published in Britain from the nineteenth century 1990 Iraqi forces invade
Kuwait, leading
through into the 1990s. This shows Saddam Hussein, leader of Iraq. to the Gulf War of
1991
1 What impression does this give you of Saddam Hussein?
1991
2 What is the message of this illustration? Shiite rebellion
crushed
147
SOURCE
1
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
TURKEY N
R. E Mosul
up
Mediterranean Sea Tehran
R . Tig
a
hr
SYRIA
tes
ri s
LEBANON
Baghdad
ISRAEL IRAN
IRAQ
AN
RD
Cairo Suez Canal Basra
JO
Aquaba
R. Nile
KUWAIT
EGYPT BAHRAIN
Persian Gulf
QATAR
SAUDI ARABIA
UAE
Think!
Here are five factors that have
created tension and conflict in the OMAN
Red Sea
Oil! Israel
All the states round the Persian Gulf produce oil; in fact, the Not far from the Gulf is the state of Israel – the Jewish
Gulf region contains nearly two-thirds of the world’s known state created in 1948 and carved out of land inhabited
oil reserves. The Gulf countries are almost entirely dependent by Arabs. The creation of the state of Israel was
on oil for their wealth. Many countries in the West and in opposed by all Arab states, including those in the Gulf,
the Far East are also highly dependent on imports of oil from and Israel has been a source of tension ever since.
the Gulf. Without it, much of their transport systems and
manufacturing industry would break down. Control of oil Religion
supplies played a major part in the Iran–Iraq War of 1980–88 The vast majority of the people in this area
and was the central cause of the Gulf War of 1991. are Muslims. However there is a huge split
between Sunni and Shia Muslims. The origins
Individuals Reasons for of this split are explained in the Factfile on the
tension in the opposite page. Disagreement between these
The other panels show underlying causes of
Gulf two branches of Islam has been a major cause
tension. It is usually people who turn these
of conflict throughout this period.
tensions into actual conflicts. The different
leaders of the Gulf states, in particular Saddam
National identity
Hussein and Ayatollah Khomeini, have each
played their part in raising tension at different The two countries you will be focussing on most of all are Iran
times. and Iraq. One is Arab while the other is not. They are both ancient
civilisations dating back thousands of years. Their people are
independent and proud of who they are and where they have come
from. Yet for much of their history the area has been controlled by
foreign empires. While outsiders might care most about oil, many
Iranians and Iraqis care more about their country, their identity and
their religion than they do about money or oil. This has sometimes
brought them into conflict with foreign powers or with rulers who
co-operate with them.
148
Why was Saddam Hussein able to
Republic
In 1958 the monarchy was overthrown and Iraq became a republic. After another coup by army
officers in 1968 the republic was ruled by the Baath Party. Most Baathists were Sunni Muslims.
The Sunnis had been the dominant group in Iraq ever since the state of Iraq was set up in 1921,
although the Shiites formed the majority of the population. Many Shiites were now brought into the
new government in a show of unity.
149
The rise of Saddam Hussein
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Profile
Saddam Hussein
One of the Baathists who had played a key role in the 1968 coup/takeover was Saddam Hussein. As
a young man, Saddam had been immersed in the anti-British, anti-Western atmosphere of the Arab
world in the late 1950s and the 1960s. He had been involved in the overthrow of the pro-British
monarchy in 1958 and played a key role in the coup of 1968. He was made Vice-President, serving
under a much older President. However, it was Saddam who emerged as the strong man of the
regime. How was he able to do this?
Control
Saddam and the Baathists became much more powerful, extending their control over Iraqi
SOURCE
2 government and society. Trade unions, schools and even sports clubs came under state control and
In July 1969 another eighty prominent membership of the Baath Party determined who was appointed to positions in the government. The
Iraqis were on trial for espionage. They main aim of education was to immunise the young against foreign culture and promote Arab unity
were merely the prelude to thousands and ‘love of order’. Saddam Hussein said that the ideal student was one who could ‘stand in the sun
of hangings, almost all for ‘espionage’ holding his weapon day and night without flinching’.
and ‘spying’. Eleven years later, when
Saddam Hussein was confirmed in
power, Iraqi hangmen were dispatching Repression
victims to the gallows at the rate of a In 1976, Saddam was made a general in the army. By now he was the effective leader of Iraq as the
hundred every six weeks. President became increasingly frail. Saddam extended government control over the army and the
secret police. High military spending kept the armed forces happy, but they were also kept under
From The Great War for Civilisation; The control by regular indoctrination, by rotating the officers (so that none could build up opposition)
Conquest of the Middle East by Robert and by the imprisonment and execution of those suspected of disloyalty.
Fisk, who has lived in, and reported
from, the Middle East for over 30 years.
150
Repression was extended throughout Iraqi society. There were increasing reports of torture and
‘Show trials’
Saddam was an admirer of Stalin’s use of terror to enforce submission. Saddam’s presidency
started with the televised trial of a number of opponents; 21 were later executed. There had always
been repression, but Saddam raised the level, terrorising his own party as well as opponents. Baath
party members faced the death penalty for joining another party. There were many attempts to
overthrow Saddam and they were met with overwhelming violence. After an attempt to assassinate
him in the village of Dujail to the north of Baghdad in 1982, he ordered his security forces to kill
nearly 150 villagers in retaliation.
151
SOURCE
3
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Source Analysis u
1 What image of Saddam Hussein
is conveyed by the poster in
Source 3?
2 Why do you think this was
published in 1989?
Factfile
The Kurds
The Kurds form about 20 per cent of
the population of Iraq.
They are mostly situated in the north, A poster of Saddam Hussein published in Iraq in 1989.
especially along the borders with Syria,
Turkey and Iran (see Source 1 on page
148).
There are millions of Kurds inside these
neighbouring countries as well as in
The Kurds
Iraq itself. However, the Iraqi Kurds
were probably the most organised. Iraq’s population was made up of three main groups: Shia Muslims (the majority), Sunni Muslims
The Kurds are Muslim but not Arab and Kurds. Ever since the state of Iraq was created in 1921, the Kurds had enjoyed a certain amount
and they speak a different language.
There had been almost constant of self-rule, but many of their leaders were determined to achieve a separate homeland, Kurdistan.
conflict between Iraqi troops and However, Saddam wanted the opposite. He was determined to extend his government’s control over
Kurdish nationalist fighters from the the Kurdish north.
time the state of Iraq was created in In 1974–75, his forces attacked the Kurds. Many of their leaders were executed or driven into
1921.
Since the end of the monarchy in exile and the Kurds lost much of their self-government. The Kurds stood little chance but they did
1958, some Kurds and many Shiites get help from Iran. Iranian help increased when Iran and Iraq went to war in 1980 (see page 158).
had done well and become better off As a result the Kurds gained greater control of Kurdish northern Iraq. Saddam saw this as a
in Iraq as long as they proved loyal. betrayal. In March 1988 Saddam’s planes bombarded the Kurdish town of Halabja using chemical
But, under Saddam, there were mass
expulsions. weapons (see Source 4). This was one of the episodes for which Saddam Hussein was later put on
trial, found guilty and executed.
152
SOURCE
4 Saddam’s solution to the ‘Kurdish problem’
Source Analysis
1 How far do Sources 4, 5 and 6
agree about the treatment of the Repression of the Shiite Iraqis
Kurds by Iraqi forces? Shiites, who form the majority of the population in the south and centre of Iraq, continued to suffer
2 Which of Sources 4, 5 and 6 are persecution under Saddam Hussein’s rule. In the early days of Baath rule, some had prospered.
more useful for the historian Many of the rank-and-file Baath party members were Shiite. Most Shiites wanted greater inclusion
studying the massacre at Halabja
in Iraqi government and society, not the separatism that many Kurds wanted. However, after
in northern Iraq?
the Islamic revolution in neighbouring Shiite Iran in 1979 (see page 155), Saddam became
increasingly suspicious of the Shiite majority in Iraq. In 1980–81, 200,000 Shiites were deported to
Iran as their ‘loyalty was not proven’. Many of them were successful businessmen whose businesses
SOURCE
6 were then handed over to the government’s supporters.
Infrastructure
At the same time Saddam continued to use Iraq’s immense oil revenue to improve the health,
education and other services for the people of Iraq. As you have already read, he brought electricity
and similar improvements to rural villages. Daily life for many ordinary Iraqis improved due to
improved road transport and water supplies. Access to university education and high quality health
care was free. Painters, musicians and other artists, helped by government subsidies, flourished.
Saddam even introduced penalties for avoiding literacy classes and bullied his own ministers to lose
A scene from the Kurdish town of weight to set an example to the people. There was freedom of religious worship and government
Halabja, in northern Iraq, in March in Iraq was relatively free from corruption. However, all of these benefits depended on people not
1988. The Iraqi air force had attacked getting on the wrong side of the regime.
the town with chemical weapons,
including mustard gas and cyanide.
Focus Task
What was the nature of Saddam Hussein’s rule in Iraq?
Divide into groups. Each group should take one of the following themes and
build up a detailed picture of this aspect of Saddam’s rule.
Revision Tip ♦ Use of terror, especially in his treatment of non-Sunni peoples in Iraq.
Saddam Hussein maintained his ♦ Indoctrination and the cult of leadership, for example, his control of
hold on power by use of terror education and his portrayal as a national and Arab hero.
and indoctrination and by crushing ♦ Development of Iraq’s infrastructure, i.e. the facilities, services and
the opposition. Make sure you can communications needed for the country to function properly.
remember examples of how: You might also think of things which do not fit easily into any of these categories
♦ he crushed opposition (such as Saddam giving preferential treatment to people from his own clan or
♦ he used the cult of personality region), or which would be appropriate in more than one category.
♦ some Iraqis benefited from Now write an essay of 200–400 words to answer the question: ‘Terror, and
Saddam’s rule terror alone, explains Saddam Hussein’s success in holding on to power.’ How far
♦ Shiites suffered. do you agree with this interpretation?
153
Why was there a revolution in Iran
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
in 1979?
You are now going to leave Iraq for a while, to study what was going on in Iraq’s neighbour Iran.
The events overlap with those you have already studied.
A British cartoon from October 1951. The animal in the kennel represents the British Prime Minister, Clement Attlee. The bag is
marked Anglo-Iranian and the man is marked Mossadeq.
154
The overthrow of Mossadeq’s government,
SOURCE
9
Numerous eyewitnesses have
commented on the almost universal
enthusiasm, discipline, mutual
cooperation and the organisation
which added to the spirit and extent
of the last months of the revolution
and distributed supplies and heating oil
during the revolutionary strikes.
Written in 2003 by historian Nikki Ayatollah Khomeini waving to a crowd of enthusiastic supporters on his return to
Keddie, an expert on Iranian history who Tehran, February 1979.
has written several books, over 40 years,
on the subject.
Focus Task
Why was there a revolution in Iran in 1979?
Extravagance in a 1 Here are some factors which help to explain the 1979 revolution. Work
country where many Role of Khomeini
in groups to decide how the factors could be grouped, and also how
are poor
some factors are connected to each other. Possible groups might be:
♦ dislike of Western influence
♦ religious leaders’ opposition to Shah
Hatred of the secret
Foreign films ♦ the Shah’s attitude towards opponents.
police
You can probably think of other groupings – and remember some
factors may be relevant to more than one group.
2 Use the results of your sorting exercise to write an essay to answer this
Pro-Western foreign Importance of question: ‘The main reason for the revolution in Iran in 1979 was the
policy mullahs and mosques Shah’s close relations with the West.’ To what extent do you agree
with this view?
♦ It is probably best to start by selecting reasons which support this
view and explain why they are important.
Strikes and Huge Western profits ♦ Then select other reasons, some of which may also be connected to
demonstrations from oil
the Shah’s close relations with the West. This second part of your
answer will contain more short-term reasons such as the growing
Killing of protestors opposition in the late 1970s.
Banks closely tied to led to bigger ♦ Finally, you need to make a judgement about the extent to which
the West demonstrations and the Shah’s overthrow was a result of his closeness to the West.
more strikes
Revision Tip
The Shah’s government was overthrown because of its unpopular, pro-Western
policies and replaced by an Islamic republic. Make sure you can remember the
role of the following in overthrowing the Shah:
♦ Ayatollah Khomeini
♦ anti-Western feeling/opinion
♦ injustices and inequalities in Iran.
156
The establishment of an Islamic
Revision Tip
Make sure you can:
♦ describe two aims of the Khomeini regime
♦ explain one reason why it was hostile to the USA
♦ give an example of one other country in the region which might be concerned
about the new regime.
157
What were the causes and
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
158
SOURCE
10
SOURCE
11
My involvement in the war was a reflection of the nature of our Islamic revolution.
It was based on a new interpretation of religion – getting involved in the war was
a sacred duty. We were led by a prophet-like statesman Khomeini so this is how
we perceived the war. This was the reason for our overwhelming commitment.
The war could not be separated from our religion.
An Iranian man tells the British journalist, Robert Fisk, what had motivated him
when he went to the war front in 1984.
SOURCE
12
Members of the Iranian Basiji (mobilized volunteer forces) pray behind a cleric, their weapons stacked to one side, during military
training in Tehran, Iran, during the Iran-Iraq War, 6th November 1981.
Within two years, Iran had recaptured all of its land and had cut off Iraq from its only sea ports.
There were calls for a ceasefire but these came to nothing because Iran said it would not settle for
anything less than the overthrow of Saddam’s regime.
When Iran stated that its target was to seize Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, the Iraqi forces became
more united in their determination to defend their country. By 1984, the two sides were bogged
down in trench warfare along the 1,000-mile border. It was similar, in this way, to the fighting
in the trenches on the western front in the First World War except that sand, not mud, was what
bogged the soldiers down.
159
Foreign involvement
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Most of the Arab states supported Iraq. In particular the Sunni rulers of the Gulf states (see
Source 1) had little support for Iran’s Islamic revolution. They were opposed to the spread of Iran’s
revolutionary, Shiite version of an Islamic state. They feared that if it won the war Iran might
liberate the Iraqi Shiites and establish an Iraqi state loyal to Khomeini. They feared Iran would stir
up the Shiite minorities in their own countries. They also believed Iran posed a threat to their oil
fields. So:
● Saudi Arabia and the smaller oil-rich Gulf states, together with Egypt and Jordan, supplied
money and arms to Iraq
● Jordan also provided a route for Iraq’s imports and exports through the port of Aqaba (see
Source 1). This was vital for Iraq when her access to the Gulf was cut off by Iranian forces.
Syria, however, supported Iran because of intense rivalry with its neighbour, Iraq. The Syrians shut
the Iraqi pipelines which passed through its territory to the Mediterranean. In return, Syria received
free Iranian oil.
France, Germany and the Soviet Union also sided with Iraq, as did the USA. They were all
bitterly opposed to the new regime in Iran. France became the main non-Arab supplier of arms
to Iraq. America’s support became more active when the Iranians counter-attacked and talked
of advancing on Baghdad. The thought of the revolutionary Iranians controlling so much of the
oil in the Gulf terrified the Americans as well as most of the Arab states. Khomeini might then be
able to control world oil prices! Furthermore, an Iranian victory might lead to the collapse of pro-
Western regimes in the Gulf. Using their satellite technology, the Americans kept Iraq informed of
Iranian troop movements. They also provided Iraq with equipment which was later used to make
chemical weapons and, like the Arab states, they turned a blind eye when these were used against
the Iranians.
From 1986 the fighting was focused on the Gulf, the vital route through which both Iraq and
Iran exported their oil. Each side attacked the enemy’s oil installations and tankers. The Iraqi air
force controlled the skies but the Iranian navy was stronger. When the Iranians began to attack
Kuwaiti ships in retaliation for Kuwait’s support for Iraq, the Soviet Union offered to help the
Kuwaitis. The USA swiftly stepped in to provide protection for Kuwaiti ships, both to pre-empt
further Soviet aid and to maintain its influence with the oil-rich Gulf states. When the Iranians cut
off Iraq’s access to the Gulf through the Shatt al-Arab waterway (see Source 13), the US provided
protection for Iraqi shipping and destroyed much of the Iranian navy.
SOURCE
13
N 0 100 200
km
Baghdad IRAN
R.
Tig
ris
IRAQ
. Eu
R
p hra
t es
KHUZESTAN
Basra
160
Ceasefire, 1988
161
What was Saddam thinking?
Why did Saddam invade Kuwait in
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Think!
How do you think the invasion would be reported in a newspaper in your own
country? Write a headline and a brief article explaining why Saddam Hussein
ordered his forces to invade Kuwait. Your word limit is 200 words.
162
SOURCE
14 The American reaction
Multi-national force
Although some Arab states, like Jordan, preferred an ‘Arab’ solution to the problem, the majority
fully supported the deadline which the UN delivered to Iraq at the end of November: withdraw from
Kuwait by 15 January 1991 or face military force.
Saddam predicted the ‘mother of all battles’. Over 700,000 troops had been assembled in the
deserts of Saudi Arabia. Most were American but Britain and France also sent large forces. Most
significant of all was that many Arab countries such as Egypt and Syria sent troops, as did other
Muslim countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh. Saudi Arabia itself contributed 100,000 soldiers.
Source Analysis u In all, 34 countries joined the coalition. It was the broadest coalition ever assembled for a UN
operation. Saddam would not be able to claim that this was a Western crusade against the Arabs
1 To what extent do you think the
cartoonist in Source 15 approves
and Islam.
the actions of the United Nations?
2 How useful is it for the historian
SOURCE
15
studying the role of the UN in the
Kuwait crisis?
3 Nicholas Garland created many
cartoons commenting on the Gulf
War. Sources 15 and 16 are two
examples. You can look up more of
his work at www.cartoons.ac.uk.
In 1966, Garland became the
first political cartoonist for the
Daily Telegraph, a paper that is
usually seen as right wing whereas
Garland came from a left-wing
background (both of his parents
were Communists). In 1986 he
became one of the founders of
the Independent newspaper. He
had freedom to draw what he
liked, noting in 1988 that political
cartoonists derive most of their
impact from their ability to express
contrasting views to the rest of the
paper. A cartoon by Nicholas Garland, in the British newspaper, the Independent,
Do these cartoons tell us more 10 August 1990, six days after Iraqi forces invaded Kuwait. The leading figure
represents the US President George Bush, followed in order by the French President,
about the cartoonist or the events
the British Foreign Secretary, the German Chancellor and the
he portrays? Explain your view. Russian Foreign Minister.
Think!
There have been many acts of aggression by one country and sources on pages 162– 63 and gather evidence of these
against another since the Second World War, but rarely have reasons. You could work in pairs or small groups.
so many countries joined together to use military force in ♦ To punish Iraq
order to repel the aggressor. So why did so many countries ♦ To protect the world’s oil supplies
agree to join the force this time? ♦ Fear of what Saddam might do next
Make a table listing the different reasons countries had ♦ Motives of USA and other Western countries
for joining the multi-national force. Look through the text ♦ Motives of Saudi Arabia and other Arab states
♦ Other reasons
163
The Gulf War, January–March 1991
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Factfile
Gulf War ceasefire
Peace terms were imposed on Iraq by the The war to liberate Kuwait became known as the Gulf War (and later ‘The First Gulf War’). It began
UN. These included: with a five-week air assault on military targets but also on airports, bridges, factories and roads.
Iraq had to recognise Kuwait’s
sovereignty The coalition forces had complete air superiority and the most powerful air force in the world
Iraq had to pay reparations (war armed with the most up-to-date weapons. Saddam hoped world opinion would turn against the
damages) coalition but his hopes came to nothing. He tried to involve Israel by firing missiles in the hope that
Iraqi aircraft could not enter the ‘no-fly this would cause a split between the West and their Arab allies. The US persuaded the Israelis not to
zones’ in the Kurdish north and the
south
retaliate and the Arab members of the US-led coalition stayed firm.
Iraq had to comply with weapons In February, the ground attack began. The Iraqi forces were no match for the coalition and
inspections from the UN to uncover were quickly defeated with heavy casualties. US and coalition troops were better trained, better
and destroy all weapons of mass equipped and more motivated than many of the reluctant conscripts in the Iraqi army. They were
destruction (WMD). WMD are
biological, chemical or nuclear
also backed by fearsome air power including helicopter gunships. As they retreated, Iraqi forces
weapons that could be used to kill as tried to wreck Kuwait by pouring oil into the Gulf and setting fire to the oilfields. With the Iraqis
many people as possible driven out of Kuwait the US-led forces continued into Iraq itself. The US President called on
Until all WMD were destroyed the UN the Kurds in the north and the Shiites in the south to rise up and overthrow Saddam. They both
imposed wide-ranging trade sanctions
(which virtually cut off Iraq from the
responded, but they lacked arms and received no support from US troops. In the Shia south, about
rest of the world). 50,000 were killed by Saddam’s forces and similar reprisals were expected in the Kurdish north.
With a humanitarian catastrophe looming, media coverage rallied world opinion and forced the
USA and Britain to act. The Americans and British established ‘no-fly zones’, which prevented
Saddam regaining control of the north. A ‘safe haven’ was created for the Kurds who have been
effectively in control of their areas ever since.
The coalition forces stopped short of Baghdad. There were strong voices in the US government
that wanted to go further and get rid of Saddam Hussein altogether. However their UN mission
had been restricted to the liberation of Kuwait and America’s Arab allies would not have supported
an American overthrow of Saddam. The coalition would have split if the Americans had attacked
Baghdad. Many Arab commentators believed that the United States used the war to establish its
military presence in the Gulf and to dominate the world’s oil resources. On 28 February, a ceasefire
was called (see Factfile).
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
16
Using the information on pages
164–165 explain the message of
Source 16.
Focus Task
Why did the multi-national
force succeed?
‘The attempt to liberate Kuwait was a
very risky operation because Saddam
had 300,000 troops in Kuwait and a
further 700,000 in Iraq. He had huge
numbers of tanks and aircraft and a
stockpile of chemical weapons. It is
therefore surprising that the coalition
forces even tried to liberate Kuwait
and even more surprising that they A cartoon by Nicholas Garland, from the British newspaper, the Daily Telegraph,
succeeded.’ 8 March 1991, a week after the ceasefire.
Build an argument against this
statement and use the sources and
information on pages 162–166
as evidence to support your view.
Try to keep your argument under
150 words long.
164
SOURCE
17 Weapons inspections
Source Analysis
The impact of sanctions on Iraq
Within a short period of time the living conditions of the Iraqi people became increasingly hard:
1 What is the message of the cartoon
● A blockade prevented any imports of machinery, fertilisers, most medicines and even books.
in Source 17?
2 What does it reveal about people's ● At first Iraq was not allowed to sell oil. After some months sales were allowed but they were
views on whether Saddam had strictly limited.
WMD? ● As Iraq imported much of its food, this had disastrous consequences. A UN survey in the mid-
1990s claimed that, in the Baghdad area, a quarter of those under the age of five were ‘severely
malnourished’. By 1997, 7,000 children were dying each month of hunger and disease.
● Iraq was not allowed to import chlorine to purify water in case it was used in making chemical
weapons. The contamination of water led to widespread outbreaks of dysentery. It is reckoned
that between a quarter and half a million children died during this period.
● As the humanitarian crisis worsened, the UN came up with a plan in 1996 to allow Iraq to sell
its oil in order to buy food. This ‘Oil for Food’ programme was to be run by the UN. It brought
much-needed relief to a desperate people.
Yet sanctions did not increase the opposition to Saddam’s regime in Iraq, let alone lead to
rebellion. Saddam used violence and terror, as ever, to control resources and reward his most loyal
supporters. Disloyal elements in the army were purged, sometimes executed. A special army unit
was created to protect the President and nearly all the top jobs in government and the armed forces
went to Sunnis, particularly to members of Saddam’s own family and tribe.
The roads, bridges and electricity systems in Baghdad and the Sunni areas were largely rebuilt
and, although Iraq’s WMD programme was depleted, the army was still the biggest in the Arab
world. Meanwhile Saddam allowed the filming of mass suffering, especially for Arab television
networks, so that the image of Iraq as the victim of the greedy, uncaring West would be propagated.
International opinion began to turn against the policy of sanctions.
165
Iraq emerges from isolation
part 2 the COLD war AND THE GULF, 1945–2000
Focus Task A
How successful were UN Saddam did not want to give up all his secret weapons and had always tried to disrupt the UN weapons
sanctions? inspectors. Besides, he knew that the inspection teams were working closely with the US Central
Create a table to show your analysis
Intelligence Agency (CIA) and other Western intelligence agencies. He no doubt suspected that they
of the following measures of success: were planning to overthrow him. When the UN inspection team demanded access to the headquarters
♦ Did they eliminate WMD? of the Iraqi special security services and to the presidential palaces, Saddam refused and, in 1997,
♦ Effects on lives of Iraqis the inspectors were forced to leave Iraq. A year later, in 1998, American (and British) planes started
♦ Effects on the USA’s image in the bombing Iraqi military sites, despite the commonly-held view that Iraq had no more WMD.
Arab world Most Arab states had been happy to see Iraq taught a lesson in 1991 but now the bombing
For your overall judgement, give a campaign turned many of them against the USA. When the US Secretary of State, Madeleine
score out of ten and explain it using
Albright, was asked on television if the starvation of half a million people was justified, she said it
specific examples.
had been ‘worth it’. This caused widespread anger in the Arab world and several states started to
trade with Iraq again. Iraq was re-emerging from international isolation.
Even the USA seemed to accept the revival of Iraq’s oil industry. A growing global economy
was pushing up oil prices and several American firms won contracts to rebuild Iraq’s oil wells. By
1999 the UN had approved unlimited oil exports from Iraq and Saddam’s regime had restored
diplomatic relations with all its neighbours. It had got rid of the hated UN inspectors and still had
the most feared army in the Arab world. Saddam had challenged both the UN and the USA (now
the world’s one and only superpower), and he had survived. When George W. Bush, the son of the
previous President, was elected President of the USA in 2000, there was renewed talk in Washington
of the need to ‘remove Saddam’.
Focus Task B
To what extent was Saddam Hussein responsible for conflict in the Gulf region, 1970–2000?
The two most obvious examples of conflict in the Gulf in this period are, of course, the Iran–Iraq War and the Gulf
War of 1990–91, but you should also make some reference to conflict within states. Some examples are listed in
the table below.
1 Copy out and complete this table using what you have found out from your study of this chapter. Some cells
have been started for you.
2 Look back to your prediction on page 148. Do you now think that you got these factors in the right order?
3 Now write an essay in answer to this question. In your conclusion you should make a judgement about the
extent of Saddam Hussein’s role. Do you think he was wholly responsible? Mostly responsible? No more
responsible than others? Use the table above to support your answer.
166
7 Why did events in the Gulf matter, c.1970–2000?
Keywords Chapter Summary
Make sure you know what these Why did events in the Gulf matter, c.1970–2000?
terms mean and be able to define
Iraq
them confidently.
♦ Arab nationalism 1 Iraq was ruled by a pro-British monarchy until 1958. Saddam Hussein came
♦ Ayatollah to power after the Baathist Party took control in 1968. Saddam nationalised
♦ Baath Party the oil industry and built up Iraq’s economy.
♦ Chemical weapons 2 He held on to power by the use of terror, propaganda and a Sunni-
♦ Coup dominated government, and he crushed Kurdish and Shiite opposition.
♦ Martyr Iran
♦ Mullah 3 Iran was ruled by the Shah although the British controlled the oil fields. Prime
♦ Multi-national force Minister Mossadeq nationalised the oil industry in 1951 but was overthrown
♦ Nationalism under Anglo–US pressure two years later.
♦ Sanctions 4 Growing opposition led to the downfall of the pro-Western Shah and the
♦ Shia establishment of an Islamic republic led by Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979.
♦ Shiite
♦ Sunni Iran–Iraq War, 1980–88
♦ Superpowers 5 Saddam took advantage of Iran’s post-revolutionary weakness and invaded
♦ WMD (Weapons of Mass his neighbour in 1980. Iraq scored early victories but the Iranians sent in
Destruction) human waves, many of them willing to be martyrs. The ‘War of the Cities’
led to widespread destruction and a huge death toll.
6 Foreign intervention also intensified the fighting. The Sunni-dominated,
Arab Gulf states feared a victory for Shiite revolutionary Iran and supported
Iraq, as did the Soviet Union and Western powers. In the oil tanker war that
developed after 1986, the US actively supported Iraq.
The Gulf War, 1990–91
7 Iraqi forces invaded Kuwait to gain control of its oil fields and the UN
imposed trade sanctions on Iraq.
8 To liberate Kuwait and also prevent a possible Iraqi attack on Saudi oil fields,
the US led a huge multi-national force against Iraq. This was supported by
most of the Arab states.
9 The Iraqis were driven out of Kuwait and forced to agree to harsh peace
terms. UN sanctions were imposed to force Iraq to destroy all its Weapons of
Mass Destruction (WMD).
10 Most WMD were destroyed while sanctions hurt the Iraqi population but
Saddam remained in power.
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1(a) Describe the methods used by Saddam Hussein to consolidate his power
in Iraq. [4]
(b) Why did Iraq and Iran go to war in 1980? [6]
(c) 'Saddam Hussein brought nothing but misery to the Iraqi people.' Explain
how far you agree with this statement. [10]
167
Paper 1: Core Content – Introduction
Section 1: Exam Focus
3 Read the question carefully: This might sound obvious but there is a skill to it.
● Make sure you understand what the question asks you to do: write a description? Write an
explanation? Write a comparison?
● Make sure you focus on the right topic and the right sub-topic. Selecting the right material is
critical. Think of your knowledge like a wardrobe. You do not wear all of your clothes every day,
you select the different clothes for school, going out, sport, cold weather, warm weather, etc. So, if
you see a question on the League of Nations it could be on the structure of the League, the League
in the 1920s, or one crisis like Abyssinia. Make sure you focus on the right area.
● Make sure you focus on the right time period. For example, if you are facing a question on the
Vietnam War make sure whether it is asking about the early stages or the later stages. Focusing on
the wrong period could be very costly.
4 Plan your answer: Are you fed up with teachers telling you to plan your answer before you start
writing? Well, you are going to be fed up with us as well then because your teachers are right! Just
remember this simple advice:
● If you think through your answer first, then writing it is easy. Start by stating your case and then
support it.
● If you try to skip the thinking and planning and just start writing, you will make a mess of it
because it will not be clear what points you are trying to make. You will also run the danger of
running out of time.
168
1919–39 example questions
What were Germany’s main losses under the Treaty of Versailles? [4]
Advice on how to answer These questions are usually straightforward but there are two key things to bear in mind:
● Show that you can select material which is relevant to the question – this is a vital skill for a
historian (and in the exam). This question asks about Germany’s territorial losses, so do not write
about restrictions on the German army!
● Be precise. Many students waste time by over-answering this question – writing far more than is
needed. A part (a) question is only 4 marks so make 4 points! You would normally get one mark
for each relevant point you make.
It is better to write a paragraph rather than just a list of points. Here is an example we have written of a
good answer which would be likely to get full marks. Read it all through and ignore the fact that some
of it is crossed out.
None of the answers on pages Under the Treaty of Versailles Germany lost 10 per cent of its land, so many
169–179 is a real student answer. Germans ended up living in other countries. Some German land was given
We have written them to help to its European neighbours. Alsace-Lorraine was given to France and West
show the features.
Prussia was given to Poland to ensure that Poland had a sea port. Germany
also lost all its overseas colonies including Togoland and Cameroon and
German East Africa which were given to Britain and France.
Now read just the parts which have not been crossed out. Just these parts would have been likely to gain
full marks!
Part (b) questions These are usually questions which ask for an explanation. An explanation is hard to define, but one
way to think of it is to say what you think and then say why you think it. So, a typical part (b) question
might be:
Explain why Clemenceau and Lloyd George disagreed at the Paris Peace
Conference about how to treat Germany. [6]
Advice on how to answer The best answers usually get straight to the point – no background information about the leaders or
the Conference. For a question like this you should say what Lloyd George and Clemenceau disagreed
about and then explain why they held these different views. One word of warning – a common error
which students make is to simply describe the disagreements and not explain them.
This paragraph would be likely Lloyd George and Clemenceau disagreed over what to do about Germany
to get a good mark because it because Clemenceau saw Germany as a bigger threat than Lloyd George
explains one reason for their did. During the war France suffered massive damage to its industries, towns
disagreement. So would the
next paragraph. and agriculture. Over two-thirds of French troops were killed or injured
in the war. Germany’s population was still much greater than France’s
(75 million compared to 40 million) and Germany had invaded France in
1870 and 1914. Lloyd George did not see Germany as a threat in the same
This paragraph explains that way. In fact he wanted to rebuild Germany so that British industries could
Clemenceau felt that the best
way to get future peace was
start trading with Germany.
to cripple Germany, but Lloyd Lloyd George and Clemenceau also disagreed about what measures would
George felt this would not
work and would make Germany work. Clemenceau wanted to cripple Germany by breaking it up into
vengeful. separate states, reducing its army and forcing it to pay huge fines. Lloyd
George felt that this would simply make Germany want revenge in the
future so although he favoured fines and some limits on German arms he
did not think Germany should be treated as harshly as Clemenceau.
169
Part (c) questions These are usually questions which ask you to think like a historian and make a judgement. They can
Section 1: exam FocuS
come in many different forms but they usually want you to show whether you think one or more factors
are more important than others in historical situations. They might ask you how far you agree or
disagree with a statement or they might state some important factors and ask you how far you think
one was more important than another. So a (c) question might look something like this:
‘The Treaty of Versailles was a fair settlement.’ How far do you agree
with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
There are many arguments to support the view that the Treaty of
Versailles was a fair settlement. To begin with, it was strongly believed that
Germany had started the war and was therefore responsible for it. It was
certainly true that Germany invaded neutral Belgium in 1914, which broke
international treaties. Another argument was that most of the fighting on
Reasons why historians or the western front took place in Belgium and France. France lost around
people at the time would argue
the Treaty was fair. 1.6 million troops and civilians as well as suffering huge damage to industry,
towns and agriculture. There was no fighting on German soil and so there
was a strong case that Germany should pay compensation.
A second argument was that the Treaty was not as harsh as its critics
claimed. Germany certainly lost territory in the Versailles settlement – 10 per
cent of its land, all colonies, 12.5 per cent of its population. However, it could
have been a lot harsher. Clemenceau wanted Germany to be broken up into
small states. And when we look at the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which Germany
forced Russia to sign in 1918, we can see that Germany was much harsher in its
terms with Russia than the Allies were with Germany at Versailles.
Of course, there were terms that were seen as unfair. Germans regarded
the Treaty as a diktat because they were not consulted about it. They
Reasons why historians or
people at the time would argue also believed that the Allies operated double standards. For example, the
the Treaty was unfair. German army was limited to 100,000 men but France and Britain and most
other countries did not reduce their armed forces to the same levels.
Another term that could be seen as unfair was the fact that many Germans
were left outside Germany as a result of the Treaty.
Overall, I agree with the statement. Obviously no treaty will be seen as
Which side you think is the fair by all sides but the Treaty of Versailles was as fair as it possibly could
stronger, and why. It is really have been, and was a lot fairer on Germany than it might have been. The
strong to end with a clear arguments against the Treaty were mainly complaints from the German
statement.
point of view at the time. But most historians, such as Margaret Macmillan,
with the benefit of hindsight, believe that the Treaty could have been a lot
harsher. I put more faith in the historians and therefore this convinces me
that the Treaty was not unfair.
Practice
Before you turn the page have a go at these three practice questions. Then you can judge your answers against our comments on page 172.
(a) Describe how the Treaty of Versailles punished Germany. [4]
(b) Explain what Wilson wanted to achieve from the peace settlement at Versailles. [6]
(c) ‘Clemenceau did not get what he wanted out of the Paris Peace Conference.’ How far do you agree with
this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
170
1945–2000 example questions
Advice on how to answer These questions are usually straightforward but there are two key things to bear in mind:
● Show that you can select material which is relevant to the question – this is a vital skill for a
historian (and for any written answers). This question asks about Saddam’s rise to power. So don’t
get bogged down into details about where he was from, or who he was related to, unless you think
it helps describe his rise to power.
● Be precise. Many students waste time by over-answering this question – writing far more than is
needed. If a question is only worth 4 marks try to make 4 points!
And remember, it is better to write a paragraph rather than just a list of points. It reads better.
Part (b) questions These are usually questions which ask for an explanation. An explanation is hard to define, but one
way to think of it is to say what you think and then say why you think it. So, a possible part (b) question
might be:
Advice on how to answer The best answers usually get straight to the point – no background information about the Cold War.
For a question like this you should say what the Truman Doctrine was and then explain why it was
important. One word of warning – do not just describe the Truman Doctrine. You need to describe
what Truman did and explain why this had an impact on US policy and Soviet policy in the years that
followed.
Part (c) questions These are usually questions which ask you to think like a historian and make a judgement. They can
come in many different forms but they usually want you to show whether you think one or more factors
are more important than others in historical situations. They might ask you how far you agree or
disagree with a statement or they might state some important factors and ask you how far you think
one was more important than another. So a (c) question might look something like this:
‘The USA was more responsible than the USSR in causing the Cold War in the late 1940s.’
How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
Advice on how to answer Planning your answer to this question is important to prevent rambling. There are many different ways
to do this but the safest is to explain first of all why you might agree with the statement; then reasons
why you might not; then finally express your judgement as to how far you agree. So think along these
lines:
● set out two to three events or developments and use them as evidence which points to the USA
being to blame
● set out two to three events or developments and use them as evidence which points to the USSR
being to blame
● come off the fence and give your view.
Before you turn the page have a go at these three practice questions. Then you can judge your answers
against the answers and comments on page 173.
171
1919–39 worked examples
Section 1: exam FocuS
Here are some example answers that we have written to show you how to tackle the questions you
might face.
Spot on – very clear response (a) Describe how the Treaty of Versailles punished Germany [4]
and no detail the question
doesn’t ask for. Identifies ways
the Treaty punished Germany, The Treaty punished Germany by limiting the size of its army to 100,000 men
all that is needed. and banning conscription. It also had to pay reparations of £6,600 million to
the Allies. All of its overseas empire was taken away from it.
(b) Explain what Wilson wanted to achieve from the peace settlement
at Versailles. [6]
Good approach – identifies a
specific aim of Wilson’s – setting
up the LoN – and then expands Wilson hoped to achieve several things. Firstly, he wanted to set up an
on this by explaining why international body called the League of Nations. He wanted this because he
Wilson wanted it. felt that nations had to work together in order to achieve world peace.
He also wanted to make sure that the different people in eastern Europe, like
Good idea to identify a second the Poles, would no longer be part of Austria–Hungary’s empire. This was
aim of Wilson and explain his because he believed in self-determination – the idea that nations should rule
reasoning behind it. themselves.
(c) ‘Clemenceau did not get what he wanted out of the Paris Peace
Conference.’ How far do you agree with this statement? Explain
Best kind of introduction sets your answer. [10]
out what your argument will be.
Clemenceau was dissatisfied with the Treaty of Versailles although there
were many terms that did please him.
Accurate but not fully
explained. He was happy that the threat from Germany was reduced with their armed
forces being limited.
Clemenceau was also pleased with some of the territorial terms of the Treaty,
More like it! Clear identification
of something Clemenceau
such as claiming Alsace-Lorraine back from Germany, which had taken it
was pleased with, and an in 1870.
explanation of why he was However, Clemenceau was not satisfied that the Treaty reduced the threat
pleased.
from Germany enough. He was dissatisfied with the reparations settlement,
thinking it was too low. He wanted Germany broken up into smaller states. He
Now the opposing evidence wanted Germany to be permanently economically and militarily crippled so as
– good! Examples of how not to pose a future threat.
Clemenceau was unhappy with
crucial explanation of why. Overall, I do not agree with the statement that Clemenceau got what he
wanted. I think Clemenceau got a lot of what he wanted out of the Treaty,
such as reparations and Alsace-Lorraine, but he did not get the one thing
Really good answer because it he wanted most, which was guaranteed security from a German attack in
reaches an overall judgement at the future, either through alliances or by crippling Germany. This is what he
the end. This answer effectively
weighs up the relative wanted above all, and he did not get it.
importance of both sides and
explains why they have reached
their decision. Another question
might be more suited to a
different approach; for example,
considering links between
different factors.
172
1945–2000 worked examples
This response is excellent – (a) Describe the Bay of Pigs incident of 1961. [4]
clear and straight to the point.
The question is only worth
4 marks, so it would not be The Bay of Pigs invasion was not a direct invasion of Cuba by the US. Kennedy
worthwhile here explaining lots
of background about the run up sent arms and equipment for 1400 anti-Castro exiles to invade Cuba and
to the invasion. overthrow him. They landed at the Bay of Pigs but were met by 20,000 Cuban
troops who had tanks and modern weapons. The invasion failed because Castro
had killed or captured all of them within a matter of days.
This is a very good start because (b) Explain the reasons that Khrushchev put nuclear missiles on Cuba
the answer fully explains how in 1962. [6]
placing missiles on Cuba was a
good defensive tactic for the
USSR.
Khrushchev was concerned about the missile gap between the USSR and
the US. The US had more long-range missiles than the USSR. He could put
medium-range missiles on Cuba and still reach most of the US. So with missiles
Unfortunately, the answer has on Cuba it was less likely that the USA would ever launch a ‘first strike’
drifted off and has lost focus on against the USSR.
the question: in this case, why
the missiles were placed in Cuba. So in October 1962 a US spy plane flew over Cuba and found the nuclear
You won’t usually get marks
missile sites. They took detailed pictures which showed that the sites would
for giving lots of detail about
things which you haven’t been be ready to launch the missiles within a week. The Americans also found that
asked about. Possible other there were Soviet ships on their way to Cuba with more missiles.
reasons could have included
Khrushchev’s wish to defend
Cuba and how the missiles (c) ‘The Cuban Missile Crisis was a victory for the USA.’ How far do
would give him bargaining you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
power.
In some ways the crisis was a victory for the US. Kennedy had secured the
It’s excellent that this answer has
removal of the missiles and Khrushchev had been forced to back down after
managed to demonstrate two the naval blockade. The Soviet military was particularly unhappy with this and
different ways that the US came felt humiliated. In 1964 Khrushchev was removed from power; his enemies
off as the victor. certainly thought he had failed.
However, Khrushchev had managed to avoid a US invasion of Cuba, a major
A balanced argument is key achievement. Cuba was able to keep Soviet aid and protection despite the loss
to earning a high mark in this of the missiles. Also, Kennedy did have to remove the US missiles from Turkey,
question. This fully explains the which was an uncomfortable position as it should have been NATO’s decision
evidence which challenges the
statement. and his NATO colleagues were unhappy.
In practical terms, the USSR gained overall because the crisis made it clear
that even though they couldn’t match the numbers of US weapons, their
This answer attempts a balanced nuclear capacity alone was enough of a threat to make them respected.
conclusion rather than a However, it was Kennedy, and therefore the US, who won the propaganda
clinching argument. It argues
that the USA won in some battle. He came off as the hero who had held firm against Communism and
respects while the USSR won in his reputation was enhanced. Khrushchev, meanwhile, was ousted from office,
others. This can be a good way unable to use the Turkish withdrawal for propaganda as it was all done in
of tackling a conclusion if you
do not feel confident enough to secret.
decide one way or the other.
173
Paper 2: Introduction
Section 1: Exam Focus
Paper 2 will also be based on your study of the core content in Chapters 1 to 7. The difference between
Paper 1 and Paper 2 is that Paper 2 is source-based – it is testing your ability to use your knowledge
and skill to interrogate and compare a range of sources.
It is essentially a source-based investigation into one historical question drawn from the core
content. You will already know the general area that this investigation will be based on (for example,
in June 2015 it will be the causes of the First World War and why international peace collapsed in 1939,
and in November 2015 it will be the causes of the Cold War).
Structure ● There is no choice of questions – you have to answer them all. The questions will be designed to
test how well you can use historical sources but you will also need to use your historical knowledge
as well.
● There will be up to eight sources, some pictures and some written, some from the time, some
written by historians.
● There are no trick sources designed to catch you out, but there will usually be some sources which
agree with each other and some which disagree, and some which do a bit of both!
● The questions take you step-by-step through the sources and are carefully designed to allow you to
show that you can think like a historian. This means doing more than extracting basic information
from a source. It means looking at sources to see what they reveal about:
– why the source was produced
– the audience for the source and the methods used in the source to convince its audience
– what it reveals about the people who produced it, e.g. attitudes, values, concerns, anger
(sources will often involve a person or organisation who is denying; criticising; mocking;
praising; accusing; threatening; warning; afraid; unhappy; campaigning; outraged …. and
much more!)
● It can be helpful to use your contextual knowledge, comment on the tone of a source, and point
out its purpose …. but only if these things are supporting your answer to the
question being asked. So if the question gives you a source in which a politician claims a
particular policy was successful and asks whether that source can be trusted, there is no need to
use your knowledge to give more detail about the policy or the politician unless that knowledge
supports what you are saying about why the source can or cannot be trusted.
Question types The exam could include any type of question about any type of source so what you are about to read is
not foolproof! It is also important to remember that answers to the different types of questions should
vary depending on the actual source – there is no ‘one size fits all’ formula. However, it is still worth
thinking about question types and how you might answer them.
174
Section 1: exam Focus
Type 3: How useful? Type 6: Reliability
● How useful is this source to the historian studying …? ● Is person X lying in Source A?
● What can the historian learn from this source? ● Does Source A prove Source B is wrong?
A good way to think of these questions is not ‘How useful is this source It’s a good idea to explain in what way you think the sources are reliable
…?’ but ‘How is this source useful …?’ Even a biased source is useful. or unreliable about particular people, issues or events. In other words, if
The really important thing to think about is ‘useful for what?’ you say the source is reliable or unreliable, make sure you explain what
All sources are useful in telling you something about the attitudes or it is reliable or unreliable about! For example:
concerns of the person or organisation who created them. An American ● If you know or can work out something about the author, explain
poster accusing Communists of crimes is not reliable about Communists why you think he/she is reliable or unreliable about particular
but it is useful in showing that Americans were worried about people, issues or events.
Communism. ● If there is any emotive language or a biased tone, explain why you
think this shows the author has a particular point of view or purpose
which makes the source reliable or unreliable about particular
Type 4: Purpose
people, issues or events.
● If you think the source is reliable or unreliable because the content
● Why was this source published at this time? of the source fits with or contradicts your own knowledge about
particular people, issues or events.
To tackle this type of question you need to work out the message of the ● Whether any other sources in the paper support or contradict the
source and then think about what the author of the source would want source – just because you are comparing two does not mean you
to achieve by getting that message across. Usually this would involve: can’t use the other sources to help you evaluate those two.
You might conclude sources are equally trustworthy or untrustworthy.
● changing people’s attitudes (e.g. voting for a particular party)
● changing people’s behaviour (e.g. getting them to join a movement
or contribute funds to a particular cause). Type 7: Conclusion
This usually starts with a statement and then asks you to explain
Type 5: Surprise whether you think the sources show that the statement is true or not.
● Address both sides of the statement – the yes/no or agree/disagree
175
Paper 2: 1919–39 example answers with
Section 1: exam FocuS
comments
SOURCE
A 1 Study Source A. Are you surprised by this
source? [8]
SOURCE
B 2 Study Source B. How useful is this source to
The Sudetenland is the last problem that must be solved an historian? [8]
and it will be solved. It is the last territorial claim which I
have to make in Europe.
The aims of our foreign policy are not unlimited …
They are grounded on the determination to save the
German people alone … Ten million Germans found
themselves beyond the frontiers of the Reich … Germans The source is definitely useful because it tells us
who wished to return to the Reich as their homeland. how Hitler was publicly portraying the issue of the
Sudetenland to the German people and the rest of the
Hitler speaking in Berlin, September 1938.
world. He says that it is the ‘last problem’ and the ‘last
territorial claim’ Germany has in Europe. Even though
Recognises that biased and untrustworthy sources this, of course, turned out not to be the case, it is still
are useful! In this case, we may not be able to useful in showing us the methods Hitler employed to get
trust what Hitler is saying, but it is still useful in
revealing how Hitler manipulated the situation. what he wanted. It also gives us an insight into why some
people may have supported Appeasement.
176
Section 1: exam Focus
SOURCE
C 3 Study Source C. What is the message of the
cartoonist? [6]
The answer has not simply described the cartoon Understands the context in which this cartoon was
but has actually used the details to support the drawn, and gets this across, without too much
point made above. unnecessary detail.
SOURCE
D 4 Study Sources D and E. How far does Source
People of Britain, your children are safe. Your husbands E prove Source D wrong? [9]
and your sons will not march to war. Peace is a victory
for all mankind. If we must have a victor, let us choose
Chamberlain, for the Prime Minister’s conquests are In some ways Source E does prove Source D wrong.
mighty and enduring – millions of happy homes and The newspaper says that the Munich Agreement will
hearts relieved of their burden. bring peace – ‘your husbands and sons will not march
to war’. This is contradicted by Churchill when he says
The Daily Express comments on the Munich Agreement,
30 September 1938.
‘This is only the beginning of the reckoning’. The overall
impression given by Source D is that people are relieved
by the Munich Agreement, whereas Churchill seems to
SOURCE
E prove this wrong by being very critical of it.
We have suffered a total defeat … I think you will find
However, Source E cannot prove Source D wrong about
that in a period of time Czechoslovakia will be engulfed in
people’s reactions to the Munich Agreement. Lots of
the Nazi regime. We have passed an awful milestone in people in Britain were relieved that it had averted war,
our history. This is only the beginning of the reckoning. or at least delayed it in the short term. This can be seen
Winston Churchill speaking in October 1938. He felt that by looking at Source C, where the cartoonist seems to
Britain should resist the demands of Hitler. However, he was support Chamberlain’s actions, showing how he has dealt
an isolated figure in the 1930s. well with a tricky situation.
Uses the content of the sources to show how they Improves the answer because it looks at the issue
disagree. This is a useful starting point – it is saying of ‘proof’ in a different way. By cross-referencing
that Source E says Source D is wrong about people’s Source D with another source on the paper, it can
attitudes to the Munich Agreement. It is important be shown that whilst Churchill may be right about
to explain ‘wrong about what?’. the Munich Agreement in general, he cannot prove
Source D wrong about people’s reactions to it.
177
Paper 2: 1945–2000 example answers with
Section 1: exam FocuS
comments
SOURCE
A 1 Study Source A. Why was this published in 1972? [7]
The source was published to turn public opinion against the US involvement
in Vietnam.
We can see this because the picture will immediately make the viewer feel
huge sympathy for the young children who have been burned by napalm.
A ten-year-old Vietnamese girl, Phan
Thi Kim, runs naked after tearing By 1967 the media had started to ask difficult questions about American
her burning clothes from her body involvement in Vietnam and the media coverage was no longer generally
following a napalm attack in 1972.
This photograph became one of the positive.
most enduring images of the war.
Here, the answer uses the detail The answer correctly places the
from the photograph to show photograph into its context.
how it supports the point made
above.
SOURCE
B 2 Study Sources B and C. Why do they differ in
We were not in My Lai to kill human beings. We were their accounts of what happened at My Lai in
there to kill ideology that is carried by – I don’t know 1968? [9]
– pawns. Blobs. Pieces of flesh. And I wasn’t in My Lai
to destroy intelligent men. I was there to destroy an
intangible idea … To destroy Communism. Even though this response has not yet tackled the
question of why the sources differ, it is a good
From Lieutenant Calley’s account of the event, Body Count, approach because we can see the sources are being
published in 1970. compared to each other, and not dealt with in
isolation.
SOURCE
C In Source B, Lieutenant Calley gives the impression that
This was a time for us to get even. A time for us to settle the massacre at My Lai was not really a massacre or a
the score. A time for revenge – when we can get revenge revenge operation: ‘We were not in My Lai to kill human
for our fallen comrades. The order we were given was to beings.’ But in Source C, Sergeant Hodge says it was
kill and destroy everything that was in the village. It was revenge – the operation was ‘a time for us to get even’.
to kill the pigs, drop them in the wells; pollute the water
I think the sources say different things because at the time
supply … burn the village, burn the hootches as we went
they were produced, Calley and other officers in Charlie
through it. It was clearly explained that there were to be
Company had been charged with murder for what happened
no prisoners. The order that was given was to kill everyone
at My Lai. So Hodge is trying to put the blame for what
in the village. Someone asked if this meant the women
happened on his senior officers, placing all the responsibility
and children. And the order was: everyone in the village,
on them, whilst Calley is trying to justify his actions. He’s
because those people that were in the village – the
trying to appeal to people’s fear of Communism.
women, the kids, the old men – were VC … or they were
sympathetic to the Viet Cong.
This part now successfully tackles the question of
Sergeant Hodge of Charlie Company. why the sources differ and uses the context and
purpose of the sources to fully explain this.
178
Section 1: exam Focus
SOURCE
D 3 Study Source D. What is the message of the
cartoonist? [7]
SOURCE
E 4 Study Source E. How reliable is this source
The American military was not defeated in about the Vietnam War? [8]
Vietnam –
The American military did not lose a battle of any
consequence. From a military standpoint, it was almost
an unprecedented performance. This included Tet 68,
which was a major military defeat for the VC and NVA.
The United States did not lose the war in
Vietnam, the South Vietnamese did – I don’t think Source E is very reliable at all about the
The fall of Saigon happened 30 April 1975, two years Vietnam War. I think the source’s whole purpose seems
AFTER the American military left Vietnam. The last to be to convince people that America shouldn’t be
American troops departed in their entirety 29 March embarrassed about its actions in Vietnam and that it
1973. How could we lose a war we had already stopped could have won the war had it chosen to stay because
fighting? We fought to an agreed stalemate. the author is very selective in the evidence put forward,
such as the fact that Saigon did not technically fall
The Fall of Saigon –
to North Vietnam until after the Americans left. He
The 140,000 evacuees in April 1975 during the fall of neglects evidence such as the fact America spent $110
Saigon consisted almost entirely of civilians and Vietnamese billion on the war and had been there over ten years
military, NOT American military running for their lives. without securing victory.
There were almost twice as many casualties in
Southeast Asia (primarily Cambodia) the first two years This is a very good response which tackles the
after the fall of Saigon in 1975 than there were during the question of reliability in different ways. Firstly, the
answer uses contextual knowledge to challenge
ten years the US was involved in Vietnam. details in the source, and secondly, the answer
examines the purpose of the source and uses that
An extract from a website, www.slideshare.net, ‘Vietnam to question its reliability.
War Statistics’, by an American ex-serviceman.
179
Paper 2: Sample Paper A: League of Nations in
Section 1: Exam Focus
the 1920s
SOURCE
B SOURCE
D
Despite its poor historical reputation, the League of Nations The League Council felt that our role under the League
should not be dismissed as a complete failure. Of sixty-six Covenant was to do everything we could to promote a
international disputes it had to deal with (four of which settlement, and since the two parties had willingly agreed
had led to open hostilities), it successfully resolved thirty- to accept the decision of the Conference of Ambassadors
five important disputes and quite legitimately passed back our job from this point was to do everything we could to
twenty to the traditional channels of diplomacy where help the Ambassadors make decisions which were in line
major powers negotiated settlements outside the League. with the opinions expressed in the Assembly in Geneva. In
It failed to resolve eleven conflicts. Like its successor the this I believe we acted rightly and properly.
United Nations, it was capable of being effective.
British government minister Lord Robert Cecil writing in
A British historian writing in 2009. October 1923 about the Corfu Crisis. Cecil was the British
minister responsible for League of Nations matters.
SOURCE
C SOURCE
E
In response to the successive menaces of Mussolini we
muzzled the League, we imposed the fine on Greece
without evidence of her guilt and without reference
to the International Court of Justice, and we disbanded
the Commission of Enquiry. A settlement was thus
achieved. At the time I felt that British public opinion will
wonder how it came about that we entered into the
dispute upon a firm moral basis and that in the end
we forced Greece to accept a settlement that was unjust.
Corfu was evacuated by the Italians, but the League of
Nations had suffered a defeat from which its prestige has
never recovered.
British government official Sir Harold Nicolson writing in
1929, soon after he resigned from the British diplomatic
A cartoon published in the USA in 1919. service after criticising one of his ministers.
180
Section 1: exam Focus
SOURCE
F SOURCE
G
Greek forces have invaded our
sovereign territory. Make only slight
resistance. Protect the refugees.
Prevent the spread of panic. Do not
expose the troops to unnecessary
losses in view of the fact that the
incident has been laid before the
Council of the League of Nations,
which is expected to stop the invasion.
A telegram from the Bulgarian Ministry
of War in Sofia to its army commanders,
22 October 1925.
A British cartoon about the conflict between Greece and Bulgaria, published in
December 1925.
181
Paper 2: Sample Paper B: The beginnings of the
Section 1: Exam Focus
Cold War
SOURCE
A SOURCE
C
I have always worked for friendship with Russia but, like
you, I feel deep anxiety because of their misinterpretation
of the Yalta decisions, their attitude towards Poland, their
overwhelming influence in the Balkans excepting Greece,
the difficulties they make about Vienna, the combination
of Russian power and the territories under their control
or occupied, coupled with the Communist technique in
so many other countries, and above all their power to
maintain very large Armies in the field for a long time.
What will be the position in a year or two?
Extract from a telegram sent by Prime Minister Churchill to
President Roosevelt in May 1945.
SOURCE
D
A publicity photograph of the Big Three taken at the Yalta OPERATION UNTHINKABLE
Conference in 1945.
REPORT BY THE JOINT PLANNING STAFF
We have examined Operation Unthinkable. As instructed,
SOURCE
B we have taken the following assumptions on which to base
We (Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin) argued freely and our examination:
frankly across the table. But at the end on every point
unanimous agreement was reached … We know, of course, Great Britain and the United States have full assistance
that it was Hitler’s hope and the German war lords’ hope from the Polish armed forces and can count upon the use of
that we would not agree – that some slight crack might German manpower and what remains of German industrial
appear in the solid wall of allied unity … But Hitler has capacity . . .
failed. Never before have the major allies been more closely Owing to the special need for secrecy, the normal staffs
united – not only in their war aims but also in their peace in Service Ministries have not been consulted.
aims. OBJECT
Extract from President Roosevelt’s report to the US Congress
The overall or political object is to impose upon Russia
on the Yalta Conference, April 1945. the will of the United States and British Empire. The only
way we can achieve our object with certainty and lasting
results is by victory in a total war.
Extract from a top secret document called Operation
Unthinkable. It was presented by the Army Chiefs to Churchill
in May 1945 but the research and planning had begun in
February 1945.
182
SOURCE
E SOURCE
F
SOURCE
G
The following circumstances should not be forgotten. The
Germans made their invasion of the USSR through Finland,
Poland and Romania. The Germans were able to make
their invasion through these countries because, at the time,
governments hostile to the Soviet Union existed in these
A Soviet cartoon published in 1946. countries. What can there be surprising about the fact
that the Soviet Union, anxious for its future safety, is trying
to see to it that governments loyal in their attitude to the
Soviet Union should exist in these countries?
A speech by Soviet leader Stalin given in 1946. It was
broadcast in the USSR and reported in Britain and the USA.
Study Source A.
1 What can you learn from this source? Explain your answer using
details from the sources. [7]
Study Sources B and C.
2 How far do Sources A and B agree? Explain your answer using
details from the sources. [8]
Study Source D.
3 Are you surprised by Source D? Explain your answer using details
from the source and your own knowledge. [7]
Study Source E.
4 What is the cartoonist’s message? Explain your answer using
details from the sources and your own knowledge. [8]
Study Sources F and G.
5 How far do you think Source F influenced Source G? Explain your
answer using details from the source and your own knowledge.
[8]
Study Sources A–G.
6 ‘The Cold War began because Churchill had such a poor
relationship with Stalin.’ How far do these sources support this
statement? Use the sources to explain your answer. [12]
183
Section 1: Exam Focus
184
8
SECTION 2 Depth Studies
8
186
8
Russia, 1905–41
KEY QUESTIONS
8.1 Why did the Tsarist regime collapse in 1917?
8.2 How did the Bolsheviks gain and hold on to power?
8.3 How did Stalin gain and hold on to power? What was the impact of Stalin’s economic
policies?
In 1905 Russia was a vast but backward agricultural country. Its industry 1900
was underdeveloped, its people mainly poor and uneducated. It was
ruled by a Tsar who had complete power. In March 1917 the Tsar was
overthrown and in November of the same year the Bolsheviks took
over the running of Russia. Over the next 30 years the country was
The Tsar survives an
transformed by Stalin into a modern industrial state which became a 1905
TSARIST RUSSIA
attempted revolution
world superpower.
In 8.1 you will investigate why the Tsar’s regime survived one revolution
in 1905 but then collapsed in 1917. What changed?
In 8.2 you will explore how the Bolsheviks (Communists) under Lenin 1910
seized power in 1917 and, against all the odds, held on to power.
In 8.3 you will look at how Stalin became the new leader of Russia (by
this time the USSR) after Lenin, how he changed the Soviet Union, and Russia enters the
the consequences of his rule for his people. 1914 First W orld War
of the key dates are filled in already. To help you get a complete picture power
of the period make your own much larger version of the timeline and add
1920
other details to it as you work through the chapter. The Bolsheviks win the
Civil War
On pages 205–209 you will be looking at the period from which this
poster comes. Try to answer the following questions (you will have to
guess intelligently) and then keep your answers and check whether you
1934 Stalin begins the Purges
were right.
1 How would you describe the poster’s view of the sailor – for example,
cowardly, weak, brave?
2 Does this mean the sailors support the Communists or the other way
around?
3 Do you get the impression that Russia is a peaceful place at this time?
4 Would you expect the relationship between the Communists and the
sailors to change in the next few months?
187
8.1 Why did the Tsarist regime collapse in 1917?
DEPTH STUDIES
Focus
When Nicholas II was crowned Tsar of Russia in 1894, the crowds flocked
to St Petersburg to cheer. There were so many people that a police report
said 1,200 people were crushed to death as the crowd surged forward to
see the new Tsar, whom they called ‘the Little Father of Russia’.
Twenty-three years later, he had been removed from power and he and
his family were prisoners. They were held under armed guard in a lonely
house at Ekaterinburg, far from the Tsar’s luxurious palaces. Perhaps the
Tsar might have asked himself how this had happened, but commentators
were predicting collapse long before 1917. In fact some people think the
surprise is that the Tsar had actually survived so long. How could one man
rule such a vast and troubled empire? So your focus in 8.1 is why, having
survived for 23 years, did the Tsar's regime finally collapse in 1917?
Focus Points
♦ How well did the Tsarist regime deal with the difficulties of ruling Russia
up to 1914?
♦ How did the Tsar survive the 1905 Revolution?
♦ How far was the Tsar weakened by the First World War?
♦ Why was the revolution of March 1917 successful?
Source
1
1 ESTONIA
2 LATVIA
0 1000 km
3 LITHUANIA N
GREAT
BRITAIN
Arctic Ocean Scale
NORWAY
SWEDEN
Sea FINLAND
GERMANY
Baltic
1 St Petersburg EASTERN
POLAND
3 2
SIBERIA
Pacific
Le
AUSTRIA–
na Ocean
Moscow Ural
er
HUNGARY
Mountains
iep
WESTERN
Dn
Kazan SIBERIA
ROMANIA Odessa Ob
R E
Don
U
Yen
S R
CRIMEA S I
ise
Bla Trans- I A N M P
ck lga E
y
Se Vo S iberia Lake
a n Railw
GEORGIA ay Baykal
TURKEY
Caucasus
Sea
MANCHURIA
Mountains
Caspian
Vladivostok
CHINA JAPAN
KOREA
Key
Tundra Land over
PERSIA 500 metres
AFGHANISTAN Coniferous Industrial
INDIA forest areas
188
The Russian empire
8 Russia, 1905–41
Profile
Tsar Nicholas II
Russia was a vast empire of many nationalities rather than a single country, and the Tsar was its
supreme ruler.
Nationalities
Only 40 per cent of the Tsar’s subjects spoke Russian as their first language. Some subjects, for
example the Cossacks, were loyal to the Tsar. Others, for example the Poles and Finns, hated
Russian rule. Jews often suffered racial prejudice and even attacks called pogroms, sponsored by
the government.
Born 1868.
Crowned as Tsar in 1896.
Married to Alexandra of Hesse (a
granddaughter of Queen Victoria).
Peasants and the countryside
Both the Tsar and his wife were totally Around 80 per cent of Russia’s population were peasants who lived in communes. There were some
committed to the idea of the Tsar as prosperous peasant farmers called kulaks, but living and working conditions for most peasants
autocrat – absolute ruler of Russia. were dreadful. Farming was backward and primitive. There was no education. Hunger and disease
Nicholas regularly rejected requests for
were common. Life expectancy was only 40 in some areas. Worse still, a rising population meant
reform.
He was interested in the Far East. This there was a shortage of good quality land. Despite this, mainly because of the teachings of the
got him into a disastrous war with Church, most peasants were loyal to the Tsar although some peasants did support the opposition
Japan in 1905. Social Revolutionaries who wanted to take the good farming land from the aristocrats and the
He was not very effective as a ruler,
Church and give it to the peasants.
unable to concentrate on the business
of being Tsar.
He was a kind, loving family man but
did not really understand the changes
New industries, cities and the working class
Russia was going through. From the later nineteenth century, the Tsars had been keen to see Russia become an industrial
By 1917 he had lost control of Russia power. The senior minister Sergei Witte introduced policies that led to rapid industrial growth.
and abdicated.
In 1918 he and his family were shot by Oil and coal production trebled, while iron production quadrupled. Some peasants left the land
Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War. to work in these newly developing industries. However, their living conditions hardly improved.
They were jammed into slum housing in the cities, especially St Petersburg and Moscow. Within a
short distance of the Tsar’s glittering palaces workers suffered from illnesses, alcoholism, appalling
working conditions and low pay. Trade unions were illegal so there was no way to protest. Most
workers were probably no better off than the peasants.
SOURCE
2
189
SOURCE
3
DEPTH STUDIES
SOURCE
4
2.5 Let all know that I, devoting all my strength to the welfare of the people, will
uphold the principle of autocracy as firmly and as unflinchingly as my late
2.0 unforgettable father.
Population in millions
Think! Control
1 Draw up your own chart to The Tsar’s regime exercised strong control over the people. Newspapers were censored and political
summarise the Tsarist system of parties banned. The police had a special force with 10,000 officers whose job was to concentrate
government. on dealing with political opponents of the regime. The Tsar’s secret police force, the Okhrana, was
2 Describe and explain at least two
very effective, sending thousands to prison and exile in Siberia. Backing them up was the army
ways in which Nicholas II made
Russia’s government weak. which could be counted to put down any disturbances, particularly those of the terrifying Cossack
regiments. A loyal army was crucial to the Tsar’s regime.
In the countryside the peasants belonged to a mir or village commune which controlled
different aspects of daily life. There were also land captains, local nobility who dealt with crimes
and disputes; they were hated by the peasants. Larger regions were controlled by governors,
aristocrats appointed by the Tsar. They had all sorts of powers to arrest people, put down trouble,
censor newspapers and so on. Some of these were petty tyrants running their own little police states.
There were elected town and district councils called zemstva, but these were dominated by
the nobility and professional classes (doctors, lawyers). The zemstva did some good work in areas
such as health and education and gave people useful experienced in running local government.
Some people wanted a national zemstvo through which elected representatives could play a part in
running the country.
190
Opposition to the Tsar
8 Russia, 1905–41
Factfile
Marxist theory
Karl Marx was a German writer and The Tsarist government faced opposition from three particular groups. Many middle-class people
political thinker. He believed that wanted greater democracy in Russia and pointed out that Britain still had a king but also a
history was dominated by class powerful parliament. These people were called liberals.
struggle and revolution.
Two other groups were more violently opposed to the Tsar. They believed that revolution was
In Marxist theory the first change
brought about by the class struggle the answer to the people’s troubles. The Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) were a radical movement.
would be the middle classes taking Their main aim was to carve up the huge estates of the nobility and hand them over to the peasants.
control from the monarchy and They believed in a violent struggle and were responsible for the assassination of two government
aristocracy.
officials, as well as the murder of a large number of Okhrana (police) agents and spies. They had
There would then be a revolution in
which the workers (the proletariat) support in the towns and the countryside.
would overthrow the middle classes. The Social Democratic Party was a smaller but more disciplined party which followed the
For a short while the Communist Party ideas of Karl Marx. In 1903 the party split itself into Bolsheviks and Mensheviks. The Bolsheviks
would rule on behalf of the people,
(led by Lenin) believed it was the job of the party to create a revolution whereas the Mensheviks
but as selfish desires disappeared
there would be no need for any believed Russia was not ready for revolution. Both of these organisations were illegal and many of
government. their members had been executed or sent in exile to Siberia. Many of the leading Social Democrat
All would live in a peaceful, leaders were forced to live abroad.
Communist society.
SOURCE
5
Source Analysis u
Look carefully at Source 5. It was
drawn by opponents of the Tsar’s
regime who had been forced to live The royal family
in Switzerland to avoid the Tsar’s (‘We rule you’)
secret police. It is a representation
of life in Russia under the rule of the
Tsar. Discuss how far you think it is
an accurate view of Russian society.
Think about:
♦ ways in which its claims are
supported by the information and
The Church
sources in the text (‘We mislead you’)
♦ ways in which its claims are not
supported by the information and
sources in the text The army
♦ aspects of life in Russia that are (‘We shoot you’)
not covered by the drawing.
The capitalists
Think! (‘We do the eating’)
191
SOURCE
6 The 1905 revolution
DEPTH STUDIES
8 Russia, 1905–41
A clear, frosty day. Went for a long streets accompanied by riots and violence. The Tsar’s uncle was assassinated and it seemed the Tsar
might well lose control of Russia. All sorts of groups joined the workers demanding change. These
walk. Since yesterday all the factories
included the liberals and middle classes who wanted civil rights and a say in government, students
and workshops in St Petersburg
who wanted freedom in the universities, and the nationalities demanding independence. However
have been on strike. Troops have
they did not combine to form a united opposition.
been brought in to strengthen the
In June the sailors on Battleship Potemkin mutinied. This was dangerous for the Tsar who
garrison. The workers have conducted needed the armed forces to remain loyal. In the countryside, peasants attacked landlords and seized
themselves calmly hitherto. At the land. Workers’ councils (or soviets) were formed, becoming particularly strong in St Petersburg
head of the workers is some socialist and Moscow, and revolutionaries like Trotsky returned from exile to join in. In September a general
priest: Gapon. strike began and paralysed Russian industry.
Sunday 22 January
A painful day. There have been serious How did the Tsar survive?
disorders in St Petersburg because
Things were so bad at the end of September that the Tsar was persuaded, unwillingly, to issue the
workmen wanted to come up to the October Manifesto. This offered the people an elected parliament called the Duma, the right to free
Winter Palace. Troops had to open fire speech and the right to form political parties. This divided the Tsar’s opponents. The liberals were
in several places in the city; there were delighted, feeling this had achieved their main aim, and the middle classes, desperate to end the
many killed and wounded. God, how violence and disorder, now supported moves to end the revolution.
painful and sad! Mama arrived from The Tsar made peace with Japan and brought his troops back to help put down the trouble. To
town, straight to church. I lunched with ensure their loyalty he promised them better pay and conditions. Now the government moved to
all the others. Went for a walk with restore order. In December 1905 the leaders of the St Petersburg and Moscow soviets were arrested.
Misha. Mama stayed overnight. This led to fighting in Moscow and other cities but the workers were no match for the army and
their resistance was crushed. In the countryside it took much of 1906 to bring peasant unrest under
From the Tsar’s diary, recording the
events of Bloody Sunday.
control. The Tsar promised financial help in setting up a peasants’ bank to help them buy land
but it was force that won the day. Troops were sent out in huge numbers to crush the peasants and
the nationalities. Thousands were executed or imprisoned. Beatings and rape were used to terrify
peasants into submission. It was clear that no revolution would succeed if the army stayed loyal
to the Tsar.
SOURCE
10 Focus Task
How did the Tsar survive the 1905 revolution?
Copy and complete the diagram. Describe how each of the
factors helped the Tsar survive and bring Russia back under
control. We have started one branch for you.
The role of
the army Use of
brutal force
193
SOURCE
11 The troubled years, 1905–14
DEPTH STUDIES
100
Grain
The Tsar survived the 1905 revolution, but some serious questions remained. Nicholas needed to
90
reform Russia and satisfy at least some of the discontented groups that had joined the revolution
80 in 1905. The Duma deputies who gathered for its first meeting in 1906 were hopeful that they
could help to steer Russia on a new course. They were soon disappointed (see Source 12). The
70 Tsar continued to rule without taking any serious notice of them. The first and second Dumas were
60 very critical of the Tsar. They lasted less than a year before Nicholas sent them home. In 1907 Tsar
Million tons
Nicholas changed the voting rules so that his opponents were not elected to the Duma. This third
50 Duma lasted until 1912, mainly because it was much less critical of the Tsar than the previous two.
Coal But by 1912 even this ‘loyal’ Duma was becoming critical of the Tsar’s ministers and policies.
40
30 SOURCE
12
20 Oil The two hostile sides stood confronting each other. The old and grey court
dignitaries, keepers of etiquette and tradition, looked across in a haughty manner,
10 though not without fear and confusion, at ‘the people of the street’, whom the
Pig iron
0 revolution had swept into the palace, and quietly whispered to one another. The
1890 1900 1910 1913 other side looked across at them with no less disdain or contempt.
Agricultural and industrial production, The court side of the hall resounded with orchestrated cheers as the Tsar
1890–1913. approached the throne. But the Duma deputies remained completely silent. It
was a natural expression of our feelings towards the monarch, who in the twelve
years of his reign had managed to destroy all the prestige of his predecessors.
SOURCE
13 The feeling was mutual: not once did the Tsar glance towards the Duma side of
Year Strikes Strikers
the hall. Sitting on the throne he delivered a short, perfunctory speech in which
1905 13,995 2,863,173 he promised to uphold the principles of autocracy ….
1906 6,114 1,108,406
1907 3,573 740,074 From the memoirs of Duma deputy Obolensky, published in 1925. He is describing
1908 892 176,101 the first session of the Duma in April 1906.
1909 340 64,166
1910 222 46,623
1911 466 105,110
Stolypin
1912 2,032 725,491 In 1906 the Tsar appointed a tough new Prime Minister – Peter Stolypin. Stolypin used a ‘carrot
1913 2,404 887,096 and stick’ approach to the problems of Russia.
1914 3,534 1,337,458 The stick: He came down hard on strikers, protesters and revolutionaries. Over 20,000 were
exiled and over 1,000 hanged (the noose came to be known as ‘Stolypin’s necktie’). This brutal
These figures were compiled by the suppression effectively killed off opposition to the regime in the countryside until after 1914.
Tsar’s Ministry of Trade and Industry. The carrot: Stolypin also tried to win over the peasants with the ‘carrot’ they had always
wanted – land. He allowed wealthier peasants, the kulaks, to opt out of the mir communes and
SOURCE
14 buy up land. These kulaks prospered and in the process created larger and more efficient farms.
Production did increase significantly (see Source 11). On the other hand, 90 per cent of land in
Let those in power make no mistake
the fertile west of Russia was still run by inefficient communes in 1916. Farm sizes remained small
about the mood of the people . . .
even in Ukraine, Russia’s best farmland. Most peasants still lived in the conditions and remained
never were the Russian people . . . so
discontented.
profoundly revolutionised by the actions
Stolypin also tried to boost Russia’s industries. There was impressive economic growth between
of the government, for day by day, faith 1908 and 1911. But Russia was still far behind modern industrial powers such as Britain, Germany
in the government is steadily waning . . . and the USA.
Guchkov, a Russian conservative in the
Duma, 1913. By 1913, even staunch
supporters of the Tsar were beginning to Think!
want change. 1 What does Source 12 suggest about the attitude of the Tsar and the members
of his court to the idea of the ‘people’ being more involved in running the
country?
2 What does Source 13 suggest about working people’s attitudes to the Tsar’s
regime?
194
The profits being made by industry were going to the capitalists, or they were being paid back to
8 Russia, 1905–41
Think! banks in France which had loaned the money to pay for much of Russia’s industrial growth. Very
1 Make two lists: little of this new wealth found its way back to the urban workers whose wages remained low while
a) Stolypin’s achievements the cost of food and housing was rising. Living and working conditions had not really improved –
b) Stolypin’s failings. they were still appalling.
2 If you were a senior adviser to
Stolypin was assassinated in 1911, but the Tsar was about to sack him anyway. He worried that
the Tsar, which of Sources 11–14
would worry you most? Explain Stolypin was trying to change Russia too much. Nicholas had already blocked some of Stolypin’s
your answer. plans for basic education for the people and regulations to protect factory workers. The Tsar was
influenced by the landlords and members of the court. They saw Stolypin’s reforms as a threat to
the traditional Russian society in which everyone knew their place.
Relations between the Tsar and his people became steadily worse. The year 1913 saw huge
celebrations for the three hundredth anniversary of the Romanovs’ rule in Russia. The celebrations
were meant to bring the country together, but enthusiasm was limited.
Discontent grew, especially among the growing industrial working class in the cities. Strikes
were on the rise (see Source 13), including the highly publicised Lena gold field strike where troops
opened fire on striking miners. However, the army and police dealt with these problems and so, to
its opponents, the government must have seemed firmly in control.
Strangely, some of the government’s supporters were less sure about the government (see
Source 14). Industrialists were concerned by the way in which the Tsar preferred to appoint loyal
but unimaginative and sometimes incompetent ministers.
SOURCE
15
Focus Task
How well was the Tsar’s government dealing with the difficulties
of ruling Russia up to 1914?
Here are some issues facing the Tsar's government. Give the government a score
between 1 and 5 to say how well it was doing on each issue. Write a comment
to explain your reasons for the score.
♦ Providing strong leadership and running the country effectively
♦ Growing modern industry to make Russia powerful
♦ Making the workers more contented to reduce strikes and unrest
♦ Making agriculture more productive and efficient
♦ Improving the lives of the peasants
♦ Responding to the demands of people for a say in government
♦ Dealing with opposition within Russia
♦ Defending the country from its enemies
Rasputin
Some of the Tsar’s supporters were particularly alarmed about the influence of a strange and
dangerous figure – Gregory Yefimovich, generally known as Rasputin. The Tsar’s son Alexis was
very ill with a blood disease called haemophilia. Through hypnosis, it appeared that Rasputin
Russian cartoon. The caption reads: could control the disease. He was greeted as a miracle worker by the Tsarina (the Tsar’s wife).
‘The Russian Tsars at home.’ Before long, Rasputin was also giving her and the Tsar advice on how to run the country. People in
Russia were very suspicious of Rasputin. He was said to be a drinker and a womaniser. His name
means ‘disreputable’. The Tsar’s opponents seized on Rasputin as a sign of the Tsar’s weakness
Source Analysis p and unfitness to rule Russia. The fact that the Tsar either didn’t notice their concern or, worse still,
Look at Source 15. How does the didn’t care showed just how out of touch he was.
cartoonist suggest that Rasputin is an
evil influence on the Tsar and Tsarina?
195
War and revolution
DEPTH STUDIES
Focus Task
How far was the Tsar
weakened by the First World In August 1914 Russia entered the First World War. Tensions in the country seemed to disappear.
War? The Tsar seemed genuinely popular with his people and there was an instant display of patriotism.
The First World War had a massive The Tsar’s action was applauded. Workers, peasants and aristocrats all joined in the patriotic
impact on Russia. Your task is to use enthusiasm. Anti-government strikes and demonstrations were abandoned. The good feeling,
the material on pages 196–197 to however, was very short-lived. As the war continued, the Tsar began to lose the support of key
present an overview of how the war sectors of Russian society.
affected four different groups of
people in Russian society. The groups
are: The army
♦ the army
♦ the workers
The Russian army was a huge army of conscripts. At first, the soldiers were enthusiastic, as was the
♦ the middle classes rest of society. Even so, many peasants felt that they were fighting to defend their country against
♦ the aristocracy. the Germans rather than showing any loyalty to the Tsar. Russian soldiers fought bravely, but they
As you read through pages 196–197 stood little chance against the German army. They were badly led and treated appallingly by their
you will find out about the impact aristocrat officers. They were also poorly supported by the industries at home. They were short of
of the war on each group. Write rifles, ammunition, artillery and shells. Many did not even have boots.
a paragraph or series of notes The Tsar took personal command of the armed forces in September 1915. This made little
summarising the impact of war on
difference to the war, since Nicholas was not a particularly able commander. However, it did mean
each group.
that people held Nicholas personally responsible for the defeats and the blunders. The defeats and
huge losses continued throughout 1916. It is not surprising that by 1917 there was deep discontent
in the army.
SOURCE
16
The army had neither wagons nor
horses nor first aid supplies . . . We Peasants and workers
visited the Warsaw station where there It did not take long for the strain of war to alienate the peasants and the workers. The huge casualty
were about 17,000 men wounded figures took their toll. In August 1916, the local governor of the village of Grushevka reported that
in battle. At the station we found a the war had killed 13 per cent of the population of the village. This left many widows and orphans
terrible scene: on the platform in dirt, needing state war pensions which they did not always receive.
filth and cold, on the ground, even Despite the losses, food production remained high until 1916. By then, the government could
without straw, wounded men, who not always be relied on to pay for the food produced. The government planned to take food by force
filled the air with heart-rending cries, but abandoned the idea because it feared it might spark a widespread revolt.
dolefully asked: ‘For God’s sake order By 1916 there was much discontent in the cities. War contracts created an extra 3.5 million
them to dress our wounds. For five industrial jobs between 1914 and 1916. The workers got little in the way of extra wages. They also
days we have not been attended to.’ had to cope with even worse overcrowding than before the war. There were fuel and food shortages.
What made it worse was that there was enough food and fuel, but it could not be transported to the
From a report by Michael Rodzianko, cities. The rail network could not cope with the needs of the army, industry and the populations of
President of the Duma. the cities. The prices of almost everything got higher and higher. As 1916 turned into 1917, many
working men and women stood and shivered in bread queues and cursed the Tsar.
SOURCE
17
Total soldiers
mobilised = 13 million
The middle classes
The middle classes did not suffer in the same way as the peasants and workers, but they too
were unhappy with the Tsar by the end of 1916. Many middle-class activists in the zemstva were
appalled by reports such as Source 16. They set up their own medical organisations along the
lines of the modern Red Cross, or joined war committees to send other supplies to the troops.
These organisations were generally far more effective than the government agencies. By 1916
many industrialists were complaining that they could not fulfil their war contracts because of a
shortage of raw materials (especially metals) and fuel. In 1915 an alliance of Duma politicians,
the Progressive Bloc, had urged the Tsar to work with them in a more representative style of
Casualties = 9.15 million
government that would unite the people. The Tsar dismissed the Duma a month later.
196
SOURCE
18 The aristocracy
8 Russia, 1905–41
The average worker's wage in 1917 was The situation was so bad by late 1916 that the Council of the United Nobility was calling for the
5 roubles a day. This would buy you:
Tsar to step down. The junior officers in the army had suffered devastating losses in the war. Many
In 1914 In 1917 of these officers were the future of the aristocrat class. The conscription of 13 million peasants also
threatened aristocrats’ livelihoods, because they had no workers for their estates. Most of all, many
of the leading aristocrats were appalled by the influence of Rasputin over the government of Russia.
When the Tsar left Petrograd (the new Russian version of the Germanic name St Petersburg) to take
2 bags of flour 13 of a bag charge of the army, he left his wife in control of the country. The fact that she was German started
of flour
rumours flying in the capital. There were also rumours of an affair between her and Rasputin.
Ministers were dismissed and then replaced. The concerns were so serious that a group of leading
aristocrats murdered Rasputin in December 1916.
5 bags of 3
of a bag
4
SOURCE
19
potatoes of potatoes I asked for an audience and was received by him [the Tsar] on March 8th. ‘I
must tell Your Majesty that this cannot continue much longer. No one opens your
eyes to the true role which this man is playing. His presence in Your Majesty’s
court undermines confidence in the Supreme Power and may have an evil effect
5 kilograms 0.8 kilograms on the fate of the dynasty and turn the hearts of the people from their Emperor’
of meat of meat
. . . My report did some good. On March 11th an order was issued sending
Prices in Russia, 1914–17. Rasputin to Tobolsk; but a few days later, at the demand of the Empress, this
order was cancelled.
SOURCE
20 M Rodzianko, President of the Duma, March 1916.
1914
(from
July)
1915 The March 1917 revolution
1916 As 1917 dawned, few people had great hopes for the survival of the Tsar’s regime. In January strikes
1917
broke out all over Russia. In February the strikes spread. They were supported and even joined by
(to members of the army. The Tsar’s best troops lay dead on the battlefields. These soldiers were recent
June)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 conscripts and had more in common with the strikers than their officers. On 7 March workers at
Number of risings by peasants the Putilov steelworks in Petrograd went on strike. They joined with thousands of women – it was
1914 International Women’s Day – and other discontented workers demanding that the government
(from
August) provide bread. From 7 to 10 March the number of striking workers rose to 250,000. Industry came
1915
to a standstill. The Duma set up a Provisional Committee to take over the government. The Tsar
ordered them to disband. They refused. On 12 March the Tsar ordered his army to put down the
1916 revolt by force. They refused. This was the decisive moment. Some soldiers even shot their own
1917 officers and joined the demonstrators. They marched to the Duma demanding that they take over
(Jan–
Feb)
the government. Reluctantly, the Duma leaders accepted – they had always wanted reform rather
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 than revolution, but now there seemed no choice.
Number of strikes by factory workers
On the same day, revolutionaries set up the Petrograd Soviet again, and began taking control of
Peasant risings and strikes, 1914–17. food supplies to the city. They set up soldiers’ committees, undermining the authority of the officers.
It was not clear who was in charge of Russia, but it was obvious that the Tsar was not! On 15 March
he issued a statement that he was abdicating. There was an initial plan for his brother Michael to
Think! take over, but Michael refused: Russia had finished with Tsars.
Imagine you are an adviser to the
Tsar in 1916. Which of the sources
SOURCE
21
on pages 196–197 would give you One company of the Pavlovsky Regiment’s reserve battalion had declared on
most concern? Explain your answer. 26 February that it would not fire on people . . . We have just received a
telegram from the Minister of War stating that the rebels have seized the most
important buildings in all parts of the city. Due to fatigue and propaganda the
troops have laid down their arms, passed to the side of the rebels or become
neutral . . .
197
DEPTH STUDIES
View 1
The Tsar’s regime was basically
stable up to 1914, even if it had some
important problems to deal with. It The military failures of Duma formed The workers
was making steady progress towards the war provisional government (Strikes, unrest)
becoming a modern state, but this (Questioned deaths, (Alternatives to Tsar’s
progress was destroyed by the coming competence of Tsar and government)
of war. Don’t forget that this war government)
was so severe that it also brought
Germany, Austria–Hungary and
Turkey to their knees as well.
View 2
The regime in Russia was cursed with
Shortages at home Tsarina and Rasputin Mutiny of the army
a weak Tsar, a backward economy THE TSAR SURVIVES
and a class of aristocrats who were (Food, fuel, rising prices) (Damaged reputations)
not prepared to share their power Stage 1
and privileges with the millions of
ordinary Russians. Revolution was 1 Copy the headings in this diagram. They show seven
only a matter of time. The war did reasons why the Tsar was forced to abdicate in
not cause it, although it may have March 1917.
speeded up the process.
2 For each of the factors, write one or two sentences
Divide the class into two groups. explaining how it contributed to the fall of the Tsar.
One group has to find evidence 3 Draw lines between any of the factors that seem to
and arguments to support View 1, be connected. Label your line explaining what the
Tsar’s supporters
the other to support View 2. link is. (Aristocrats, middle
You could compare notes in a class Stage 2 classes, army officers had
discussion or organise a formal debate. lost faith in Tsar as leader)
4 In pairs or small groups, discuss the following
You may even be able to compare points:
your views with students in other a) Which factors were present in 1905?
schools using email conferencing. b) Were these same factors more or less serious than in 1905?
c) Which factors were not present in 1905?
d) Were the new factors decisive in making the March 1917 revolution successful?
198
8.2 How did the Bolsheviks gain and hold on to
8 Russia, 1905–41
power?
SOURCE
1
The Provisional Government should do Focus
nothing now which would break our If you had asked Russians in Petrograd in March 1917 what they thought of
ties with the allies. The worst thing the Bolsheviks, most would probably have said, ‘Who are the Bolsheviks?’
that could happen to us would be Yet this small party quite dramatically seized control of Russia just six
separate peace. It would be ruinous months later in November 1917.
for the Russian revolution, ruinous for Once in power most people thought the Bolsheviks would survive only
international democracy . . . a few weeks. They had a formidable set of enemies lined up against them.
In the first few days they could not even get into the central bank to get
As to the land question, we regard it
money to run the government.Yet, against all the odds, they did survive.
as our duty at the present to prepare
So your focus in pages 199–210 is all about how they did it. It all begins with
the ground for a just solution of the
the problems facing the Provisional Government of Russia in March 1917.
problem by the Constituent Assembly.
Focus Points
A Provisional Government Minister
explains why Russia should stay in the ♦ How effectively did the Provisional Government rule Russia in 1917?
war, 1917. ♦ Why were the Bolsheviks able to seize power in November 1917?
♦ Why did the Bolsheviks win the Civil War?
♦ How far was the New Economic Policy a success?
SOURCE
2
200,000
120,000
Russia’s problems were not solved by the abdication of the Tsar. The Duma’s Provisional Committee
took over government. It faced three overwhelmingly urgent decisions:
80,000 ● to continue the war or make peace
● to distribute land to the peasants (who had already started taking it) or ask them to wait until
elections had been held
40,000 ● how best to get food to the starving workers in the cities.
The Provisional Government was dominated by middle-class liberals, particularly the Cadets,
0 although some revolutionary leaders joined them later. It included men such as the lawyer
Jan Mar May July Alexander Kerensky – Justice Minister in the Provisional Government but also a respected
1917
member of the Petrograd Soviet – it also included angry revolutionaries who had no experience
Growth of Bolshevik support, 1917. of government at all. The Provisional Government promised Russia’s allies that it would continue
the war, while trying to settle the situation in Russia. It also urged the peasants to be restrained
and wait for elections before taking any land. The idea was that the Provisional Government could
Think! then stand down and allow free elections to take place to elect a new Constituent Assembly that
would fairly and democratically represent the people of Russia. It was a very cautious message for a
Read Source 1. How popular do you
think the Provisional Government’s
people who had just gone through a revolution.
policies on the war and land would be However, the Provisional Government was not the only possible government. The newly formed
with the peasants and the soldiers? Petrograd Soviet held the real power in St Petersburg. It had the support of the workers, e.g. railway
men, and, crucially, the soldiers in St Petersburg. It could control what went on in the city. However,
the Soviet decided to work with the Provisional Government in the spring and summer of 1917.
One man was determined to push the revolution further. He was Lenin, leader of the Bolsheviks
(see page 202). When he heard of the March revolution he immediately returned to Russia from
exile in Europe. The Germans even provided him with a special train, hoping that he might cause
more chaos in Russia!
When Lenin arrived at Petrograd station, he set out the Bolshevik programme in his April
Theses. He urged the people to support the Bolsheviks in a second revolution. Lenin’s slogans
‘Peace, Land and Bread’ and ‘All power to the soviets’ contrasted sharply with the cautious message
of the Provisional Government. Support for the Bolsheviks increased quickly (see Sources 2 and 4),
particularly in the soviets and in the army. 199
SOURCE
3 SOURCE
4
DEPTH STUDIES
A sudden and disastrous change has The Bolshevik speaker would ask the crowd ‘Do you need more land?’
occurred in the attitude of the troops . Do you have as much land as the landlords do?’
. . Authority and obedience no longer
‘But will the Kerensky government give you land? No, never. It protects the
exist . . . for hundreds of miles one can
interests of the landlords. Only our party, the Bolsheviks, will immediately give you
see deserters, armed and unarmed, in
land . . .’
good health and in high spirits, certain
they will not be punished. Several times I tried to take the floor and explain that the Bolsheviks make
promises which they can never fulfil. I used figures from farming statistics to
A Russian officer reporting back to the prove my point; but I saw that the crowded square was unsuitable for this kind of
Provisional Government, 1917. discussion.
A Menshevik writer, summer 1917.
Source Analysis
How useful is Source 4 to a historian In the second half of 1917, the Provisional Government’s authority steadily collapsed.
studying Russia at this time? Use the ● The war effort was failing. Soldiers had been deserting in thousands from the army. Kerensky
source and your own knowledge to became Minister for War and rallied the army for a great offensive in June. It was a disaster.
explain your answer.
The army began to fall apart in the face of a German counter-attack (see Source 3). The
deserters decided to come home.
● Desertions were made worse because another element of the Provisional Government’s policy
had failed. The peasants ignored the orders of the government to wait. They were simply taking
control of the countryside. The soldiers, who were mostly peasants, did not want to miss their
turn when the land was shared out.
The Provisional Government’s problems got worse in the summer. In July (the ‘July Days’),
Bolshevik-led protests against the war turned into a rebellion. However, when Kerensky produced
evidence that Lenin had been helped by the Germans, support for the rebellion fell. Lenin, in
disguise, fled to Finland. Kerensky used troops to crush the rebellion and took over the government.
SOURCE
5 SOURCE
6
The Provisional Government possesses
no real power and its orders are
executed only in so far as this is
permitted by the Soviet of Workers’ and
Soldiers’ Deputies, which holds in its
hands the most important elements of
actual power, such as troops, railroads,
postal and telegraph service . . .
A letter from Guchkov, Minister for
War in the Provisional Government, to
General Alekseyev, 22 March 1917.
Kerensky was in a very difficult situation. In the cities strikes, lawlessness and violence were
rife. The upper and middle classes expected him to restore order. Kerensky seemed unable to do
anything about this or the deteriorating economic situation.
There was little reason for the ordinary people of Russia to be grateful to the Provisional
Government (see Sources 7 and 8).
200
SOURCE
7 SOURCE
8
8 Russia, 1905–41
Cabs and horse-drawn carriages Week by week food became scarcer . . . one had to queue for long hours in the
began to disappear. Street-car service chill rain . . . Think of the poorly clad people standing on the streets of Petrograd
was erratic. The railway stations filled for whole days in the Russian winter! I have listened in the bread-lines, hearing
with tramps and deserting soldiers, the bitter discontent which from time to time burst through the miraculous good
often drunk, sometimes threatening. nature of the Russian crowd.
The police force had vanished in the
John Reed, an American writer who lived in Petrograd in 1917.
first days of the Revolution. Now
‘revolutionary order’ was over. Hold-
Others were also fed up with the Provisional Government. In September 1917, the army leader
ups and robberies became the order of
Kornilov marched his troops towards Moscow, intending to get rid of the Bolsheviks and the
the day. Politically, signs of chaos were Provisional Government, and restore order. Kerensky was in an impossible situation. He had some
everywhere. troops who supported him but they were no match for Kornilov’s. Kerensky turned to the only group
HE Salisbury, Russia in Revolution. which could save him: his Bolshevik opponents. The Bolsheviks organised themselves into an army
which they called the Red Guards. Kornilov’s troops refused to fight members of the Soviet so his
plans collapsed.
Source Analysis But it was hardly a victory for Kerensky. In fact, by October Kerensky’s government was
doomed. It had tried to carry on the war and failed. It had therefore lost the army’s support. It had
How far do you think Source 8 is a
reliable source about the situation tried to stop the peasants from taking over the land and so lost their support too. Without peasant
in Russia under the Provisional support it had failed to bring food into the towns and food prices had spiralled upwards. This had
Government? Use the source, your lost the government any support it had from the urban workers.
knowledge and the other sources in In contrast, the Bolsheviks were promising what the people wanted most (bread, peace, land).
this section to explain your answer. It was the Bolsheviks who had removed the threat of Kornilov. By the end of September 1917,
the Bolsheviks had control of the Petrograd Soviet and Leon Trotsky was its chairman. They also
controlled the soviets in Moscow and other major cities.
What do you think happened next?
Focus Task
How effectively did the Provisional Government rule Russia in
1917?
Step 1
1 Here is a list of some decisions that faced the Provisional Government when it
took over in March 1917:
a) what to do about the war
b) what to do about land
c) what to do about food.
For each one, say how the government dealt with it, and what the result of the
action was.
2 Based on your answers to question 1, how effective do you think the Provisional
Government was? Give it a mark out of ten.
Step 2
3 Read through pages 199–201 again. Think about how effectively the
Provisional Government dealt with their opponents:
♦ Petrograd Soviet
♦ Bolsheviks
♦ Kornilov’s attempted coup..
4 Based on your answers to question 3, would you revise the score you gave the
government in question 2?
Step 3
5 Now reach an overview score. Out of 10, how effective was the Provisional
Government? Write a paragraph to explain your score.
201
SOURCE
9 The Bolshevik Revolution
DEPTH STUDIES
Think!
Work in pairs, taking either Lenin or Trotsky.
1 Using Sources 10–14 add extra bullet points to the profiles of Lenin (this page)
and Trotsky (page 203):
♦ why he appealed to people
♦ his personal qualities
Born 1870 into a respectable Russian ♦ his strengths as a leader.
family. 2 Finally, write a short report on the contribution of your individual to the
Brother hanged in 1887 for plotting Bolsheviks’ success in 1917.
against the Tsar.
Graduated from St Petersburg
University after being thrown out
of Kazan University for his political
SOURCE
10
beliefs. This extraordinary figure [Lenin] was first and foremost a professional
One of the largest Okhrana files was revolutionary. He had no other occupation. A man of iron will and inflexible
about him! ambition, he was absolutely ruthless and used human beings as mere material for
Exiled to Siberia 1897–1900.
1900–03 lived in various countries
his purpose. Short and sturdy with a bald head, small beard and deep set eyes,
writing the revolutionary newspaper Lenin looked like a small tradesman. When he spoke at meetings his ill-fitting
‘Iskra’ (‘The Spark’). suit, his crooked tie, his ordinary appearance disposed the crowd in his favour.
Became leader of the Bolsheviks in
1903.
‘He is not one of the gentlefolk, he is one of us’, they would say.
Was exiled in European countries,
1905–17. The Times, writing about Lenin after his death, 1924.
Returned to Russia after the first
revolution in 1917.
Led the Bolsheviks to power in
November 1917.
202
SOURCE
11
8 Russia, 1905–41
Profile Lenin . . . was the overall planner of the revolution: he also dealt with internal
Leon Trotsky
divisions within the party and provided tight control, and a degree of discipline
and unity which the other parties lacked.
SJ Lee, The European Dictatorships, 1987.
SOURCE
12
The struggle was headed by Lenin who guided the Party’s Central Committee,
the editorial board of Pravda, and who kept in touch with the Party organisations
in the provinces . . . He frequently addressed mass rallies and meetings. Lenin’s
appearance on the platform inevitably triggered off the cheers of the audience.
Born 1879 into a respectable and Lenin’s brilliant speeches inspired the workers and soldiers to a determined
prosperous Jewish farming family. struggle.
Exceptionally bright at school and
brilliant at university. Soviet historian Y Kukushkin, History of the USSR, 1981
Politically active – arrested in 1900 and
deported to Siberia.
Escaped to London in 1902 and met
Lenin there.
SOURCE
13
Joined the Social Democratic Party, but Now that the great revolution has come, one feels that however intelligent Lenin
supported the Menshevik wing rather may be he begins to fade beside the genius of Trotsky.
than the Bolsheviks.
Played an important role in the Mikhail Uritsky, 1917. Uritsky was a Bolshevik activist and went on to play an
1905 revolution – imprisoned for his important role in Bolshevik governments after 1917.
activities.
Escaped in 1907 and worked as
a writer and journalist in Europe,
especially in Vienna, Austria. Edited
SOURCE
14
Pravda, the newspaper of the Social Under the influence of his [Trotsky’s] tremendous activity and blinding success,
Democratic Party. certain people close to Trotsky were even inclined to see in him the real leader of
In 1917 he returned to Russia and the Russian revolution . . . It is true that during that period, after the thunderous
played a key role in the Bolshevik
Revolution.
success of his arrival in Russia and before the July days, Lenin did keep rather
In 1918 he became the Commissar for in the background, not speaking often, not writing much, but largely engaged
War and led the Bolsheviks to victory in directing organisational work in the Bolshevik camp, whilst Trotsky thundered
in the Civil War which broke out in
forth at meetings in Petrograd. Trotsky’s most obvious gifts were his talents as an
1918.
orator and as a writer. I regard Trotsky as probably the greatest orator of our age.
In my time I have heard all the greatest parliamentarians and popular tribunes of
SOURCE
15 socialism and very many famous orators of the bourgeois world and I would find it
difficult to name any of them whom I could put in the same class as Trotsky.
The [November] Revolution has often
and widely been held to have been From Revolutionary Silhouettes, by Anatoly Lunacharsky, published in 1918. The
mainly Lenin’s revolution. But was it? book was a series of portraits of leading revolutionaries. The author was a Bolshevik
Certainly Lenin had a heavier impact activist and knew Lenin and Trotsky well.
on the course [of events] than anyone
else. The point is, however, that great
historical changes are brought about Focus Task
not only by individuals. There were Why were the Bolsheviks able to seize power in November 1917?
other mighty factors at work as well in 1 Using your answers in this section, sum up how Bolshevik organisation and
Russia in 1917 . . . Lenin simply could leadership contributed to their success.
2 Read Source 15.
not have done or even co-ordinated 3 Here are some of the ‘other mighty factors at work’. Write some notes to
everything. explain how each one helped the Bolsheviks. The first has been done for you:
♦ Collapse of the Tsar’s regime – This had left a power vacuum. It was
Historian Robert Service, writing in 1990. difficult to set up a new democratic regime which everybody would
support.
♦ War (people war weary, disruption)
♦ Army disintegrating (officers and soldiers in St Petersburg)
♦ Peasants (had already begun to seize land)
♦ Desperate economic situation (desperate people)
203
Lenin in power
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
Bolshevik decrees, 1917
8 November Lenin and the Bolsheviks had promised the people bread, peace and land. Lenin knew that if he
Land belonging to Tsar, Church and failed to deliver, the Bolsheviks would suffer the same fate as the Provisional Government.
nobles handed over to peasants. Lenin immediately set up the Council of People’s Commissars (the Sovnarkom). It issued its
Russia asked for peace with Germany.
12 November
first decree on 8 November, announcing that Russia was asking for peace with Germany. There
Working day limited to eight hours; followed an enormous number of decrees from the new government that aimed to strengthen the
48-hour week; rules made about Bolsheviks’ hold on power (see Factfile). The peasants were given the nobles’ lands. The factories
overtime and holidays. and industries were put into the hands of the workers. The Bolsheviks were given power to deal
14 November
Workers to be insured against illness
ruthlessly with their opponents – and they did (see page 205).
or accident.
1 December
All non-Bolshevik newspapers banned. The Bolshevik dictatorship
11 December Lenin had also promised free elections to the new Constituent Assembly. Elections were held in late
The opposition Constitutional
1917. As Lenin had feared, the Bolsheviks did not gain a majority (see Source 16). Their rivals, the
Democratic Party (Cadets) banned;
its leaders arrested. peasant-based Socialist Revolutionaries, were the biggest party when the Assembly opened on 18
20 December January 1918.
Cheka (secret police) set up to Lenin solved this problem in his typically direct style. He sent the Red Guards to close down
deal with ‘spies and counter-
the Assembly. After brief protests (again put down by the Red Guards) the Assembly was forgotten.
revolutionaries’.
27 December Lenin instead used the Congress of Soviets to pass his laws as it did contain a Bolshevik majority.
Factories put under control of workers’ Russia’s democratic experiment therefore lasted less than 24 hours, but this did not trouble
committees. Lenin’s conscience. He believed he was establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat which in time
Banks put under Bolshevik government
would give way to true Communism.
control.
31 December
Marriages could take place without a
SOURCE
16
priest if desired. 175
Divorce made easier.
370
40
16
Think! 17
FINLAND
Sea
Making peace
AY
D
SWE
RW
Petrograd
NO
The next promise that Lenin had to make good was for peace. He put Trotsky in charge of
Moscow
negotiating a peace treaty. He told Trotsky to try to spin out the peace negotiations as long as
Best agricultural land
possible. He hoped that very soon a socialist revolution would break out in Germany as it had in
GERMANY
Brest-Litovsk Russia. By February of 1918, however, there was no revolution and the Germans began to advance
Industrial areas again. Lenin had to accept their terms in the Treaty of Brest–Litovsk in March 1918.
AUSTRIA–
The Treaty was a severe blow to Russia. You can see how much land was lost in Source 17, but
HUNGARY this was not the whole story. Russia’s losses included 34 per cent of its population, 32 per cent of its
Black agricultural land, 54 per cent of its industry, 26 per cent of its railways and 89 per cent of its coalmines.
Sea
A final blow was the imposition of a fine of 300 million gold roubles. It was another example of Lenin’s
single-minded leadership. If this much had to be sacrificed to safeguard his revolution, then so be it.
The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, 1918. Many Russians, including revolutionaries, were opposed to the signing of the treaty.
204
Opposition and Civil War
8 Russia, 1905–41
Factfile
The Whites
‘Whites’ was a very broad term and was Lenin’s activities in 1917–18 were bound to make him enemies. He survived an attempted
applied to any anti-Bolshevik group(s). assassination in August 1918 (he was hit three times). In December he set up a secret police force
Whites were made up of: called the Cheka to crush his opponents.
Socialist Revolutionaries
Mensheviks
By the end of 1918 an unlikely collection of anti-Bolshevik elements had united against the
supporters of the Tsar Bolsheviks. They became known as the Whites (in contrast to the Bolshevik Reds) and consisted of
landlords and capitalists who had lost enemies of the Bolsheviks from inside and outside Russia (see Factfile). By the spring of 1918 three
land or money in the revolution separate White armies were marching on Bolshevik-controlled western Russia. Generals Yudenich
the Czech Legion (former prisoners of
war).
and Denikin marched towards Petrograd and Moscow, while Admiral Kolchak marched on Moscow
The Whites were also supported for part from central southern Russia.
of the Civil War by foreign troops from
the USA, Japan, France and Britain. They
were sent by their governments to force
SOURCE
18
Russia back into war against Germany. Key
N
General White armies and
Denikin their leaders
SOURCE
19 British,
French, British
Foreign armies of
100,000 intervention
Americans
80,662
Murmansk Land under Bolshevik
control, 1919
FINLAND
General Kronstadt Petrograd
47,348 Yudenich
50,000
Archangel SIBERIA
General Brest-
Wrangel Litovsk General Czech
Kiev Moscow Miller
Orel Legion
General Kazan
Odessa Denikin Ekaterinburg
1918 1919 Trans-Siberian Americans
0 French CRIMEA Samara Omsk Railway
Ufa
Arrests UKRAINE
corruption
counter-
205
Why did the Bolsheviks win the Civil War?
DEPTH STUDIES
The Red Army was no match for the armies that were still fighting on the Western Front in 1918.
However, compared to the Whites, the Red Army was united and disciplined. It was also brilliantly
led by Trotsky.
SOURCE
20 SOURCE
21
In the villages the peasant will not give
grain to the Bolsheviks because he
hates them. Armed companies are
sent to take grain from the peasant
and every day, all over Russia, fights for
grain are fought to a finish.
In the Red Army, for any military
offence, there is only one punishment,
death. If a regiment retreats against
orders, machine guns are turned on
them. The position of the bourgeoisie
[middle class] defies all description.
Payments by the banks have been
stopped. It is forbidden to sell furniture.
All owners and managers of works,
offices and shops have been called up
for compulsory labour. In Petrograd
hundreds of people are dying from
hunger. People are arrested daily and
Members of the Red Guard requisition grain from peasants during the Civil War.
kept in prison for months without trial.
The Red Terror, observed by a British The Bolsheviks also kept strict control over their heartlands in western Russia.
businessman in Russia in 1918. ● They made sure that the towns and armies were fed, by forcing peasants to hand over food and
by rationing supplies (see Source 22).
● They took over the factories of Moscow and Petrograd so that they were able to supply their
206
SOURCE
23 SOURCE
24
8 Russia, 1905–41
For the first time in history the working
people have got control of their
country. The workers of all countries
are striving to achieve this objective.
We in Russia have succeeded. We
have thrown off the rule of the Tsar,
of landlords and of capitalists. But
we still have tremendous difficulties
to overcome. We cannot build a new
society in a day. We ask you, are you
going to crush us? To help give Russia
back to the landlords, the capitalists
and the Tsar?
Red propaganda leaflet, Why Have You
Come to Murmansk?
SOURCE
25 Bolshevik propaganda cartoon, 1919. The dogs represent the White generals
The Civil War, 1918–1920, was a Denikin, Kolchak and Yudenich.
time of great chaos and estimates of
Cheka executions vary from twelve to Finally, the Reds had important territorial advantages. Their enemies were spread around the edge
fifty thousands. But even the highest of Russia while they controlled the centre and also the all-important railway system. This enabled
figure does not compare to the ferocity them to move troops and supplies quickly and effectively by rail, while their enemies used less
of the White Terror . . . for instance, in efficient methods.
Finland alone, the number of workers The Whites, in contrast with the Bolsheviks, were not united.
● They were made up of many different groups, all with different aims.
executed by the Whites approaches
● They were also widely spread so they were unable to co-ordinate their campaigns against the
100,000.
Reds. Trotsky was able to defeat them one by one.
R Appignanesi, Lenin for Beginners, ● They had limited support from the Russian population. Russian peasants did not especially like
1977. the Bolsheviks, but they preferred them to the Whites. If the Whites won, the peasants knew the
landlords would return. Both sides were guilty of atrocities, but the Whites in general caused
more suffering to the peasants than the Reds.
Source Analysis
‘Most Russians saw the Bolsheviks as
the lesser of two evils.’ Explain how Focus Task
Sources 20, 22, 23 and 25 support Why did the Bolsheviks win the Civil War?
this statement or not.
1 Draw a table and use the text to make notes about how each of these factors
helped the Bolsheviks win.
♦ Unity ♦ Support of the peasants
♦ Leadership ♦ The Red Army
♦ Communications, e.g. railways ♦ Foreign intervention
♦ Geography ♦ Propaganda
♦ Support of the workers
2 Now write some paragraphs to show how some of these factors were
connected. Two examples are shown below.
Linking Geography and Communications:
In such a vast country communications were a key to success. The
Bolsheviks held the central industrial area which included all the main
railway lines out of Moscow and Petrograd. This meant that they could get
soldiers and military supplies to the different fronts much more easily that
the Whites who found it very difficult to communicate with each other and
move troops around the edges of the centre.
Linking Foreign intervention and Propaganda:
The foreign intervention was a gift to the Reds. They could use it in their
propaganda to show that the Red Army was fighting foreign invaders.
207
Economic policy
DEPTH STUDIES
War Communism
War Communism was the name given to the harsh economic measures the Bolsheviks adopted
during the Civil War in order to survive. It had two main aims. The first aim was to put Communist
theories into practice by redistributing (sharing out) wealth among the Russian people. The second
aim was to help with the Civil War by keeping the towns and the Red Army supplied with food and
weapons.
● All large factories were taken over by the government.
● Production was planned and organised by the government.
● Discipline for workers was strict and strikers could be shot.
● Peasants had to hand over surplus food to the government. If they didn’t, they could be shot.
● Food was rationed.
● Free enterprise became illegal – all production and trade was controlled by the state.
War Communism achieved its aim of winning the war, but in doing so it caused terrible hardship.
Peasants refused to co-operate in producing more food because the government simply took it
away. This led to food shortages which, along with the bad weather in 1920 and 1921, caused a
terrible famine. Some estimates suggest that 7 million Russian people died in this famine. There
were even reports of cannibalism.
SOURCE
26 Kronstadt mutiny
As you saw on page 186 the sailors from the Kronstadt naval base were
strong supporters of the Bolsheviks during the revolution and the Civil
War. Many of them were Bolshevik Party members. However, they were
concerned at the impact that Bolshevik policies were having on ordinary
Russians. In February 1921 a delegation of sailors visited Petrograd
and learned first hand of the hardships people were suffering and the
repressive policies being used by the Bolsheviks against their own people.
Sailors from two of the battleships at Kronstadt passed a resolution
calling on the Bolsheviks to change their policies. The made 15 demands,
including new elections, freedom of speech, equal rations and the
Starving children photographed during the Russian scrapping of the militia units which were taking peasants’ grain.
famine of 1921. This was a potentially serious threat to Lenin and the Bolsheviks.
The Kronstadt sailors had been loyal supporters and losing their support
SOURCE
27 was serious. More importantly, they were well armed and well organised
After carrying out the October Revolution, the working and could potentially threaten the Bolshevik war effort. Lenin issued
classes hoped for freedom. But the result has been greater a statement claiming the rebellion was a plot by the White force. He
slavery. The bayonets, bullets and harsh commands of the demanded the rebels surrender. They refused, so in early March Trotsky’s
Cheka – these are what the working man of Soviet Russia forces stormed the Kronstadt base. There was heavy fighting and
has won. The glorious emblem of the workers’ state – the although there are no reliable figures about casualties the death toll was
hammer and sickle – has been replaced by the Communist probably in the thousands. Thousands more of the rebels were executed
or imprisoned in labour camps. Nevertheless the rebellion had affected
authorities with the bayonet and the barred window. Here
Lenin. Soon afterwards he abandoned the emergency policies of War
in Kronstadt we are making a third revolution which will free
Communism. Considering the chaos of the Civil War years, it may seem
the workers and the Soviets from the Communists.
strange that this particular revolt had such a startling effect on Lenin.
Official statement from the Kronstadt sailors. It did so because the Kronstadt sailors had been among the strongest
supporters of Lenin and Bolshevism in 1917–20. Lenin began to think
that he had to make some concessions.
Think!
1 Read Source 27. What aspects of War Communism are
the sailors most angry about? Source Analysis
2 Would you expect peasants in Russia to feel the same? Why do you think the photograph in Source 26 was
3 Why do you think Lenin was more worried about the revolt taken and published in 1921? Use the source and your
of the sailors than about starvation among the peasants? knowledge to explain your answer.
208
SOURCE
28 The New Economic Policy
8 Russia, 1905–41
Our poverty and ruin are so great Many thousands of the Kronstadt sailors were killed. The mutiny was crushed. But Lenin
that we cannot at one stroke restore recognised that changes were necessary. In March 1921, at the Party Congress, Lenin announced
large-scale socialist production . . . some startling new policies which he called the New Economic Policy (NEP). The NEP effectively
we must try to satisfy the demands brought back capitalism for some sections of Russian society. Peasants were allowed to sell surplus
of the peasants who are dissatisfied, grain for profit and would pay tax on what they produced rather than giving some of it up to the
discontented and cannot be otherwise government.
. . . there must be a certain amount
of freedom to trade, freedom for the SOURCE
29
small private owner. We are now War Communism New Economic Policy
retreating, but we are doing this so Hard-working peasant
Grows 10 tons Grows 10 tons
as to then run and leap forward more
vigorously.
Government 1 ton
Lenin, introducing the NEP at 5 tons
takes all plus
the Party Congress, 1921. surplus
4 tons cash
Left with
9 tons
1 ton Government Peasant Left with
SOURCE
30 takes 50% sells
Poor, starving old Russia, Russia of Lazy peasant
Grows 1 ton Grows 1 ton
primitive lighting and the meal of a
crust of black bread, is going to be
Government
covered by a network of electric power takes none Government Left with
takes 50%
stations. The NEP will transform the
Russian economy and rebuild a broken 1 ton 1 1
nation. The future is endless and Left with 2 ton 2 ton
beautiful.
How the NEP differed from War Communism.
Bukharin, speaking in 1922. He was a
leading Bolshevik and a strong supporter In the towns, small factories were handed back into private ownership and private trading of small
of the NEP.
goods was allowed.
Lenin made it clear that the NEP was temporary and that the vital heavy industries (coal,
SOURCE
31 oil, iron and steel) would remain in state hands. Nevertheless, many Bolsheviks were horrified
In 1925 the Soviet Commissar for when the NEP was announced, seeing it as a betrayal of Communism. As always, Lenin won the
Finance admitted that the pay of argument and the NEP went into operation from 1921 onwards. By 1925 there seemed to be strong
miners, metal workers and engine evidence that it was working, as food production in particular rose steeply. However, as Source 31
drivers was still lower than it had suggests, increases in production did not necessarily improve the situation of industrial workers.
been before 1914. This in turn meant
that workers’ housing and food were
SOURCE
32
poor. The factory committee of a Electricity
cement works in Smolensk reported, 140
Pigs
Levels of production under the Tsar
for example, in 1929: ‘Every day 120
there are many complaints about 100
Cattle
apartments: many workers have Coal
80
Index
40
Steel
Some problems identified by Soviet
observers in the 1920s. 20
0
1913 1917 1918 1921 1925
First War New
Source Analysis World War Revolution Communism Economic
Does the evidence of Source 32 Policy
prove that the NEP was a success?
Explain your answer with reference Production under the New Economic Policy, 1921–25.
to Sources 28, 30 and 31.
209
The death of Lenin and the
DEPTH STUDIES
Source Analysis
From all you have found out about
Lenin, do you agree with Source 34? creation of the USSR
(Don’t forget to look at Source 33.)
Lenin did not live to see the recovery of the Russian economy. He suffered several strokes in
1922 and 1923 which left him paralysed and which led to his death in January 1924. He was a
SOURCE
33 remarkable man by any standards. He led Russia through revolution and civil war and even in 1923
In the late 1980s and 1990s, Soviet he supervised the drawing up of a new constitution that turned the Russian Empire into the Union
archives were opened up as the of Soviet Socialist Republics. Source 34 gives the opinion of a British historian.
Communist regime came to an end.
These revealed a much harder, more SOURCE
34
ruthless Lenin than the ‘softer’ image Lenin did more than any other political leader to change the face of the
he had enjoyed amongst left-wing twentieth-century world. The creation of Soviet Russia and its survival were due to
historians and groups. For instance, a him. He was a very great man and even, despite his faults, a very good man.
memorandum, first published in 1990,
reveals his ordering the extermination The British historian AJP Taylor writing in the 1960s.
of the clergy in a place called Shuya … We will never know what policies Lenin would have pursued if he had lived longer – he certainly
Lenin believed that revolutionaries left no clear plans about how long he wanted the NEP to last. He also left another big unanswered
had to be hard to carry out their role, question behind him: who was to be the next leader of the USSR?
which would inevitably involve spilling
the blood of their opponents. Although
hard and tough on others, it seems
that Lenin was not personally brave.
He left the fighting to others.
An extract from Communist Russia
under Lenin and Stalin. This was an
A level History textbook published in
2002. Key Question Summary
How did the Bolsheviks gain power and how did they hold on to
power?
Focus Task 1 After the Tsar’s abdication, a Provisional Government was set up to run
How did the Bolsheviks Russia until elections could be held to choose a new government.
consolidate their rule? 2 The Petrograd Soviet had the real power in the capital because it controlled
1 Draw a timeline from 1917 to the army and the workers in the factories.
1924, and mark on it the events of 3 The Provisional Government was weak and failed to deal with the problems
that period mentioned in the text. of the war and the land to the satisfaction of the people. The economic
2 Mark on the timeline: situation continued to deteriorate throughout 1917.
a) one moment at which you 4 Lenin returned to Russia and announced, in the April Theses, that his party,
think Bolshevik rule was most the Bolsheviks, would end the war, give the land to the peasants and ensure
threatened that the people got food. This brought them popular support although an
b) one moment at which you attempt by some Bolsheviks to stage a rising in the July Days was a failure.
think it was most secure. 5 However, after Kornilov’s attempted coup, they had enough support to take
3 Write an explanation of how the control of the Petrograd Soviet. On Lenin’s urging, they seized power in
Bolsheviks made their rule more October 1917.
secure. Mention the following: 6 The Bolsheviks dealt with any internal opposition ruthlessly by using the
♦ the power of the Red Army Cheka.
♦ treatment of opposition 7 Lenin ended the war by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.
♦ War Communism 8 He crushed the newly elected Constituent Assembly because the Bolsheviks
♦ the New Economic Policy did not win the elections.
♦ the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk 9 The Bolsheviks won the Civil War and kept the economy going through a
♦ the victory in the Civil War system called War Communism.
♦ the promise of a new society 10 But this was very harsh and people, including former supporters like the
♦ propaganda. Kronstadt sailors, were turning against the Communists. So Lenin introduced
4 Is any one of these factors more a compromise – the New Economic Policy – which allowed the economy to
important than any of the others? recover and bring the people respite and some prosperity. So by 1924 the
Explain your answer. Bolsheviks were still firmly in power and had consolidated their position.
210
8.3 Stalin’s Russia
8 Russia, 1905–41
Focus
Most people thought Trotsky was the person most likely to succeed Lenin.
Yet not only did Stalin become the new leader of the USSR, but over the
next 40 years he changed it radically. He created a modern industrial state
that became a superpower but he also created a totalitarian state where
opposition was not tolerated and where the government imprisoned or
murdered millions of its own citizens.
SOURCE
1
An official poster from the mid to late 1930s showing Stalin pointing out the achievements of the USSR and its people. 211
Stalin or Trotsky?
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
Stalin’s steps to power
1923 Lenin calls for Stalin to be When Lenin died in 1924 there were several leading Communists who were possible candidates
replaced. Trotsky calls him ‘the party’s to take his place. Among the contenders were Kamenev and Zinoviev, leading Bolsheviks who had
most eminent mediocrity’. played important parts in the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, and Bukharin was a more moderate
1924 Lenin’s death. Stalin attends
funeral as chief mourner. Trotsky does
member of the party who favoured the NEP and wanted to introduce Communism gradually to
not turn up (tricked by Stalin). the USSR. However, the real struggle to succeed Lenin was between two bitter rivals, Joseph Stalin
1924 Stalin, Kamenev and Zinoviev and Leon Trotsky. The power struggle went on for some time and it was not until 1929 that Stalin
form the triumvirate that dominates made himself completely secure as the supreme leader of the USSR. Stalin achieved this through
the Politburo, the policy-making
committee of the Communist Party.
a combination of political scheming, the mistakes of his opponents and the clever way in which he
Working together, these three cut off built up his power base in the Communist Party.
their opponents (Trotsky and Bukharin)
because between them they control
the important posts in the party. Lenin’s Testament
1925 Trotsky sacked as War
Commissar. Stalin introduces his idea
of Socialism in One Country.
SOURCE
2
1926 Stalin turns against Kamenev Comrade Stalin, having become Secretary General, has unlimited authority in
and Zinoviev and allies himself with his hands and I am not sure whether he will always be capable of using that
Bukharin.
1927 Kamenev, Zinoviev and Trotsky authority with sufficient caution.
all expelled from the Communist Party. Comrade Trotsky, on the other hand, is distinguished not only by his
1928 Trotsky exiled to Siberia. Stalin
begins attacking Bukharin.
outstanding ability. He is personally probably the most capable man in the
1929 Trotsky expelled from USSR present Central Committee, but he has displayed excessive self-assurance and
and Bukharin expelled from the preoccupation with the purely administrative side of the work.
Communist Party.
Lenin’s Testament. This is often used as evidence that Stalin was an outsider.
However, the document contained many remarks critical of other leading Communists
as well. It was never published in Russia, although, if it had been, it would certainly
have damaged Stalin.
Source 2 shows Lenin’s opinions of Trotsky and Stalin. As Lenin lay dying in late 1923 Trotsky
seemed most likely to win. He was a brilliant speaker and writer, as well as the party’s best political
thinker, after Lenin. He was also the man who had organised the Bolshevik Revolution and was the
hero of the Civil War as leader of the Red Army (see page 206).
SOURCE
3 Trotsky’s mistakes
Trotsky refrained from attacking
Stalin because he felt secure. No So how did Trotsky lose this contest? Much of the blame lies with Trotsky himself. He was brilliant,
contemporary, and he least of all, saw but also arrogant and high-handed. He often offended other senior party members. More
in the Stalin of 1923 the menacing importantly, he failed to take the opposition seriously. He made little effort to build up any support
and towering figure he was to become. in the ranks of the party. And he seriously underestimated Stalin, as did the other contenders.
It seemed to Trotsky almost a joke No one saw Stalin as a threat. They were all more concerned with each other. Stalin kept in the
that Stalin, the wilful and sly but shadows, not taking a clear position and seeming to be the friend and ally of different groups. This
allowed him to become steadily more powerful without the others realising it.
shabby and inarticulate man in the
Trotsky also frightened many people in the USSR. They were worried he might become a
background, should be his rival.
dictator, especially because he had a great deal of support in the army. Trotsky argued that the
Historian I Deutscher in The Prophet future security of the USSR lay in trying to spread permanent revolution across the globe until the
Unarmed, Trotsky 1921–1929, whole world was Communist. Many people were worried that Trotsky would involve the USSR in
published in 1959. new conflicts and that his radical policies might split the party.
Luck
As it often does in history, chance also played a part. Trotsky was unfortunate in falling ill late in
1923 with a malaria-like infection – just when Lenin was dying, and Trotsky needed to be at his
most active.
212
SOURCE
4 Stalin’s cunning
8 Russia, 1905–41
We have already seen that Stalin was a clever
politician and he planned his bid for power
carefully. He made great efforts to associate
himself with Lenin wherever possible and got
off to an excellent start at Lenin’s funeral. He
played a trick on Trotsky. Stalin cabled Trotsky
to tell him that Lenin’s funeral was to be on 26
January, when it was in fact going to be on the
27th. Trotsky was away in the south of Russia and
would not have had time to get back for the 26th,
although he could have got back for the 27th.
As a result, Trotsky did not appear at the funeral
whereas Stalin appeared as chief mourner and
Lenin’s closest comrade and follower.
He was also extremely clever in using his
power within the Communist Party. He took
on many boring but important jobs including
the post of General Secretary. He used these
positions to put his own supporters into
Lenin and Stalin. Stalin made the most of any opportunity to appear close to Lenin.
This photograph is a suspected fake. important posts and remove people likely to
support his opponents from the Party. He was
also very good at political manoeuvring. First of all he allied himself with Zinoviev and Kamanev to
Profile push out Trotsky. Then he allied himself with Bukharin in the debate about the NEP (see page 209)
Joseph Stalin to defeat Zinoviev and Kamanev and later get them, along with Trotsky, expelled from the Party. All
Born 1879 in Georgia. His father was a the time he was building his own power base, bringing in his supporters to the Party Congress and
shoemaker and an alcoholic. Central Committee to make sure he was chosen as leader. Finally he turned on Bukharin and his
Original name was Iosif Dzhugashvili
but changed his name to Stalin (man
supporters, removing them from powerful positions. By 1929 he was the unchallenged leader.
of steel). Stalin’s policies also met with greater favour than Trotsky’s. Stalin proposed that in future
Twice exiled to Siberia by the Tsarist the party should try to establish ‘Socialism in One Country’ rather than try to spread revolution
secret police, he escaped each time. worldwide. The idea that they could achieve socialism on their own appealed to the Russian
Made his name in violent bank raids to
raise party funds.
sense of nationalism. Finally, Stalin appeared to be a straightforward Georgian peasant – much
He was slow and steady, but very more a man of the people than his intellectual rivals. To a Soviet people weary of years of war and
hardworking. revolution, Stalin seemed to be the man who understood their feelings.
He also held grudges and generally
made his enemies suffer.
Became a leading Communist after
playing an important role in defending
Think!
the Bolshevik city of Tsaritsyn (later In groups, look at the following statements and decide on a scale of 1–5 how far
Stalingrad) during the Civil War. you agree with them.
Had become undisputed party leader ♦ Stalin was a dull and unimaginative politician.
by 1929. ♦ Stalin appeared to be a dull and unimaginative politician.
♦ Trotsky lost the contest because of his mistakes.
♦ Stalin trusted to luck rather than careful planning.
♦ Stalin was ruthless and devious.
Try to find evidence on these two pages to back up your judgements.
Focus Task
Why did Stalin and not Trotsky emerge as Lenin’s successor?
Write notes under the following headings to explain why Stalin rather than
Trotsky emerged as the new leader of Russia.
♦ Trotsky’s strengths and weaknesses in the leadership contest
♦ Why other contenders underestimated Stalin
♦ How Stalin outmanoeuvred other contenders
♦ Why Stalin’s policies were attractive to Party members
Then combine your notes to write your own account in answer to the question:
‘Why did Stalin and not Trotsky emerge as Lenin’s successor?’
213
SOURCE
5 Modernising the USSR
DEPTH STUDIES
The first Five-Year Plan focused on the major industries and although most targets were not met,
NORWAY
the achievements were still staggering. The USSR increased production and created a foundation
SWEDEN
on which to build the next Five-Year Plans. The USSR was rich in natural resources, but many of
GERMANY
FINLAND them were in remote places such as Siberia. So whole cities were built from nothing and workers
taken out to the new industrial centres. Foreign observers marvelled as huge new steel mills
POLAND
Leningrad
appeared at Magnitogorsk in the Urals and Sverdlovsk in central Siberia. New dams and hydro-
Urals electric power fed industry’s energy requirements. Russian ‘experts’ flooded into the Muslim
USSR
republics of central Asia such as Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, creating industry from scratch in
er
Sverdlovsk
iep
Odessa The second Five-Year Plan (1933–37) built on the achievements of the first. Heavy industry
Don
Magnitogorsk was still a priority, but other areas were also developed. Mining for lead, tin, zinc and other
CRIMEA
lga minerals intensified as Stalin further exploited Siberia’s rich mineral resources. Transport and
Vo
GEORGIA
communications were also boosted, and new railways and canals were built. The most spectacular
TURKEY showpiece project was the Moscow underground railway.
Stalin also wanted industrialisation to help improve Russia’s agriculture. The production of
Key
tractors and other farm machinery increased dramatically. In the third Five-Year Plan, which was
0 500 km
New begun in 1938, some factories were to switch to the production of consumer goods. However, this
industry Scale plan was disrupted by the Second World War.
214
SOURCE
7 How was industrialisation
8 Russia, 1905–41
achieved?
Any programme as extreme as Stalin’s Five-Year Plans was bound to
carry a cost. In the USSR this cost was paid by the workers. Many foreign
experts and engineers were called in by Stalin to supervise the work and
in their letters and reports they marvel at the toughness of the Russian
people. The workers were constantly bombarded with propaganda,
posters, slogans and radio broadcasts. They all had strict targets to meet
and were fined if they did not meet them.
The most famous worker was Alexei Stakhanov. In 1935 with two
helpers and an easy coal seam to work on, he managed to cut an amazing
102 tons of coal in one shift. This was fourteen times the average for a
shift. Stakhanov became a ‘Hero of Socialist Labour’ and the propaganda
machine encouraged all Soviet workers to be Stakhanovites.
The first Five-Year Plan revealed a shortage of workers, so from 1930
Propaganda poster showing Stalin as a comrade side by side
with Soviet workers. The text means ‘It is our workers who the government concentrated on drafting more women into industry. It
make our programme achievable.’ set up thousands of new crèches and day-care centres so that mothers
could work. By 1937 women were 40 per cent of industrial workers
(compared to 28 per cent in 1927), 21 per cent of building workers and 72 per cent of health
SOURCE
8 workers. Four out of five new workers recruited between 1932 and 1937 were women.
We got so dirty and we were such By the late 1930s many Soviet workers had improved their conditions by acquiring well-paid
young things, small, slender, fragile. But skilled jobs and earning bonuses for meeting targets. Unemployment was almost non-existent. In
we had our orders to build the metro 1940 the USSR had more doctors per head of population than Britain. Education became free and
and we wanted to do it more than compulsory for all and Stalin invested huge sums in training schemes based in colleges and in the
anything else. We wore our miners’ work place.
overalls with such style. My feet were But, on the other hand, life was very harsh under Stalin. Factory discipline was strict and
size four and the boots were elevens. punishments were severe. Lateness or absences were punished by sacking, and that often meant
But there was such enthusiasm. losing your flat or house as well. In the headlong rush to fulfil targets, many of the products were
of poor quality. Some factories overproduced in massive amounts while others had to shut down for
Tatyana Fyodorova, interviewed as an old short periods because they could not get parts and raw materials. However things did improve in
lady in 1990, remembers building the
Moscow underground. the second and third Five-Year Plans.
On the great engineering projects, such as dams and canals, many of the workers were
prisoners who had been sentenced to hard labour for being political opponents, or suspected
SOURCE
9 opponents, of Stalin, or for being kulaks (rich peasants) or Jews. Many other prisoners were simply
Half a billion cubic feet of excavation unfortunate workers who had had accidents or made mistakes in their work but had been found
work . . . 25,000 tons of structural guilty of ‘sabotage’.
steel . . . without sufficient labour, On these major projects conditions were appalling and there were many deaths and accidents.
without necessary quantities of It is estimated that 100,000 workers died in the construction of the Belomor Canal.
the most rudimentary materials. At the same time, the concentration on heavy industry meant that there were few consumer
Brigades of young enthusiasts arrived goods (such as clothes or radios) which ordinary people wanted to buy. In the towns and cities,
in the summer of 1930 and did the most housing was provided by the state, but overcrowding was a problem. Most families lived in
groundwork of railroad and dam . . . flats and were crowded into two rooms which were used for living, sleeping and eating. What’s
Later groups of peasants came . . . more, wages actually fell between 1928 and 1937. In 1932 a husband and wife who both worked
Many were completely unfamiliar with earned only as much as one man or woman had in 1928.
industrial tools and processes . . . Stalin was also quite prepared to destroy the way of life of the Soviet people to help
industrialisation. For example, in the republics of central Asia the influence of Islam was thought to
J Scott, Behind the Urals, 1943. hold back industrialisation, so between 1928 and 1932 it was repressed. Many Muslim leaders were
imprisoned or deported, mosques were closed and pilgrimages to Mecca were forbidden.
215
SOURCE
10 Did the Five-Year Plans succeed?
DEPTH STUDIES
What are the results of the Five-Year There is much that could be and was criticised in the Five-Year Plans. Certainly there was a great
Plan in four years? deal of inefficiency, duplication of effort and waste. One feature of the plans was spectacular
• We did not have an iron and steel building projects, e.g. the Dnieprostroi Dam, which were used as a showcase of Soviet achievement.
industry. Now we have one. The Moscow Metro was particularly impressive with vast stations and stunning architectural
• We did not have a machine tool design. There was an enormous human cost to these. But the fact remains that by 1937 the USSR
industry. Now we have one. was a modern state and it was this that saved it from defeat when Hitler invaded in 1941.
• We did not have a modern
chemicals industry. Now we have
SOURCE
11
one. Production in 1927–28 First Five-Year Plan. Second Five-Year Plan.
Target and actual Target and actual
• We did not have a big industry for production in 1933 production in 1937
5.05 Actual
36.2
SOURCE
12
1913 1928 1940
Gas (billion m )
3
0.02 0.3 3.4 COAL
(million tons)
Fertilisers (million tons) 0.07 0.1 3.2
Target
Plastics (million tons) – – 10.9 152.5
Target Actual
Tractors (thousand) – 1.3 31.6 68.0 128.0
Actual
35.4 64.3
The growth in the output of the USSR,
1913–40.
OIL Target
(million tons) 46.8
Target
19.0
11.7
SOURCE
13
50
United States
USSR Actual Actual
Germany 21.4 28.5
40 Britain
PIG IRON
(million tons) Target
Target 16.0
8.0
per cent share
30 3.3
Actual Actual
20 6.2 14.5
STEEL
(million tons)
10 Target
Actual
Target 17.7 17.0
Actual
8.3
4.0 5.9
0
29
38
32
37
19
19
19
19
216
The Five-Year Plans were used very effectively SOURCE
15
8 Russia, 1905–41
for propaganda purposes. Stalin had wanted
the Soviet Union to be a beacon of socialism
and his publicity machine used the successes
of industrialisation to further that objective.
Blaming the workers was a good way of
excusing mistakes made by management.
However, many of the workers were unskilled
ex-peasants and they did cause damage
to machinery and equipment. To escape
punishments and harsh conditions, or to try to
get better wages and bonuses, workers moved
jobs frequently (in some industries three times
a year). This did not help industry or society
to stabilise. To try to prevent this, internal
passports were introduced to prevent the
movement of workers inside the USSR.
SOURCE
14
There is evidence that he [Stalin]
exaggerated Russia’s industrial
deficiency in 1929. The Tsars had
developed a considerable industrial
capacity . . . in a sense the spadework
had already been done and it is not
altogether surprising that Stalin should
have achieved such rapid results.
Historian SJ Lee, The European
Dictatorships, 1918–1945, published
in 1987.
Source Analysis
1 What is the message of Source 15?
2 How could Stalin use Sources 12
and 13 to support the claims of
Source 15? Soviet propaganda poster, 1933. In the top half, the hand is holding the first Five-
Year Plan. The capitalist is saying (in 1928), ‘Fantasy, Lies, Utopia.’ The bottom half
3 Compare Sources 10 and 14.
shows 1933.
Do they agree or disagree about
the Five-Year Plans? Explain your
answer.
4 Which of Sources 10 or 14 do Focus Task
Sources 11, 12 and 13 most How successful were Stalin’s economic policies?
support? Step 1: The Five-Year Plans
Use all the information and sources in this section to assess the Five-Year Plans
for industry. Copy and complete a table like this. Fill out column 2. You will come
back to column 3 on page 219.
Aims
Key features
Successes
Failures
Human cost
217
Modernising agriculture:
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
Collectivisation
Peasants were to put their lands
collectivisation
together to form large joint farms
(‘kolkhoz’) but could keep small plots For the enormous changes of the Five-Year Plan to be successful, Stalin needed to modernise the
for personal use.
USSR’s agriculture. This was vital because the population of the industrial centres was growing
Animals and tools were to be pooled
together. rapidly and yet as early as 1928 the country was already 2 million tons short of the grain it needed
Motor Tractor Stations (MTS), provided to feed its workers. Stalin also wanted to try to raise money for his industrialisation programme by
by the government, made tractors selling exports of surplus food abroad.
available.
His answer was collectivisation – forcing the farmers to combine their lands and cattle and
Ninety per cent of ‘kolkhoz’ produce
would be sold to the state and the farm them together (collectively) – see Factfile.
profits shared out. Most peasants were still working on small plots of land using backward methods. Making
The remaining 10 per cent of produce the peasants work on larger farms meant that it would be easier to make efficient use of tractors,
was to be used to feed the ‘kolkhoz’.
fertilisers and other modern methods of farming. This would produce more food. Mechanised
farming would require fewer peasants and release large numbers to work in growing industries.
Moreover it would be easier to collect grain and taxes from larger farms. It would also be a more
Think! socialist way of farming as they would be co-operating rather than selling their own food for a
1 Explain why Stalin needed to profit.
change farming in the USSR. There was one big problem with collectivisation. The peasants did not want to hand over their
2 Why did the peasants resist? animals and tools and be ordered around by farm managers. All they wanted was to farm their
own piece of land without interference from the government. This applied particularly to kulaks –
richer peasants who owned larger farms and employed agricultural labourers.
SOURCE
16 The government sent out activists, backed up by the secret police, to ‘persuade’ them and a
In order to turn a peasant society into massive propaganda campaign was organised to inform peasants of the advantages of joining a
an industrialised country, countless collective farm. Some did join, but many resisted bitterly. They slaughtered and ate their animals
material and human sacrifices were rather than allow them to be taken, burnt crops and even their houses. In some areas there was
necessary. The people had to accept armed resistance. The government blamed the kulaks for all the trouble and Stalin announced
this, but it would not be achieved by that ‘We must liquidate the kulaks as a class’. In practice anybody who resisted became a kulak.
enthusiasm alone . . . If a few million Peasants were rounded up and deported in huge numbers to remote areas in Siberia, or to labour
people had to perish in the process, camps. Others fled to the cities.
history would forgive Comrade Stalin This process in 1930–32 caused huge disruption in the countryside and there were severe food
. . . The great aim demanded great shortages. This, combined with a poor harvest in 1932, led to a famine on an unimaginable scale,
energy that could be drawn from particularly in the Ukraine, in the years 1932–33. The government would not acknowledge the
famine and still sent out requisitioning gangs to collect grain for the workers and to export to other
a backward people only by great
countries. Millions starved, perhaps as many as 13 million people. It was a man-made human
harshness.
tragedy of immense proportions. The way of life of millions of peasants had been destroyed.
Anatoli Rybakov, Children of the Arbat, After this traumatic period, the countryside did settle down and gradually more grain was
1988. A Russian writer presents Stalin’s produced, although the numbers of animals did not reach pre-collectivisation levels until 1940.
viewpoint on the modernisation of Stalin had achieved his aim (see Source 17): he had established control of the grain supply and
Russia.
collectivised the peasants. Moreover he had a ready supply of labour for the factories.
SOURCE
17
30 Key 100 95
Cows 86
25
80 73
Grain (millions of tons)
Pigs 69
20
Million head
60
15
40 36
10
20
5
0 0
1913 1921 1928 1933 1940 1913 1921 1928 1933 1940
218
SOURCE
18
8 Russia, 1905–41
Source Analysis u ‘How are things with you?’ I asked one old man. He looked around anxiously to
Read Source 18. Why do you think
the only reports of the famine came
see that no soldiers were about. ‘We have nothing, absolutely nothing. They have
from Western journalists? taken everything away.’ It was true. The famine is an organised one. Some of the
food that has been taken away from them is being exported to foreign countries.
It is literally true that whole villages have been exiled. I saw myself a group of
SOURCE
19 some twenty peasants being marched off under escort. This is so common a sight
Stalin, ignoring the great cost in that it no longer arouses even curiosity.
human life and misery, claimed
that collectivisation was a success; The Manchester Guardian, 1933.
for, after the great famines caused
at the time . . . no more famines Despite the famine, Stalin did not ease off. By 1934 there were no kulaks left. By 1941 almost
came to haunt the Russian people. all agricultural land was organised under the collective system. Stalin had achieved his aim of
The collective farms, despite their collectivisation.
inefficiencies, did grow more food than
the tiny, privately owned holdings had Focus Task
done. For example, 30 to 40 million How successful were Stalin’s economic policies?
tons of grain were produced every Step 2: Collectivisation
year. Collectivisation also meant the
1 You started a chart on page 217. Now complete column 3 to assess the policy
introduction of machines into the of collectivisation.
countryside. Now 2 million previously 2 Which policy do you think was more effective: the Five-Year Plans or
backward peasants learned how collectivisation? Support your answer with evidence from pages 214–19.
to drive a tractor. New methods of
farming were taught by agricultural
experts. The countryside was Key Question Summary
transformed. What was the impact of Stalin’s economic policies?
Historian E Roberts, Stalin, Man of 1 From 1928, Stalin embarked on a radical programme of change to
Steel, published in 1986. modernise the USSR to increase its military power, rival Western economies
and create a Communist society.
2 He initiated Five-Year Plans for industry in which production targets were set
for every industry right down to individual factories.
3 The first two Five-Year Plans concentrated mainly on heavy industry – iron,
coal and steel – and to a lesser extent on mining, chemicals and transport.
4 A feature of the plans was gigantic spectacular projects like the Moscow
Underground.
5 The plans were very successful – the production of heavy industries rose
dramatically, huge new industrial plants were built, new cities appeared and
a modern industrial state was created. However, the quality of goods was
often poor and there were inefficiencies.
6 Stalin needed to make farming more modern – using tractors and fertilisers
– to produce the food he needed for the workers. He used collectivisation to
do this – making peasants put their land and animals into collective farms
under state control.
7 Many peasants resisted and were shot, sent to labour camps or exiled.
Millions fled to the new cities to become workers.
8 As a result of this disruption, food production fell and there was a famine
in parts of the USSR, especially the Ukraine, in 1932–33. However, Stalin
had got what he wanted from collectivisation: food for the workers, food to
export abroad, more industrial workers and control of the peasants and the
food supply.
9 The cost to the Russian people of Stalin’s economic plans was high. The
peasants suffered immensely. But the workers also had to make sacrifices.
Very few consumer goods were produced, the quality of housing was poor
and the standard of living low. Factory discipline was harsh and workers who
made mistakes could be punished severely or accused of sabotage and sent
to labour camps.
219
SOURCE
20 How did Stalin control Russia?
DEPTH STUDIES
Russian exiles in France made this mock travel poster in the late 1930s.
220 The text says: ‘Visit the USSR’s pyramids!’
The new constitution
8 Russia, 1905–41
Source Analysis
Choose either Source 22 or 24. In 1936 Stalin created a new constitution for the USSR. It gave freedom
1 Summarise the message of the cartoon in your own of speech and free elections to the Russian people. This was, of course,
words. a cosmetic measure. Only Communist Party candidates were allowed to
2 Do you think either of these cartoons could have been stand in elections, and only approved newspapers and magazines could
published in the USSR? be published.
SOURCE
23 SOURCE
24
One of Stalin’s opponents deleted from a photograph, A cartoon published by Russian exiles in Paris in 1936. The
1935. Techniques of doctoring pictures became far more title of the cartoon is ‘The Stalinist Constitution’ and the text at
sophisticated in the 1930s. This allowed Stalin to create the the bottom reads ‘New seating arrangements in the Supreme
impression that his enemies had never existed. Soviet’.
SOURCE
25 Focus Task
These men lifted their villainous hands against Comrade Stalin.
Why did Stalin launch the Purges?
By lifting their hands against Comrade Stalin, they lifted them
Some say that Stalin launched the Purges because he was
against all of us, against the working class . . . against the
power-mad and paranoid. Do you agree with this? Can you
teaching of Marx, Engels, Lenin . . . Stalin is our hope, Stalin is suggest other reasons? Use these headings to help you:
the beacon which guides all progressive mankind. Stalin is our ♦ Opposition to Stalin
banner. Stalin is our will. Stalin is our victory. ♦ Why Stalin was determined to remain leader
♦ Controlling the Communist Party
From a speech made by Communist leader Nikita Khrushchev ♦ Controlling the people in an unstable society
in 1937, at the height of the Purges. (Khrushchev later ♦ Getting rid of disruptive elements in the population
became leader of the USSR and in 1956 announced a ‘de- ♦ Making sure the army stayed loyal.
Stalinisation’ programme – see page 128).
221
Society and culture under Stalin
DEPTH STUDIES
Think!
1 Why did Stalin try to reduce the
influence of religion? Stalin understood the power of ideas and the media. Newspapers were censored or run by
2 How effective were his policies? government agencies. The radio was under state control. The state used propaganda extensively in
3 What does the story of posters, information leaflets and through public events like organised street theatre and processions.
Shostakovich tell historians about Soviet citizens could get very little information from the world outside apart from through state-
life for musicians under Stalin?
controlled media. Stalin also controlled other areas that influenced the way people thought.
Use the internet to look up other
artists or writers such as Maxim Religion came under sustained attack in the 1930s. Many churches were closed, priests deported
Gorky. and church buildings pulled down. Priests were not allowed to vote and their children. By 1939 only
one in 40 churches were holding regular services in the USSR. Muslim worship was also attacked.
Muslims were banned from practising Islamic law and women encouraged to abandon the veil. In
1917 there were 26,000 mosques in Russia but by 1939 there were only 1,300. Despite this aggressive
action, in the 1937 census, around 60 per cent of Russians said that they were Christians.
All music and other arts in the USSR were carefully monitored by the NKVD. Poets and
playwrights praised Stalin either directly or indirectly. Composers such as Shostakovich wrote music
praising him and lived in dread of Stalin’s disapproval. Artists and writers were forced to adopt a style
called Soviet Realism. This meant that paintings and novels had to glorify ordinary workers, inspire
people with socialism, and help build the future. Paintings showed happy collective farm workers in
the fields or workers striving in the factories. It was a similar situation with literature (see Source 26).
SOURCE
26
Whoever said that Soviet literature
contains only real images is profoundly Education and youth organisations
mistaken. The themes are dictated by By the early 1930s Stalin set about reforming the Soviet education system. The discipline of
the Party. The Party deals harshly with teachers and parents was emphasised. Strict programmes of work were set out for key subjects like
anybody who tries to depict the real mathematics, physics and chemistry. History textbooks presented Stalin’s view of history. There were
state of affairs in their literature. compulsory lessons in socialist values and how a Soviet citizen should behave.
Children under fifteen joined the Pioneers where they were indoctrinated with Communist
Is it not a fact that all of you now views, encouraged to be loyal to the state and to behave like a good citizens. It was like the Boy
reading these lines saw people dying Scouts with activities stressing co-operation and teamwork.
in the streets in 1932? People, swollen
with hunger and foaming at the
mouth, lying in their death throes in
Women in Stalin’s USSR
the streets. Is it not a fact that whole Life under Stalin for women was a mixed picture. In many respects, women gained much more
villages full of people perished in 1932? freedom and opportunity under Stalin’s rule than they had had under the Tsar. Women were given
the same educational and employment opportunities as men. Women entered the workforce in
Does our literature show any of these
increasing numbers. By 1935 some 42 per cent of all industrial workers were women. The historian
horrors, which make your hair stand
Wendy Goldman argues that the Second Five Year Plan in particular would have struggled to
on end? No. Where will you find such achieve what it did if it had not been for the huge influx of women workers. There is also some
appalling things depicted in Soviet evidence that women were enrolled into technical training programs and management positions,
literature? You call it realism? although the vast majority of women remained in relatively low paid industrial jobs or traditional
roles. There is also evidence of women facing resentment from male colleagues and relatively few
A protest note pinned on the walls of a
college by students in November 1935. women were able to achieve promotion.
The Communists also tried to challenge traditional views about women and the family. Communists
thought that women should be free and not tied down to men by marriage. Children would be looked
SOURCE
27 after in crèches and kindergarten. So divorce was made very easy and there was abortion on demand. The
I, a Young Pioneer of the Soviet Union, reality did not live up to the dream. In the cities many men abandoned and divorced women as soon as
in the presence of my comrades, they became pregnant. In 1927 two-thirds of marriages in Moscow ended in divorce. The promised state-
solemnly promise to love my Soviet provided kindergartens did not materialise and thousands of women were left to manage as best they
motherland passionately, and to live, could with jobs and children. This situation was compounded by the upheavals in 1928–33, especially
learn and struggle as the great Lenin by collectivisation, which resulted in huge numbers of families being split. The result was millions of
bade us and the Communist Party homeless children who roamed the streets in gangs, begging or taking part in petty crime.
teaches us.
The promise made by each member of
The Great Retreat
the Young Pioneers. By the mid 1930s there was a movement to return to traditional family values and discipline, often
called ‘The Great Retreat’.
● Abortion was made illegal except to protect the health of the mother.
● Divorce was made more difficult. Divorcing couples had to go to court and pay a fee.
● Divorced fathers had to pay maintenance for their children.
222
SOURCE
28 ● Mothers received cash payments of 2,000 roubles per year for each child up to age five.
8 Russia, 1905–41
● A new law in 1935 allowed the NKVD to deal harshly with youth crime. There was even a death
Interviews with Soviet citizens who
sentence introduced for young criminals, although there are no records of it being used.
fled the USSR in the Second World
● Parents could be fined if their children caused trouble. Their children could be taken to
War showed that support for welfare
orphanages and their parents forced to pay for their upkeep.
policies, support for strong government It is very hard to judge the impact of these measures although they tended to have a much greater
and patriotic pride were all robust – impact on women than men as they restricted many of the new opportunities which had opened up.
and this was from a sample of persons Divorce rates did not fall and absent fathers meant women took the major role in holding family
who had shown their hatred of Stalin life together and became breadwinners as well. Overall, it seems that family life did not decline
by leaving the country. further in the 1930s and interviews with survivors of the period seem to suggest that most people
supported the Great Retreat policies.
An extract from A History of Modern
Russia by Robert Conquest, published
in 2003. Conquest is a well-known
historian in this field.
Equal society?
One of the main aims of Communist policies was to make life more equal and fair for all members
of society. Critics of Communism have usually pointed out that it made life equally bad for everyone
Focus Task in society. There is some evidence to support this.
● The buying power of a worker’s wages fell by over 50 per cent during the first Five Year Plan.
How were Soviet people
● The average worker in 1930s Moscow ate only 20 per cent of the meat and fish he ate in 1900.
affected by Stalin’s rule?
● Housing was hard to find and expensive.
Work with a partner to produce a ● It was difficult to get clothing, shoes and boots. Queuing to buy goods became part of life.
presentation to answer this question.
On the other hand, there were some positives. Health care improved enormously. Education
You will find useful information on
pages 220–23 but you could do improved and public libraries became available as literacy became a high priority. Sports facilities
further research in the library or were good in most towns and cities.
online. Your presentation could be Despite the ideology a divide in society began to open up. For some, if you were ambitious,
done on computer or as a booklet you could become part of the new ‘class’ of skilled workers or a foreman, supervisor or technician.
or poster with supporting notes on There was an army of managers and bureaucrats, and they created jobs for the secretaries who
each area. handled their paperwork. One manager employed a servant on eighteen roubles a week, while
Start by making your own mind his wife earned 30 roubles a week as a typist. The manager could also get items like clothing and
map to sum up the key features of
luxuries in the official Party shops. At the very top was a new ruling class – the nomenclatura.
Stalin’s rule. Here are some possible
boundaries
This was the special group loyal to Stalin who took all the top jobs in the Communist Party, the
government and regional government. They and their families enjoyed many privileges such as
New cities and Religion better housing, food, clothes and schools for their children.
towns, and living The groups mentioned above had done well out of the new industrial society and their support
conditions Education
for Stalin was vital in helping him control Soviet society.
224
We know that Stalin tried to control things personally as far as he could. He sent out a constant
8 Russia, 1905–41
Focus Task stream of notes and letters giving very specific instructions about what should be done, even down
What methods did Stalin use to particular industrial plants. In letters to his henchmen Stalin talks frequently about fulfilling
to control the USSR? targets ‘with unrelenting firmness and ruthlessness’. These could be used as evidence of Stalin’s
1 Draw up and complete a table to control but the frustration expressed in the letters can also be seen as evidence that Stalin was not
make notes and record examples able to get them to do what he wanted (see Source 29 for example).
for the methods of control listed.
You can add more/different
methods if you wish. Key Question Summary
♦ Fear and terror (NKVD, Gulag) How did Stalin gain and hold on to power?
♦ Purges
♦ Force and compulsion (e.g. 1 Stalin emerged as the new leader of Russia through a mixture of political
collectivisation) cunning, ruthlessness and the mistakes of the other contenders.
♦ Propaganda 2 He gained control of the party machine and could appoint his supporters to
♦ Cult of the personality key positions. He outmanoeuvred his opponents by playing them off against
♦ Education and youth groups each other.
♦ Control of mass media and the 3 His main rival Trotsky, ill at the time, would not get involved in the power
arts struggle. He was disliked by many Bolsheviks for being too aloof and they
♦ Improving living conditions for feared he would become a dictator.
some 4 Stalin’s policy of ‘Socialism in one country’ was popular and appealed to
Russian nationalism.
How complete was Stalin’s 5 Stalin established a system of fear and terror to control the USSR, backed by
control over the Soviet Union an effective secret police force and the Gulag labour camps.
by 1941? 6 From 1936 he used the Purges to make sure he remained leader. He set up
2 Now use your notes to write an show trials to get rid of the old Bolsheviks who might form an alternative
answer to this question: government and to frighten others.
‘By 1941 Stalin had complete 7 He purged the Communist Party to make sure it would carry out his orders
control of the Soviet Union without question.
because he had crushed all 8 He purged the army to get rid of any officers who might be disloyal to him.
opposition.’ How far do you agree 9 He undertook a general purge of the population to instil fear so that
with this statement? Explain your they would do as they were told. He got rid of leading members of the
answer. intelligentsia in education and the arts. He also got rid of troublesome
You should structure this in three individuals on the fringes of society who did not fit into the Stalinist system.
sections or paragraphs: 10 A cult of the personality saw Stalin promoted as a god-like leader who could
1 The argument that Stalin was in guide the USSR to a great future.
control. Here you should include: 11 Stalin tried to control what people thought through the mass media,
♦ examples of the methods he education, the arts and culture in general. He tried to suppress religion but
used was not successful.
♦ evidence that these methods
actually worked (e.g. source
extracts).
2 The argument that Stalin was Exam Practice
not in control or that his control See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
was not as great as it appeared. questions you might face.
Here you should include: 1 (a) What were the Five-Year Plans? [4]
♦ examples of resistance to (b) Explain why Stalin was so committed to modernising industry in the
Stalin and his methods USSR. [6]
♦ an explanation of how serious (c) ‘The Five-Year Plans brought glory to Stalin but misery to his people.’ How
this resistance was. far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer [10]
3 Your overall judgement as to
how complete his control really
was (e.g. that his control was
not complete but the resistance
was limited).
225
9
226
9
Germany, 1918–45
KEY QUESTIONS
9.1 Was the Weimar Republic doomed from the start?
9.2 Why was Hitler able to dominate Germany by 1934?
9.3 How effectively did the Nazis control Germany, 1933–45?
9.4 What was it like to live in Nazi Germany?
Germany emerged from the First World War in a state of chaos. The new The end of the
1918
First World War
Weimar government struggled from crisis to crisis. Out of this confusion
Adolf Hitler and the Nazis emerged as the most powerful group in 1920
Germany and led Germany into a period of dictatorship ending in an
The Nazis had a very specific vision of what Germany should be like
and they did not tolerate opposition. In 9.3 you will examine how they
1933 Hitler becomes
imposed their will on the German people through a combination of Chancellor of Germany
terror and propaganda.
THE THIRD REICH
In 9.4 you will see how specific groups of people were affected by Nazi
rule – young people, women, workers and farmers – and how the lives of
Germans began to change again as a result of the Second World War.
The Second World War
1939
Timeline begins
1940
This timeline shows the period you will be covering in this chapter. Some
of the key dates are filled in already. To help you get a complete picture of
the period make your own much larger version and add other details to it
as you work through the chapter.
1945 Germany is defeated
by the Allies.
Hitler kills himself
t This Nazi poster from the 1930s encouraged people to turn to Nazi-
led community groups for help and advice.
1 Using this source, describe the Nazis’ ideal family.
2 What are the Nazis offering this ideal family and how is it represented
in the poster?
3 Does this poster give the impression that people were afraid of the
Nazis?
4 What message is the poster trying to convey to Germans?
227
9.1 Was the Weimar Republic doomed from
DEPTH STUDIES
the start?
Focus Others would disagree with these points and point to
the recovery and successes of the 1920s. They would say
The democratic Weimar government collapsed in 1933 that the successes of the 1920s were significant – the
and was replaced by a Nazi dictatorship. Some people underlying problems had been solved and Germany’s
suggest that this was inevitable: Germany had long been government was doing well.
an authoritarian state so its fourteen-year experiment
with democracy was doomed to fail – particularly given There is plenty of evidence on both sides of the debate.
the problems that Germany faced after the war. Some As you study these events you can reach your own
would say: conclusions on these issues and arrive at your own
judgement about whether the Weimar Republic was
♦ There were deep problems in the way the Weimar
doomed to fail.
Republic was set up. The constitution was too
democratic and made it hard to rule Germany, Focus Points
particularly in a crisis. ♦ How did Germany emerge from defeat at the end of
♦ The post-war problems – starvation, debt, political the First World War?
chaos, hyperinflation – were just too great for any ♦ What was the impact of the Treaty of Versailles on the
country to survive, let alone a brand new one in a Republic?
deeply divided country. ♦ To what extent did the Republic recover after 1923?
♦ Being forced to sign the Treaty of Versailles fatally ♦ What were the achievements of the Weimar period?
damaged the new government even before it had got
going and increased divisions in German society.
228
9 Germany, 1918–45
National There were acute shortages of food. By 1918
income Germany was producing only 50 per cent of
was about the milk and 60 per cent of the butter and
one-third meat it had produced before the war.
of what it Fuel was short and people were cold. Nearly
had been 300,000 people died from starvation and
in 1913 hypothermia in 1918.
POLITICAL IMPACT
SOCIAL IMPACT Impact of the war on Germany had a revolution and became
an unstable democratic republic.
The war had deepened divisions
in German society Germany by 1918 Groups with extremist political views
tried to gain power.
There were huge gaps between the living Stresses of war led to a revolution in
standards of the rich and the poor October – November 1918. There
was fighting between right-wing
groups and left-wing groups.
Many German workers were bitter at Many Germans were angry about Many ex-soldiers and civilians
the restrictions placed on their losing the war. There was a wave despised the new democratic leaders
earnings during the war while the of unrest, especially in cities like and came to believe that the heroic
factory owners made vast fortunes Berlin. Law and order was breaking leader Field Marshal Hindenburg had
from the war down in a country where people been betrayed by weak politicians
were used to order and discipline.
229
The birth of the Weimar Republic
DEPTH STUDIES
In autumn 1918 the Allies had clearly won the war. Germany was in a state of chaos, as you can see
from the diagram on page 229,. The Allies offered Germany peace, but under strict conditions. One
condition was that Germany should become more democratic and that the Kaiser should abdicate.
When the Kaiser refused, sailors in northern Germany mutinied and took over the town of Kiel.
This triggered other revolts. The Kaiser’s old enemies, the Socialists, led uprisings of workers and
soldiers in other German ports. Soon, other German cities followed. In Bavaria an independent
Socialist Republic was declared. On 9 November 1918 the Kaiser abdicated his throne and left
Germany for the Netherlands.
The following day, the Socialist leader Friedrich Ebert became the new leader of the Republic of
Germany. He immediately signed an armistice with the Allies. The war was over. He also announced
to the German people that the new Republic was giving them freedom of speech, freedom of
worship and better working conditions. A new constitution was drawn up (see Factfile).
The success of the new government depended on the German people accepting an almost
instant change from the traditional, autocratic German system of government to this new
democratic system. The prospects for this did not look good.
Revision Tip The reaction of politicians in Germany was unenthusiastic. Ebert had opposition from both
♦ Make sure you can describe at right and left.
least two features of the Weimar
● On the right wing, nearly all the Kaiser’s former advisers remained in their positions in the
Constitution.
♦ See if you can explain clearly why army, judiciary, civil service and industry. They restricted what the new government could do.
at least one measure might cause Many still hoped for a return to rule by the Kaiser. A powerful myth developed that men such as
problems in the future. Ebert had stabbed Germany in the back and caused the defeat in the war (see page 231).
● On the left wing there were many Communists who believed that at this stage what
Germany actually needed was a Communist revolution just like Russia’s in 1917.
Think! Despite this opposition, in January 1919 free elections took place for the first time in Germany’s
history. Ebert’s party won a majority and he became the President of the Weimar Republic. It was
Why might the Right dislike the
Weimar Constitution? called this because, to start with, the new government met in the small town of Weimar rather than in
the German capital, Berlin. Even in February 1919, Berlin was thought to be too violent and unstable.
Factfile
The Weimar Constitution
President
Before the war Germany had no real
democracy. The Kaiser was virtually a
dictator.
Appointed judges Appointed Controlled
The Weimar Constitution, on the other
hand, attempted to set up probably the
most democratic system in the world
Courts Chancellor Armed forces
where no individual could gain too
much power.
All Germans over the age of 20 could
Appointed
vote.
There was a system of proportional
representation – if a party gained 20 per
cent of the votes, they gained 20 per Government Ministers 17 local governments (Länder)
for Bavaria, Prussia and all
cent of the seats in the Parliament Germany’s other regions.
(Reichstag). The Constitution limited their
The Chancellor was responsible for day- Government sent laws power as much as possible
to Reichstag for approval
to-day government, but he needed the
support of half the Reichstag.
The Head of State was the President.
Reichstag (Parliament)
The President stayed out of day-to-day
government. In a crisis he could rule
the country directly through Article
48 of the Constitution. This gave him Elected Elected Elected
emergency powers, which meant he did
not have to consult the Reichstag.
German people
230
The Republic in danger, 1919–24
9 Germany, 1918–45
Think!
1 Draw up a table to compare the
various threats from Left and Right From the start, Ebert’s government faced violent opposition from both left-wing and right-wing
described on this page. Include: opponents.
♦ Name of group
♦ Leadership
♦ Demands/Aims The threat from the Left
♦ Supported by
One left-wing group was known as the Spartacists. They were Communists led by Karl Liebknecht
♦ Methods
♦ How defeated
and Rosa Luxemburg. Their party was much like Lenin’s Bolsheviks, who had just taken power in
♦ Consequences Russia. They argued strongly against Ebert’s plans for a democratic Germany (see Factfile). They
2 What differences can you see wanted a Germany ruled by workers’ councils or soviets.
between the treatment of left- Early in 1919 the Spartacists launched their bid for power. Joined by rebel soldiers and sailors,
wing and right-wing extremists? they set up soviets in many towns. Not all soldiers were on the side of the Spartacists, however. Some
Can you explain this? anti-Communist ex-soldiers had formed themselves into vigilante groups called Freikorps. Ebert
made an agreement with the commanders of the army and the Freikorps to put down the rebellion.
Bitter street fighting followed between the Spartacists and Freikorps. Both sides were heavily armed.
Revision Tip Casualties were high. The Freikorps won. Liebknecht and Luxemburg were murdered and this
♦ Make sure you can describe at Communist revolution had failed. However, another one was soon to follow.
least one example of Left wing It emerged in Bavaria in the south of Germany. Bavaria was still an independent Socialist state
and one example of Right wing led by Kurt Eisner, who was Ebert’s ally. In February 1919 he was murdered by political opponents.
revolts. The Communists in Bavaria seized the opportunity to declare a soviet republic in Bavaria. Ebert
♦ Practise explaining how the used the same tactics as he had against the Spartacists. The Freikorps moved in to crush the revolt
government defeated Left and
in May 1919. Around 600 Communists were killed.
Right wing threats.
In 1920 there was more Communist agitation in the Ruhr industrial area. Again police, army
and Freikorps clashed with Communists. There were 2,000 casualties.
Ebert’s ruthless measures against the Communists created lasting bitterness between them
and his Socialist Party. However, it gained approval from many in Germany. Ebert was terrified
that Germany might go the same way as Russia (at that time rocked by bloody civil war). Many
Germans shared his fears. Even so, despite these defeats, the Communists remained a powerful
anti-government force in Germany throughout the 1920s.
231
SOURCE
1 The Treaty of Versailles
DEPTH STUDIES
Versailles was a scandal and a disgrace The biggest crisis for the new republic came in May 1919 when the terms of the Treaty of Versailles
and … the dictate signified an act of were announced. You can read more about this in Chapter 1. Most people in Germany were
highway robbery against our people. appalled, but the right-wing opponents of Ebert’s government were particularly angry. They
blamed Ebert’s government for betraying Germany. Germany lost:
Extract from Hitler’s biography
Mein Kampf, 1924. ● 10 per cent of its land
● all of its overseas colonies
● 12.5 per cent of its population
● 16 per cent of its coal and 48 per cent of its iron industry.
Focus Task In addition:
What was the impact of the ● its army was reduced to 100,000; it was not allowed to have an air force; its navy was reduced
Treaty of Versailles on the ● Germany had to accept blame for starting the war and was forced to pay reparations.
Republic? Most Germans were appalled. Supporters of the Weimar government felt betrayed by the Allies.
1 Research: Using all the information The Kaiser was gone – why should they be punished for his war and aggression? Opponents of the
and sources on pages 232–34 and regime turned their fury on Ebert.
pages 14–15 in Chapter 1, find out
Ebert himself was very reluctant to sign the Treaty, but he had no choice. Germany could not go
the impact of the treaty on:
a) German territory back to war. However, in the minds of many Germans, Ebert and his Weimar Republic were forever to
b) the armed forces blame for the Treaty. The injustice of the Treaty became a rallying point for all Ebert’s opponents. They
c) German attitudes and national believed that the German army had been ‘stabbed in the back’ by the Socialist and Liberal politicians
pride who agreed an armistice in November 1918. They believed that Germany had not been beaten on the
d) the economy battlefield, but that it had been betrayed by its civilian politicians who didn’t dare continue the war.
e) political stability. The Treaty was still a source of bitterness in Germany when Hitler came to power in 1933.
2 Reach a judgement: Which
of these do you think was most
damaging to the Weimar republic Revision Tip
in: ♦ Make sure you can describe at least two ways the Treaty
♦ the short term (in 1920) affected Germany.
♦ the long term (by 1923)? ♦ Try to explain at least two ways in which the Treaty
Support your answer with evidence caused economic problems in Germany.
from your research. ♦ Practise explaining two reasons why the Treaty caused
political problems.
SOURCE
2
The text reads: ‘The Mammoth
Military superiority of our neighbours’.
Source Analysis
1 Study Source 2 carefully. What
point is the cartoonist trying to
make about Germany’s position?
2 What point is the cartoonist
making about France in relation to
Germany?
3 What point is the cartoonist
making about France in relation to
the other countries in the cartoon?
Nazi cartoon commenting on the military terms of the Versailles treaty.
232
SOURCE
3 Economic disaster
9 Germany, 1918–45
There was a lot of official harassment. The Treaty of Versailles destabilised Germany politically, but Germans also blamed it for another
There was widespread hunger, squalor problem – economic chaos. See if you agree that the Treaty of Versailles was responsible for
and poverty and – what really affected economic problems in Germany.
us – there was humiliation. The French The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to pay reparations to the Allies. The reparations bill
ruled with an iron hand. If they disliked was announced in April 1921. It was set at £6,600 million, to be paid in annual instalments of 2 per
you walking on the pavement, for cent of Germany’s annual output. The Germans protested that this was an intolerable strain on the
instance, they’d come along with their economy which they were struggling to rebuild after the war, but their protests were ignored.
riding crops and you’d have to walk in
the road. The Ruhr
The memories of Jutta Rudiger, a The first instalment of £50 million was paid in 1921, but in 1922 nothing was paid. Ebert did his
German woman living in the Ruhr during best to play for time and to negotiate concessions from the Allies, but the French in particular ran
the French occupation. out of patience. They too had war debts to pay to the USA. So in January 1923 French and Belgian
troops entered the Ruhr (quite legally under the Treaty of Versailles) and began to take what was
owed to them in the form of raw materials and goods.
Think! The results of the occupation of the Ruhr were disastrous for Germany. The government
1 Work in pairs. One of you study ordered the workers to carry out passive resistance, which meant to go on strike. That way, there
Source 4 and the other Source 5. would be nothing for the French to take away. The French reacted harshly, killing over 100 workers
Explain the message of each
and expelling over 100,000 protesters from the region. More importantly, the halt in industrial
source to the other person in
your pair. Remember to make production in Germany’s most important region caused the collapse of the German currency.
a valid inference (for example,
the cartoonist is saying …).
Then remember to support the
inference with a detail from the Think!
cartoon (for example this is shown Is it possible to answer the question ‘Could Germany afford the reparations
in the cartoon by …). payments?’ with a simple yes or no? Explain your answer.
SOURCE
4 SOURCE
5
234
SOURCE
11 The Weimar Republic under
9 Germany, 1918–45
120
100
Stresemann
80
Achievements
60
40
The economy
Key Although Chancellor for only a few months, Stresemann was a leading member of every
20 Industrial production government from 1923 to 1929. He was a more skilful politician than Ebert, and, as a right-winger,
Spending power of workers he had wider support. He was also helped by the fact that through the 1920s the rest of Europe
0 was gradually coming out of its post-war depression. Slowly but surely, he built up Germany’s
1913 1923 1928
prosperity again. Under the Dawes Plan (see page 37), reparations payments were spread over a
Comparison of aspects of the German longer period, and 800 million marks in loans from the USA poured into German industry. Some of
economy in 1913, 1923 and 1928. the money went into German businesses, replacing old equipment with the latest technology. Some
of the money went into public works like swimming pools, sports stadia and apartment blocks. As
well as providing facilities, these projects created jobs.
Think! By 1927 German industry seemed to have recovered very well. In 1928 Germany finally achieved
1 List the factors that helped the same levels of production as before the war and regained its place as the world’s second greatest
Germany’s economy to recover. industrial power (behind the USA). Wages for industrial workers rose and for many Germans there
2 In what ways did economic was a higher standard of living. Reparations were being paid and exports were on the increase. The
recovery affect the lives of government was even able to increase welfare benefits and wages for state employees.
ordinary Germans?
Politics
Revision Tip Even politics became more stable. To begin with, there were no more attempted revolutions after
Hyperinflation 1923 (see page 239). One politician who had been a leading opponent of Ebert in 1923 said that
‘the Republic is beginning to settle and the German people are becoming reconciled to the way
♦ Make sure you can describe two
causes and two effects of the
things are.’ Source 12 shows that the parties that supported Weimar democracy did well in these
hyperinflation. years. By 1928 the moderate parties had 136 more seats in the Reichstag than the radical parties.
♦ Describe the actions of Hitler’s Nazis gained less than 3 per cent of the vote in the 1928 election. Just as importantly, some
Stresemann to tackle the currency of the parties who had co-operated in the ‘revolution’ of 1918 began to co-operate again. The
crisis. Socialists (SPD), Catholic Centre Party, German Democratic Party (DDP) and the German People’s
♦ Ideally, see if you can explain at Party (DVP) generally worked well together in the years 1924–29.
least one reason why Germans
believed the Treaty caused the
hyperinflation.
SOURCE
12
♦ Try explaining to someone else 400
whether you think Stresemann’s
actions were effective.
The Dawes Plan 300
Number of MPs elected
0
1919 May 1924 1928
Key
Left wing opposed to the Republic
Left wing supporting the Republic
Right wing opposed to the Republic
235
SOURCE
13 Culture
DEPTH STUDIES
There was also a cultural revival in Germany. In the Kaiser’s time there had been strict censorship,
but the Weimar constitution allowed free expression of ideas. Writers and poets flourished,
especially in Berlin. Artists in Weimar Germany turned their back on old styles of painting and tried
to represent the reality of everyday life, even when that reality was sometimes harsh and shocking.
Artists like George Grosz produced powerful paintings such as Pillars of Society, which criticised
the politicians and business, church and army leaders of the Weimar period, showing them as
callous and mindless. Other paintings by Grosz highlighted how soldiers had been traumatised by
their experiences in the war.
The famous Bauhaus style of design and architecture developed. Artists such as Walter Gropius,
Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky taught at the Bauhaus design college in Dessau. The Bauhaus
architects rejected traditional styles to create new and exciting buildings. They produced designs
for anything from houses and shops to art galleries and factories. The first Bauhaus exhibition
attracted 15,000 visitors.
The 1920s were a golden age for German cinema, producing one of its greatest ever
international stars, Marlene Dietrich, and one of its most celebrated directors, Fritz Lang. Berlin
was famous for its daring and liberated night life. Going to clubs was a major pastime. In 1927
there were 900 dance bands in Berlin alone. Cabaret artists performed songs criticising political
leaders that would have been banned in the Kaiser’s days. These included songs about sex that
would have shocked an earlier generation of Germans.
Foreign policy
Stresemann’s greatest triumphs were in foreign policy. In 1925 he signed the Locarno Treaties,
Poster for one of Marlene Dietrich’s films. guaranteeing not to try to change Germany’s western borders with France and Belgium. As a result,
in 1926 Germany was accepted into the League of Nations. Here Stresemann began to work, quietly
but steadily, on reversing some of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, particularly those concerning
SOURCE
14 reparations and Germany’s eastern frontiers. By the time he died in 1929, Stresemann had
What we have today is a coalition of negotiated the Young Plan, which further lightened the reparations burden on Germany and led to
ministers, not a coalition of parties. the final removal of British, French and Belgian troops from the Rhineland.
There are no government parties,
only opposition parties. This state
of things is a greater danger to the Problems
democratic system than ministers and
parliamentarians realise. The economy
The economic boom in Weimar Germany was precarious. The US loans could be called in at short
Gustav Stolper, a Reichstag member for notice, which would cause ruin in Germany.
the DDP in 1929.
The main economic winners in Germany were big businesses (such as the steel and chemicals
industries) which controlled about half of Germany’s industrial production. Other winners were big
landowners, particularly if they owned land in towns – the value of land in Berlin rose by 700 per
Revision Tip cent in this period. The workers in the big industries gained as well. Most Weimar governments were
Weimar society sympathetic towards the unions, which led to improved pay and conditions. However, even here there
♦ Make sure you can describe one were concerns as unemployment began to rise – it was 6 per cent of the working population by 1928.
example of cultural achievement The main losers were the peasant farmers and sections of the middle classes. The peasant
and one example of economic
achievement in this period.
farmers had increased production during the war. In peacetime, they found themselves
♦ Learn and repeat at least one overproducing. They had mortgages to pay but not enough demand for the food they produced.
example of winners and one Many small business owners became disillusioned during this period. Small shopkeepers saw their
example of losers in Germany at businesses threatened by large department stores (many of which were owned by Jews). A university
this time. lecturer in 1913 earned ten times as much as a coal miner. In the 1920s he only earned twice as
♦ Picture Weimar as a fresh, rosy much. These people began to feel that the Weimar government offered them little.
apple. Now try to explain to
someone looking at the apple that
it might have worms in. What are Politics
the worms? Despite the relative stability of Weimar politics in this period, both the Nazis and Communists were
building up their party organisations. Even during these stable years there were four different
chancellors and it was only the influence of party leaders which held the party coalitions together
(see Source 14).
236
More worrying for the Republic was that around 30 per cent of the vote regularly went to
9 Germany, 1918–45
parties opposed to the Republic. Most serious of all, the right-wing organisations which posed the
greatest threat to the Republic were quiet rather than destroyed. The right-wing Nationalist Party
(DNVP) and the Nazis began to collaborate closely and make themselves appear more respectable.
Another event which would turn out to be very significant was that the German people elected
Hindenburg as President in 1926. He was opposed to democracy and wrote to the Kaiser in exile for
approval before he took up the post!
Culture
The Weimar culture was colourful and exciting to many. However, to many people living in
Germany’s villages and country towns, the culture of the cities seemed to represent a moral decline,
made worse by American immigrants and Jewish artists and musicians. As you have read, the
Bauhaus design college was in Dessau. What you were not told is that it was in Dessau because it
was forced out of Weimar by hostile town officials.
Organisations such as the Wandervogel movement were a reaction to Weimar’s culture. The
Wandervogel called for a return to simple country values and wanted to see more help for the
countryside and less decadence in the towns. It was a powerful feeling which the Nazis successfully
harnessed in later years.
237
9.2 Why was Hitler able to dominate Germany
DEPTH STUDIES
by 1934?
Profile Focus
Adolf Hitler – the early years,
Stresemann’s government succeeded in stabilising Germany. However, as
1889–1919
you have already seen, the extremist opponents of the Weimar government
had not disappeared. Through the 1920s they were organising and
regrouping, waiting for their chance to win power.
One of these extremist groups was the Nazi Party.You are now going to
look back at what it had been doing since 1919 and examine its changing
fortunes through the 1920s and early 1930s.
Your key question examines how the Nazis turned themselves from an
obscure fringe party in the 1920s to the most popular party in Germany
by 1933.You will see that there are a range of factors including Hitler’s
skills as a leader and the economic Depression that hit Germany in the
1930s.
You will also examine the ruthless way that once elected as Chancellor
Hitler consolidated his power by removing all possible opposition.
Born in Austria in 1889. Focus Points
He got on badly with his father but
♦ What did the Nazi Party stand for in the 1920s?
was fond of his mother.
At 16 he left school and went to ♦ Why did the Nazis have little success before 1930?
Vienna to become a painter. However, ♦ Why was Hitler able to become Chancellor by 1933?
he was not successful and between ♦ How did Hitler consolidate his power in 1933–34?
1909 and 1914 he was virtually a
‘down and out’ on the streets of
Vienna.
During this period he developed his
hatred of foreigners and Jews. Hitler and the Nazis
When war broke out in 1914, Hitler
joined the German army and served The Nazis began as the German Workers’ Party, led by Anton Drexler. In 1919 Adolf Hitler joined
with distinction, winning the Iron
Cross.
the party. Drexler soon realised that Hitler had great talent and within months he had put him in
Hitler found it very hard to accept the charge of propaganda and the political ideas of the party. In 1920 the party announced its Twenty-
armistice and was completely unable Five Point Programme (see Factfile), and renamed itself the National Socialist German Workers’
to accept the Treaty of Versailles. Party, or Nazis for short.
He despised the Weimar democracy
and like many Germans looked back to
In 1921 Hitler removed Drexler as leader. Hitler’s energy, commitment and above all his power
the ‘glorious days’ of the Kaiser. as a speaker were soon attracting attention.
After the war, Hitler stayed in the
army, working in Munich spying on
extremist groups. It was in this job
SOURCE
1
that he came across the German The most active political force in Bavaria at the present time is the National
Workers’ Party. He liked their ideas and Socialist Party . . . It has recently acquired a political influence quite
joined in 1919. disproportionate to its actual numerical strength . . . Adolf Hitler from the very
first has been the dominating force in the movement and the personality of this
man has undoubtedly been one of the most important factors contributing to its
Factfile success . . . His ability to influence a popular assembly is uncanny.
Twenty-Five Point Programme
American intelligence report on political activities in Germany, 1922.
The most important points were:
the abolition of the Treaty of Versailles
union of Germany and Austria
only ‘true’ Germans to be allowed
to live in Germany. Jews in particular
were to be excluded
Revision Tip
♦ Make sure you can describe two aims of the Nazis (use pages 240–241 as well
large industries and businesses to be
nationalised
for this).
generous old age pension ♦ Try to explain one way in which the Munich Putsch was a disaster for the Nazis
a strong central government. and one way it was a success.
238
SOURCE
2 Hitler had a clear and simple appeal. He stirred nationalist passions in his audiences. He gave
9 Germany, 1918–45
Hitler knew how to whip up those them scapegoats to blame for Germany’s problems: the Allies, the Versailles Treaty, the ‘November
Criminals’ (the Socialist politicians who signed the Treaty), the Communists and the Jews.
crowds jammed closely in a dense cloud
His meetings were so successful that his opponents tried to disrupt them. To counter this, he
of cigarette smoke – not by argument,
set up the SA, also known as storm troopers or brownshirts, in 1921. These hired thugs protected
but by his manner: the roaring and
Hitler’s meetings but also disrupted those of other parties.
especially the power of his repetitions By 1923 the Nazis were still very much a minority party, but Hitler had given them a high profile.
delivered in a certain infectious rhythm
. . . He would draw up a list of existing
evils and imaginary abuses and after The Munich Putsch, 1923
listing them, in higher and higher By November 1923 Hitler believed that the moment had come for him to topple the Weimar
crescendo, he screamed: ‘And whose government. The government was preoccupied with the economic crisis. Stresemann had just
fault is it? It’s all . . . the fault . . . of called off Germany’s passive resistance in the Ruhr (see pages 233–34). On 8 November, Hitler
the Jews!’ hijacked a local government meeting and announced he was taking over the government of
Bavaria. He was joined by the old war hero Ludendorff.
A person who went to Nazi meetings Nazi storm troopers began taking over official buildings. The next day, however, the Weimar
describes the impact of Hitler’s
speeches. From A Part of Myself:
government forces hit back. Police rounded up the storm troopers and in a brief exchange of shots
Portrait of an Epoch, by C Zuckmayer. sixteen Nazis were killed by the police. The rebellion broke up in chaos. Hitler escaped in a car,
while Ludendorff and others stayed to face the armed police.
Hitler had miscalculated the mood of the German people. In the short term, the Munich
SOURCE
3 Putsch was a disaster for him. People did not rise up to support him. He and other leading Nazis
‘Power!’ screamed Adolf. ‘We must were arrested and charged with treason. At the trial, however, Hitler gained enormous publicity for
have power!’ ‘Before we gain it,’ I himself and his ideas, as his every word was reported in the newspapers.
replied firmly, ‘let us decide what we In fact, Hitler so impressed the judges that he and his accomplices got off very lightly.
propose to do with it.’ Ludendorff was freed altogether and Hitler was given only five years in prison, even though the
Hitler, who even then could hardly legal guidelines said that high treason should carry a life sentence. In the end, Hitler only served
bear contradiction, thumped the table nine months of the sentence and did so in great comfort in Landsberg castle. This last point was
and barked: ‘Power first – afterwards very significant. It was clear that Hitler had some sympathy and support from important figures
we can act as circumstances dictate.’ in the legal system. Because of his links with Ludendorff, Hitler probably gained the attention of
important figures in the army. Time would show that Hitler was down, but not out.
Leading Nazi Otto Strasser recalls a
conversation with Hitler in the early
1920s.
SOURCE
4
Think!
A foreign intelligence service wants
to keep an eye on Hitler and the Nazi
Party. They want to know about this
new man:
♦ his background
♦ abilities
♦ why his ideas are proving popular
with some Germans
♦ why the Munich Putsch failed
♦ why Hitler got off so lightly.
Use the sources and information
on these two pages to write a short
report under each heading.
Source Analysis u
1 What impression does Source 4 give
of the Putsch and Hitler’s role in it?
2 Why would you have concerns
about it as a source for finding out
what happened? A painting of the Munich Putsch made by Arthur Wirth, one of the Nazis who took
part in it. Hitler is in the centre and Ludendorff is in the black hat to Hitler’s right.
239
SOURCE
5 The Nazis in the wilderness, 1924–29
DEPTH STUDIES
When I resume active work, it will Hitler used his time in prison to write a book, Mein Kampf (My Struggle), which clarified and
be necessary to pursue a new policy. presented his ideas about Germany’s future. It was also while in prison that he came to the
Instead of working to achieve power conclusion that the Nazis would not be able to seize power by force. They would have to work
by armed conspiracy we shall have to within the democratic system to achieve power but, once in power, they could destroy that system.
take hold of our noses and enter the As soon as he was released from prison, Hitler set about rebuilding the Nazi Party so that it
Reichstag against the Catholic and could take power through democratic means. He saw the Communists building up their strength
Marxist deputies. If out-voting them through youth organisations and recruitment drives. Soon the Nazis were doing the same.
takes longer than out-shooting them, They fought the Reichstag elections for the first time in May 1924 and won 32 seats.
at least the results will be guaranteed Encouraged by this, Hitler created a network of local Nazi parties which in turn set up the Hitler
by their own constitution. Any lawful Youth, the Nazi Students’ League and similar organisations.
process is slow. Sooner or later we shall
have a majority and after that we shall
SOURCE
6
have Germany. The German people is an enslaved people. We have had all our sovereign rights
taken from us. We are just good enough that international capital allows us to
Hitler, writing while in prison in 1923. fill its money sacks with interest payments. That and only that is the result of a
centuries-long history of heroism. Have we deserved it? No, and no again!
Factfile Therefore we demand that a struggle against this condition of shame and
Hitler’s views misery begin . . .
In Mein Kampf and his later writings, Three million people lack work and sustenance . . . The illusion of freedom,
Hitler set out the main Nazi beliefs: peace and prosperity that we were promised . . . is vanishing . . .
National Socialism: This stood for
loyalty to Germany, racial purity, Thus we demand the right of work and a decent living for every working
equality and state control of the German.
economy.
Racism: The Aryans (white Europeans) While the front soldier was fighting in the trenches to defend his Fatherland,
were the Master Race. All other races some Eastern Jewish profiteer robbed him of hearth and home. The Jew lives in
and especially the Jews were inferior. palaces and the proletarian, the front soldier, lives in holes that do not deserve to
Armed force: Hitler believed that war
and struggle were an essential part of
be called ‘homes’. That is . . . rather an injustice that cries out to the heavens. A
the development of a healthy Aryan government that does nothing is useless and must vanish, the sooner the better.
race. Therefore we demand homes for German soldiers and workers. If there is not
Living space (‘Lebensraum’): Germany
needed to expand as its people were enough money to build them, drive the foreigners out so that Germans can live
hemmed in. This expansion would be on German soil.
mainly at the expense of Russia and
Poland.
Our people is growing, others diminishing. It will mean the end of our history if
The Führer: Debate and democratic a cowardly and lazy policy takes from us the posterity that will one day be called
discussion produced weakness. upon to fulfil our historical mission.
Strength lay in total loyalty to the
leader (the Führer). Therefore we demand land on which to grow the grain that will feed our
children.
We, however, demand a government of national labour, statesmen who are
men and whose aim is the creation of a German state.
These days anyone has the right to speak in Germany – the Jew, the
Frenchman, the Englishman, the League of Nations, the conscience of the world
and the Devil knows who else. Everyone but the German worker. He has to shut
up and work. Every four years he elects a new set of torturers, and everything
Source Analysis u stays the same. That is unjust and treasonous. We need tolerate it no longer.
1 Read Source 6. List the demands We have the right to demand that only Germans who build this state may speak,
made by Goebbels. those whose fate is bound to the fate of their Fatherland.
2 Would you say this source appeals
Therefore we demand the annihilation of the system of exploitation! Up with
more to the hearts of German
people than to their minds? the German worker’s state! Germany for the Germans!
Support your answer with evidence
A pamphlet called ‘We demand’, written in 1927 by Nazi propaganda expert
from the source.
Joseph Goebbels.
240
As you can see from Source 7, by 1927 the Nazis were still trying to appeal to German workers, as
9 Germany, 1918–45
Focus Task A they had when the party was first founded. The results of the 1928 elections convinced the Nazis
What did the Nazis stand for that they had to look elsewhere for support. The Nazis gained only twelve Reichstag seats and only
in the 1920s? a quarter of the Communist vote. Although their anti-semitic policies gained them some support,
1 Using the information and sources they had failed to win over the workers. Workers with radical political views were more likely to
from pages 238–41, draw up a support the Communists. The great majority of workers supported the socialist Social Democratic
diagram or chart to represent the Party (SPD), as they had done in every election since 1919. Indeed, despite the Nazis’ arguments
Nazis’ ideas. You can use this for that workers were exploited, urban industrial workers actually felt that they were doing rather well
revision so make the headings big
in Weimar Germany in the years up to 1929.
and bold. You can use the ones
below and/or add others of your Other groups in society were doing less well. The Nazis found that they gained more support
own: from groups such as the peasant farmers in northern Germany and middle-class shopkeepers and
♦ The Treaty of Versailles small business people in country towns. Unlike Britain, Germany still had a large rural population
♦ Greater Germany who lived and worked on the land – probably about 35 per cent of the entire population. They were
♦ The German people not sharing in Weimar Germany’s economic prosperity. The Nazis highlighted the importance of
♦ Lebensraum the peasants in their plans for Germany, promising to help agriculture if they came to power. They
♦ Race and the Jews
praised the peasants as racially pure Germans. Nazi propaganda also contrasted the supposedly
♦ Government/Weimar Republic
♦ Economic policies
clean and simple life of the peasants with that of the allegedly corrupt, immoral, crime-ridden
♦ Social policies. cities (for which they blamed the Jews). The fact that the Nazis despised Weimar culture also
2 What was the biggest change in gained them support among some conservative people in the towns, who saw Weimar’s flourishing
Nazi policy after 1923? art, literature and film achievements as immoral.
SOURCE
8
At one of the early congresses I was sitting surrounded by thousands of SA men.
SOURCE
7 As Hitler spoke I was most interested at the shouts and more often the muttered
exclamations of the men around me, who were mainly workmen or lower-middle-
class types. ‘He speaks for me . . . Ach, Gott, he knows how I feel’ . . . One man
in particular struck me as he leant forward with his head in his hands, and with a
sort of convulsive sob said: ‘Gott sei Dank [God be thanked], he understands.’
E Amy Buller, Darkness over Germany, published in 1943. Buller was an anti-Nazi
German teacher.
In 1925 Hitler enlarged the SA. About 55 per cent of the SA came from the ranks of the unemployed.
Many were ex-servicemen from the war. He also set up a new group called the SS. The SS were
similar to the SA but were fanatically loyal to Hitler personally. Membership of the party rose to over
100,000 by 1928.
Hitler appointed Joseph Goebbels to take charge of Nazi propaganda. Goebbels was highly
efficient at spreading the Nazi message. He and Hitler believed that the best way to reach what they
called ‘the masses’ was by appealing to their feelings rather than by rational argument. Goebbels
produced posters, leaflets, films and radio broadcasts; he organised rallies; he set up ‘photo
opportunities’.
Despite these shifting policies and priorities, there was no electoral breakthrough for the Nazis.
Even after all their hard work, in 1928 they were still a fringe minority party who had the support
A Nazi election poster from 1928, saying of less than 3 per cent of the population. They were the smallest party with fewer seats than the
‘Work, freedom and bread! Vote for the Communists. The prosperity of the Stresemann years and Stresemann’s success in foreign policy
National Socialists.’ made Germans uninterested in extreme politics.
Focus Task B
Why did the Nazis have little success before 1930?
On the right are some factors which explain the Nazis’ lack ♦ disastrous Putsch of 1923
of success. ♦ disruption of meetings by political enemies
At the moment these factors are organised in alphabetical ♦ lack of support in the police and army
order. Work in groups to rearrange these factors into what ♦ most industrial workers supported left-wing parties
you think is their order of importance. ♦ Nazi aims were irrelevant to most Germans
♦ successes of Weimar government (for example in the
economy, foreign policy)
241
The Depression and the rise
DEPTH STUDIES
Revision Tip
♦ Can you describe two effects of
the Depression on Germans? of the Nazis
♦ Make sure you can explain two
ways in which the Depression In 1929 the American stock market crashed and sent the USA into a disastrous economic
helped the Nazis. depression. In a very short time, countries around the world began to feel the effects of this
depression. Germany was particularly badly affected. American bankers and businessmen lost huge
amounts of money in the crash. To pay off their debts they asked German banks to repay the money
they had borrowed. The result was economic collapse in Germany. Businesses went bankrupt,
workers were laid off and unemployment rocketed.
SOURCE
9 SOURCE
10
No one knew how many there were of them. They
completely filled the streets. They stood or lay about in the
streets as if they had taken root there. They sat or lay on
the pavements or in the roadway and gravely shared out
scraps of newspapers among themselves.
An eyewitness describes the unemployed vagrants in Germany
in 1932.
200 vote In the 1930 elections the Nazis got 107 seats. In November 1932 they got nearly 200. They did
Nazi vote 5 not yet have an overall majority, but they were the biggest single party.
Unemployed (millions)
150
4
Why did the Nazis succeed in elections?
3 When the Nazis were well established in power in Germany in the 1930s, their propaganda chief,
100
Goebbels, created his own version of the events of 1929–33 that brought Hitler to power. In this
2
version, it was Hitler’s destiny to become Germany’s leader, and the German people finally came to
50
1
recognise this. How valid was this view? On pages 243–44 you are going to investigate
0 0 Nazi campaigning
1928 1930 July Nov
1932 1932 Nazi campaign methods were modern and effective. The Nazis’ greatest campaigning asset was
Hitler. He was a powerful speaker. Hitler ran for president in 1932. Despite his defeat, the campaign
Support for the Nazis and Communists, raised his profile hugely. He was years ahead of his time as a communicator. Using films, radio and
242 and unemployment, 1928–32. records he brought his message to millions. He travelled by plane on a hectic tour of rallies all over
SOURCE
12 Germany. He appeared as a dynamic man of the moment, the leader of a
9 Germany, 1918–45
modern party with modern ideas. At the same time, he was able to appear
The Duties of German Communist Party volunteers to be a man of the people, someone who knew and understood the people
and their problems.
Nazi posters and pamphlets such as Sources 12 and 13 could be
found everywhere. Their rallies impressed people with their energy,
enthusiasm and sheer size. Nazis relied on generalised slogans rather
than detailed policies – ‘uniting the people of Germany behind one
leader’; ‘going back to traditional values’ – though they were never
very clear about what this meant in terms of policies. This made it hard
to criticise them. When they were criticised for a specific policy, they
were quite likely to drop it. (For example, when industrialists expressed
Unselfishly they help the farmers Particular detachments are responsible for
to dry the harvest. improving transport. concern about Nazi plans to nationalise industry, they simply dropped the
policy.) The Nazis repeated at every opportunity that they believed Jews,
Communists, Weimar politicians and the Treaty of Versailles were the
causes of Germany’s problems. They expressed contempt for Weimar’s
democratic system and said that it was unable to solve Germany’s
economic problems.
At this time, there were frequent street battles between Communist
gangs and the police. Large unruly groups of unemployed workers
gathered on street corners. In contrast, the SA and SS gave an impression
of discipline and order. Many people felt the country needed this kind of
They work nights and overtime getting They increase their fitness for the
together useful equipment. fatherland with target practice. order. The Nazis also organised soup kitchens and provided shelter in
hostels for the unemployed.
An English translation of a 1931 Nazi election poster.
SOURCE
14
My mother saw a storm trooper parade in the streets
SOURCE
13 of Heidelberg. The sight of discipline in a time of chaos,
the impression of energy in an atmosphere of universal
hopelessness seems to have won her over.
Albert Speer, writing in 1931. Later, he was to become an
important and powerful Nazi leader.
SOURCE
15
He began to speak and I immediately disliked him. I didn’t
know then what he would later become. I found him rather
comical, with his funny moustache. He had a scratchy voice
and a rather strange appearance, and he shouted so much.
He was shouting in this small room, and what he was saying
was very simplistic. I thought he wasn’t quite normal. I found
him spooky.
An eyewitness account of one of Hitler’s meetings.
Revision Tip
♦ Give two examples of places where Nazi support rose.
♦ Could you explain negative cohesion to someone who
has never heard the phrase?
A Nazi election poster from July 1932. The Nazis proclaim ‘We
build!’ and promise to provide work, freedom and bread. They
accuse the opposing parties of planning to use terror, corruption,
lies and other strategies as the basis for their government. 243
SOURCE
16 ‘Negative cohesion’
DEPTH STUDIES
Our opponents accuse us National As Source 15 on page 243 shows, not everyone was taken in by Hitler’s magnetism. But even some
Socialists, and me in particular, of of the sceptics supported the Nazis. The historian Gordon Craig believed that this was because of
being intolerant and quarrelsome. ‘negative cohesion’. People supported the Nazis not because they shared Nazi views (that would be
They say that we don’t want to work positive cohesion) but because they shared Nazi fears: if you hate what I hate, then I'll support you!
with other parties. They say the
National Socialists are not German at Disillusionment with democracy
all, because they refuse to work with Perhaps the biggest negative was a dissatisfaction with democracy in Weimar Germany. Politicians
other political parties. So is it typically seemed unable to tackle the problems of the Depression. When the Depression began to bite,
German to have thirty political parties? Chancellor Brüning actually cut government spending and welfare benefits. He urged Germans to
I have to admit one thing – these make sacrifices. Some historians think that he was deliberately making the situation worse in order
gentlemen are quite right. We are to get the international community to cancel reparations payments. Other historians think that he
intolerant. I have given myself this one was afraid of hyperinflation as in 1923.
goal – to sweep these thirty political Brüning called new elections in 1930. This was a disastrous decision, as it gave the Nazis
parties out of Germany. the opportunity to exploit the discontent in Germany. The new elections resulted in yet another
divided Reichstag. The impression was that democracy involved politicians squabbling over which
Hitler speaking at an election rally, job they would get. Meanwhile, they did nothing about the real world, where unemployment was
July 1932. heading towards 6 million and the average German’s income had fallen by 40 per cent since 1929.
The Reichstag seemed irrelevant. It met for only five days in 1932. Brüning relied on President
SOURCE
17 Hindenburg’s emergency powers, bypassing the democratic process altogether.
The so-called race of poets and
thinkers is hurrying with flags flying The Communist threat
towards dictatorship . . . the radicalism As the crisis deepened, Communist support was rising too. The Nazis turned this to their advantage.
of the Right [Nazis] has unleashed ‘Fear of Communism’ was another shared negative.
a strong radicalism on the Left Business leaders feared the Communists because of their plans to introduce state control of
[Communists]. The Communists have businesses. They were also concerned about the growing strength of Germany’s trade unions. They
made gains almost everywhere. The felt the Nazis would combat these threats and some began to put money into Nazi campaign funds.
situation is such that half the German Farmers were also alarmed by the Communists. In the USSR, the Communist government had
people have declared themselves taken over all of the land. Millions of peasants had been killed or imprisoned in the process. In
contrast, the Nazis promised to help Germany’s desperately struggling small farmers.
against the present state.
The Reich Interior Minister commenting Decadence
on the rise of the Nazis and the As for modern decadent Weimar culture – the Nazis could count on all those who felt traditional
Communists in 1932.
German values were under threat. The Nazis talked about restoring these old-fashioned values.
The Social Democratic Party made a grave mistake in thinking that German people would
not fall for these vague promises and accusations. They underestimated the fear and anger that
German people felt towards the Weimar Republic.
9 Germany, 1918–45
After the Reichstag elections of July 1932 the Nazis were the largest single party (with 230
July 1932 seats) but not a majority party. Hitler demanded the post of Chancellor from the President. However,
Hindenburg was suspicious of Hitler and refused. He allowed the current Chancellor Franz von
Papen to carry on. He then used his emergency powers to pass the measures that von Papen hoped
would solve the unemployment problem. However, von Papen was soon in trouble. He had virtually
no support at all in the Reichstag and so called yet another election.
In November 1932 the Nazis again came out as the largest party, although their share of the
November 1932 vote fell. Hitler regarded the election as a disaster. He had lost more than 2 million votes along with
38 seats in the Reichstag. The signs were that the Hitler tide had finally turned. The Nazis started to
run out of funds. Hitler is said to have threatened suicide.
Hindenburg again refused to appoint Hitler as Chancellor. In December 1932 he
December 1932 chose Kurt von Schleicher, one of his own advisers and a bitter rival of von Papen. But within a
month, however, von Schleicher too was forced to resign.
By this time it was clear that the Weimar system of government was not working. The system of
balances and proportional representation meant that no political group was able to provide strong rule.
This had left the 84-year-old President Hindenburg to more or less run the country using his emergency
powers, supported by army leaders and rich industrialists. In one sense, Hindenburg had already
overthrown the principles of democracy by running Germany with emergency powers. If he was to
rescue the democratic system, he needed a Chancellor who actually had support in the Reichstag.
Through January 1933 Hindenburg and von Papen met secretly with industrialists, army leaders
January 1933 and politicians. On 30 January, to everyone’s surprise, they offered Hitler the post of Chancellor. With
only a few Nazis in the Cabinet and von Papen as Vice Chancellor, they were confident that they could
limit Hitler’s influence and resist his extremist demands. The idea was that the policies would be
made by the Cabinet, which was filled with conservatives like von Papen. Hitler would be there to get
SOURCE
18 support in the Reichstag for those policies and to control the Communists.
The majority of Germans never voted
So Hitler ended up as Chancellor through a behind-the-scenes deal by some German
for the Nazis.
aristocrats. Both Hindenburg and von Papen were sure that they could control Hitler. They were
The Nazis made it clear they would very wrong.
destroy democracy and all who stood
in their way. Why then didn’t their
enemies join together to stop Hitler? . . . Focus Task
Had the Communists and Socialists How did Hitler become Chancellor in 1933?
joined forces they would probably Here is a list of factors that helped Hitler come to power.
have been strong enough both in the
Nazi strengths
Reichstag and on the streets to have
♦ Hitler’s speaking skills ♦ Nazi policies
blocked the Nazis. The fact was that ♦ Propaganda campaigns ♦ Support from big business
by 1932–3 there were simply not ♦ Their criticisms of the Weimar ♦ Violent treatment of their opponents
enough Germans who believed in system of government
democracy and individual freedom to Opponents’ weaknesses
save the Weimar Republic. ♦ Failure to deal with the Depression ♦ Attitudes of Germans to the
♦ Failure to co-operate with one another democratic parties
S Williams, in The Rise and Fall of
Hitler’s Germany, published in 1986, Other factors
assesses the reasons for Hitler’s success. ♦ Weaknesses of the Weimar Republic ♦ The impact of the Depression
♦ Scheming of Hindenburg and ♦ The Treaty of Versailles
von Papen ♦ Memories of the problems of 1923
Revision Tip 1 For each factor, write down one example of how it helped Hitler.
♦ Make sure you can describe three 2 Give each factor a mark out of 10 for its importance in bringing Hitler to
of the events (in date order) that power.
brought Hitler to power in 1933. 3 Choose what you think are the five most important factors and write a short
♦ ‘Hindenburg offered Hitler the paragraph on each, explaining why you have chosen it.
post of Chancellor because every 4 If you took away any of those factors, would Hitler still have become
other alternative had failed.’ Could Chancellor?
you explain one point for and one 5 Were any of those five factors also present in the 1920s?
point against this argument? 6 If so, explain why the Nazis were not successful in the 1920s.
245
SOURCE
19 Hitler consolidates his position
DEPTH STUDIES
It is easy to forget, but when Hitler became Chancellor in January 1933 he was in a very precarious
position (see Source 19). Few people thought he would hold on to power for long. Even fewer
thought that by the summer of 1934 he would be the supreme dictator of Germany. He achieved this
through a clever combination of methods – some legal, others dubious. He also managed to defeat
or reach agreements with those who could have stopped him.
Focus Task
How did Hitler consolidate his power in 1933–34?
Work in groups of three or four. Take one of these topics each. Report back your
answers to the others then try to summarise in just a headline each how the
following helped Hitler consolidate power:
♦ the Reichstag Fire
♦ the Enabling Act
♦ the Night of the Long Knives.
246
The Night of the Long Knives
9 Germany, 1918–45
Factfile
Nazi consolidation of power Within a year any opponents (or potential opponents) of the Nazis had either left Germany or been
30 January 1933 Hitler appointed
taken to special concentration camps run by the SS. Other political parties were banned.
Chancellor; Goering Minister of Hitler was still not entirely secure, however. The leading officers in the army were not
Interior. impressed by him and were particularly suspicious of Hitler’s SA and its leader Ernst Röhm. The
17 February Goering ordered local SA was a badly disciplined force and, what’s more, Röhm talked of making the SA into a second
police forces to co-operate with the SA
and SS.
German army. Hitler himself was also suspicious of Röhm. Hitler feared that Röhm’s control over
27 February Reichstag fire. Arrest of the 4 million SA men made him a potentially dangerous rival.
4,000 Communists and other Nazi Hitler had to choose between the army and the SA. He made his choice and acted ruthlessly.
opponents on the same night. On the weekend of 29–30 June squads of SS men broke into the homes of Röhm and other leading
28 February Emergency Decree issued
by Hindenburg:
figures in the SA and arrested them. Hitler accused Röhm of plotting to overthrow and murder
– police to arrest suspects and hold him. Over the weekend Röhm and possibly as many as 400 others were executed. These included
them without trial, search houses, the former Chancellor von Schleicher, a fierce critic of Hitler, and others who actually had no
ban meetings, close newspapers and connection with Röhm. This purge came to be known as the Night of the Long Knives.
radio stations
– Hitler took over regional
Hindenburg thanked Hitler for his ‘determined action which has nipped treason in the bud’.
governments. The army said it was well satisfied with the events of the weekend.
5 March Reichstag elections: The SA was not disbanded. It remained as a Nazi paramilitary organisation, but was very much
government used control of radio and subordinate to the SS. Many of its members were absorbed by the army and the SS.
police to intimidate opponents. Nazi
election slogan was ‘The battle against
Marxism’. Won 52 per cent of vote.
13 March Goebbels appointed head
The Army oath
of Ministry for Propaganda. Took Soon after the Night of the Long Knives, Hindenburg died and Hitler took over as Supreme Leader
control of all media. (Führer) of Germany. On 2 August 1934 the entire army swore an oath of personal loyalty to
24 March The Enabling Act allowed
Hitler to pass decrees without the
Adolf Hitler as Führer of Germany. The army agreed to stay out of politics and to serve Hitler. In
President’s involvement. This made return, Hitler spent vast sums on rearmament, brought back conscription and made plans to make
Hitler a legal dictator. Germany a great military power again.
7 April Civil Service administration,
court, and education purged of
‘alien elements’, i.e. Jews and other
opponents of the Nazis.
1 May Workers granted May Day Key Question Summary
holiday. Why was Hitler able to dominate Germany by 1934?
2 May Trade unions banned; all
workers to belong to new German
1 The Nazi Party was formed in 1919 and Hitler soon became its leader.
Labour Front (DAF). 2 Its 25-point programme appealed to ex-soldiers and those on the right but it
9 June Employment Law: major did not enjoy wider support.
programme of public works (e.g. road 3 While in prison after the Munich Putsch of 1923, Hitler wrote Mein Kampf,
building) to create jobs. setting out his ideas.
14 July Law against the Formation of 4 The Nazi Party reorganised itself in the 1920s but was still a fringe party in
New Parties: Germany became a one- the 1928 elections.
party state. 5 The Great Depression led to unemployment and economic hardship,
20 July Concordat (agreement) with the circumstances in which the Nazis could flourish.
Roman Catholic Church: government
6 Nazi criticisms of the Weimar government and the Treaty of Versailles were
protected religious freedom; Church
banned from political activity.
popular along with their ideas on rebuilding Germany.
January 1934 All state governments 7 They used innovative techniques – rallies, slogans, films, radio, posters and
taken over. pamphlets – to put across their ideas.
30 June Night of the Long Knives. 8 Hitler was a great asset as a highly effective speaker who appeared to
August On death of Hindenburg, understand the people’s problems and express their hopes.
Hitler became Führer. German armed 9 Disillusionment with the Weimar Republic pushed Germans towards
forces swore oath of loyalty to him. extremist parties, both the Nazis and the Communists.
10 There was violence and lawlessness and groups like businessmen and
farmers, who feared Communism, liked the Nazis' anti-Communist message.
11 The Nazis became the biggest single party in the 1932 elections.
Revision Tip 12 The leaders of the Weimar Republic thought they could use Hitler to their
♦ Choose three events from the advantage by making him Chancellor. But he used emergency powers and
Factfile above and make sure you the Enabling Act to establish himself as dictator.
can describe them accurately.
♦ Give the Enabling Act and the
Night of The Long Knives marks
out of 10 for their importance.
Now prepare two points that
justify your marks.
247
9.3 How effectively did the Nazis control
DEPTH STUDIES
Germany, 1933–45?
Focus The police state
There was supposed to be no room for opposition The Nazis had a powerful range of organisations and weapons that they
of any kind in Nazi Germany. The aim was to create
used to control Germany and terrorise Germans into submission.
a totalitarian state. In a totalitarian state there can be
no rival parties, no political debate. Ordinary citizens
must divert their whole energy into serving the state
and to doing what its leaders want.
In this section you will examine how the Nazis
combined the strategies of terror and propaganda to
control Germany.
Focus Points The Gestapo
♦ How much opposition was there to the Nazi The Gestapo (secret state police) was the force which was perhaps
regime? most feared by the ordinary German citizen. Under the command of
♦ How effectively did the Nazis deal with their Reinhard Heydrich, Gestapo agents had sweeping powers. They could
political opponents? arrest citizens on suspicion and send them to concentration camps
♦ How did the Nazis use culture and the mass media without trial or even explanation.
to control the people? Modern research has shown that Germans thought the Gestapo
♦ Why did the Nazis persecute many groups in were much more powerful than they actually were. As a result, many
German society? ordinary Germans informed on each other because they thought the
♦ Was Nazi Germany a totalitarian state? Gestapo would find out anyway.
Focus Task
Summarise the information on these two pages in a table
like this:
248
9 Germany, 1918–45
The SS Revision Tip
♦ Make sure you can describe at
least two methods of control
SOURCE
1 the Nazis used.
Order Himmler Race and resettlement office ♦ Choose one method and make
police (Reichsführer–SS and (Resettlement policy, especially sure you can explain how it
(Ordinary police) Head of Germany's police) in the occupied territories)
was effective.
The SS was formed in 1925 from fanatics loyal to Hitler. After virtually destroying the SA in
1934, it grew into a huge organisation with many different responsibilities. It was led by Heinrich
Himmler. SS men were of course Aryans, very highly trained and totally loyal to Hitler. Under
Himmler, the SS had primary responsibility for destroying opposition to Nazism and carrying out
the racial policies of the Nazis.
Two important sub-divisions of the SS were the Death’s Head units and the Waffen-SS. The
Death’s Head units were responsible for the concentration camps and the slaughter of the Jews.
The Waffen-SS were special SS armoured regiments which fought alongside the regular army.
Concentration camps
Concentration camps were the Nazis’ ultimate sanction against their own people. They
were set up almost as soon as Hitler took power. The first concentration camps in 1933 were
simply makeshift prisons in disused factories and warehouses. Soon these were purpose-built.
These camps were usually in isolated rural areas, and run by SS Death’s Head units. Prisoners
were forced to do hard labour. Food was very limited and prisoners suffered harsh discipline,
beatings and random executions. By the late 1930s, deaths in the camps became increasingly
common and very few people emerged alive from them. Jews, Socialists, Communists, trade
unionists, churchmen and anyone else brave enough to criticise the Nazis ended up there.
SOURCE
2
249
SOURCE
3 Propaganda, culture and mass
DEPTH STUDIES
SOURCE
4
A Hitler speaks to the assembled Germans. C German youth marching with spades.
250 The annual rally at Nuremberg. The whole town was taken over and the rally dominated radio broadcasts and newsreels.
The media and culture
9 Germany, 1918–45
Think!
In groups, discuss which of the Less spectacular than the rallies but possibly more important was Goebbels’ control of the media. In
following statements you most agree contrast with the free expression of Weimar Germany, the Nazis controlled the media and all aspects
with. of culture strictly.
A Goebbels’ work was more ● No books could be published without Goebbels’ permission (not surprisingly the best seller in
important to Nazi success than Nazi Germany was Mein Kampf). In 1933 he organised a high-profile ‘book-burning’. Nazi
that of Himmler (head of the SS).
students came together publicly to burn any books that included ideas unacceptable to the
B Himmler’s work was more
important to Nazi success than
Nazis.
Goebbels’. ● Artists suffered the same kinds of restriction as writers. Only Nazi-approved painters could
C The techniques of repression and show their works. These were usually paintings or sculptures of heroic-looking Aryans, military
propaganda go hand in hand – figures or images of the ideal Aryan family.
neither would work without the ● Goebbels also controlled the newspapers closely. They were not allowed to print anti-Nazi
other. ideas. Within months of the Nazi takeover, Jewish editors and journalists found themselves out
of work and anti-Nazi newspapers were closed down. The German newspapers became very
SOURCE
5 dull reading and Germans bought fewer newspapers as a result – circulation fell by about
10 per cent.
Hitler’s dictatorship differed in
● The cinema was also closely controlled. All films – factual or fictional, thrillers or comedies
one fundamental point from all its
predecessors in history. It was the first – had to carry a pro-Nazi message. The newsreels which preceded feature films were full
dictatorship in the present period of of the greatness of Hitler and the massive achievements of Nazi Germany. There is evidence
that Germans avoided these productions by arriving late! Goebbels censored all foreign films
modern technical development which
coming into Germany.
made complete use of all technical
● He banned jazz music, which had been popular in Germany as elsewhere around Europe.
means for the domination of its own
He banned it because it was ‘Black’ music and black people were considered an inferior race.
country.
Goebbels plastered Germany with posters proclaiming the successes of Hitler and the Nazis and
Through technical devices like the attacking their opponents.
radio and loud-speaker, eighty million ● Goebbels also loved new technology and quickly saw the potential of radio broadcasting
people were deprived of independent for spreading the Nazi message. He made cheap radios available so all Germans could buy
thought. It was thereby possible to one (see Source 7) and he controlled all the radio stations. Listening to broadcasts from
subject them to the will of one man the BBC was punishable by death. Just in case people did not have a radio Goebbels placed
… The nightmare of many a man loudspeakers in the streets and public bars. Hitler’s speeches and those of other Nazi leaders
that one day nations could be ruled were repeated on the radio over and over
by technical means was realised in again until the ideas expressed in them – SOURCE
7
Hitler’s totalitarian system. German expansion into eastern Europe, the
inferiority of the Jews – came to be believed
Albert Speer, a leading Nazi, speaking at by the German people.
the Nuremberg war trials. Throughout this period Goebbels was supported
in his work by the SS and the Gestapo. When he
SOURCE
6 wanted to close down an anti-Nazi newspaper,
There are cinema evenings to be caught silence an anti-Nazi writer, or catch someone
up with, very enjoyable ones – if only listening to a foreign radio station, they were
there were not each time the bitterness there to do that work for him.
of the Third Reich’s self-adulation
and triumphalism. The renewal of
German art – recent German history Source Analysis u
as reflected in postage stamps, youth What does Source 7 tell you
camp, enthusiastic welcome for the about the effectiveness of Nazi
propaganda?
Führer in X or Y. Goebbels’ speech
on culture to the Germanised theatre
people, the biggest lecture theatre in
the world, the biggest autobahn in the Revision Tip
world, etc. etc. – the biggest lie in the ♦ Make sure you can describe at least
two things the Nazis banned and
world, the biggest disgrace in the world. one thing the Nazis promoted. Poster advertising cheap Nazi-produced
It can’t be helped . . . ♦ Would you be able to explain why radios. The text reads ‘All Germany hears
the Führer on the People’s Radio.’ The
Goebbels thought technology was
From the diary of Victor Klemperer for radios had only a short range and were
important? unable to pick up foreign stations.
8 August 1937.
251
Case study: The 1936 Olympics
DEPTH STUDIES
One of Goebbels’ greatest challenges came with the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. Other Nazis
Think! were opposed to holding the Games in Berlin, but Goebbels convinced Hitler that this was a great
1 In what ways was the Berlin propaganda opportunity both within Germany and internationally.
Olympics a propaganda success Goebbels and Hitler also thought that the Olympics could be a showcase for their doctrine that
for Goebbels? the Aryan race was superior to all other races. However, there was international pressure for nations
2 In what ways was it a failure? such as the USA to boycott the Games in protest against the Nazis’ repressive regime and anti-
3 Why do you think Nazi
Jewish politics. In response the Nazis included one token Jew in their team!
propaganda was more successful
within Germany than outside it? Goebbels built a brand new stadium to hold 100,000 people. It was lit by the most modern
4 You have already come across electric lighting. He brought in television cameras for the first time. The most sophisticated German
many examples of Nazi photo-electronic timing device was installed. The stadium had the largest stop clock ever built.
propaganda. Choose one example With guests and competitors from 49 countries coming into the heart of Nazi Germany, it was going
which you think is the clearest to take all Goebbels’ talents to show that Germany was a modern, civilised and successful nation.
piece of propaganda. Explain your No expense was spared. When the Games opened, the visitors were duly amazed at the scale of the
choice.
stadium, the wonderful facilities, and the efficiency of the organisation. However, they were also
struck, and in some cases appalled, by the almost fanatical devotion of the people to Hitler and by
the overt presence of army and SS soldiers who were patrolling or standing guard everywhere.
Revision Tip To the delight of Hitler and Goebbels, Germany came top of the medal table, way ahead of all
♦ Describe how the Nazis exploited other countries. However, to their great dismay, a black athlete, Jesse Owens, became the star of
the 1936 Olympics. the Games. He won four gold medals and broke eleven world records in the process. The ten black
♦ Can you explain one way in which members of the American team won thirteen medals between them. So much for Aryan superiority!
the Olympics were a propaganda
To the majority of German people, who had grown used to the Nazi propaganda machine, the
success and one way they were a
failure? Games appeared to present all the qualities they valued in the Nazis – a grand vision, efficiency,
power, strength and achievement. However, to many foreign visitors who were not used to such
blatant propaganda it backfired on the Nazi regime.
SOURCE
8
252
How did the Nazis deal with the
9 Germany, 1918–45
Churches?
The relationship between the Churches and the Nazis was complicated. In the early stages of the
Nazi regime, there was some co-operation between the Nazis and the Churches. Hitler signed a
Concordat with the Catholic Church in 1933. This meant that Hitler agreed to leave the Catholic
Church alone and allowed it to keep control of its schools. In return, the Church agreed to stay out
of politics.
Hitler tried to get all of the Protestant Churches to come together in one official Reich Church.
The Reich Church was headed by the Protestant Bishop Ludwig Müller. However, many Germans
still felt that their true loyalties lay with their original Churches in their local areas rather than with
this state-approved Church.
Hitler even encouraged an alternative religion to the Churches, the pagan German Faith
Movement (see Source 10).
Many churchgoers either supported the Nazis or did little to oppose them. However, there
were some very important exceptions. The Catholic Bishop Galen criticised the Nazis throughout
the 1930s. In 1941 he led a popular protest against the Nazi policies of killing mentally ill and
physically disabled people, forcing the Nazis temporarily to stop. He had such strong support
among his followers that the Nazis decided it was too risky to try to silence him because they did
not want trouble while Germany was at war.
Protestant ministers also resisted the Nazis. Pastor Martin Niemöller was one of the most
high-profile critics of the regime in the 1930s. Along with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, he formed an
alternative Protestant Church to the official Reich Church. These church leaders suffered a similar
fate to Hitler’s political opponents. Niemöller spent the years 1938–45 in a concentration camp
for resisting the Nazis. Dietrich Bonhoeffer preached against the Nazis until the Gestapo stopped
him in 1937. He then became involved with members of the army’s intelligence services who were
secretly opposed to Hitler. He helped Jews to escape from Germany. Gradually he increased his
activity. In 1942 he contacted the Allied commanders and asked what peace terms they would offer
Germany if Hitler were overthrown. He was arrested in October 1942 and hanged shortly before the
end of the war in April 1945.
SOURCE
9 SOURCE
10
Most postwar accounts have
concentrated on the few German
clerics who did behave bravely . . .
But these were few. Most German
church leaders were shamefully silent.
As late as January 1945, the Catholic
bishop of Würzburg was urging his flock
to fight on for the Fatherland, saying
that ‘salvation lies in sacrifice’.
British historian and journalist Charles
Wheeler, writing in 1996.
253
The persecution of minorities
DEPTH STUDIES
Focus Task
Why did the Nazis persecute
so many groups in Germany? The Nazis believed in the superiority of the Aryan race. Through their twelve years in power they
You have seen how the Nazis persecuted members of other races, and many minority groups such as gypsies, homosexuals and
persecuted people who opposed mentally handicapped people. They persecuted any group that they thought challenged Nazi ideas.
them politically, e.g. the Homosexuals were a threat to Nazi ideas about family life; the mentally handicapped were a threat to
Communists, socialists and trade Nazi ideas about Germans being a perfect master race; gypsies were thought to be an inferior people.
unionists. But why did they persecute The persecution of such minorities varied. In families where there were hereditary illnesses,
so many other groups?
sterilisation was enforced. Over 300,000 men and women were compulsorily sterilised between
Complete a table as follows. In
the first column, list the groups
1934 and 1945. A so-called ‘euthanasia programme’ was begun in 1939. At least 5,000 severely
mentioned in this section. In the mentally handicapped babies and children were killed between 1939 and 1945 either by injection
second column explain why these or by starvation. Between 1939 and 1941, 72,000 mentally ill patients were gassed before a public
groups were targeted, and in the third outcry in Germany itself ended the extermination. The extermination of the gypsies, on the other
column note Nazi actions towards hand, did not cause an outcry. Five out of six gypsies living in Germany in 1939 were killed by
them and what happened to them. the Nazis. Similarly, there was little or no complaint about the treatment of so-called ‘asocials’ –
homosexuals, alcoholics, the homeless, prostitutes, habitual criminals and beggars – who were
rounded up off the streets and sent to concentration camps.
Revision Tip You are going to investigate this most disturbing aspect of Nazi Germany by tracing the story
Make sure you can describe how the of Nazi treatment of the Jewish population in which anti-semitism culminated in the dreadful
Nazis persecuted the Jews and one slaughter of the ‘Final Solution’.
other group. It is important to be
able to explain Nazi theories on race
and how these led to persecution. Hitler and the Jews
Anti-semitism means hatred of Jews. Throughout Europe, Jews had experienced discrimination for
hundreds of years. They were often treated unjustly in courts or forced to live in ghettos. One reason
SOURCE
11 for this persecution was religious, in that Jews were blamed for the death of Jesus Christ! Another
To read the pages [of Hitler’s Mein reason was that they tended to be well educated and therefore held well-paid professional jobs or
Kampf] is to enter a world of the ran successful stores and businesses.
insane, a world peopled by hideous Hitler hated Jews insanely. In his years of poverty in Vienna, he became obsessed by the fact
and distorted shadows. The Jew is no that Jews ran many of the most successful businesses, particularly the large department stores.
longer a human being, he has become This offended his idea of the superiority of Aryans. Hitler also blamed Jewish businessmen and
a mythical figure, a grimacing leering bankers for Germany’s defeat in the First World War. He thought they had forced the surrender of
devil invested with infernal powers, the the German army.
incarnation of evil. As soon as Hitler took power in 1933 he began to mobilise the full powers of the state against
the Jews. They were immediately banned from the Civil Service and a variety of public services such
A Bullock, Hitler: A Study in Tyranny, as broadcasting and teaching. At the same time, SA and later SS troopers organised boycotts of
published in 1990.
Jewish shops and businesses, which were marked with a star of David.
SOURCE
12 SOURCE
13
254
SOURCE
14 In 1935 the Nuremberg Laws took away German citizenship from Jews. Jews were also forbidden to
9 Germany, 1918–45
marry or have sex with pure-blooded Germans. Goebbels’ propaganda experts bombarded German
children and families with anti-Jewish messages. Jews were often refused jobs, and people in shops
refused to serve them. In schools, Jewish children were humiliated and then segregated.
Kristallnacht
In November 1938 a young Jew killed a German diplomat in Paris. The Nazis used this as an
excuse to launch a violent revenge on Jews. Plain-clothes SS troopers were issued with pickaxes
and hammers and the addresses of Jewish businesses. They ran riot, smashing up Jewish shops
and workplaces. Ninety-one Jews were murdered. Hundreds of synagogues were burned. Twenty
thousand Jews were taken to concentration camps. Thousands more left the country. This event
A cartoon from the Nazi newspaper became known as Kristallnacht or ‘The Night of Broken Glass’. Many Germans watched the events
Der Stürmer, 1935. Jews owned many of Kristallnacht with alarm and concern. The Nazi-controlled press presented Kristallnacht as
shops and businesses. These were a the spontaneous reaction of ordinary Germans against the Jews. Most Germans did not believe this.
constant target for Nazi attacks.
However, hardly anyone protested. The few who did were brutally murdered.
SOURCE
15 SOURCE
16
[The day after Kristallnacht] the I hate the treatment of the Jews. I think it is a bad side of the movement and I will
teachers told us: don’t worry about what have nothing to do with it. I did not join the party to do that sort of thing. I joined
you see, even if you see some nasty the party because I thought and still think that Hitler did the greatest Christian
things which you may not understand. work for twenty-five years. I saw seven million men rotting in the streets, often
Hitler wants a better Germany, a clean I was there too, and no one . . . seemed to care . . . Then Hitler came and he
Germany. Don’t worry, everything will took all those men off the streets and gave them health and security and work . . .
work out fine in the end.
H Schmidt, Labour Corps leader, in an interview in 1938.
Henrik Metelmann, member of the Hitler
Youth, in 1938. SOURCE
17
I feel the urge to present to you a true report of the recent riots, plundering and
Source Analysis destruction of Jewish property. Despite what the official Nazi account says, the
1 Read Sources 15–18. How useful German people have nothing whatever to do with these riots and burnings. The
is each source to a historian police supplied SS men with axes, house-breaking tools and ladders. A list of the
looking at the German reaction to addresses of all Jewish shops and flats was provided and the mob worked under
Kristallnacht?
the leadership of the SS men. The police had strict orders to remain neutral.
2 Taken together, do they provide a
clear picture of how Germans felt
Anonymous letter from a German civil servant to the British consul, 1938.
about Kristallnacht?
SOURCE
18
Until Kristallnacht, many Germans believed Hitler was not engaged in mass
murder. [The treatment of the Jews] seemed to be a minor form of harassment of
a disliked minority. But after Kristallnacht no German could any longer be under
any illusion. I believe it was the day that we lost our innocence. But it would be
fair to point out that I myself never met even the most fanatic Nazi who wanted
Revision Tip the extermination [mass murder] of the Jews. Certainly we wanted the Jews out of
Germany, but we did not want them to be killed.
It is important that you can describe
how actions against the Jews
Alfons Heck, member of the Hitler Youth in 1938, interviewed for a television
increased in the 1930s. Make sure programme in 1989.
you can:
♦ describe the 1933 boycott;
the Nuremberg Laws and
Kristallnacht. Think!
♦ explain how each was more severe Could Germans have protested effectively about Kristallnacht? Explain your
than the one before it. answer with reference to pages 248–56.
255
Why was there little opposition?
DEPTH STUDIES
Source Analysis
The writer of Source 19 was an
opponent of the Nazi regime. Does The Nazis faced relatively little open opposition during their twelve years in power. In private,
that affect the value of this source as Germans complained about the regime and its actions. Some might refuse to give the Nazi salute.
evidence? Explain your answer. They might pass on anti-Nazi jokes and rude stories about senior Nazis. However, serious criticism
was always in private, never in public. Historians have debated why this was so. The main answer
SOURCE
19 they have come up with may seem obvious to you if you’ve read pages 248–49. It was terror! All
the Nazis’ main opponents had been killed, exiled or put in prison. The rest had been scared into
The average worker is primarily interested
in work and not in democracy. People submission. However, it won’t surprise you to learn that historians think the answer is not quite as
who previously enthusiastically supported simple as that. It takes more than just terror to explain why there was so little opposition to the Nazis.
democracy showed no interest at all in
politics. One must be clear about the ‘It’s all for the good of Germany’ – Nazi successes
fact that in the first instance men are Many Germans admired and trusted Hitler. They were prepared to tolerate rule by terror and to
fathers of families and have jobs, and trade their political freedom in return for work, foreign policy success and what they thought was
that for them politics takes second place strong government.
and even then only when they expect to ● Economic recovery was deeply appreciated.
get something out of it. ● Many felt that the Nazis were bringing some much needed discipline back to Germany by
restoring traditional values and clamping down on rowdy Communists.
A report by a Socialist activist in ● Between 1933 and 1938 Hitler’s success in foreign affairs made Germans feel that Germany
Germany, February 1936. was a great power again after the humiliations of the First World War.
SOURCE
20 ‘I don’t want to lose my job’ – economic fears
November 1933
German workers feared losing their jobs if they did express opposition. Germany had been hit so
Millions of Germans are indeed won hard by the Depression that many were terrified by the prospect of being out of work again. It was a
over by Hitler and the power and the similar situation for the bosses. Businesses that did not contribute to Nazi Party funds risked losing
glory are really his. I hear of some Nazi business and going bankrupt, and so in self-defence they conformed as well. If you asked no
actions by the Communists . . . But questions and kept your head down, life in Nazi Germany could be comfortable. ‘Keeping your head
what good do such pinpricks do? Less down’ became a national obsession.
than none, because all Germany
prefers Hitler to the Communists. ‘Have you heard the good news?’ – propaganda
April 1935 Underlying the whole regime was the propaganda machine. This ensured that many Germans
Frau Wilbrandt told us that people found out very little about the bad things that were happening, or if they did they only heard them
complain in Munich when Hitler or with a positive, pro-Nazi slant. Propaganda was particularly important in maintaining the image of
Goebbels appear on film but even Hitler. The evidence suggests that personal support for Hitler remained high throughout the 1930s
she (an economist close to the Social and he was still widely respected even as Germany was losing the war in 1944.
Democrats) says: ‘Will there not be
something even worse, if Hitler is
overthrown, Bolshevism?’ (That fear
Key Question Summary
How effectively did the Nazis control Germany, 1933–45?
keeps Hitler where he is again and again.)
1 The Nazis had a powerful range of organisations to control Germany: the SS,
Extracts from the diaries of Victor the Gestapo, the police and the courts, and concentration camps.
Klemperer, a Jewish university lecturer 2 There was little opposition because of the terror they inspired, economic
in Germany. progress and success in foreign affairs, overturning the Treaty of Versailles
and making Germany a strong military power.
3 The Nazis built a highly successful propaganda machine and used mass
Revision Tip media to control what people knew.
4 They sought to control culture, banning books which contained ideas they
♦ There are three important factors
did not like. Paintings, plays and films had to put across a pro-Nazi message
on this page which explain
and show idealised images of the Aryan family.
lack of opposition to the Nazis
5 The Nazis persecuted many groups that did not fit in with their notions of
(Nazi successes; economic fears;
racial purity, such as disabled people, homosexuals and gypsies.
propaganda). Make sure you can
6 They particularly persecuted the Jews, depriving them of their jobs,
give an example of each one.
businesses and homes and forcing them into ghettos.
♦ Give each a mark out of ten
7 In 1942 they introduced a programme of mass extermination called the Final
(but no two marks the same)
Solution.
and prepare an explanation that
supports your mark. Be especially
clear why you gave one factor a
256 higher mark than another.
9 Germany, 1918–45
9.4 What was it like to live in Nazi Germany?
Focus
It was Hitler’s aim to control every aspect of life in Germany, including the
daily lives of ordinary people. In the Volksgemeinschaft almost everyone had
a role in making Germany great again.
Central to the Nazi vision was the role of young people: young men who
would be turned into loyal soldiers and young women who would be
turned into strong mothers. The workers were no longer working just
for pay but they were working to provide the goods that the Fatherland
needed.
However if you did not fit into the Nazi plan for Germany then you had
a desperate time. From the very earliest stages of the regime minority
groups who did not fit with the Nazi ideal of what a German person
should be like were persecuted mercilessly. Measures against Jews, the
homeless, the mentally ill, gypsies and homosexuals became more and
more extreme, ending in the mass murder of the Holocaust.
In this section you will examine the experiences of these different groups.
Focus Points
♦ How did young people react to the Nazi regime?
♦ How successful were Nazi policies towards women and the family?
♦ Did most people in Germany benefit from Nazi rule?
♦ How did the coming of war change life in Nazi Germany?
The Jews are aliens in Germany. All subjects – German language, History, Geography, Chemistry and
In 1933 there were 66,060,000 Mathematics – must concentrate on military subjects, the glorification of military
inhabitants of the German Reich of service and of German heroes and leaders and the strength of a rebuilt Germany.
whom 499,862 were Jews. What is the Chemistry will develop a knowledge of chemical warfare, explosives, etc, while
percentage of aliens in Germany? Mathematics will help the young to understand artillery, calculations, ballistics.
A question from a Nazi maths textbook, A German newspaper, heavily controlled by the Nazis,
1933. approves of the curriculum in 1939.
Think
SOURCE
5
8.00 German (every day)
1 Do you think the real aim of the
question in Source 3 is to improve 8.50 Geography, History or Singing (alternate days)
mathematical skills? 9.40 Race Studies and Ideology (every day)
2 Read Source 5. Eugenics is the
study of how to produce perfect 10.25 Recess, Sports and Special Announcements (every day)
offspring by choosing parents 11.00 Domestic Science or Maths (alternate days)
with ideal qualities. How would
this help the Nazis?
12.10 Eugenics or Health Biology (alternate days)
.00–6.00 Sport
1
Evenings Sex education, Ideology or Domestic Science (one evening each)
SOURCE
6 The daily timetable for a girls’ school in Nazi Germany
SOURCE
7
Hitler looked over the stand, and I
know he looked into my eyes, and he
said: ‘You my boys are the standard
bearers, you will inherit what we have
created.’ From that moment there
was not any doubt I was bound to
Adolf Hitler until long after our defeat.
Afterwards I told my friends how Hitler
had looked into my eyes, but they
all said: ‘No! It was my eyes he was
looking into.’ Members of the Hitler Youth in the 1930s. From a very early age children were
encouraged to join the Nazi youth organisations. It was not compulsory, but most
A young German describes his feelings young people did join.
after a Hitler Youth rally.
258
SOURCE
9 At home
9 Germany, 1918–45
Children have been deliberately taken As a child in Nazi Germany, you might well feel slightly alienated (estranged) from your parents
away from parents who refused to because they are not as keen on the Nazis as you are. They expect your first loyalty to be to your
acknowledge their belief in National family, whereas your Hitler Youth leader makes it clear that your first loyalty is to Adolf Hitler. You
Socialism . . . The refusal of parents to find it hard to understand why your father grumbles about Nazi regulation of his working practices
allow their young children to join the – surely the Führer (Hitler) is protecting him? Your parents find the idea of Nazi inspectors
youth organisation is regarded as an checking up on the teachers rather strange. For you it is normal.
adequate reason for taking the children
away. SOURCE
10
A German teacher writing in 1938.
Think!
1 Make a list of the main differences
between your life and the life of a
sixteen-year-old in Nazi Germany.
2 Totalitarian regimes through
history have used children as a
way of influencing parents. Why
do you think they do this?
3 Read Source 6. Why do you think
Henrik’s father asks Henrik not to
repeat what he says to him?
SOURCE
11
We didn’t know much about Nazi
ideals. Nevertheless, we were politically
programmed: to obey orders, to
cultivate the soldierly virtue of standing Illustration from a Nazi children’s book. The children are being taught
to attention and saying ‘Yes, Sir’ and to to distrust Jews.
stop thinking when the word Fatherland
was uttered and Germany’s honour Many young people were attracted to the Nazi youth movements by the leisure opportunities they
offered. There were really no alternatives. All other youth organisations had been absorbed or made
and greatness were mentioned.
illegal. Even so, only half of all German boys were members in 1933 and only 15 per cent of girls.
A former member of the Hitler Youth You can read what happened to young people in wartime on page 267.
looks back after the war.
259
Women in Nazi Germany
DEPTH STUDIES
Source Analysis u
SOURCE
12
What does Source 12 show about
the Nazis’ view of women?
All the Nazi leaders were men. The Nazis were a very male-dominated organisation. Hitler had a
very traditional view of the role of the German woman as wife and mother. It is worth remembering
that many women agreed with him. In the traditional rural areas and small towns, many women
felt that the proper role of a woman was to support her husband. There was also resentment
towards working women in the early 1930s, since they were seen as keeping men out of jobs. It all
created a lot of pressure on women to conform to what the Nazis called ‘the traditional balance’
between men and women. ‘No true German woman wears trousers’ said a Nazi newspaper headline
when the film star Marlene Dietrich appeared wearing trousers in public.
Alarmed at the falling birth rate, Hitler offered tempting financial incentives for married
couples to have at least four children. You got a ‘Gold Cross’ for having eight children, and were
given a privileged seat at Nazi meetings. Posters, radio broadcasts and newsreels all celebrated
the ideas of motherhood and homebuilding. The German Maidens’ League reinforced these ideas,
focusing on a combination of good physical health and housekeeping skills. This was reinforced at
school (see Source 5 on page 258).
With all these encouragements the birth rate did increase from fifteen per thousand in 1933 to
twenty per thousand in 1939. There was also an increase in pregnancies outside marriage. These
girls were looked after in state maternity hostels.
260
SOURCE
13
9 Germany, 1918–45
Revision Tip
♦ You need to be able to describe
at least two aspects of Nazi policy
towards women.
♦ Make sure you can explain why
the Nazis wanted women out of
the workplace.
♦ Find two points you could use
as evidence in an essay to argue
that Nazi policies on women were
successful.
261
Workers, farmers and businesses in
DEPTH STUDIES
Nazi Germany
6 30
5
Unemployment (millions)
4 20
2 10
262
SOURCE
17 The Nazis and the workers
9 Germany, 1918–45
Early one morning, a neighbour of ours, Hitler promised (and delivered) lower unemployment which helped to ensure popularity among
a trade-union secretary, was taken industrial workers. These workers were important to the Nazis: Hitler needed good workers to
away in a car by the SS and police. His create the industries that would help to make Germany great and establish a new German empire
wife had great difficulty finding out what in eastern Europe. He won the loyalty of industrial workers by a variety of initiatives.
had happened to him. My mother was ● Propaganda praised the workers and tried to associate them with Hitler.
too scared to be seen talking to her and ● Schemes such as Strength Through Joy (KDF) gave them cheap theatre and cinema
Father became very quiet and alarmed tickets, organised courses, trips and sports events, and even cut-price cruises on luxury liners.
and begged me not to repeat what he ● Many thousands of workers saved five marks a week in the state scheme to buy the
had said within our four walls about the Volkswagen Beetle, the ‘people’s car’. It was designed by Ferdinand Porsche and became a
whole Nazi set-up . . . symbol of the prosperous new Germany, even though no workers ever received a car because all
I loved it when we went on our car production was halted by the war in 1939.
● Another important scheme was the Beauty of Labour movement. This improved working
frequent marches, feeling important
when the police had to stop the traffic conditions in factories. It introduced features not seen in many workplaces before, such as
washing facilities and low-cost canteens.
to give us right of way and passing
What was the price of these advances? Workers lost their main political party, the SDP. They lost
pedestrians had to raise their arm in
their trade unions and for many workers this remained a source of bitter resentment. All workers
the Nazi salute. Whenever we were
had to join the DAF (General Labour Front) run by Dr Robert Ley. This organisation kept
led out on a march, it was always strict control of workers. They could not strike for better pay and conditions. In some areas, they
into the working-class quarters. We were prevented from moving to better-paid jobs. Wages remained comparatively low, although
were told that this was to remind the prices were also strictly controlled. Even so, by the late 1930s, many workers were grumbling that
workers, but I sometimes wondered their standard of living was still lower than it had been before the Depression (see Source 16).
what we wanted to remind them
of, after all most of our fathers were
workers . . . The Nazis and the farming communities
The farmers had been an important factor in the Nazis’ rise to power. Hitler did not forget this
From Through Hell for Hitler, the and introduced a series of measures to help them. In September 1933 he introduced the Reich
memoirs of Henrik Metelmann,
published in 1970. Metelmann came
Food Estate under Richard Darre. This set up central boards to buy agricultural produce from
from a working-class family in Hamburg the farmers and distribute it to markets across Germany. It gave the peasant farmers a guaranteed
but was an enthusiastic member of the market for their goods at guaranteed prices. The second main measure was the Reich Entailed
Hitler Youth and served in the German Farm Law. It gave peasants state protection for their farms: banks could not seize their land if
army in the Second World War.
they could not pay loans or mortgages. This ensured that peasants’ farms stayed in their hands.
The Reich Entailed Farm Law also had a racial aim. Part of the Nazi
SOURCE
18 philosophy was ‘Blood and Soil’, the belief that the peasant farmers
30 were the basis of Germany’s master race. They would be the backbone of
Percentage increase in consumption
20.2 the new German empire in the east. As a result, their way of life had to be
20
protected. As Source 19 shows, the measures were widely appreciated.
11.5
10 However, rather like the industrial workers, some peasants were not
4.1 thrilled with the regime’s measures. The Reich Food Estate meant that
Percentage change 1927–37
Wheat bread
Milk
Cheese
Eggs
Potatoes
Beer
The record of the Nazis with the middle classes was also mixed. Certainly many middle-class
business people were grateful to the Nazis for eliminating the Communist threat to their businesses
and properties. They also liked the way in which the Nazis seemed to be bringing order to Germany.
For the owners of small businesses it was a mixed picture. If you owned a small engineering firm,
you were likely to do well from government orders as rearmament spending grew in the 1930s.
However, if you produced consumer goods or ran a small shop, you might well struggle. Despite
Hitler’s promises, the large department stores which were taking business away from local shops
were not closed.
It was big business that really benefited from Nazi rule. The big companies no longer had
to worry about troublesome trade unions and strikes. Companies such as the chemicals giant IG
Farben gained huge government contracts to make explosives, fertilisers and even artificial oil
from coal. Other household names today, such as Mercedes and Volkswagen, prospered from Nazi
policies.
264
The impact of the Second World
9 Germany, 1918–45
Focus Task
How did the war change life
in Germany? War on Germany
1 Draw a timeline from 1939 to
1945 down the middle of a page. Through the 1930s, Hitler fulfilled his promises to the German people that he would:
2 On the left, make notes from ● reverse the Treaty of Versailles
pages 265–68 on how the war ● rebuild Germany’s armed forces
was going for Germany’s army. ● unite Germany and Austria
3 On the right, make notes to show ● extend German territory into eastern Europe.
how the war affected Germans at
He fulfilled each of these aims, but started the Second World War in the process.
home in Germany.
4 Choose one change from the right- Germans had no great enthusiasm for war. People still had memories of the First World War.
hand column that you think had But in war, as in peace time, the Nazis used all methods available to make the German people
the greatest impact on ordinary support the regime.
Germans and explain your choice. Food rationing was introduced soon after war began in September 1939. Clothes rationing
followed in November 1939. Even so, from 1939 to 1941 it was not difficult to keep up civilian
morale because the war went spectacularly well for Germany. Hitler was in control of much of
Factfile western and eastern Europe and supplies of luxury goods flowed into Germany from captured
territories.
Germany’s War Economy However, in 1941 Hitler took the massive gamble of invading the Soviet Union, and for the
When war broke out it did not bring
massive changes to the German next three years his troops were engaged in an increasingly expensive war with Russian forces who
economy because Germany had been ‘tore the heart out of the German army’, as the British war leader, Winston Churchill, put it. As
preparing for it since the mid-1930s. the tide turned against the German armies, civilians found their lives increasingly disrupted. They
In the early stages of the war, Germany had to cut back on heating, work longer hours and recycle their rubbish. Goebbels redoubled his
was short of raw materials. This was
made worse when the British navy censorship efforts. He tried to maintain people’s support for the war by involving them in it through
blockaded sea routes into Germany. asking them to make sacrifices. They donated an estimated 1.5 million fur coats to help to clothe
As the German forces conquered the German army in Russia.
territories they took raw materials At this stage in the war, the German people began to see and hear less of Hitler. His old speeches
and goods from these territories. For
example, Germany took around 20 per were broadcast by Goebbels, but Hitler was increasingly preoccupied with the detail of the war. In
cent of Norway’s entire production in 1942 the ‘Final Solution’ began (see pages 268–69), which was to kill millions of Jewish civilians in
1940. German-occupied countries.
From 1942 German production was From 1942, Albert Speer began to direct Germany’s war economy (see Factfile). All effort
shifted towards armaments to supply
the army fighting against Russia. focused on the armament industries. Postal services were suspended and letter boxes were
Huge corporations like IG Farben closed. All places of entertainment were closed, except cinemas – Goebbels needed these to show
produced chemicals, explosives and the propaganda films. Women were drafted into the labour force in increasing numbers. Country areas
infamous gas used in the death camps. had to take evacuees from the cities and refugees from eastern Europe.
German factories used forced labour
from occupied countries. Most These measures were increasingly carried out by the SS. In fact, the SS became virtually a
factories had a significant number state within the German state. This SS empire had its own armed forces, armaments industries and
of prisoners in their workforce labour camps. It developed a business empire that was worth a fortune. However, even the SS could
and estimates suggest that forced not win the war, or even keep up German morale.
labourers made up around 25 per cent
of the workforce. With defeat looming, support for the Nazis weakened. Germans stopped declaring food they
♦ By 1944 there had been a vast had. They stayed away from Nazi rallies. They refused to give the ‘Heil Hitler’ salute when asked to
increase in military production. do so. Himmler even contacted the Allies to ask about possible peace terms.
Production of aircraft and tanks
trebled compared to 1942.
♦ Production was hampered by Allied
bombing and some factories were
The July bomb plot
moved underground. In July 1944, some army officers came close to removing Hitler. By this stage of the war, many army
♦ There is an ongoing debate about officers were sure that the war was lost and that Hitler was leading Germany into ruin. One of these
the effectiveness of the Nazi war was a colonel in the army, Count von Stauffenberg. On 20 July he left a bomb in Hitler’s conference
economy. The traditional view is that
the economy was mismanaged until
room. The plan was to kill Hitler, close down the radio stations, round up the other leading Nazis
1942 and then improved. However, and take over Germany. It failed on all counts, for the revolt was poorly planned and organised.
this account is based on the writings of Hitler survived and the Nazis took a terrible revenge, killing 5,000 in reprisal.
Albert Speer. Some historians believe he
exaggerated his own importance and
that the war economy became more
efficient after 1942 simply because
Germany focused production away
from civilian goods and into military
equipment.
265
SOURCE
20 The bombing of Dresden
DEPTH STUDIES
Goebbels does not always tell you the It was the bombing of Germany which had the most dramatic effect on the lives of German
truth. When he tells you that England civilians. In 1942 the Allies decided on a new policy towards the bombing of Germany. Under
is powerless do you believe that? Have Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris the British began an all-out assault on both industrial and residential areas
you forgotten that our bombers fly over of all the major German cities. One of the objectives was to cripple German industry, the other was
Germany at will? The bombs that fell to lower the morale of civilians and to terrorise them into submission.
with these leaflets tell you . . . The war The bombing escalated through the next three years, culminating in the bombing of Dresden
lasts as long as Hitler’s regime. in February 1945 which killed between 35,000 and 150,000 people in two days. Sources 21–23 tell
you more about that bombing.
Translation of a leaflet dropped by the
Allies on Berlin. SOURCE
22
SOURCE
21
The greatest effect on [civilian] morale
will be produced if a new blow of
catastrophic force can be struck at
a time when the situation already
appears desperate.
From a secret report to the British
government, 1944.
Think!
What do Sources 20–23 tell you
about The centre of Dresden after the bombing in February 1945.
a) the aims of the bombing
b) the success of the bombing?
SOURCE
23
Key
Air Command HQ
A map showing the destruction of Dresden. Dresden was an industrial city, but the
major damage was to civilian areas.
By 1945 the German people were in a desperate state. Food supplies were dwindling. Already 3.5
million German civilians had died. Refugees were fleeing the advancing Russian armies in the east.
Three months after the massive destruction of Dresden, Germany’s war was over. Hitler,
Goebbels and other Nazi war leaders committed suicide or were captured. Germany surrendered. It
was now a shattered country. The Nazi promises lay in tatters and the country was divided up into
zones of occupation run by the British, French, US and Soviet forces (see page 88).
266
SOURCE
24 How did war affect young people?
9 Germany, 1918–45
The formation of cliques, i.e. groupings
of young people outside the Hitler In 1939 membership of a Nazi youth movement was made compulsory. But by this time the youth
Youth, has been on the increase before movements were going through a crisis. Many of the experienced leaders had been drafted into the
and particularly during the war to German army. Others – particularly those who had been leaders in the pre-Nazi days – had been
such a degree that one must speak replaced by keener Nazis. Many of the movements were now run by older teenagers who rigidly
of a serious risk of political, moral and enforced Nazi rules. They even forbade other teenagers to meet informally with their friends.
criminal subversion of our youth. As the war progressed, the activities of the youth movements focused increasingly on the war
effort and military drill. The popularity of the movements decreased and indeed an anti-Hitler
From a report by the Nazi youth
leadership, 1942.
Youth movement appeared. The Nazis identified two distinct groups of young people who they were
worried about: the Swing movement and the Edelweiss Pirates.
267
SOURCE
26 How did war affect the Jews?
DEPTH STUDIES
The ghettos
Persecution of the Jews developed in intensity after the outbreak of war in 1939. After defeating
Poland in 1939, the Nazis set about ‘Germanising’ western Poland. This meant transporting Poles
from their homes and replacing them with German settlers. Almost one in five Poles died in the
fighting and as a result of racial policies of 1939–45. Polish Jews were rounded up and transported
to the major cities. Here they were herded into sealed areas, called ghettos. The able-bodied Jews
were used for slave labour but the young, the old and the sick were simply left to die from hunger
and disease.
Mass murder
In 1941 Germany invaded the USSR. The invasion was a great success at first. However, within weeks
the Nazis found themselves in control of 3 million Russian Jews in addition to the Jews in all of the
other countries they had invaded. German forces had orders to round up and shoot Communist
Party activists and their Jewish supporters. The shooting was carried out by special SS units called
A drawing by a prisoner in Auschwitz Einsatzgruppen. By the autumn of 1941, mass shootings were taking place all over occupied eastern
concentration camp. The prisoners are Europe. In Germany, all Jews were ordered to wear the star of David on their clothing to mark them
being made to do knee bends to see if
they are fit enough to work. If not they
out.
will be killed in the gas chambers.
The ‘Final solution’
SOURCE
27 In January 1942, senior Nazis met at Wannsee, a suburb of Berlin, for a conference to discuss what
The extermination of the Jews is the they called the ‘Final Solution’ to the ‘Jewish Question’. At the Wannsee Conference, Himmler,
most dreadful chapter in German head of the SS and Gestapo, was put in charge of the systematic killing of all Jews within Germany
history, doubly so because the men and German-occupied territory. Slave labour and death camps were built at Auschwitz, Treblinka,
who did it closed their senses to the Chelmo and other places. The old, the sick and young children were killed immediately. The
reality of what they were doing by able-bodied were first used as slave labour. Some were used for appalling medical experiments.
taking pride in the technical efficiency Six million Jews, 500,000 European gypsies and countless political prisoners, Jehovah’s Witnesses,
of their actions and, at moments when homosexuals and Russian and Polish prisoners of war were sent to these camps to be worked to
their conscience threatened to break death, gassed or shot.
in, telling themselves that they were
doing their duty . . . others took refuge Resistance
in the enormity of the operation, which Many Jews escaped from Germany before the killing started. Other Jews managed to live under
lent it a convenient depersonalisation. cover in Germany and the occupied territories. Gad Beck, for instance, led the Jewish resistance to
When they ordered a hundred Jews to the Nazis in Berlin. He was finally captured in April 1945. On the day he was due to be executed, he
get on a train in Paris or Amsterdam, was rescued by a detachment of troops from the Jewish regiment of the Red Army who had heard of
they considered their job accomplished his capture and had been sent to rescue him. There were 28 known groups of Jewish fighters, and
and carefully closed their minds to there may have been more. Many Jews fought in the resistance movements in the Nazi-occupied
the thought that eventually those lands. In 1945 the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto rose up against the Nazis and held out against them
passengers would arrive in front of the for four weeks. Five concentration camps saw armed uprisings and Greek Jews managed to blow up
ovens of Treblinka. the gas ovens at Auschwitz.
We know that many Germans and other non-Jews helped Jews by hiding them and smuggling
American historian Gordon Craig, 1978. them out of German-held territory. The industrialist Oskar Schindler protected and saved many by
getting them on to his ‘list’ of workers. The Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg worked with other
resisters to provide Jews with Swedish and US passports to get them out of the reach of the Nazis in
Think! Hungary. He disappeared in mysterious circumstances in 1945. Of course, high-profile individuals
The systematic killing of the Jews by such as these were rare. Most of the successful resisters were successful because they kept an
the Nazis is generally known today
extremely low profile and were discovered neither by the Nazis then, nor by historians today.
as the Holocaust, which means
‘sacrifice’. Many people prefer the
Jewish term Sho’ah, which means
‘destruction’. Why do you think
this is?
268
9 Germany, 1918–45
Keywords Focus Task
Make sure you know what these Was Germany a totalitarian state?
terms mean and are able to define A totalitarian state is one where:
them confidently. ♦ no opposition is allowed;
♦ Autobahn ♦ people are expected to show total loyalty and obedience to the state;
♦ Bauhaus ♦ every aspect of life is controlled by the state for its own benefit.
♦ Beauty of Labour You are going to prepare for a debate on the question: Was Nazi Germany a
♦ Communist (Bolshevik) totalitarian state? Clearly Hitler wanted Germany to be like this, but did the Nazis
♦ Concentration camps achieve it?
♦ Consolidation
♦ Democracy Stage A: Research
♦ Diktat Read through this chapter gathering as much evidence as you can on either side.
♦ Edelweiss Pirates Use the text and the sources and your own research. Here are a few references to
♦ Final Solution get you started.
♦ Freikorps p.247 p.249 p.250 p.267 p.251
♦ Gestapo Factfile Source 2 Source 3 Source 25 Source 6
♦ Hitler Youth
♦ Holocaust
p.255 p.258 p.261 p.268 p.253
♦ Inflation
Source 16 Source 7 Source 14 Source 27 Source 9
♦ League of German Maidens Summarise your evidence in a table (be sure to note where you found this
♦ National Community evidence).
♦ Nazism Stage B: Reach your judgement
♦ Negative cohesion Share your evidence with others. Discuss it. Do you think that the Nazis managed
♦ Nuremburg Laws to turn Germany into a totalitarian state?
♦ Propaganda
♦ Putsch Stage C: Write your speech
♦ Rearmament Aim for just one minute (200–250 words). State your view. Use evidence to
♦ Reparations support your arguments.
♦ Spartacists
♦ SA
♦ SS
♦ Strength Through Joy Key Question Summary
What was it like to live in Nazi Germany?
1 Young people were expected to join the Hitler Youth. There were separate
Revision Tip organisations for boys and girls.
2 The boys focused on activities to teach them to be soldiers. The girls focused
♦ Make sure you can describe the on healthy living and preparing for motherhood.
ghettos and the Final Solution. 3 The school curriculum was also used to indoctrinate young people. Teachers
♦ Identify three examples that show were among the keenest supporters of the Nazis.
how Nazi actions against Jews 4 Not all young people liked the Nazis and once the war started opposition
and other groups became more to the Hitler Youth among young people increased and groups like the
violent as the war went on. Edelweiss Pirates actively resisted.
5 The Nazis rewarded German women for having children – the more the
better. They discouraged women from working and encouraged them to stay
at home and look after children.
Exam Practice 6 However later on they also needed women to become workers so they had
See pages 168–175 and pages to change their policies to encourage women to do both.
316–319 for advice on the different 7 The Nazis promised to end unemployment, which they did but only by
types of questions you might face. drafting hundreds of thousands of people into the army or putting political
1 (a) What was the Munich Putsch? opponents to forced labour.
[4] 8 The economy recovered in the 1930s but business was geared to getting
(b) Explain why the Nazis ready for war, making weapons or becoming self-sufficient in raw materials.
launched the Munich Putsch 9 For those who did not fit Nazi ideas life was terrible. The Jews suffered in
in 1923. [6] particular, facing restrictions, then persecution or exile, and in the end forced
(c) ‘The Munich Putsch was a labour and genocide.
total failure for Adolf Hitler.’ 10 The war went well for Germany to start with. However after Germany
How far do you agree with invaded Russia in 1941 the tide turned. German resources were directed into
this statement? Explain your a fighting an unwinnable war against the USSR. The German economy and
answer. [10] the Nazi regime collapsed.
269
1
270
10
The USA 1919–41
KEY QUESTIONS
10.1 How far did the US economy boom in the 1920s?
10.2 How far did US society change in the 1920s?
10.3 What were the causes and consequences of the Wall Street Crash?
10.4 How successful was the New Deal?
At the end of the First World War the USA was the richest and most Congress refuses to
powerful country in the world. The next two decades were a turbulent 1919 join the League of
1920 Nations
time: a boom then a bust; a time of opportunity for some but a time of
trauma for others.
THE BOOM
In 10.1 you will look at the booming US economy in the 1920s.You will Calvin Coolidge
1923 elected President
look at the causes of this economic boom and also its consequences.
Most important of all, you will investigate which Americans shared in the
new prosperity and what happened to those who did not.
In 10.2 you will examine the changes that took place in the 1920s,
particularly for women, immigrants and African Americans.
In 10.3 you will examine the economic disaster that plunged the USA into 1929 Oct
NEW DEPRESSION
crisis – the Wall Street Crash of 1929 – and how the Crash led to a deep 1930 The Wall Street Crash
economic depression.
THE Franklin Roosevelt
In 10.4 you will look at the New Deal: the measures President Roosevelt 1932 elected President
promising a New Deal
used to help the USA recover. You will examine the range of measures
taken, the thinking behind those measures and how people reacted to
DEAL
THE
them. Most of all you will think hard about whether or not the New Deal
should be seen as a success or not.
Timeline
This timeline shows the period you will be covering in this chapter. Some 1939 The Second World
War begins in Europe
of the key dates are filled in already. To help you get a complete picture of 1940
the period make your own much larger version and add other details to it 1941 The USA joins the war
as you work through the chapter.
271
10.1 How far did the US economy boom in the
DEPTH STUDIES
1920s?
FOCUS did best – making money! Over the next ten years the
As you saw in Chapter 1, after the First World War USA, already the richest country in the world, became
President Wilson determined that from then on the richer still as its economy boomed.
USA should take a lead in world affairs. He proposed In 10.1 you will examine the reasons for this boom and
an international League of Nations that would be like also the extent.You will also see that while some people
a world parliament that prevented aggression between in America benefited greatly from the boom there were
countries. As you saw in Chapter 2, Wilson failed in this significant proportions – possibly even the majority –
attempt. He even failed to get the USA to agree to join who did not share in the boom at all.
the League at all.
Focus Points
Instead Wilson was defeated and the USA turned
♦ On what factors was the economic boom based?
its back on Europe, a policy known as ‘isolationism’.
♦ Why did some industries prosper while others did
A new President, Warren Harding, promised a return to
not?
‘normalcy’ by which he meant life as it had been before
♦ Why did agriculture not share in the prosperity?
the war. Americans turned their energies to what they
♦ Did all Americans benefit from the boom?
Electricity Transport 1 These cards show nine key features of the 1920s economic boom. Make your
own set of cards – large enough to write some information on the back.
2 As you read this chapter write notes on each card to summarise how this was
Mass
Credit changing in the 1920s and how it contributed to the boom.
consumption
3 Working on a larger piece of paper make notes about how these different
features are linked.
Mass
NB Keep your cards. They will be useful for the Focus Task on page 277. They will
production
also be useful when it comes to revision.
272
Factors behind the economic boom
Seattle
WASHINGTON
MONTANA NORTH DAKOTA
MINNESOTA MAINE
New Orleans
TEXAS
FLORIDA
Miami
MEXICO Gulf of Mexico 0 500 1000 km
Scale
The USA’s main centres of population and main natural resources around 1920.
Ever since the 1860s and 1870s, American industry had been growing vigorously. By the time of
Think! the First World War, the USA led the world in most areas of industry. It had massive steel, coal and
Why did it benefit American industry textile industries. It was the leading oil producer. It was foremost in developing new technology
to have raw materials, especially coal, such as motor cars, telephones and electric lighting. In fact, electricity and electrical goods were a
oil and cotton, so easily available key factor in the USA’s economic boom. Other new industries such as chemicals were also growing
within the USA? fast. The USA’s new film industry already led the world.
The managers of these industries were increasingly skilled and professional, and they were
selling more and more of their products not just in the USA but in Europe, Latin America and the
Revision Tip Far East.
On this page and the next four there American agriculture had become the most efficient and productive in the world. In fact,
are quite a few factors explaining the
farmers had become so successful that they were producing more than they could sell, which was
boom. Focus on two per page. Make
sure you can explain how the factor a very serious problem (see page 278). In 1914, however, most Americans would have confidently
contributed to the boom. stated that American agriculture and industry were going from strength to strength.
273
The First World War
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
US system of government The Americans tried hard to stay out of the fighting in the First World War. But throughout the
The federal system: The USA’s
war they lent money to the Allies, and sold arms and munitions to Britain and France. They sold
federal system means that all the massive amounts of foodstuffs as well. This one-way trade gave American industry a real boost. In
individual states look after their own addition, while the European powers slugged it out in France, the Americans were able to take over
internal affairs (such as education). Europe’s trade around the world. American exports to the areas controlled by European colonial
Questions that concern all of the
states (such as making treaties with
powers increased during the war.
other countries) are dealt with by There were other benefits as well. Before the war Germany had one of the world’s most
Congress. successful chemicals industries. The war stopped it in its tracks. By the end of the war the USA had
The Constitution: The Constitution far outstripped Germany in the supply of chemical products. Explosives manufacture during the
lays out how the government is war also stimulated a range of by-products which became new American industries in their own
supposed to operate and what it is
allowed to do. right. Plastics and other new materials were produced.
The President: He (or she) is the Aircraft technology was improved during the First World War. From 1918 these developments
single most important politician in the were applied to civilian uses. In 1918 there were virtually no civilian airlines. By 1930 the new
USA. He is elected every four years. aircraft companies flew 162,000 flights a year.
However, the Constitution of the USA
is designed to stop one individual
Historians have called the growth and change at this time the USA’s second industrial
from becoming too powerful. revolution. The war actually helped rather than hindered the ‘revolution’.
Congress and the Supreme Court both When the USA joined the fighting it was not in the war long enough for the war to drain
act as ‘watchdogs’ checking how the American resources in the way it drained Europe’s. There was a downturn in the USA when war
President behaves.
industries readjusted to peacetime, but it was only a blip. By 1922 the American economy was
Congress: Congress is made up
of the Senate and the House of growing fast once again.
Representatives. Congress and the
President run the country.
The Supreme Court: This is made Republican policies
up of judges, who are usually very A third factor behind the boom was the policies of the Republican Party. From 1920 to 1932 all the
experienced lawyers. Their main
task is to make sure that American
US presidents were Republican, and Republicans also dominated Congress. Here are some of their
governments do not misuse their beliefs.
power or pass unfair laws. They
have the power to say that a law
is unconstitutional (against the 1 Laissez-faire 2 Protective tariffs
Constitution), which usually means Republicans believed that government The Republicans believed in import tariffs
that they feel the law would harm
American citizens. should interfere as little as possible in the which made it expensive to import foreign
Parties: There are two main political everyday lives of the people. This attitude is goods. For example, in 1922 Harding
parties, the Republicans and the called ‘laissez-faire’. In their view, the job of introduce the Fordney–McCumber tariff
Democrats. In the 1920s and 1930s, the President was to leave the businessman which made imported food expensive in
the Republicans were stronger in the
industrial north of the USA while the
alone – to do his job. That was where the USA. These tariffs protected businesses
Democrats had more support in the prosperity came from. against foreign competition and allowed
south. On the whole, Republicans This was closely related to their belief in American companies to grow even more
in the 1920s and 1930s preferred ‘rugged individualism’. They admired the rapidly.
government to stay out of people’s
lives if possible. The Democrats
way Americans were strong and got on with
were more prepared to intervene in solving their own problems.
everyday life. 4 Powerful trusts
Trusts were huge super-corporations, which
3 Low taxation dominated industry. Woodrow Wilson and
The Republicans kept taxation as low as the Democrats had fought against trusts
possible. This brought some benefits to because they believed it was unhealthy for
ordinary working people, but it brought men such as Carnegie (steel) and Rockefeller
even more to the very wealthy. The (oil) to have almost complete control of one
Republican thinking was that if people kept vital sector of industry. The Republicans
their own money, they would spend it on allowed the trusts to do what they wanted,
American goods and wealthy people would believing that the ‘captains of industry’ knew
reinvest their money in industries. better than politicians did what was good for
the USA.
274
SOURCE
2
400
World industrial production
300
100
200
100
50
0
1916–20 1921–25 1926–30
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
6 C Unemployment D Steel production
60
Numbers represent
11.9 percentage of civilian
5 labour force
50
USA
4 40
Britain
7.6
Germany
3 30
5.5 5.2 Russia
4.4 Others
2 4.0 4.1
4 20
3.2
1 1.9 10
0 0
2
25
27
21
23
29
26
24
28
0
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
Think!
New industries, new methods
Through the 1920s new industries and new methods of production were developed in the USA.
1 How could the Republicans use
Source 2 to justify their policies? The country was able to exploit its vast resources of raw materials to produce steel, chemicals,
2 How could critics of Republican glass and machinery. Electricity was changing America too. Before the First World War industry
policies use Source 2 to attack the was still largely powered by coal. By the 1920s electricity had taken over. In 1918 only a few homes
Republicans? were supplied; by 1929 almost all urban homes had it. These new industries in turn became the
foundation of an enormous boom in consumer goods. Telephones, radios, vacuum cleaners and
washing machines were mass-produced on a vast scale. These new techniques, together with mass
Revision Tip production methods, meant that huge amounts of goods could be produced much more cheaply
and so more people could afford them.
Which factors have you chosen
from pages 274 and 275? Practise Things that used to be luxuries were now made cheaper by new inventions and mass production.
explaining how they caused the For example, silk stockings had once been a luxury item reserved for the rich. In 1900 only 12,000
boom rather than just describing pairs had been sold. In the 1920s rayon was invented, which was a cheaper substitute for silk. In
them. 1930, 300 million pairs of stockings were sold to a female population of around 100 million.
SOURCE
3
We are quick to adopt the latest time and labour saving devices in business. The
modern woman has an equal right to employ in her home the most popular electric
cleaner: The Frantz Premier. Over 250,000 are in use. We have branches and
dealers everywhere. Our price is modest – time payments if desired.
Advertisement for the Frantz Premier vacuum cleaner.
275
The car
DEPTH STUDIES
Think! The most important of these new booming industries was the motor-car or automobile industry.
1 Why were mass production
techniques so crucial to production The motor car had only been developed in the 1890s. The first cars were built by blacksmiths and
and consumption of goods made other skilled craftsmen. They took a long time to make and were very expensive. In 1900 only 4,000
by the new industries? cars were made. Car production was revolutionised by Henry Ford. In 1913 he set up the world’s
first moving production line, in a giant shed in Detroit. Each worker on the line had one or two
small jobs to do as the skeleton of the car moved past him. At the beginning of the line, a skeleton
car went in; at the end of the line was a new car. The most famous of these was the Model T. More
than 15 million were produced between 1908 and 1925. In 1927 they came off the production line
at a rate of one every ten seconds. In 1929, 4.8 million cars were made. In 1925 they cost $290. This
was only three months’ wages for an American factory worker.
SOURCE
4 SOURCE
5
By the end of the 1920s the motor industry was the USA’s biggest industry.
As well as employing hundreds of thousands of workers directly, it also
kept workers in other industries in employment. Glass, leather, steel and
rubber were all required to build the new vehicles. Automobiles used up
75 per cent of US glass production in the 1920s! Petrol was needed
to run them. And a massive army of labourers was busily building
roads throughout the country for these cars to drive on. In fact, road
construction was the biggest single employer in the 1920s.
The new roads gave rise to a new truck industry. In 1919 there Owning a car was not just a rich person’s privilege, as it was in
were 1 million trucks in the USA. By 1929 there Europe. There was one car to five people in the USA compared with one
were 3.5 million. to 43 in Britain, and one to 7,000 in Russia. The car made it possible
for people to buy a house in the suburbs, which further boosted house
SOURCE
6 building. It also stimulated the growth of hundreds of other smaller
businesses, ranging from hot dog stands and advertising bill boards to
petrol stations and holiday resorts.
1920s
Revision Tip
So have you got five or more factors which explain the boom? If so:
♦ Choose two factors you think were connected and practise explaining how
The USA’s they were connected.
industrial ♦ Decide which one you think is the most important (or if you think the boom
strength
cannot be explained that way, say why).
277
SOURCE
8 Problems in the farming industry
DEPTH STUDIES
While many Americans were enjoying the boom, farmers most definitely were not. Total US farm
income dropped from $22 billion in 1919 to just $13 billion in 1928. There were a number of
reasons why farming had such problems.
Declining exports After the war, Europe imported far less food from the USA. This was
partly because Europe was poor, and it was partly a response to US tariffs which stopped Europe
from exporting to the USA (see page 274).
New competitors Farmers were also struggling against competition from the highly
efficient Canadian wheat producers. All of this came at a time when the population of the USA was
actually falling and there were fewer mouths to feed.
Over-production Underlying all these problems was overproduction. From 1900 to
1920, while farming was doing well, more and more land was being farmed. Improved machinery,
especially the combine harvester, and improved fertilisers made US agriculture extremely efficient.
The result was that by 1920 it was producing surpluses of wheat which nobody wanted.
Falling prices Prices plummeted as desperate farmers tried to sell their produce. In 1921
A cartoon showing the situation faced by alone, most farm prices fell by 50 per cent (see Source 9). Hundreds of rural banks collapsed in the
American farmers in the 1920s. 1920s and there were five times as many farm bankruptcies as there had been in the 1900s and 1910s.
Not all farmers were affected by these problems. Rich Americans wanted fresh vegetables and
fruit throughout the year. Shipments of lettuce to the cities, for example, rose from 14,000 crates in
1920 to 52,000 in 1928. But for most farmers the 1920s were a time of hardship.
This was a serious issue. About half of all Americans lived in rural areas, mostly working on
farms or in businesses that sold goods to farmers. Problems in farming therefore directly affected
more than 60 million Americans.
Six million rural Americans, mainly farm labourers, were forced off the land in the 1920s.
Many of these were unskilled workers who migrated to the cities, where there was little demand for
their labour. The African Americans were particularly badly hit. They had always done the least
skilled jobs in the rural areas. As they lost their jobs on the farms, three-quarters of a million of
them became unemployed.
It is no surprise that farming communities were the fiercest critics of the ‘laissez-faire’ policies
of the Republican party.
SOURCE
9
250
Key
Revision Tip
Wheat, corn and oats – cents per bushel. Potatoes – cents per pound
Wheat Oats
Falling prices, Over-production, New Corn Potatoes
competitors, Declining exports – take
the first letter of each and you have 200
FOND (this is called a mnemonic).
Make sure you can explain why each
factor was a problem for the farming
industry. 150
278
SOURCE
10 Problems in traditional industries
Dividends to You have already seen how the farmers – a very large group in American society – did not share
160
shareholders in the prosperity of the 1920s. But they were not alone. Workers in many older industries did not
benefit much either.
150
The coal industry was a big employer but it began to struggle. Firstly, like farming it was
Company producing too much coal and this reduced the price of coal and therefore profits. At the same time
% increase 1920–29
140 profits
coal was losing out to new power sources like electricity and oil. Although electricity producers
130 used coal to generate electricity, the new generating technology was highly efficient so it did not
need much coal to produce a lot of energy. Manufacturers were either switching to electricity or oil,
120 or if they were using coal they had more efficient machinery which used less coal. The same pattern
Average earnings could be seen in areas like domestic heating boilers where users could get the same amount of heat
110 with less coal.
Other industries such as leather, textiles and shoe-making also struggled. They were protected
100 from competition from foreign imports by tariffs. However, they were not growth markets like the
markets for electrical goods. They also suffered from competition from industries which used new
1920 1929 man-made materials and were often mechanised. In the traditional industries generally growth
was slow and profits were gradually declining. Workers in these industries suffered as they became
A comparison of the growth of profits
and the growth of average earnings. increasingly mechanised. Skilled workers struggled to compete against both machinery and cheap
labour in the southern states. Even if workers in these industries did get a pay rise, their wages did
not increase on the same scale as company profits or dividends paid to shareholders.
SOURCE
11 In 1928 there was a strike in the coal industry in North Carolina, where the male workers were
goes to paid only $18 and women $9 for a 70-hour week, at a time when $48 per week was considered to
the be the minimum required for a decent life. In fact, for the majority of Americans wages remained
richest 5% well below that figure. It has been estimated that 42 per cent of Americans lived below the poverty
line – they did not have the money needed to pay for essentials such as food, clothing, housing and
32%
heating for their families.
SOURCE
12
10%
goes to
the
poorest
42%
Revision Tip
Find an industry where the following
issues called problems: electrification;
oil; lack of growth markets; declining
profits. Your friends might come up
with different ideas – that is fine,
several industries suffered many
similar problems.
A hunger march in Washington during the brief recession which hit some industries
in 1921–22.
279
Unemployment
DEPTH STUDIES
Focus Task
Did all Americans share in the What’s more, throughout this period unemployment remained a problem. The growth in industry
boom? in the 1920s did not create many new jobs. Industries were growing by electrifying or mechanising
In 1928 a new Republican President,
production. The same number of people (around 5 per cent) were unemployed at the peak of
Herbert Hoover, was elected. He said: the boom in 1929 as in 1920. Yet the amount of goods produced had doubled. These millions of
unemployed Americans were not sharing in the boom. They included many poor whites, but an
SOURCE
13 even greater proportion of African American and Hispanic people and other members of the USA’s
large immigrant communities.
One of the oldest and perhaps the
noblest of human activities [aims] The plight of the poor was desperate for the individuals concerned. But it was also damaging to
American industry. The boom of the 1920s was a consumer-led boom, which means that it was led
has been the abolition of poverty
by ordinary families buying things for their home. But with so many families too poor to buy such
. . . we in America today are
goods, the demand for them was likely to begin to tail off. However, Republican policy remained not
nearer to the final triumph over
to interfere, and this included doing nothing about unemployment or poverty.
poverty than ever before in the
history of any land.
Case Study: Chicago in the 1920s
Herbert Hoover.
Chicago was one of America’s biggest cities. It was the centre of the steel, meat and clothing
Gather evidence from pages 278–80 industries, which employed many unskilled workers. Such industries had busy and slack periods.
to contest Hoover’s claim. Write a In slack periods the workers would be ‘seasonally unemployed’. Many of these workers were Polish
paper setting out in detail: or Italian immigrants, or African American migrants from the southern United States. How far did
♦ how badly off some farmers have they share in the prosperity of the 1920s?
become since the war • Only 3 per cent of semi-skilled workers owned a car. Compare that with richer areas where
♦ why farmers are poor and 29 per cent owned a car.
how Republican policies have
• Workers in Chicago didn’t like to buy large items on credit. They preferred to save for when
contributed to this
♦ why workers in older industries are
they might not have a job. Many bought smaller items on credit, such as radios.
suffering and what has happened • The poor whites did not use the new chain stores which had revolutionised shopping in the
to their wages (give an example) 1920s. Nearly all of them were in middle-class districts. Poorer white industrial workers
♦ why immigrant workers and preferred to shop at the local grocer’s where the owner was more flexible and gave them credit.
African-Americans are not well off.
Try to use specific examples such as
Chicago in the 1920s. Key Question Summary
How far did the US economy boom in the 1920s?
1 The 1920s saw unprecedented growth in mass consumption in the USA.
Revision Tip People bought a vast range of new products which changed the way people
lived their lives.
♦ Choose two points about Chicago 2 The period saw dynamic business growth and prosperity with the creation of
which you think you could use vast new cities, characterised by skyscrapers, and new systems of transport
in a question about whether all to link towns and cities.
Americans shared in the boom. 3 The boom was encouraged by the policies of the Republican party which
♦ Explain to someone else how you believed in laissez-faire, low taxes and protective tariffs.
would use those points. 4 It was also underpinned by the development of new industries using new
materials and innovative production techniques, especially mass production.
5 The motor car was particularly important, changing the American way of life
and stimulating other industries.
6 Large sections of American society did not benefit to the same degree from
prosperity including farmers and farm labourers – farming in the 1920s was
very depressed through a combination of overproduction and environmental
problems.
7 Older industries such as coal or leather suffered because of competition
from new materials such as oil or plastics and because their methods and
machinery became outdated.
280
10.2 How far did US society change in the 1920s?
80
Towns and cities
Population in millions
60
40 Countryside
20
0
1900 1910 1920 1930 1940
SOURCE
4 Cinema
In a small suburb outside Los Angeles, called Hollywood, a major film
industry was developing. All-year-round sunshine meant that the studios
could produce large numbers of films or ‘movies’. New stars like Charlie
Chaplin and Buster Keaton made audiences roar with laughter, while
Douglas Fairbanks thrilled them in daring adventure films. Until 1927 all
movies were silent. In 1927 the first ‘talkie’ was made.
During the 1920s movies became a multi-billion dollar business and
it was estimated that, by the end of the decade, a hundred million cinema
tickets were being sold each week.
Even the poor joined the movie craze. For example, there were
hundreds of cinemas in Chicago with four performances a day. Working
people in Chicago spent more than half of their leisure budget on
movies. Even those who were so poor that they were getting Mothers’ Aid
Assistance went often. It only cost ten or twenty cents to see a movie.
282
Morals
Source 5 is one historian’s description of this period. He refers to new attitudes among young
women (see pages 284–85). The gulf he mentions was most obvious in sexual morals. In the
generation before the war, sex had still been a taboo subject. After the war it became a major
concern of tabloid newspapers, Hollywood films, and everyday conversation. Scott Fitzgerald, one
of a celebrated new group of young American writers who had served in the First World War, said:
‘None of the mothers had any idea how casually their daughters were accustomed to be kissed.’
The cinema quickly discovered the selling power of sex. The first cinema star to be sold on sex
appeal was Theda Bara who, without any acting talent, made a string of wildly successful films with
titles like Forbidden Path and When a Woman Sins. Clara Bow was sold as the ‘It’ girl. Everybody
knew that ‘It’ meant ‘sex’. Hollywood turned out dozens of films a month about ‘It’, such as Up
in Mabel’s Room, Her Purchase Price and A Shocking Night. Male stars too, such as Rudolph
Valentino, were presented as sex symbols. Women were said to faint at the very sight of him as a
half-naked Arab prince in The Sheik (1921).
Today these films would be considered very tame indeed, but at the time they were considered
very daring. The more conservative rural states were worried by the deluge of sex-obsessed
films, and 36 states threatened to introduce censorship legislation. Hollywood responded with its
own censorship code which ensured that, while films might still be full of sex, at least the sinful
characters were not allowed to get away with it!
Meanwhile, in the real world, contraceptive advice was openly available for the first time. Sex
outside marriage was much more common than in the past, although probably more people talked
about it and went to films about it than actually did it!
The car
The motor car was one factor that tended to make all the other features of the 1920s mentioned
above more possible. Cars helped the cities to grow by opening up the suburbs. They carried their
owners to and from their entertainments. Cars carried boyfriends and girlfriends beyond the moral
gaze of their parents and they took Americans to an increasing range of sporting events, beach
holidays, shopping trips, picnics in the country, or simply on visits to their family and friends.
Focus Task
What were the Roaring Twenties?
1 Draw a mind map to summarise the features of the Roaring Twenties. You can
get lots of ideas from the text on pages 281–83, but remember that other
factors may also be relevant; for example, material on the economy (pages
272–80). You can also add to your mind map as you find out about the period,
particularly women (pages 284–85) and prohibition (pages 293–96).
2 Think about the way these new developments in the 1920s affected people’s
lives. Choose three aspects of the Roaring Twenties that you think would have
had the greatest impact and explain why. Compare your choices with others in
your class.
283
SOURCE
6 Women in 1920s USA
DEPTH STUDIES
Women formed half of the population of the USA and their lives were as varied as those of men. It
is therefore difficult to generalise. However, before the First World War middle-class women in the
USA, like those in Britain, were expected to lead restricted lives. They had to wear very restrictive
clothes and behave politely. They were expected not to wear make-up. Their relationships with
men were strictly controlled. They had to have a chaperone with them when they went out with
a boyfriend. They were expected not to take part in sport or to smoke in public. In most states
they could not vote. Most women were expected to be housewives. Very few paid jobs were open
to women. Most working women were in lower-paid jobs such as cleaning, dressmaking and
secretarial work.
In rural USA there were particularly tight restrictions owing to the Churches’ traditional
attitude to the role of women.
In the 1920s, many of these things began to change, especially for urban and middle-class
women, for a range of reasons.
● Impact of war When the USA joined the war in 1917, some women were taken into the war
industries, giving them experience of skilled factory work for the first time.
● The vote In 1920 they got the vote in all states.
● The car Through the 1920s, they shared the liberating effects of the car.
● Housework Their domestic work was made easier (in theory) by new electrical goods such
as vacuum cleaners and washing machines.
● Behaviour For younger urban women many of the traditional roles of behaviour were eased
as well. Women wore more daring clothes. They smoked in public and drank with men, in
public. They went out with men, in cars, without a chaperone. They kissed in public.
Employment
A school teacher in 1905.
In urban areas more women took on jobs – particularly middle-class women. They typically took
on jobs created by the new industries. There were 10 million women in jobs in 1929, 24 per cent
more than in 1920. With money of their own, working women became the particular target of
Revision Tip advertising. Even women who did not earn their own money were increasingly seen as the ones who
Select two changes for women
took decisions about whether to buy new items for the home. There is evidence that women’s role in
in this period. Make sure you can
describe both of them fully.
choosing cars triggered Ford, in 1925, to make them available in colours other than black.
SOURCE
7 Choices
Films and novels also exposed women to a
much wider range of role models. Millions
of women a week saw films with sexy or
daring heroines as well as other films that
showed women in a more traditional role. The
newspaper, magazine and film industries found
that sex sold much better than anything else.
Women were less likely to stay in unhappy
marriages. In 1914 there were 100,000 divorces;
in 1929 there were twice as many.
Think!
1 Compare the clothes of the
women in Sources 6 and 7. Write
a detailed description of the
differences between them.
2 Flappers were controversial figures
in the 1920s. List as many reasons
Flappers, identified by short skirts, bobbed hair, bright clothes, and lots of make-up, as possible for this.
were the extreme example of liberated urban women
284
SOURCE
8 Limitations
Focus Task
Did the roles of women change during the 1920s?
1861– At the same time as some young Americans were experiencing liberation, others were facing
1870
intolerance and racism.
1871– The vast majority of Americans were either immigrants or descendants of recent immigrants.
1880 Source 11 shows you the ethnic background of the main groups.
As you can see from Source 10, immigration to the USA was at an all-time high from 1901 to
1881– 1910. Immigrants were flooding in, particularly Jews from eastern Europe and Russia who were
1890
fleeing persecution, and people from Italy who were fleeing poverty. Many Italian immigrants did
1891– not intend to settle in the USA, but hoped to make money to take back to their families in Italy.
1900 The United States had always prided itself on being a ‘melting pot’. In theory, individual
groups lost their ethnic identity and blended together with other groups to become just ‘Americans’.
1901–
1910
In practice, however, this wasn’t always the case. In the USA’s big cities the more established
immigrant groups – Irish Americans, French Canadians and German Americans – competed for
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 the best jobs and the best available housing. These groups tended to look down on the more recent
Number of immigrants (millions) eastern European and Italian immigrants. These in turn had nothing but contempt for African
Americans and Mexicans, who were almost at the bottom of the scale.
Immigration to the USA, 1861–1910.
SOURCE
11
1,200,000 Canada & Newfoundland
700,000 Norway
1,000,000 Sweden
2,700,000 Russia
4,400,000 Germany
5,000,000 Great Britain
2,000,000 Ireland
USA 3,300,000 Austria– Hungary
3,200,000 Italy
400,000 Balkans
600,000 France
200,000 West Indies
50,000 Mexico
250,000 China
175,000 Japan
SOURCE
12 The Red Scare
The blaze of revolution is eating its In the 1920s these racist attitudes towards immigrants were made worse by an increased fear of
way into the homes of the American Bolshevism or Communism. The USA watched with alarm as Russia became Communist after
workman, licking at the altars of the the Russian Revolution of 1917. It feared that many of the more recent immigrants from eastern
churches, leaping into the belfry of Europe and Russia were bringing similar radical ideas with them to the USA. This reaction was
the school house, crawling into the called the Red Scare.
sacred corners of American homes, In 1919 Americans saw evidence all around them to confirm their fears. There was a wave of
seeking to replace the marriage vows disturbances. Some 400,000 American workers went on strike. Even the police in Boston went on
with libertine laws, burning up the strike and looters and thieves roamed the city. There were race riots in 25 towns.
foundations of society. Today, most historians argue that the strikes were caused by economic hardship. However, many
prominent Americans in the 1920s saw the strikes as the dangerous signs of Communist interference.
Mitchell Palmer, US Attorney General, Fear of Communism combined with prejudice against immigrants was a powerful mix.
speaking in 1920.
The fears were not totally unjustified. Many immigrants in the USA did hold radical political
beliefs. Anarchists published pamphlets and distributed them widely in American cities, calling for
the overthrow of the government. In April 1919 a bomb planted in a church in Milwaukee killed
ten people. In May, bombs were posted to 36 prominent Americans. In June more bombs went off in
seven US cities, and one almost succeeded in killing Mitchell Palmer, the US Attorney General. All
those known to have radical political beliefs were rounded up. They were generally immigrants and
the evidence against them was often flimsy. J. Edgar Hoover, a clerk appointed by Palmers, built up
files on 60,000 suspects and in 1919–20 around 10,000 individuals were informed that they were to
286 be deported from the USA.
SOURCE
13 SOURCE
14
Source Analysis Palmer discovered that these purges were popular, so he tried to use the fear of revolution to build
up his own political support and run for president. Trade unionists, African Americans, Jews,
Look at Sources 12–14. Do they tell
historians more about Communists Catholics and almost all minority groups found themselves accused of being Communists. In the
or the enemies of Communism? end, however, Palmer caused his own downfall. He predicted that a Red Revolution would begin
Explain your answer. in May 1920. When nothing happened, the papers began to make fun of him and officials in the
Justice Department who were sickened by Palmer’s actions undermined him. Secretary of Labor
Louis Post examined Palmer’s case files and found that only 556 out of the thousands of cases
brought had any basis in fact.
Think!
Work in pairs.
1 One of you collect evidence to Sacco and Vanzetti
show that the Red Scare was the
Two high-profile victims of the Red Scare were Italian Americans Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo
result of fear of Communism.
2 The other collect evidence to show
Vanzetti. They were arrested in 1920 on suspicion of armed robbery and murder. It quickly emerged
that the Red Scare was the result that they were self-confessed anarchists. Anarchists hated the American system of government
of prejudice and intolerance. and believed in destroying it by creating social disorder. Their trial became less a trial for murder,
3 Now try to come up with a more a trial of their radical ideas. The prosecution relied heavily on racist slurs about their Italian
definition of the Red Scare that origins, and on stirring up fears about their radical beliefs. The judge at the trial said that although
combines both of your views. Vanzetti ‘may not actually have committed the crime attributed to him he is nevertheless morally
culpable [to blame] because he is the enemy of our existing institutions’.
Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted on flimsy evidence. A leading lawyer of the time said:
Revision Tip ‘Judge Thayer is . . . full of prejudice. He has been carried away by fear of Reds which has captured
♦ Make sure you can describe two about 90 per cent of the American people.’ After six years of legal appeals, Sacco and Vanzetti were
attacks that sparked off the Red executed in 1927, to a storm of protest around the world from both radicals and moderates who
Scare 1919–20. saw how unjustly the trial had been conducted. Fifty years later, they were pardoned.
♦ Make sure you can explain at least
one reason for Palmer’s downfall.
♦ Practise explaining to someone Immigration quotas
else why the Sacco and Vanzetti In 1924 the government introduced a quota system that ensured that the largest proportion of
case received so much publicity. immigrants was from north-west Europe (mainly British, Irish and German). From a high point of
more than a million immigrants a year between 1901 and 1910, by 1929 the number arriving in the
USA had fallen to 150,000 per year. No Asians were allowed in at all.
287
The experience of African
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
The Ku Klux Klan
Americans
African Americans had long been part of America’s history. The first Africans had been brought to
the USA as slaves by white settlers in the seventeenth century. By the time slavery was ended in the
nineteenth century, there were more African Americans than white people in the southern United
States. White governments, fearing the power of African Americans, introduced many laws to
control their freedom. They could not vote. They were denied access to good jobs and to worthwhile
education, and well into the twentieth century they suffered great poverty.
288
SOURCE
17
289
African Americans also entered politics. WEB DuBois founded the National Association for
DEPTH STUDIES
the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). In 1919 it had 300 branches and around 90,000
members. It campaigned to end racial segregation laws and to get laws passed against lynching. It
did not make much headway at the time, but the numbers of lynchings did fall.
Another important figure was Marcus Garvey. He founded the Universal Negro Improvement
Association (UNIA). Garvey urged African Americans to be proud of their race and colour. He
SOURCE
18 instituted an honours system for African Americans (like the British Empire’s honours system of
If I die in Atlanta my work shall only knighthoods). The UNIA helped African Americans to set up their own businesses. By the mid 1920s
then begin . . . Look for me in the there were UNIA grocery stores, laundries, restaurants and even a printing workshop.
whirlwind or the storm, look for me all Garvey set up a shipping line to support both the UNIA businesses and also his scheme of
around you, for, with God’s grace, I helping African Americans to emigrate to Africa away from white racism. Eventually, his businesses
shall come and bring with me countless collapsed, partly because he was prosecuted for exaggerating the value of his shares. He was one
millions of black slaves who have died of very few businessmen to be charged for this offence, and some historians believe that J Edgar
in America and the West Indies and Hoover was behind the prosecution. Garvey’s movement attracted over 1 million members at its
the millions in Africa to aid you in the height in 1921. One of these was the Reverend Earl Little. He was beaten to death by Klan thugs in
fight for Liberty, Freedom and Life. the late 1920s, but his son went on to be the civil rights leader Malcolm X.
290
‘The vanishing Americans’
SOURCE
21
Photograph of a native American, Charlie Guardipee, and his family taken for a US government report of 1921. According to the
report Charlie Guardipee had twenty horses, ten cattle, no chickens, no wheat, oats or garden, and no sickness in the family.
In the 1920s the government became concerned about the treatment of native Americans. Twelve
Think! thousand had served in the armed forces in the First World War, which helped to change white
Make two lists: attitudes to them. The government did a census in the 1920s and a major survey in the late 1920s
a) evidence of prejudice and which revealed that most lived in extreme poverty, with much lower life expectancy than whites,
discrimination towards native that they were in worse health and had poorer education and poorly paid jobs (if they were able to
Americans
get a job at all). They suffered extreme discrimination. They were quickly losing their land. Mining
b) evidence that the treatment of
native Americans was improving companies were legally able to seize large areas of native American land. Many native Americans
in the 1920s. who owned land were giving up the struggle to survive in their traditional way and selling up.
They were also losing their culture. Their children were sent to special boarding schools. The
aim of the schools was to ‘assimilate’ them into white American culture. This involved trying to
destroy the native Americans’ beliefs, traditions, dances and languages. In the 1920s the native
Revision Tip Americans were referred to as ‘the vanishing Americans’.
Make sure you can describe: However, the 1920s were in some ways a turning point. In 1924 native Americans were
♦ at least two ways in which native
Americans suffered in the 1920s.
granted US citizenship and allowed to vote for the first time. In 1928 the Merriam Report proposed
♦ one improvement. widespread improvement to the laws relating to native Americans, and these reforms were finally
introduced under Roosevelt’s New Deal in 1934.
291
The Monkey Trial
DEPTH STUDIES
While the Sacco and Vanzetti trial became a public demonstration of anti-immigrant feelings,
another trial in the 1920s – the Monkey Trial – became the focus of ill-feeling between rural and
urban USA.
Most urban people in the 1920s would have believed in Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution.
This says that over millions of years human beings evolved from ape-like ancestors.
Many rural Americans, however, disagreed. They were very religious people. They were mostly
Protestants. They went to church regularly and believed in the Bible. When the Bible told them that
God made the world in six days, and that on the sixth day He created human beings to be like Him,
they took the teachings literally. People with these views were known as Fundamentalists. They were
particularly strong in the ‘Bible Belt’ states such as Tennessee.
At school, however, even in these states, most children were taught evolution. Fundamentalists
felt that this was undermining their own religion. It seemed to be yet another example of the USA’s
abandoning traditional values in the headlong rush to modernise in the 1920s. They decided to roll
back the modern ideas and so, in six states, the Fundamentalists led by William Jennings Bryan
managed to pass a law banning the teaching of ‘evolution’.
A biology teacher called John Scopes deliberately broke the law so that he could be arrested and
put his case against Fundamentalism in the courts. The best lawyers were brought in for both sides
and in July 1925, in the stifling heat of a Tennessee courtroom, the USA’s traditionalists joined battle
with its modernists.
The trial captured public imagination and the arguments on both sides were widely reported
in the press. Scopes was convicted of breaking the law, but it was really American Fundamentalism
itself which was on trial – and it lost! At the trial the anti-evolutionists were subjected to great
Think! mockery. Their arguments were publicly ridiculed and their spokesman Bryan, who claimed to be
1 Why do you think the trial became an expert on religion and science, was shown to be ignorant and confused. After the trial, the anti-
known as the Monkey Trial? evolution lobby was weakened.
2 In what ways did the trial show
American intolerance of other
points of view?
SOURCE
22
. . . for nearly two hours . . . Mr Darrow [lawyer for the defendant] goaded his
opponent. [He] asked Mr Bryan if he really believed that the serpent had always
crawled on its belly because it tempted Eve, and if he believed Eve was made
Revision Tip from Adam’s rib . . .
Try to summarise this page in three [Bryan’s] face flushed under Mr Darrow’s searching words, and . . . when one
points: [question] stumped him he took refuge in his faith and either refused to answer
♦ a reason for the Monkey Trial
directly or said in effect: ‘The Bible states it; it must be so.’
♦ description of the trial
♦ results of the trial.
From the report of the Monkey Trial in the Baltimore Evening Sun, July 1925.
Focus Task
How widespread was intolerance in the 1920s?
You have looked at various examples of intolerance and prejudice in the 1920s.
Draw up a chart like this, and fill it in to summarise the various examples.
Group Pages How did intolerance affect them? How did they react? How did the situation
change?
Immigrants 286–87
Communists 286
Evolutionists 292
292
SOURCE
23 Why was prohibition introduced?
SOURCE
24 SOURCE
25
A poster issued by the Anti-Saloon League in 1915. A poster issued by the Women’s Christian Temperance Union.
Supporters of prohibition became known as ‘dries’. The dries brought some powerful
Revision Tip arguments to their case. They claimed that ‘3000 infants are smothered yearly in bed, by drunken
You should aim to be able to explain parents.’ The USA’s entry into the First World War in 1917 boosted the dries. Drinkers were accused
at least two reasons why Prohibition of being unpatriotic cowards. Most of the big breweries were run by German immigrants who were
was brought in. Ideally, group your portrayed as the enemy. Drink was linked to other evils as well. After the Russian Revolution, the
reasons under headings like Religion;
dries claimed that Bolshevism thrived on drink and that alcohol led to lawlessness in the cities,
Patriotism; Health, etc.
particularly in immigrant communities. Saloons were seen as dens of vice that destroyed family life.
The campaign became one of country values against city values.
In 1917 the movement had enough states on its side to propose the Eighteenth Amendment to
the Constitution. This ‘prohibited the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors’. It
became law in January 1920 and is known as the Volstead Act. 293
What was the impact of
DEPTH STUDIES
Think!
1 Prohibition did not actually make
it illegal to drink alcohol, only to prohibition?
make or supply it. Why not?
2 Is it possible to enforce any law Prohibition lasted from 1920 until 1933. It is often said that prohibition was a total failure. This is
when the population refuses to not entirely correct. Levels of alcohol consumption fell by about 30 per cent in the early 1920s (see
obey it? Try to think of laws that
Source 26). Prohibition gained widespread approval in some states, particularly the rural areas
affect you today.
in the mid-west, although in urban states it was not popular (Maryland never even introduced
prohibition). The government ran information campaigns and prohibition agents arrested
SOURCE
26 offenders (see Source 27). Two of the most famous agents were Isadore Einstein and his deputy
Moe Smith. They made 4,392 arrests. Their raids were always low key. They would enter speakeasies
35.0
Key (illegal bars) and simply order a drink. Einstein had a special flask hidden inside his waistcoat
Beer
with a funnel attached. He preserved the evidence by pouring his drink down the funnel and the
30.0 Spirits
criminals were caught!
Period of
25.0
prohibition SOURCE
27
Gallons of alcohol
5.0
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
Enforcement was underfinanced. There were not enough agents – each agent was poorly paid
Average alcohol consumption of Americans and was responsible for a huge area.
(in US gallons) per year, 1905–40. By far the biggest problem was that millions of Americans, particularly in urban areas, were
simply not prepared to obey this law. So bootleggers (suppliers of illegal alcohol) made vast
SOURCE
28 fortunes. Al Capone (see page 296) made around $60 million a year from
his speakeasies. His view was that ‘Prohibition is a business. All I do is
supply a public demand.’ And the demand was huge. By 1925 there were
more speakeasies in American cities than there had been saloons in 1919.
Izzy Einstein filed a report to his superiors on how easy it was to find
alcohol after arriving in a new city. Here are the results:
● Chicago: 21 minutes
● Atlanta: 17 minutes
● Pittsburg: 11 minutes
● New Orleans: 35 seconds (he was offered a bottle of whisky by his
taxi driver when he asked where he could get a drink!)
Source Analysis
Which of Sources 26–28 is the most useful to the historian,
or are they more useful when taken together? Explain your
answer.
Revision Tip
Alcohol being tipped down the drain. Vast quantities of bootleg The main debate about Prohibition is about why it failed.
(illegal) liquor were seized, but were only a fraction of the total.
Even so it is worth selecting one or two examples of its
success.
294
SOURCE
29 Illegal stills (short for distilleries) sprang up all over the USA as people
Corruption
Prohibition led to massive corruption. Many of the law enforcement
officers were themselves involved with the liquor trade. Big breweries
A visit to a speakeasy. stayed in business throughout the prohibition era. This is not an easy
business to hide! But the breweries stayed in operation by bribing
local government officials, prohibition agents and the police to leave
SOURCE
30 them alone.
In some cities, police officers were quite prepared to direct people
to speakeasies. Even when arrests were made, it was difficult to get
convictions because more senior officers or even judges were in the pay
of the criminals. One in twelve prohibition agents was dismissed for
corruption. The New York FBI boss, Don Chaplin, once ordered his 200
agents: ‘Put your hands on the table, both of them. Every son of a bitch
wearing a diamond is fired.’
SOURCE
31
Statistics in the Detroit police court of 1924 show 7391
arrests for violations of the prohibition law, but only 458
convictions. Ten years ago a dishonest policeman was a
rarity . . . Now the honest ones are pointed out as rarities .
. . Their relationship with the bootleggers is perfectly friendly.
They have to pinch two out of five once in a while, but they
choose the ones who are least willing to pay bribes.
E Mandeville, in Outlook magazine, 1925.
Source Analysis
1 Explain the message of Source 30.
2 Read Source 31. How has prohibition affected the police
in Detroit?
3 Which of Sources 30 and 31 do you most trust to give
‘The National Gesture’: a cartoon from the prohibition era. you accurate information about corruption during the
Prohibition era?
Revision Tip
Make sure you can use the key terms in an answer about
why Prohibition failed: bootlegger, speakeasy, demand,
corruption.
295
SOURCE
32 Gangsters
DEPTH STUDIES
The most common image people have of the prohibition era is the gangster. Estimates suggest that
organised gangs made about $2 billion out of the sale of illegal alcohol. The bootlegger George
Remus certainly did well from the trade. He had a huge network of paid officials that allowed him
to escape charge after charge against him. At one party he gave a car to each of the women guests,
while all the men received diamond cuff links worth $25,000.
The rise of the gangsters tells us a lot about American society at this time. The gangsters
generally came from immigrant backgrounds. In the early 1920s the main gangs were Jewish,
Polish, Irish and Italian. Gangsters generally came from poorer backgrounds within these
communities. They were often poorly educated, but they were also clever and ruthless. Dan
O’Banion (Irish gang leader murdered by Capone), Pete and Vince Guizenberg (hired killers
who worked for Bugsy Moran and died in the St Valentine’s Day Massacre), and Lucky Luciano
(Italian killer who spent ten years in prison) were some of the most powerful gangsters. The gangs
fought viciously with each other to control the liquor trade and also the prostitution, gambling
and protection rackets that were centred on the speakeasies. They made use of new technology,
especially automobiles and the Thompson sub-machine gun, which was devastatingly powerful
but could be carried around and hidden under an overcoat. In Chicago alone, there were 130
gangland murders in 1926 and 1927 and not one arrest. By the late 1920s fear and bribery made
A portrait of Al Capone from 1930.
law enforcement ineffective.
296
10 The USA 1919–41
Focus Task A
Why did prohibition fail?
In the end prohibition failed. Here are four groups who could be blamed for the failure
of prohibition.
a) the American people who carried on going to illegal b) the law enforcers who were corrupt and ignored the law
speakeasies making prohibition difficult to enforce breakers
c) the bootleggers who continued supplying and selling d) the gangsters who controlled the trade through
alcohol violence and made huge profits
1 For each of the above groups find evidence on pages 293–96 to show that it
contributed to the failure of prohibition.
2 Say which group you think played the most important role in the failure. Explain
your choice.
3 Draw a diagram to show links between the groups.
297
10.3 What were the causes and consequences of
DEPTH STUDIES
300
299
The economic consequences of the
DEPTH STUDIES
An attempt to make some cash after the Wall Street Crash, 1929.
At first, however, these seemed like tragic but isolated incidents. President Hoover reassured the
nation that prosperity was ‘just around the corner’. He cut taxes to encourage people to buy more
goods and by mid 1931 production was rising again slightly and there was hope that the situation
Revision Tip was more settled.
In fact, it was the worst of the Depression that was ‘just around the corner’, because the Crash
The impact of the Crash is a big
theme. There are so many examples had destroyed the one thing that was crucial to the prosperity of the 1920s: confidence.
to choose from it is helpful to narrow This was most marked in the banking crisis. In 1929, 659 banks failed. As banks failed people
it down. stopped trusting them and many withdrew their savings. In 1930 another 1,352 went bankrupt. The
♦ Choose four examples and make biggest of these was the Bank of the United States in New York, which went bankrupt in December
sure you can describe those 1930. It had 400,000 depositors – many of them recent immigrants. Almost one-third of New
thoroughly. Yorkers saved with it. This was the worst failure in American history. To make matters worse, 1931
♦ Make sure at least one of your
saw escalating problems in European banks, which had a knock-on effect in the USA. Panic set
examples is about the collapse
of banks and one is about
in. Around the country a billion dollars was withdrawn from banks and put in safe deposit boxes,
unemployment. or stored at home. People felt that hard currency was the only security. Another 2,294 banks went
under in 1931.
300
SOURCE
4 So while Hoover talked optimistically about the return of prosperity,
Focus Task
What impact did the Crash have on the
American economy? Wall Street
You can see how a downward spiral was started by the Crash
Crash. Draw a diagram with notes to explain how the
following were connected to each other. Show how
the effect they had on one another continued to make wage cuts and
the economic situation worse over time. unemployment
♦ Wall Street Crash
♦ the banking crisis
♦ business failure or contraction the banking
♦ wage cuts and unemployment crisis
♦ reduced spending.
reduced
spending
business
failures or
contraction
301
SOURCE
5 The human cost of the Depression
DEPTH STUDIES
SOURCE
7
Last summer, in the hot weather,
when the smell was sickening and the
A dustbowl farm. Overfarming, drought and poor conservation turned farmland
flies were thick, there were a hundred into desert.
people a day coming to the dumps . . .
a widow who used to do housework and In the towns, the story was not much better. Unemployment rose rapidly. For example, in 1932 in
laundry, but now had no work at all, fed the steel city of Cleveland, 50 per cent of workers were now unemployed and in Toledo 80 per cent.
herself and her fourteen-year-old son on Forced to sell their homes or kicked out because they could not pay the rent, city workers joined
garbage. Before she picked up the meat the army of unemployed searching for work of any kind. Thousands were taken in by relatives
she would always take off her glasses so but many ended up on the streets. At night the parks were full of the homeless and unemployed.
that she couldn’t see the maggots. In every city, workers who had contributed to the prosperity of the 1920s now queued for bread
and soup dished out by charity workers. A large number of men (estimated at 2 million in 1932)
From New Republic magazine, February travelled from place to place on railway freight wagons seeking work. Thousands of children could
1933.
be found living in wagons or on tents next to the tracks. Every town had a so-called Hooverville.
This was a shanty town of ramshackle huts where the migrants lived, while they searched for work.
Revision Tip The rubbish tips were crowded with families hoping to scrape a meal from the leftovers of more
As with the economic effects of fortunate people. Through 1931, 238 people were admitted to hospital in New York suffering from
the Crash, the key here is to focus. malnutrition or starvation. Forty-five of them died.
Choose three examples of hardships
and make sure you can describe those
thoroughly. Make sure at least one of
your examples is about Hoovervilles.
302
SOURCE
8 SOURCE
9
10
9
Unemployed (millions)
8 8.0
7
4 4.3
2 1.6
15.9%
23.6%
24.9%
1
5.2%
8.7%
0
1929 1930 1931 1932 1933
Unemployment in the USA, 1929–33. A Hooverville shanty town on wasteland in Seattle, Washington.
SOURCE
10 SOURCE
11
There is not an unemployed man in the
country that hasn’t contributed to the
wealth of every millionaire in America.
The working classes didn’t bring this on,
it was the big boys . . . We’ve got more
wheat, more corn, more food, more
cotton, more money in the banks,
more everything in the world than any
nation that ever lived ever had, yet we
are starving to death. We are the first
nation in the history of the world to go
to the poorhouse in an automobile.
Will Rogers, an American writer, 1931.
Rogers had a regular humorous column
in an American magazine which was
popular with ordinary people.
303
The 1932 presidential election
DEPTH STUDIES
Source Analysis q
1 Source 12 had a very powerful
effect on Americans. Explain why. In the 1932 election President Hoover paid the price for being unable to solve the problems
2 From Sources 13 and 14 make a of the Depression. It was partly his own fault. Until 1932 he refused to accept that there was a
list of criticisms of Hoover and his major problem. He insisted that ‘prosperity is just around the corner’. This left him open to bitter
government.
criticisms such as Source 14. A famous banner carried in a demonstration of Iowa farmers said: ‘In
Hoover we trusted and now we are busted.’
Hoover was regarded as a ‘do nothing’ President. This was not entirely fair on Hoover. He tried
SOURCE
12 to restart the economy in 1930 and 1931 by tax cuts. He tried to persuade business leaders not to cut
wages. He set up the Reconstruction Finance Company, which propped up banks to stop them going
bankrupt. He did put money into public works programmes, e.g. the Hoover Dam on the Colorado
River, but too little to have a real impact on unemployment. He tried to protect US industries by
introducing tariffs, but this simply strangled international trade and made the Depression worse.
To most observers these measures looked like mere tinkering. The measures the government
was taking did not match up to the scale of the problems the country was facing. Hoover and most
Republicans were very reluctant to change their basic policies. They believed that the main cause of
the Depression had been economic problems in Europe, not weaknesses in the USA’s economy. They
said that business should be left alone to bring back prosperity. Government help was not needed.
They argued that business went in cycles of boom and bust, and therefore prosperity would soon
return. In 1932 Hoover blocked the Garner–Wagner Relief Bill, which would have allowed Congress
to provide $2.1 billion to create jobs.
Even more damaging to Hoover’s personal reputation, however, was how little he tried to
help people who were suffering because of the Depression. He believed that social security was not
the responsibility of the government. Relief should be provided by local government or charities.
The Republicans were afraid that if the government helped individuals, they would become less
independent and less willing to work.
A 1932 Democrat election poster. Hoover’s reputation was particularly damaged by an event in June 1932. Thousands of
servicemen who had fought in the First World War marched on Washington asking for their war
SOURCE
13 bonuses (a kind of pension) to be paid early. The marchers camped peacefully outside the White
Never before in this country has a House and sang patriotic songs. Hoover refused to meet them. He appointed General Douglas
government fallen . . . so low . . . in MacArthur to handle the situation. MacArthur convinced himself (with little or no evidence) that
popular estimation or been [such] an they were Communist agitators. He ignored Hoover’s instructions to treat the marchers with respect.
object of cynical contempt. Never before Troops and police used tear gas and burned the marchers’ camps. Hoover would not admit he had
has [a President] given his name so freely failed to control MacArthur. He publicly thanked God that the USA still knew how to deal with a mob.
to latrines and offal dumps, or had his
face banished from the [cinema] screen
SOURCE
15
to avoid the hoots and jeers of children.
Written by a political commentator.
SOURCE
14
Farmers are just ready to do anything
to get even with the situation. I almost
hate to express it, but I honestly
believe that if some of them could
buy airplanes they would come down
here to Washington to blow you fellows
up . . . The farmer is a naturally
conservative individual, but you cannot
find a conservative farmer today. Any
economic system that has in its power
to set me and my wife in the streets,
at my age what can I see but red?
President of the Farmers’ Union of
Wisconsin, AN Young, speaking to a
Senate committee in 1932. Police attacking the war bonus marchers.
304
Franklin D Roosevelt
The campaign
Born in 1882, into a rich New York
family. With such ill-feeling towards Hoover being expressed throughout the country, Roosevelt was
He went to university and became a confident of victory, but he took no chances. He went on a grand train tour of the USA in the weeks
successful lawyer. before the election and mercilessly attacked the attitude of Hoover and the Republicans.
In 1910 he entered politics as a Roosevelt’s own plans were rather vague and general (see Source 16). But he realised people
Democratic senator for New York.
In 1921 he was paralysed by polio wanted action, whatever that action was. In a 20,800 km campaign trip he made sixteen major
and spent the rest of his life in a speeches and another 60 from the back of his train. He promised the American people a ‘New Deal’.
wheelchair. It was not only his policies that attracted support; it was also his personality. He radiated warmth
He became President in 1933, in the and inspired confidence. He made personal contact with the American people and seemed to offer
middle of the economic crisis.
Roosevelt was an excellent public hope and a way out of the terrible situation they were in.
speaker, an optimist and a believer in The election was a landslide victory for Roosevelt. He won by 7 million votes and the Democrats
the ‘American dream’ – that anyone won a majority of seats in Congress. It was the worst defeat the Republicans had ever suffered.
who worked hard enough could
become rich.
His ‘New Deal’ policies (see pages
306–15), made him extremely popular.
Key Question Summary
He was elected President four times. What were the causes and consequences of the Wall Street Crash?
He led the USA through the Second
1 In October 1929 the Wall Street stock market crashed with a devastating
World War until his death in
impact on America and the rest of the world.
April 1945.
He is often referred to simply as FDR. 2 The Crash was partly to do with uncontrolled speculation but it was also
the result of underlying weaknesses in the American economy; in particular,
industry was overproducing goods which it could not sell.
3 The main consequences for the economy were huge losses for investors,
SOURCE
16 bank failures, factories closing, mass unemployment, the collapse of farm
Millions of our citizens cherish the hope prices and a drastic reduction in foreign trade.
that their old standards of living have 4 The human cost was devastating: unemployment, homelessness, poverty and
hunger. Families were split and ‘Hoovervilles’ appeared on the edges of cities.
not gone forever. Those millions shall not
5 Farmers lost their land and were dispossessed. Poverty was rampant in rural
hope in vain. . . . I pledge myself, to a areas. Matters were made even worse by the dustbowl, which led to mass
New Deal for the American people. This migration from central southern America to California.
is more than a political campaign; it is a 6 President Hoover was unable to deal with the crisis. He believed that
call to arms. Give me your help, not to government should not interfere too much: the system would repair itself.
win votes alone, but to win this crusade The measures he undertook were too little too late and he did not do
enough to provide relief to those who were suffering.
to restore America . . . I am waging a 7 In 1932, Americans elected Franklin D Roosevelt as President. He promised a
war against Destruction, Delay, Deceit New Deal to help people and get America back to work.
and Despair . . .
Roosevelt’s pre-election speech, 1932.
Focus Task
Why did Roosevelt win the 1932 election?
Revision Tip In many ways Roosevelt’s victory needs no explanation. Indeed, it would have
Make sure you can describe: been very surprising if any President could have been re-elected after the
♦ two actions taken by Hoover sufferings of 1929–32. But it is important to recognise the range of factors that
♦ two factors which damaged helped Roosevelt and damaged Hoover.
Hoover Write your own account of Roosevelt’s success under the following headings:
♦ two reasons why people ♦ The experiences of ordinary people, 1929–32
supported Roosevelt. ♦ The policies of the Republicans
♦ Actions taken by the Republicans
♦ Roosevelt’s election campaign and personality.
305
10.4 How successful was the New Deal?
DEPTH STUDIES
SOURCE
1 The Hundred Days
This is the time to speak the truth
frankly and boldly . . . So let me assert In the first hundred days of his presidency, Roosevelt worked round the clock with his advisers (who
my firm belief that the only thing we became known as the ‘Brains Trust’) to produce an enormous range of sweeping measures.
have to fear is fear itself – nameless, One of the many problems affecting the USA was its loss of confidence in the banks.
unreasoning, unjustified terror which The day after his inauguration Roosevelt ordered all of the banks to close and to remain closed
paralyses efforts to convert retreat into until government officials had checked them over. A few days later 5,000 trustworthy banks were
advance . . . This nation calls for action allowed to reopen. They were even supported by government money if necessary. At the same time,
and action now . . . Our greatest Roosevelt’s advisers had come up with a set of rules and regulations which would prevent the
primary task is to put people to work reckless speculation that had contributed to the Wall Street Crash.
. . . We must act and act quickly. These two measures, the Emergency Banking Act and the Securities Exchange
Commission, gave the American people a taste of what the New Deal was to look like, but there
Roosevelt’s inauguration speech,
was a lot more to come. One of Roosevelt’s advisers at this time said, ‘During the whole Hundred
4 March 1933.
Days Congress, people didn’t know what was going on, but they knew something was happening,
something good for them.’ In the Hundred Days, Roosevelt sent fifteen proposals to Congress and
SOURCE
2 all fifteen were adopted. Just as importantly, he took time to explain to the American people what
The bank rescue of 1933 was probably he was doing and why he was doing it. Every Sunday he would broadcast on radio to the nation.
the turning point of the Depression. An estimated 60 million Americans tuned in to these ‘fireside chats’. Nowadays, we are used to
When people were able to survive the politicians doing this. At that time it was a new development.
shock of having all the banks closed, The Federal Emergency Relief Administration tackled the urgent needs of the poor.
and then see the banks open up again, $500 million was spent on soup kitchens, blankets, employment schemes and nursery schools.
with their money protected, there The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was aimed at unemployed young men. They could
began to be confidence. Good times sign on for periods of six months, which could be renewed if they could still not find work. Most
were coming. It marked the revival of of the work done by the CCC was on environmental projects in national parks. The money earned
hope. generally went back to the men’s families. Around 2.5 million were helped by this scheme.
The Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) tried to take a long-term view
Raymond Moley, one of Roosevelt’s of the problems facing farmers. It set quotas to reduce farm production in order to force prices
advisers during the Hundred Days
Congress session.
gradually upwards. At the same time, the AAA helped farmers to modernise and to use farming
methods that would conserve and protect the soil. In cases of extreme hardship, farmers could also
receive help with their mortgages. The AAA certainly helped farmers, although modernisation had
Revision Tip the unfortunate effect of putting more farm labourers out of work.
The final measure of the Hundred Days passed on 18 June was the National Industrial
The various agencies can be a bit
confusing. Make sure you can Recovery Act (NIRA). It set up two important organisations. The Public Works
describe the aims and the work of at Administration (PWA) used government money to build schools, roads, dams, bridges and
least the National Industrial Recovery airports. These would be vital once the USA had recovered, and in the short term they created
Act and the Tennessee Valley millions of jobs. The National Recovery Administration (NRA) improved working conditions
Authority. in industry and outlawed child labour. It also set out fair wages and sensible levels of production.
The idea was to stimulate the economy by giving workers money to spend, without overproducing
and causing a slump. It was voluntary, but firms which joined used the blue eagle as a symbol of
306 presidential approval. Over 2 million employers joined the scheme.
SOURCE
3
Cherokee
Dam
i
ipp
siss
T E N N E S S E E Fontana Dam
Mis
Hiwassee NORTH
Chickamauga
Memphis Dam Dam CAROLINA
SOUTH
Wilson Dam Chattanooga CAROLINA
MIS
GEORGIA
SISS
ALABAMA
IPPI
0 100 km
Scale The Fontana Dam, one of the TVA’s later projects. Dams
such as these revitalised farmland, provided jobs and brought
The Tennessee Valley and the work of the TVA. electric power to the area.
307
Impact
DEPTH STUDIES
Factfile
Main events of the Hundred The measures introduced during the Hundred Days had an immediate effect. They restored
Days confidence in government. Reporters who travelled the country brought back reports of the new
4 March Roosevelt inaugurated.
spirit to be seen around the USA.
5 March Closed banks. Historians too agree that Roosevelt’s bold and decisive action did have a marked effect on the
9 March Selected banks reopened. American people.
12 March Roosevelt’s first radio
‘fireside chat’. Encouraged Americans
to put their money back into the
SOURCE
6
banks. Many did so.
Wandering around the country with one of New York’s baseball teams, I find
31 March The Civilian Conservation that [what was] the national road to ruin is now a thriving thoroughfare. It has
Corps set up. been redecorated. People have come out of the shell holes. They are working and
12 May The Agricultural Adjustment playing and seem content to let a tribe of professional worriers do their worrying
Act passed.
18 May The Tennessee Valley
for them.
Authority created.
Rudd Rennie, an American journalist, on the early days of the New Deal. From
18 June The National Industrial
Changing the Tune from Gloom to Cheer, 1934.
Recovery Act passed.
Achievements of the Hundred
Days
SOURCE
7
It restored confidence and stopped The CCC, the PWA, and similar government bodies (the alphabet agencies as
investors pulling money out of the Americans called them) made work for millions of people. The money they earned
banks.
began to bring back life to the nation’s trade and businesses. More customers
Banking measures saved 20 per cent
of home owners and farmers from appeared in the shops . . . As people started to buy again, shopkeepers, farmers
repossession. and manufacturers began to benefit from the money the government was
Farmers were 50 per cent better off spending on work for the unemployed. This process was described by Roosevelt as
under AAA by 1936.
‘priming the pump’. By this he meant that the money the Federal Government
TVA brought electrical power to
underdeveloped areas. was spending was like a fuel, flowing into the nation’s economic machinery and
Public Works Administration created starting it moving again.
600,000 jobs and built landmarks like
San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. DB O’Callaghan, Roosevelt and the USA, published in 1966.
SOURCE
8
Source Analysis As Roosevelt described it, the ‘New Deal’ meant that the forgotten man, the
1 What do Sources 6–8 agree little man, the man nobody knew much about, was going to be dealt better
about? cards to play with . . . He understood that the suffering of the Depression had
2 What do they disagree about?
fallen with terrific impact upon the people least able to bear it. He knew that the
rich had been hit hard too, but at least they had something left. But the little
merchant, the small householder and home owner, the farmer, the man who
Revision Tip worked for himself – these people were desperate. And Roosevelt saw them as
There was a lot of activity in the principal citizens of the United States, numerically and in their importance to the
Hundred Days but you need to focus maintenance of the ideals of American democracy.
on effects. Make sure you can give
examples of at least three ways the Frances Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew, 1947. Perkins was
Hundred Days had an impact on Labour Secretary under Roosevelt from 1933.
Americans.
Focus Task
What was the New Deal as introduced in 1933?
Look back over pages 306–08 and complete your own copy of this table.
308
SOURCE
9 The Second New Deal
Revision Tip
For the Second New Deal the key
measures are the Wagner Act and
the Social Security Act. Make sure
you can describe them.
Source Analysis u
1 What impression of the New
Deal does Source 10 attempt to
convey?
2 Why do you think Roosevelt
wanted artists and photographers
to be employed under the New
Deal? Steel Industry by Howard Cook, painted for the steel-making town of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.
309
Opposition to the New Deal
DEPTH STUDIES
A programme such as Roosevelt’s New Deal was unheard of in American history. It was bound to
attract opposition and it did.
SOURCE
11
The New Deal is nothing more or less than an effort to take
away from the thrifty what the thrifty and their ancestors
have accumulated, or may accumulate, and give it to
others who have not earned it and never will earn it, and
thus to destroy the incentive for future accumulation. Such
a purpose is in defiance of all the ideas upon which our
civilisation has been founded.
A Republican opponent of the New Deal speaking in 1935.
Think!
Look at the criticisms of the New Deal (above right).
Roosevelt’s opponents were often accused of being selfish.
How far do the criticisms support or contradict that view?
310 A cartoon published in an American newspaper in the mid 1930s.
SOURCE
13 Opposition from the Supreme Court
SOURCE
14
For twelve years this nation was
afflicted with hear-nothing, see-
nothing, do-nothing government.
The nation looked to government but
government looked away. Nine crazy
years at the stock market and three
long years in the bread-lines! Nine A cartoon from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle,
A Punch cartoon, June 1935. February1937.
mad years of mirage and three long
years of despair! Powerful influences
strive today to restore that kind of
government with its doctrine that Focus Task
government is best which is most Why did the New Deal encounter opposition?
indifferent . . . We know now that The thought bubbles below show some of the reasons why people opposed
government by organised money is the New Deal. Use the text and sources on these two pages to find examples
of individuals who held each belief. Try to find two more reasons why people
just as dangerous as government by opposed the New Deal.
organised mob. Never before in all
our history have these forces been
It won’t work. It’ll harm me. It’ll harm the USA.
so united against one candidate –
me – as they stand today. They are
unanimous in their hate of me – and
I welcome their hatred.
A speech by Roosevelt in the 1936
presidential election campaign.
311
Verdicts on the New Deal
DEPTH STUDIES
Focus Task A
How successful was the New
Deal (1)? The events of 1936 took their toll on Roosevelt and he became more cautious after that. Early in
1937 prosperity seemed to be returning and Roosevelt did what all conservatives had wanted: he
–5 –4 –3 –2 –1 0 1 2 3 4 5 cut the New Deal budget. He laid off many workers who had been employed by the New Deal’s own
Failure is –5. Success is +5. organisations and the cut in spending triggered other cuts throughout the economy. This meant
Pages 312–14 summarise the impact that unemployment spiralled upwards once more.
of the New Deal on various groups. The 1937 recession damaged Roosevelt badly. Middle-class voters lost some confidence in him.
1 For each of the six aspects of As a result, in 1938 the Republicans once again did well in the congressional elections. Now it was
the New Deal, decide where you much harder for Roosevelt to push his reforms through Congress. However, he was still enormously
would place it on the scale. Explain
popular with most ordinary Americans (he was elected again with a big majority in 1940). The
your score and support it with
evidence from Chapter 10.4.
problem was that the USA was no longer as united behind his New Deal as it had been in 1933.
2 Compare your six ‘marks’ on the Indeed, by 1940 Roosevelt and most Americans were focusing more on the outbreak of war in
scale with those of someone else Europe and on Japan’s exploits in the Far East.
in your class. So was the New Deal a success? One of the reasons why this question is hard to answer is that
3 Working together, try to come up you need to decide what Roosevelt was trying to achieve. We know that by 1940, unemployment
with an agreed mark for the whole was still high and the economy was certainly not booming. On the other hand, economic recovery
of the New Deal. You will have to was not Roosevelt’s only aim. In fact it may not have been his main aim. Roosevelt and many of
think about the relative importance
of different issues. For example,
his advisers wanted to reform the USA’s economy and society. So when you decide whether the New
you might give more weight to Deal was a success or not, you will have to decide what you think the aims of the New Deal were, as
a low mark in an important area well as whether you think the aims were achieved.
than to a high mark in a less
important area.
25 Deal budget
(1932 = 100%)
enters war 150
15 16.9 17.2
15.9
14.3 14.6
10
9.9 100
8.7
5
5.2 4.7
0 50
1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942
● The New Deal created millions of jobs. ● The US economy took longer to recover than that of most European
● It stabilised the American banking system. countries.
● It cut the number of business failures. ● Confidence remained low – throughout the 1930s Americans only
● Projects such as the TVA brought work and an improved standard of spent and invested about 75 per cent of what they had before 1929.
living to deprived parts of the USA. ● When Roosevelt cut the New Deal budget in 1937, the country went
● New Deal projects provided the USA with valuable resources such as back into recession.
schools, roads and power stations. ● There were six million unemployed in 1941.
● The New Deal never solved the underlying economic problems. ● Only the USA’s entry into the war brought an end to unemployment.
313
SOURCE
20
DEPTH STUDIES
African Americans queuing for government relief in 1937 in front of a famous government poster.
SOURCE
19 Focus Task
Many of Roosevelt’s experiments
How successful was the New Deal (2)?
were failures, but that is what
This is a complicated question. You have already spent time thinking about it;
experimentation entails. He would
now you are going to prepare to write an essay.
be satisfied he said if 75 per cent 1 First recap some key points by answering these questions.
of them produced beneficial results.
Experimentation depended on one Roosevelt’s aims Unemployment and the
of his distinctive characteristics: economy
receptivity to new and untried methods ♦ What were Roosevelt’s aims for ♦ Why did unemployment remain
and ideas. the First New Deal? (see page 306) high throughout the 1930s?
♦ What new aims did the Second ♦ Does this mean that Roosevelt’s
Written by historian Samuel Rosemann. New Deal have? New Deal was not a success?
♦ Which of these aims did Roosevelt
succeed in? Which did he fail in?
♦ How far do you think opposition ♦ Which criticism of the New Deal do
to the New Deal made it hard for you think is most serious? Why?
the New Deal to work? ♦ Which achievement do you think
is the most important? Why?
♦ Would Roosevelt have agreed with
your choice? Why?
2 Now write your own balanced account of the successes and failures of the New
Deal, reaching your own conclusion as to whether it was a success or not. Include:
♦ the nature and scale of the problem facing Roosevelt
♦ the action he took through the 1930s
♦ the impact of the New Deal on Americans
♦ the reasons for opposition to the New Deal
♦ your own judgement on its success.
Include evidence to back up your judgements.
314
10 The USA 1919–41
Keywords Key Question Summary
Make sure you know what these How successful was the New Deal?
terms mean and are able to define
them confidently. 1 Roosevelt’s New Deal promised action to get industry and agriculture
♦ Competition
working, get Americans back to work and provide relief for those suffering
♦ Crash
from the Depression.
♦ Credit
2 The first Hundred Days was a whirlwind of activity, putting into place a
♦ Democrat
number of New Deal agencies to achieve his aims. These involved huge
♦ Depression
public works programmes, schemes to boost employment and measures to
♦ Flappers
put agriculture and industry on a more sustainable basis. Millions of dollars
♦ Hire purchase
were set aside for relief.
♦ Hollywood
3 Roosevelt restored confidence in the banks and put financial bodies in
♦ Hooverville
America on a more stable footing.
♦ Hundred Days
4 He explained his actions to Americans and gave hope and optimism through
♦ Jazz
his radio talks, ‘fireside chats’, to the nation.
♦ Ku Klux Klan
5 The Tennessee Valley Authority was a special example of government
♦ Mail order
planning across several states.
♦ Mass production
6 In 1935 Roosevelt introduced a Second New Deal, which was focused more
♦ NAACP
on reform and creating a better life for ordinary Americans.
♦ New Deal
7 There was a lot of opposition to his policies from those who thought he was
♦ Overproduction
not doing enough to help and those who thought he was doing too much.
♦ Prohibition
Many thought that the New Deal was a huge waste of money and resources
♦ Red Scare
and was wrong in principle – it involved too much government interference
♦ Repeal
and undermined American individualism and self-reliance.
♦ Republican
8 The Supreme Court ruled some parts of the New Deal to be unconstitutional.
♦ Roaring Twenties
9 The American people re-elected Roosevelt in 1936 in a landslide victory.
♦ Shares
10 The New Deal did not solve the underlying problems of the American
♦ Speculation
economy or conquer unemployment. It was the Second World War which
♦ Stock market
got it going again. Some groups in society did not do as well out of it as they
♦ Supreme Court
might have hoped.
♦ Tariff
11 It did save the banking system, create millions of jobs and relieve the
♦ Temperance
suffering of millions of Americans. It left much of lasting value, for example
♦ Tennessee Valley Authority
in roads, public buildings and schools. It set the tone for future government
action in the USA.
Exam Practice
See pages 168–175 and pages 316–319 for advice on the different types of
questions you might face.
1 (a) What was the Tennessee Valley Authority? [4]
(b) Explain why Roosevelt introduced the Second New Deal in 1935. [6]
(c) The New Deal was a failure. How far do you agree with this statement?
Explain your answer. [10]
315
SECTION 2: EXAM FOCUS
A typical part (a) question (a) What were the main features of the Weimar constitution?
In a question like this, you should describe four features, such as Article 48, or the position of
Chancellor.
A typical part (b) question (b) Why did Hitler become Chancellor in 1933?
Don’t make the mistake of just describing the events of 1933. A good answer is likely to include longer-
term factors such as the Depression or Nazi campaigning tactics, but would also need to show how
what happened in 1933 finally gave Hitler the Chancellorship.
A typical part (c) question (c) ‘Nazi education and youth policies were not effective in controlling
young people’. How far do you agree with this statement?
This question is often answered badly because students simply list Nazi policies and don’t explain
whether or not they had the effect they intended. In a good answer you would be expected to:
● set out two to three events or developments and use them as evidence to support the argument that
the Nazis were able to control young people
None of the answers on pages
317–318 is a real student answer. ● set out two to three events or developments and use them as evidence to support the argument that
We have written them to help Nazi policies failed.
show the features.
We have worked through some examples for you on the following two pages.
316
Germany worked examples
There is nothing wrong with this (a) What methods did the Nazis use to control the population? [4]
response but it is far too long!
Remember that this question
is only worth 4 marks, so you The SS under Himmler were used to intimidate and terrorise people into
should aim to make four points
only, or two to three points with obedience. There was also the Gestapo who were the secret police. They
supporting detail. tapped telephones and spied on people. Political opponents were taken to
concentration camps. Propaganda was also used to prevent opposition.
This was the job of Goebbels who controlled what people read and heard.
This part of the answer correctly Newspapers were taken over or their content strictly controlled. Cheap radio
identifies a group who opposed
sets were sold so people could hear Hitler’s speeches.
the Nazis, but it is a bit vague
in addressing the question of
‘why’. It would be better to give
specific examples such as the (b) Explain why some people opposed Nazi rule. [6]
Communists had been targeted
after the Reichstag Fire.
The Communists opposed Nazi rule because of their political beliefs.
Some youth groups such as the Edelweiss Pirates were anti-Nazi. They liked to
The second part of this answer listen to music and many gangs went looking for the Hitler Youth to beat them
is only describing the youth up. They sang songs but changed the lyrics to mock Germany.
opposition, rather than saying
why people opposed the Nazis.
With this example, the answer (c) ‘The success of Nazi economic policy was more important than the
would need to explain how the
popularity of youth groups fell as
police state in controlling opposition to the Nazis.’ How far do you
the war progressed because the agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [10]
activities were more focused on
military drill and the war effort.
The Nazis’ economic policies did help. They promised employment and did this
through the development of public works such as the building of autobahns.
This answer starts well by Schemes like ‘Strength Through Joy’ gave workers cheap theatre and cinema
addressing the question. It states tickets.
clearly why economic policy
helped to control opposition. So some workers were won over by popular policies and this stopped opposition
arising in the first place.
This is the clinching bit that From 1935 conscription was applied and rearmament meant thousands of
makes all the above supporting jobs in armament factories. So some people were scared of losing their jobs if
detail into an excellent
they spoke out. Germany had been hit hard by the Depression and many were
explanation.
terrified of being out of work again.
However, the police state was also important. The Nazis were very
Another reason that economic successful at getting rid of opposition. The SS went round terrorising people
policy helped to stifle opposition
here – again with a clear link into obedience. It could arrest people without trial and put them into
back to the question. The concentration camps where people were tortured or indoctrinated. The
answer goes on to examine the Gestapo spied on people. It had informers and encouraged people to inform
police state.
on their neighbours and children on their families. It also tapped phones. The
Germans thought the Gestapo was much more powerful than it actually was,
This is a very good example so lots of people informed on each other purely because they thought the
of showing how the two Gestapo would find out anyway.
factors given are actually
linked together. This is a valid In conclusion, I would say that economic successes were vital in controlling
way of evaluating reasons opposition amongst ordinary citizens but that the police state was also vital
in a conclusion. The answer
distinguishes between two types for dealing with the opposition when it did arise; the two actually worked
of opposition and shows how together. The Nazis’ main political opponents had been dealt with swiftly
a different method was more with the help of the SS and Gestapo, which left smaller pockets of opposition.
successful for each.
Ordinary people with weaker political motivation were more easily won over
by the Nazis’ successes and the fear of losing their jobs.
317
Russia worked examples
Lenin banned non-Bolshevik papers and set up the ‘Cheka’ secret police. The
This is better because it is a
much fuller explanation of how banks were placed under Bolshevik control.
Lenin’s actions were leading
to the Bolsheviks’ retention of Lenin had promised free elections and these were held in late 1917. However,
power. under the first democratic elections to the new Constituent Assembly, the
Socialist Revolutionaries beat the Bolsheviks. This could have been the end
of the Bolsheviks’ power. However, Lenin simply sent the Red Guards to close
Another sound explanation, down the assembly and to put down the protests against him.
showing how Lenin was
attempting to secure power Finally, Lenin had to negotiate a peace treaty to end the war because he had
through popularity with the promised the people ‘bread, peace and land’. He hoped that this would increase
people.
the popularity of the Bolsheviks and they would stay in power.
This is a full explanation of (c) ‘The main reason that the Reds won the Civil War was because
how the reason given in the
statement led to Red success. the Whites were not unified.’ How far do you agree with this
statement? Explain your answer. [10]
Remember that in this kind of The success of the Reds was definitely helped by the lack of unity in their
question you need to identify
opposition. The Whites were made up of lots of different elements such as
and explain another reason,
which has not been given in the Czech Legion, moderate socialists and ex-Tsarists. This meant they had
the statement. This answer has different leaders and different objectives and therefore were not able to work
explained how War Communism together effectively. This allowed Trotsky to defeat them one by one.
was also a factor in the Reds’
victory. However, other things helped the Reds win the Civil War as well. For example,
Lenin introduced War Communism. This system allowed Reds total control
over people’s lives and possessions in order to win the war. Ruthless discipline
The answer includes an
attempted conclusion, but this was introduced into the factories. Food was taken from peasant farmers by
is more of a summary. What you force in order to feed the Red Army and the workers in the cities. Strict
need to do here is to actively rationing was introduced and the Cheka was used to terrify opponents. This
compare the factors, or to draw
them together to show how policy ensured the Red Army was kept supplied and could continue to fight.
they are linked. For example, I think that overall the Reds won because the Whites were not unified, which
you might say that although it
was always going to be difficult helped the Reds pick them off, and also because of War Communism, which
for the Whites to win because allowed the Red Army to keep fighting.
they were such a broad alliance,
it was the ruthless and harsh
policy of War Communism,
which determined that they
were defeated by 1920 and that
the Bolsheviks held onto their
power so firmly.
318
Components 3 (coursework) and 4 (written paper
alternative to coursework)
As well as Paper 1 and Paper 2, you have to tackle one more component.
Question
This is either coursework or a written paper. Whichever component you
tackle the focus is on the significance of a given event, person or group. Other significant factors This mattered More/less
If you are taking the coursework option your teacher will set and mark that played a part because important than
your question so it is difficult for us to offer very specific advice. However included X because
it will still focus on the same issue as the written paper, significance, so the
following advice about the written alternative may still be useful.
Here is an example of how you could begin to fill it out to analyse the
Written paper alternative to coursework following question about Lenin.
Focus
How significant was Lenin in keeping the Bolsheviks in
In this paper you will be focusing on whichever Depth Study you have
power in Russia after the 1917 revolution?
followed. There will be two questions and you have to choose one of them.
The questions will ask you to make a judgement on how important or He was very significant This mattered because:
significant a particular event, person, group or development was. So you because:
need to practise thinking about questions such as: He was the driving force The Bolsheviks could not have taken
● How important was the Depression in explaining the failure of the behind the Bolshevik Party. and held power if they were not united
League of Nations in the 1930s? and disciplined. No other Bolshevik
● How important was propaganda in maintaining Nazi control of leader had Lenin’s authority over the
Germany 1933–39? Party or his ruthlessness.
● How significant was corruption in causing Prohibition to fail in the
He passed a range of decrees The land decree gained support for
USA? in 1917 including giving the the Bolsheviks from the peasants and
● How significant was Lenin in keeping the Bolsheviks in power in Russia
land to the peasants, limiting the working hours decrees gained
after the 1917 revolution? working hours and banning support from the workers. Shutting
Your aims opposition newspapers. down newspapers weakened Lenin’s
A good answer to these questions will need to do the following things: opponents.
● Make a strong case that X (your given event, person or group) was Other points …
or was not significant. You should aim to make a strong argument that
focuses mostly on X.
Other significant factors This mattered More/less
● Support your argument by selecting relevant events and
that played a part because important
developments and explain how these events support the argument you included than Lenin
are making. because
● Show you are aware of other factors that you think are more/
less significant than X. You should: Actions of Trotsky He organised the Red
– Explain why you think they are more or less significant than X. Army which eventually
– Explain how they might be connected to X – how X and the other defeated the Whites in
factors are interrelated (e.g. it could be that other factors created the Civil War which
problems that gave an advantage to X) saved the Bolsheviks.
● Produce a well-argued conclusion that sets out your view on the Weaknesses of Whites
significance of X. This does not mean summarising the essay you have
just written. It means saying that overall you think X was/was not the And remember…
most significant factor and the reasoning which brought you to that Significance or importance is difficult to assess. These ideas might help you
conclusion (e.g. none of the other factors could have happened without as you plan your argument.
X, or all the leading historians seem to argue X was not significant). ● Did X bring about change in the way people acted?
A possible approach ● Did X change people’s ideas and or beliefs?
The important thing is to make up your mind on your key argument and ● Did X force authorities (governments, monarchs, police forces, etc.) to
then to use the rest of your research to support it. To help you think through change?
the issue and reach a conclusion you could use a table like this. ● Was the impact of X long lasting or short term?
● Did X have a major impact on people’s lives? How many lives? For how
Question long?
…X was significant This mattered because: ● If you remove X how far to you think events would have been different?
because:
319
Glossary
Glossary
Abyssinian crisis International tensions resulting from invasion of Budget The spending plans of a government. Can refer to a particular
Abyssinia (present day Ethiopia) by Italy in 1935. policy or the whole government spending plan.
Agent Orange Poisonous chemical used by US forces in Vietnam to Capitalism/Capitalist Political, social and economic system centred
defoliate (remove leaves) from forest areas to deprive enemy of cover. on democracy and individual freedoms such as free speech, political
Alliance Arrangement between two countries to help or defend each beliefs and freedom to do business.
other, usually in trade or war. Censorship System of controlling information to the public, usually
Anschluss Joining of Austria and Germany as one state – forbidden employed by governments. Can refer to paper, radio, TV or online
by Treaty of Versailles 1919 but carried out by Hitler in 1938. information.
Anti-Comintern Pact Alliance between Germany, Italy and Japan in CENTO Central Treaty Organisation – alliance of countries including
1936 to combat spread of Communism. Britain, Turkey and Pakistan designed to resist spread of Communism.
Appeasement Policy of Britain and France in 1930s allowing Hitler Checkpoint Charlie Most famous point where travel between
to break terms of Treaty of Versailles. Communist East Berlin and US controlled West Berlin was possible.
Arab nationalism Movement of Arab peoples in the Middle East to Chemical weapons Usually refers to weapons which employ
join together to resist outside influence and to oppose Israel in particular. poisonous gas to kill enemies.
Armistice End to fighting. Civil War War between two sides within the same nation or group.
Arms race Competition to build stockpiles of weapons Examples in Russia 1919–21 and Spain 1936–37.
Article 10 Article of League of Nations Covenant which promised Co-existence Living side by side without threatening the other
security to League members from attack by other states. side. Most famously put forward by Soviet leader Khrushchev when he
Assembly Main forum of League of Nations for discussing important proposed East and West could live in peaceful co-existence.
issues. co-operation Working together – could be political, economic or
Atomic bomb/H bomb Nuclear weapons, only used in WW2 by legal
USA against Japan but a constant threat in the Cold War. Cold War Conflict which ran from c1946 to 1989 between the USA
Autobahn High speed motorways built by the Nazis in Germany in and the USSR and their various allies. They never fought each other
the 1930s to create jobs. but used propaganda, spying and similar methods against other. Also
Ayatollah A senior Muslim cleric sponsored other countries in regional wars.
Baath Party Sunni Muslim political movement, most prominent in Collective security Key principle of the League of Nations, that all
Iraq from 1960s. Strongly opposed to external interference in Arab world. members could expect to be secure because the other members of the
Bauhaus German design movement incorporating sleek lines and League would defend them from attack.
modern materials. Collectivisation Policy to modernise agriculture in the USSR
Bay of Pigs Bay in Cuba, scene of disastrous attempt by Cuban exiles 1928–40. Succeeded in modernising farming to some extent but with
to overthrow Fidel Castro. Caused humiliation for USA which backed the terrible human cost.
attack. Comecon Organisation to control economic planning in Communist
Beauty of Labour Nazi movement to improve conditions for countries of Eastern Europe.
industrial workers and try to win their support. Cominform Organisation to spread Communist ideas and also make
Berlin airlift Operation in 1948–49 using aircraft to transport sure Communist states followed ideas of Communism practiced in USSR.
supplies to West Berlin which had been cut off by USSR. Commissions Organisations set up by the League of Nations to
Berlin Blockade Action by USSR to cut road, rail and canal links tackle economic, social and health problems.
between West Berlin and the rest of Germany. Aim was to force USA and Communism/Communist Political, economic and social system
allies to withdraw from West Berlin. involving state control of economy and less emphasis on individual rights
Berlin Wall Barrier constructed by Communist East German than Capitalism.
government to block movement between East and West Berlin. As well as Communist bloc Eastern European states controlled by Communist
a Wall there were fences, dogs and armed guards. governments from end of WW2 to 1989.
Big Three (1) Three main leaders at Versailles Peace Conference Competition Pressure from rivals, usually in business and often
1919 – Lloyd George (Britain); Wilson (USA); Clemenceau (France). rivals in other countries.
(2) Leaders at Yalta and Potsdam Conferences 1945 – Roosevelt/Truman Concentration camps Camps used by Nazis to hold political
(USA); Churchill/Atlee (Britain); Stalin (USSR) opponents in Germany.
Blockade Tactic involving cutting off supplies to a city or country. Conference of Ambassadors Organisation involving Britain,
Usually by sea but can also be land or air blockade. France, Italy and Japan which met to sort out international disputes.
Bolshevik/Bolshevism Russian political movement led by Lenin Worked alongside League of Nations.
and following Communist ideas developed by Karl Marx and further Conscription Compulsory service in the armed forces.
developed by Lenin. Consolidation Making a position more secure, usually when a
Brezhnev Doctrine Policy of USSR from 1968 which effectively political party has just taken power.
meant no Eastern European states would be allowed to have a non- Containment US policy in Cold War to stop spread of Communism.
Communist government.
320
Conventional weapons Non-nuclear weapons. Can refer to Freikorps Ex-soldiers in Germany after WW1.
Glossary
ground, air or sea including missiles. General strike Large scale, co-ordinated strike by workers designed
Cossack Elite troops of the Russian Tsars. to stop essential services like power, transport etc.
Council Influential body within the League of Nations which Gestapo Secret police in Nazi Germany.
contained the most powerful members of the League. Glasnost Openness and transparency – policy of Soviet leader
Coup Revolution. Mikhail Gorbachev in 1980s designed to allow people to have their views
Covenant Agreement or set of rules. heard and criticise the government.
Crash Collapse in value of US economy in 1929 which led to Guerrilla warfare Type of warfare which avoids large scale battles
economic depression in 1930s. and relies on hit and run raids
Credit Borrowing money, usually from a bank. Hindsight Looking back on historical events with the ability to see
De-Stalinisation Policy of Soviet leader Khrushchev in 1950s what happened since.
moving away from policies of Stalin. Hire purchase System of buying goods in instalments so they could
Demilitarised zone Area of land where troops cannot be stationed, be enjoyed straight away.
e.g. Rhineland area of Germany after WW1. Hitler Youth Youth organisation in Nazi Germany designed to
Democracy Political system in which population votes for its prepare young people for war and make them loyal Nazis.
government in elections held on a regular basis. Ho Chi Minh Trail Route in Cambodia used by North Vietnamese
Democrat Member of one of the main US political parties. and Viet Cong forces to supply forces fighting South Vietnamese and US
Depression Period of economic hardship in which trade is poor and forces.
usually leading to problems such as unemployment and possibly political Hollywood Suburb of Los Angeles, home of the US film industry.
unrest. Holocaust The mass murder of Jews and other racial groups by the
Dictator Leader of a state who has total control and does not have to Nazis in WW2.
listen to opponents or face elections. Hooverville Shanty town made up of temporary shacks, common
Dictatorship System in which one person runs a country. in the economic depression of the 1930s in the USA and named after
Diktat Term used in Germany to describe the Treaty of Versailles President Hoover.
because Germany had no say in the terms of the Treaty. Hundred Days The initial period of President FD Roosevelt in 1933
Diplomatic relations How countries discuss issues with each other. in which he passed a huge range of measures to help bring economic
Breaking off diplomatic relations can sometimes be a first step towards recovery.
war. Hyperinflation Process of money becoming worthless, most notable
Disarmament Process of scrapping land, sea or air weapons. instance was in Germany in 1923.
Domino theory Policy in which USA believed it had to stop ICBM Inter Continental Ballistic Missile – nuclear missiles capable of
countries becoming Communist otherwise they would fall to Communism travelling through space and almost impossible to stop.
like dominoes. idealist Person motivated by particular beliefs e.g. commitment to
Draft US term for compulsory military service. right of peoples to rule themselves.
Duma Russian Parliament established after 1905 revolution in Russia Indochina Former name for Vietnam.
and a source of opposition to Tsar 1905–17. Inflation Rising prices .
Ebert President of Germany 1919–25. He was the first democratically Intelligence (as in CIA) Secret services of states e.g. CIA in USA or
elected President. KGB in USSR.
Economic depression Period of economic downturn where Iron curtain Term used by Churchill in 1946 to describe separation
trade between countries and inside countries declines, often leading to of Eastern and Western Europe into Communist and non-Communist
unemployment. blocs.
Edelweiss Pirates Youth groups in Germany who opposed Nazis, Isolationism Policy in the USA in the 1920s which argued USA
especially in war years. should not get involved in international disputes.
Final Solution Nazi plan to exterminate the Jews and other races in Jazz Type of music which became extremely popular from 1920s,
Europe. Generally thought to have begun in 1942. generally associated with African American musicians.
Five-Year Plan Programme of economic development in the USSR Kapp Putsch Attempt to overthrow democratically elected
from 1928 onwards. Achieved considerable progress in industry but with government in Germany in 1920.
heavy human cost. Kerensky Leader of the Provisional Government which governed
Flappers Young women in 1920s, especially USA, who had greater Russia after first revolution in 1917.
freedom than previously because of job opportunities and changing Ku Klux Klan Secret Society in USA which aimed to keep white
attitudes. supremacy in USA and terrorised African Americans and other groups.
Fourteen Points Key Points set out by US President Woodrow Wilson Landlord/peasant Key figures in farming, particularly in Russia
for negotiating peace at end of WW1. c.1900. Landlords owned land but also maintained Tsar’s authority.
Free trade Policy of trading between countries with no tariffs or Peasants worked for the landlords.
duties, aim was to increase trade. League of German Maidens Organisation in Nazi Germany for
Freedom of speech Ability to publish or speak any religious or girls designed to get girls to embrace Nazi beliefs and values.
political view without being arrested.
321
League of Nations Organisation set up to manage international Munich Agreement Agreement in October 1938 in which Britain
Glossary
disputes and prevent wars after WW1. Brainchild of US President and France agreed to Hitler’s demands to control the Sudetenland area
Woodrow Wilson. of Czechoslovakia. This is generally seen as the final stage of the policy of
Lebensraum Living Space – became part of Hitler’s plans to Appeasement.
conquer and empire for Germany in the 1930s. NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Coloured people
Left-wing Groups or individuals whose political beliefs are rooted in – organisation whose aim was to promote and support the cause of
Socialism or Communism. African Americans in the USA in the 1920s and 1930s.
Lenin Leader of the Bolshevik/Communist Party in Russia and a key Napalm Highly explosive chemical weapon which spread a fireball
figure in bringing them to power in 1917 and keeping power until his over a large area. Used extensively in Vietnam war.
death in 1924. National Community Key idea of Nazis in Germany in the
MAD Mutually Assured Destruction – the idea that no state would 1930s – they wanted people to become part of and promote a ‘National
ever use nuclear weapons because they would themselves be destroyed by Community’.
retaliation. Nationalism Strong sense of pride in your own country, sometimes
Mail order Popular type of shopping in USA in 1920s, customers directed aggressively towards other countries or minority groups.
ordered from catalogues. Nationalities Racial groups within larger states e.g. Poles in the
Manchurian crisis International crisis sparked off when Russian Empire or Hungarians in the Austrian Empire.
Japan invaded the Chinese province of Manchuria in 1931. Despite NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organisation: Alliance formed by USA
investigating, League of Nations failed to stop Japanese aggression. and other western states which promised to defend members against any
Mandates System by which Britain and France took control of attack, particularly from the USSR.
territories ruled by Germany and Turkey which had been on the losing Nazism National Socialism, the political belief of Adolf Hitler and
side in WW1. the Nazi party based on aggressive expansion of German lands and the
Marshall Aid Programme of US economic aid to Western Europe superiority of the Aryan race.
from 1947–51. Aim was to aid economic recovery but also to prevent Nazi–Soviet Pact Agreement in 1939 between Hitler and Stalin to
more states becoming Communist. not attack each other and to divide Poland between them.
Marshall Plan Plan behind Marshall Aid. Although it was an Negative cohesion Term coined by historian Gordon Craig to
economic programme it was also political. Some commentators argued describe the way different groups in Germany supported the Nazis not
it was an economic form of imperialism designed to allow the USA to because they supported the Nazis but because they feared the opponents
dominate Western Europe. of the Nazis (particularly the Communists) more.
Martial law Rule by the military rather than a civil police force. New Deal Policies introduced by US President Roosevelt from 1933
Martyr Person who dies for a cause he or she believes in. onwards to try to tackle US economic problems.
Marxist Person who follows ideas of Karl Marx, a political New Economic Policy Policy introduced by Lenin in the USSR
commentator who believed that societies would eventually become after the Russian Civil War. Basically allowed limited amounts of private
Communist as workers overthrew bosses and took control of wealth and enterprise which went against Communist theory but was an emergency
power. measure to help economy recover from war.
Mass production System of producing goods in factories using NKVD Secret Police in USSR, later became KGB.
production lines in which workers specialised in one task. Made Nobel Peace Prize Prize awarded to politicians who have made
production quick and efficient and relatively cheap. major contribution to bringing end to a conflict.
Mein Kampf ‘My Struggle’: the autobiography of Adolf Hitler in Normalcy Term used by US President Warren Harding in the 1920s to
which he set out his theories about power and racial superiority. describe return to normal life after WW1.
Mensheviks Opposition party in Russia in early 1900s, part of the November Criminals The German politicians who signed the
Social Democratic Party before it split into Bolsheviks and Mensheviks. Treaty of Versailles. This was a term of abuse exploited by extreme parties
Military force Use of armed force (e.g. troops, bombing by aircraft) in Germany, especially the Nazis, to undermine democracy.
as opposed to political or economic methods. Nuclear deterrent Term which referred to the nuclear weapons
Missile gap Term to describe the alleged advantage of the USSR over owned by each side in the Cold War. The fact that each side had these
the USA in nuclear missiles. Historians doubt whether the missile gap was weapons stopped the other side from using theirs.
as real as was claimed. Nuremberg Laws Series of laws passed in Germany in 1935
Mobilised Armed forces told to prepare for war. discriminating against Jews and other racial groups in Germany.
Moral condemnation Criticism of a state for actions against Okhrana Secret police force of the Russian Tsars.
another state – prelude to stronger action such as economic sanctions or One-party state State where only one political party is permitted by
military force. law such as Nazi Germany or the USSR under Communism.
Mullah A man or woman well educated in the Islamic religion, often Operation Rolling Thunder Huge scale bombing campaign by
a term used to describe Islamic clergy. USA against North Vietnam during Vietnam War.
Multi-national force Force made up of more than one state. Often Overproduction Usually in agriculture – growing too much food so
a political devise to make it appear that a policy is not driven by one state that demand is filled and prices fall.
e.g. UN intervention in the Korean War in 1950 or the Gulf Wars of the
1990s.
322
Paris Peace Conference Conference which ran from 1919-23 to Rhineland Area of Germany which bordered France. Under Treaty of
Glossary
decide how to officially end WW1. Resulted in Treaty of Versailles with Versailles it was demilitarised – no German forces were allowed there.
Germany and three other treaties. Right-wing Political groups or individuals with beliefs usually in
Peasants Poor farmers who worked their own small plots of land and national pride, authoritarian government and opposed to Communism.
usually had to work the lands of landlords as well. Roaring Twenties Refers to 1920s in USA, a period of major social
People power Term to describe the rise of popular action against and economic change for many Americans.
Communist regimes in 1989 which contributed to fall of Communism. Ruhr Main industrial area of Germany.
Perestroika Restructuring – the idea of Soviet leader Mikhail Saar Region on the border between France and Germany. Run by
Gorbachev in the later 1980s that the USSR needed to reform. League of Nations from 1920 to 1935 when its people voted to become
Polish Corridor Strip of land which under the Treaty of Versailles part of Germany.
1919 gave Poland access to the sea but separated East Prussia from the Sanctions Actions taken against states which break international law,
rest of Germany. most commonly economic sanctions e.g. refusing to supply oil.
Politburo Main decision making group of the Communist Party in Satellite state State which is controlled by a larger state e.g. Eastern
USSR, similar to British Cabinet. European states controlled by USSR after WW2
Potsdam Conference Conference held in August 1945 between Search and destroy Type of tactic used by US military in Vietnam to
President Truman (USA), Stalin (USSR) and Churchill, then Atlee locate Vietcong fighters and kill them.
(Britain). Discussed major issues including the Atomic Bomb and Soviet SEATO South East Asia Treaty Organisation – alliance formed in 1954
takeover of Eastern Europe. designed mainly to block the spread of Communism.
Prague Spring Reform movement in Czechoslovakia to change Secret police Police force specialising in dealing with threats to the
Communist rule in Czechoslovakia, eventually crushed by Soviet forces. state e.g. political opponents rather than normal crimes.
Prohibition Amendment to US constitution passed in 1919 to ban secret treaties Agreements between states which were not made
production of alcohol. public and therefore led to suspicions from other states. A contributing
Propaganda Method of winning over a population to a particular factor to outbreak of WW1.
idea or set of beliefs. Also used in wartime to raise morale. Secretariat The section of the League of Nations which carried out
Provisional Government Government headed by Alexander administrative tasks and also the agencies of the League.
Kerensky which took control of Russia after the March 1917 revolution Self-determination The right of nations to rule themselves rather
which overthrew the Tsar. than be part of larger empires.
Public opinion View of majority or large section of population on an Shares System which allows large or small investors to own part of a
issue, most important in democracies where politicians often have to win company and get a share of its profits.
over public opinion. Shia (Shiite) One of the main branches of the Muslim faith.
Purges Policy pursued by Stalin in USSR in 1930s to remove potential Show trials Trials of political opponents which were given great
opponents. Involved arrests, torture, show trials, deportations to labour publicity – most prominent in the USSR under Stalin in the 1930s.
camps and executions. Social Democratic Party Main left wing (and generally most
Putsch Revolt designed to overthrow the existing government, most popular) political party in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s. Eventually
commonly associated with Kapp Putsch in 1920 and Nazis’ attempted banned by the Nazis when they came to power in 1933.
Putsch in Munich in 1923. Socialism Political system in which government takes strong control
Radical Term used to describe extreme political views. of economic and social life. In theory socialist societies would eventually
Realist Politician who accepts a particular course of action even become Communist societies.
though it is not what they would prefer to do. Socialist Revolutionaries Opposition group in Tsarist Russia, the
Rearmament Building up arms and armed forces, used as a means most well supported group as they had the support of the peasants.
to fight unemployment by many states in the 1930s, including Nazi Solidarity Polish trade union which emerged in the 1980s and
Germany and Britain. opposed the Communist government there.
Red Army Armed forces of the Communists in the Russian Civil War Soviet republics The various smaller states which made up the
1918–21 and then the official forces of the Soviet Union. USSR.
Red Scare Wave of fear about Communist infiltration of American Soviet sphere of influence Terms agreed at Yalta Conference in
political and social life to undermine it. Seen in the 1920s and also the 1945 – Western powers agreed that Poland and other parts of Eastern
1940s and 1950s. Europe would be under Soviet influence.
Remilitarisation Reintroduction of armed forces into the Soviet Union The former Russian empire after it became a
Rhineland area of Germany 1936 even though this was banned by the Communist state in the 1920s.
Treaty of Versailles Soviets Councils of workers.
Reparations Compensation to be paid by Germany to France, Spanish Civil War Conflict in Spain which was seen as a rehearsal
Belgium, Britain and other states as a result of the First World War. for WW2 when German and Italian forces intervened to support General
Repeal The overturning of a law. Franco.
Republican One of the two main political parties in the USA. Spartacists Communists in Germany in 1919 who wanted a
Reunification Bringing back together of Germany in 1990 after it revolution in Germany similar to the 1917 revolution in Russia.
had been divided in 1945.
323
Speculation Buying shares in the hope that their price will rise when Trotsky Leading figure in the Bolshevik Party, especially in the
Glossary
324
Photo acknowledgements
Photo acknowledgements
p.iii t © Bettmann/Corbis, b © Popperfoto/Getty Images; pp.1, 2 © Bettmann/Corbis; p.4 © Punch Limited; p.6 © Hulton Archive: Getty Images; p.7 © Solo
Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd. Photo: British Cartoon Archive; p.8 © Hulton Archive/Getty Images; p.9 © Hulton Archive/Getty Images; p.10
© Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans Picture Library; p.15 © Mary Evans Picture Library; p.16 Cartoon by Will Dyson published by Daily Herald on 13 May
1919, British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent; p.17 © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.22 © United Nations Library Geneva; p.24 © Express Newspapers, London;
p.25 l © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.26 © The British Library. All rights reserved. Star 11/06/1919; p.27 © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.28 l & r © United Nations
Library Geneva; p.34 © Punch Limited; p.36 © Punch Limited; p.41 © Solo Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd.; p.43 © Solo Syndication/Associated
Newspapers Ltd.; p.45 © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.46 © Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz; p.47 © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.50 © Solo Syndication/
Associated Newspapers Ltd. Photo: John Frost Historical Newspapers; p.55 t © AKG London, b Cartoon by David Low, the Evening Standard 18 January 1935 © Solo
Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd. Photo: British Cartoon Archive; p.56 l © Bruce Alexander Russell, r © The Art Archive; p.57 © Punch Limited/TopFoto;
p.58 © Topham Picturepoint/TopFoto; p.59 l © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.61 © Solo Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd.; p.63 r © Topham Picturepoint/
TopFoto; p.63 l © Popperfoto/Getty Images; p.64 © Punch Limited/TopFoto; p.65 © 2006 Alinari/TopFoto; p.66 © TopFoto; p.74 © Bettmann/Corbis; p.76 ©
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Images; p.106 © Cartoon by Victor Weisz, London Evening Standard, 24 October 1962, Solo Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd./British Cartoon Archive; p.107
© Solo Syndication/Associated Newspapers Ltd.; p.110 © Associated Press/Topham; p.115 © Nguyen Kong (Nick) Ut/Associated Press; p.116 © CBS Photo
Archive/Getty images; p.117 1967 Herblock Cartoon © The Herb Block Foundation; p.118 © Associated Press/Topham/TopFoto; p.124 © Solo Syndication/
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p.150 © Vienna Report Agency/Sygma/Corbis; p.152 © 2005 Roger-Viollet/Topfoto; p.153 © IRNA/AFP/Getty Images; p.154 © Solo Syndication/Associated
Newspapers Ltd.; by permission of Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru/The National Library of Wales; p.156 © Michel Setboun/Corbis; p.157 © ullsteinbild/TopFoto;
p.159 © Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images; p.163 © Cartoon by Nicholas Garland, Independent 10th August 1990/British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent; p.164
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Picturepoint/TopFoto; p.177 © News of the World/NI Syndication; p.178 © Nguyen Kong (Nick) Ut/Associated Press; p.179 1967 Herblock Cartoon © The Herb
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Getty Images; p.186 © David King Collection; p.189 t © Illustrated London News, b © David King Collection; p.191 © RIA Novosti/TopFoto; p.192 © RIA
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Photographs Division, LC-DIG-ggbain-30798; p.203 © Illustrated London News; p.206 © The British Library. All rights reserved. BL063554; p.207 © Bolshevik
cartoon on the intervention of the USA, Britain and France in the Russian Civil War, 1919 (colour litho), Russian School, (20th century)/Private Collection/Peter
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Photographs Division; LC-DIG-fsa-8b29516; p.276 r © Bettman/Corbis; p.278 © Cartoon of the 1920s depicting the difficult times of the American Farmers
(colour litho) by Fitzpatrick, Daniel Robert (1891–1969) Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library; p.279 © Bettman/Corbis;
p.281 © The Builder (colour litho) by Beneker, Gerrit Albertus (1882–1934), Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library; p.282
© The Granger Collection, NYC/TopFoto; p.284 t & b © Bettman/Corbis; p.285 © Underwood & Underwood/Corbis; p.287 © San Francisco Examiner; p.288
© Mary Evans Picture Library; p.289 l © Hulton Archive/Getty Images, r © Bettman/Corbis; p.290 © Bettman/Corbis; p.291 © US National Archives, Rocky
Mountains Division; p.293 l © ‘Wanted … a little boy’s plea’, c. 1915 (engraving), American School, (20th Century), Private Collection/Peter Newark American
Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library, r © Culver Pictures; p.294 © Bettman/Corbis; p.295 t © Bettman/Corbis, b © Clive Weed, Judge, June 12, 1926—American
Social History Project; p.296 © Underwood Archives/Getty Images; p.300 © Popperfoto/Getty Images; p.301 Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special
Collections, Northwestern University Library, © John T. McCutcheon Jr.; p.302 © Car and farm machinery buried by dust and sand, Dallas, South Dakota, 1936 (b/w
photo) by American Photographer (20th Century), Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library; p.303 t © Topham Picturepoint/
Topfoto, b © The Art Archive/Alamy; p.304 t © ‘Smilette’, Democrat Election Poster, 1932 (litho) by American School (20th Century), Private Collection/Peter
Newark American Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library, b © Gabriel Hackett/Getty Images; p.305 © Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division;
LC-USZ62-117121; p.307 tl & tr © The Granger Collection, NYC / TopFoto, br © Tennessee Valley Authority; p.309 t © Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
Division; LC-DIG-fsa-8b29516, b © Photographs in the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division; p.310 © The Granger
Collection, NYC / TopFoto; p.311 tl © Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archives, a division of the Orion Publishing Group, London, c © Punch Limited; p.314 © ‘World’s
Highest Standard of Living…’, 1937, 1937 (litho), American School, (20th Century)/ Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/The Bridgeman Art Library.
325
Index
Index
326
Islam Ludendorff, Erich 239 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 109
Index
Sunni/Shiite Muslims 149 Luxemburg, Rosa 231 nuclear weapons 82, 95, 100–1
USSR 215, 222 lynching 288–9 Cuban Missile Crisis 102–9
Islamic Revolution 155 Nuremberg rallies 250
Israel 148, 149, 164 MacArthur, General Douglas 96, 98, 304
McNamara, Robert 112 October Manifesto 193
Japan: and Russia 192 MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) 101 oil 148, 149, 154–5, 160, 161, 162, 164, 165
Jaruzelski, General Wojciech 137 Manchurian crisis 38, 39, 40–1 Okhrana (Tsar’s secret police) 190, 191
jazz 282 Marshall Aid 87, 125 Olympics (Berlin, 1936) 252
Jews 259, 261 Marshall Plan 86 OPEC (Oil Producing and Exporting Countries) 162
Hitler and 254–5 Marxist theory 191 Oppenheimer, Robert 101
in WW2 268 Mein Kampf (Hitler) 52, 72, 232, 240, 251, 254
Johnson, Lyndon 111, 119 Mensheviks 191 Palmer, Mitchell 286–7
July bomb plot 265 Monkey Trial 292 Papen, Franz von 245
Mossadeq, Mohammed 154–5 Paris Peace Conference 7, 10–11: see also
Kádár, János 129 mullahs 155 Versailles, Treaty of
Kamenev, Lev 212, 213, 220 Munich Agreement 63–4, 66 peace treaties 5
Kapp, Wolfgang 231 Munich Putsch 231, 239 perestroika 138
Kapp Putsch 15, 231 Mussolini, Benito 33, 39, 44–5, 46 Perkins, Frances 313
Kellogg-Briand Pact (Pact of Paris) 36 My Lai massacre 118 Poincaré, Raymond 9
Kennedy, John F. 102, 103, 106–7, 109 Poland 66, 67, 80, 82, 127, 136–7, 140
and Vietnam War 111 Nagy, Imre 128 Potsdam conference 82
and West Berlin 133, 134, 135 napalm 115 Prague Spring 130–1
Kerensky, Alexander 199, 200, 201, 202 National Association for the Advancement of Colored Public Works Administration (PWA), USA 306
Keynes, John Maynard 16, 18 People (NAACP), USA 290
Khomeini, Ayatollah 155, 156, 157, 158, 161 National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), USA 306
Khrushchev, Nikita 101, 103, 106–8, 109, 126–7, National Recovery Administration (NRA), USA 306 Rapallo Treaty 36
134, 221 NATO 91, 109 Rasputin, Gregory Yefimovich 194–5, 197
King, Martin Luther 117 Nazi Party (National Socialist German Workers’ Rathenau, Walter 231
Kiro, Sergei 220 Party) Reagan, Ronald 139
Kissinger, Henry 119 and agriculture 263 rearmament 54, 262
Klemperer, Victor 246, 251, 256 in Austria 59 Red Guards 201, 202
Korean War 96–101 and businesses 264 Red Scare 286–7
Kornilov, Lavr 201 censorship 251, 265 Red Terror 205, 206
Kristallnacht 255 consolidation of power 247 refugees 35
Kronstadt mutiny 208 control of Germany 248–56 Reich Entailed Farm Law 263
Ku Klux Klan 288 and Depression 242–4 Reich Food Estate 263
Kurds 152–3, 164 Hitler and 238–9 Reichstag Fire 246
Kuwait 160, 162–3 lack of opposition to 256 reparations 12, 14, 15, 82, 236
and middle classes 264 Resettlement Administration (RA) , USA 309
Lange, Dorothea 309 persecution of minorities 254–5 Rhineland: remilitarisation of 56–7
Latvia 140 and religion 253 Ribbentrop, Joachim von 66
Lausanne, Treaty of 20 rise of 240–5 Robeson, Paul 289
Laval, Pierre 46 Twenty-Five Point Programme 238 Röhm, Ernst 247
League of Nations 6, 13, 14, 22–7, 236, 237 and workers 263 Romania 140
1920s border disputes 32–4 Nazi–Soviet Pact 66–7 Rome–Berlin Axis 46
aims 28, 35–6 Neuilly, Treaty of 19 Roosevelt, Eleanor 285, 313
beginnings 24–7 New Deal 306–14 Roosevelt, Franklin D. 296, 305–9
failures 40–7 Hundred Days 306–8 New Deal 306–8, 310–11
membership 29 opposition to 310–11 Second New Deal 309, 311
organisation 30–1 Second New Deal 309, 311 and Yalta Conference 80–1
and Saar region 55 Supreme Court opposition 311 Ruhr 15, 231, 233, 234
successes 37–9 verdicts on 312–14 Russia
Lenin, Vladimir Ilich 199, 200, 202–3, 204, 205, New Economic Policy (NEP) 209 1905 revolution 192–3
209, 210 Nicholas II, Tsar 189, 190, 191, 193, 196 1905–14: 194–5
Liebknecht, Karl 231 Nicolson, Harold 16 aristocracy 197
Lithuania 142 Niemöller, Martin 253 armed forces 190, 193, 196, 197, 201, 202
Lloyd George, David 8–9, 10–11 Night of the Long Knives 247 Bloody Sunday 192–3
Locarno treaties 36, 236, 237 Nixon, Richard 119 Bolshevik Revolution 202–3
Long, Huey 310 non-representation 14 Civil War 205–7
Low, David: cartoons 41, 43, 55, 61, 91, 97, 124 nuclear deterrent 101 collapse of Tsarism 188–98
327
Dumas 193, 194, 196, 197 Suez Canal 45 new constitution 221
Index
economic policies 208–9 Swing movement 267 religion 222
and Japan 192 Syria 160 seizure of control in eastern Europe 124
July Days 200 society/culture under Stalin 222–3
March 1917 revolution 197 temperance movement 293 Stalin’s control of 224–5
middle classes 190, 191, 193, 196, 206 Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) 307 USA and 78–9
peasants 189, 192, 193, 194, 196, 200, 206, Tet Offensive 116 youth organisations 222, 258–9
218–19 Tito, Josip Broz 84, 125 see also Russia
Petrograd Soviet 197, 199, 201, 202 Tolstoy, Leo 192
Provisional government (Mar–Oct 1917) Tonkin Gulf Resolution 111 Vanzetti, Bartolomeo 287
199–201, 202 Townsend, Francis 310 Versailles, Treaty of 4, 12–18, 52, 232: see also Paris
Red Army 205, 206 Trianon, Treaty of 19 Peace Conference
Russian Empire 189–90 Trotsky, Leon 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 212, 213 Viet Cong 111, 114
Whites 205, 207 Truman, Harry 82, 85–6, 89, 96, 98 Vietnam War 110–21
working class 189, 192, 195, 196 Truman Doctrine 86 My Lai massacre 118
and WW1: 196 Twenty-Five Point Programme 238 origins 110–11
see also USSR tactics 114–15
Ukraine 142 Tet Offensive 116
SA (stormtroopers/brown shirts) 239, 241, 246, 247 United Nations 80, 96–8, 162 Vilna 33
Saar plebiscite 55 United Nations Special Committee (UNSCOM) 165 Volksgemeinschaft (national community) 264
Sacco, Nicola 287 Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) 290
Saddam Hussein 150–3, 158 Upper Silesia 33 Waffen-SS 249
St Germain, Treaty of 19 USA Wagner Act, USA 309
St Valentine’s Day Massacre 296 African Americans 288–90, 313, 314 Walesa, Lech 136, 137
Saudi Arabia 162 car industry 276 Wall Street Crash 38, 298–301
Schuschnigg, Kurt 59 and Communism 78, 79, 95, 100, 286–7 causes of 298–9
SEATO 100 and Cuba 102–3 economic consequences of 300–1
Sevres, Treaty of 19–20, 149 economic boom 272–7 Wandervogel movement 237
Shah of Iraq 154–5 farming industry 273, 278, 301, 302, 306, 309 War Communism 208
Shostakovich, Dmitri 222 gangsters 296 war criminals 80
Social Security Act, USA 309, 313 immigrants 286–7 war guilt 12, 14
Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) 191 industry 273, 275–7, 279, 306, 312 War of the Cities 158, 161
Solidarity, Poland 136–7, 140 mass consumption 277 Warsaw Pact (Warsaw Treaty Organisation) 100,
Soviet Realism 222 Monkey Trial 292 127
Sovnarkom 204 native Americans 291, 313 Washington Conference 36
Spanish Civil War 58 New Deal 306–14 Weimar Constitution 230, 242
Spartacists 231 1932 presidential election 304–5 Weimar Republic 228–37
Speer, Albert 243, 251, 261, 265 peace movement 117 birth of 230
SS 241, 246, 249, 251, 265 prohibition 293–5 economic disaster 233–4
Stakhanov, Alexander 215 reaction to Stalin’s takeover of eastern Europe 85 hyperinflation 234
Stalin, Joseph 66–7, 78, 98, 212–13 Red Scare 286–7 under Stresemann 235–7
and Berlin Blockade 89 relations with USSR 78–9 threats to 231
control of Russia 220–1 Republican policies 274 Wilson, Woodrow 6, 8, 288
control of USSR 224–5 Roaring Twenties 281–3 and Armenia 20
cult of personality 221 system of government 274 and League of Nations 24, 25, 26–7
extension of Soviet power 84 unemployment 280, 302–3, 313 Fourteen Points 6, 7, 9, 10–11, 14
Khrushchev’s attack on 126 women in 284–5, 313 Witte, Sergei 189, 190
and Marshall Aid 87 and WW1 274 WMD (weapons of mass destruction) 164, 165
and NATO 91 USSR Works Progress Administration (WPA), USA 309
and Potsdam Conference 82 and Britain 78–9 World Health Organisation (WHO) 35
Purges 220, 224 collapse of 142
and Yalta Conference 80–1 creation of 210 Yalta Conference 80–1
stock markets 298 and Cuba 103–8 Yeltsin, Boris 142
Stolypyn, Peter 190, 194–5 Great Retreat 222–3 Young Plan 36, 236
Stresa Pact 44 Islam 215, 222
Stresemann, Gustav 234, 235–7 modernisation of agriculture 218–19 Zinoviev, Grigory 212, 213, 220
Sudetenland 62–4 modernisation of industry 214–17
328