U.S.A. vs. U.S.S.R.

  • Eastern European Independance

    For the first time since 1939, Eastern European countries were free.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In the late 1940’s, The Cold War brought tension in Europe. Stalin’s Communist party fought for control of the Eastern European colonies they had acquired during WWII and supported the spread of Communism, while the Europeans and the US fought for self-government and the spread of Democracy.
  • NATO Warsow Pact

    In order to strengthen their defense, the US, Canada, and ten other European countries formed NATO, (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), in 1949.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    The US building of the A-bomb gave the Soviets incentive to research nuclear weaponry and they succeeded by 1949. This started an “arms race” in which the US and the USSR each were fighting to obtain the greatest nuclear power. This created many newer, bigger nuclear weapons, including the hydrogen bomb, and a growing fear of nuclear warfare. Each side knew that nuclear war would desolate both nations.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    By the 1950’s Berlin had been divided after WWII between the Democratic Party in the West and the Communist State in the East. Due to obvious flaws in communist practice, many citizens fled East Berlin for West Berlin and a mass exodus resulted.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In the 1950’s Fidel Castro rallied an uprising against the corrupt dictator of the time, and after many conflicts, took power.
  • Eastern European Independance

    Revolts had erupted in Poland, Hungary and, Czechoslovakia in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • Chinese Civil War

    1950- Communists conquer Tibet
  • Korean Conflict

    Kim II Sung called for a Heroic Struggle to reunite Korea.
  • Korean Conlflict

    Troops from the United Nations landed on the beaches around the port of Inch’on , behind enemy lines. These U.S led troops quickly captured Korea’s North-south rail lines and cut of North Korean from their supply of food and ammunition.
  • Korean Conflict

    1953- Both sides signed an armistice to end the fighting
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In response, in 1955, the Soviets formed the Warsaw Pact; a pact between the Soviet Union and seven other Soviet-ruled satellites in Eastern Europe. The Warsaw Pact, however, was more often utilized to stop revolt inside of the Soviet satellites. The formation of these alliances defined the two sides of the war.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1956-Hungarians tried to break free of Soviet control. Krushchev sent tanks in to enforce obedience.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1957-The government poured resources into science an technology, launching the first satellite called Sputnik.
  • Chinese Civil War

    1958-1960- Mao led a program called the GREAT LEAP FORWARD. He urged people to make a super human effort to increase farm and industrial output.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    By 1959, Castro and his rebellion had gained victory and began reforming Cuba. Castro imposed restrictions on freedoms of speech and took most land under government control, enforcing a communist regime. He also sought the assistance of the Soviet Union. This upset the US, causing John Kennedy to support the Bay of Pigs Invasion and enforce a trade embargo when the invasion failed.
  • Chinese Civil War

    1959- The Dalai Lama of Tibet was forced to flee the country
  • Chinese Cicil War

    1959-1961- 55 million Chinese were thought to have starved to death.
  • Korean Conflict

    Koreas economy had leapt ahead.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In order to stop the loss of Communist citizens, in 1961, the Soviets built a large, heavily guarded, cement wall. The Berlin Wall became a staple for the Cold War, and proved that Communism was much more a tyranny than it was fair treatment.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    Tensions grew and in 1962, the USSR sent nuclear missiles to Cuba, severely threatening the US with mass destruction and the world with nuclear war. In response, the US blockaded Cuba to prevent further importation of Nuclear weapons, and demanded the deportation of all nuclear arms from Cuba. The Soviets withdrew when Premier Nikita Khrushchev was convinced of Soviet inferiority in potential nuclear war with the US.
  • Vietnam Conflict

    August 1, 1964 South Vietnamese commandos conducted raids on North Vietnamese islands in the Gulf of Tonkin. The following day, the North Vietnamese attacked a nearby U.S. Navy destroyer, the Maddox, Which they mistakenly believed had assisted the South Vietnamese raids.
  • Vietnam Conflict

    August 7, 1964 Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, the resolution authorized the president to take all necessary measures to prevent further aggression in Southeast Asia.
  • Chinese Civil WAr

    1966- Mao launched the great proletarian Cultural Revolution. The goal of this was to purge China of “Bourgeois” tendencies.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1968-Leonid Brezhnev (Krushchev’s successor) did the same thing when Czechs challenged the Soviets in the “Prague spring”.
  • Vietnam Conflict

    In 1968 guerrilla forces came out of the jungles and attacked American and South Vietnamese forces in cities all across the south, the assault took place during Tet, the Vietnamese New Year which made it unexpected.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In 1969, the US and USSR began discussing limitations on nuclear arms.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    In 1972 and again in 1979, the US and USSR signed agreements limiting the use of nuclear arms. These agreements lead to a time of relieved tensions or a détente during most of the 1970’s.
  • Vietnam Conflict

    In January 1973 President Nixon finally negotiated the Paris Peace Accord. This agreement established a cease-fire or a halt in the fight. The U.S. agreed to withdraw its troops and North Vietnam agreed to stop sending troops into the South.
  • NATO Warsaw Pact

    Tensions reappeared when the soviets attacked Afghanistan in 1979.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1979-The Soviet Union became involved in the war in Afghanistan.
  • Afghanistan Conflict

    In 1979 became involved in a long war in Afghanistan, an Islamic country just south of the Soviet Union.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    Mid 1980s-The American government bega to smuggle modern weaponry to the mujaedin.
  • Eastern European Independance

    In the 1980s, demands for change mounted once again.
  • Eastern European Independance

    In the 1980s, Hungarians began to criticize the communist government more openly. Economic troubles led to later discontent.
  • Eastern European Independance

    In Poland, in 1980, economic hardships ignited strikes by shipyard workers. They organized solidarity (an independent labor union. It won millions of members and demanded political and economic change.
  • Afghanistan Conflict

    By mdi-1980s the American government started to smuggle modern weaponry to the Muslim religious warriors.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1985- A new leader Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in he soviet union. He was eager to bring about reforms. The changes he had made soon spiraled out of control.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    Finally, in 1988 and 1989, under public pressure, the communist government allowed greater freedoms. New political parties were allowed to form, and the western border with Austria was opened.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    989-Eastern European countries from Poland to Bulgaria broke out of the soviet orbit.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    1989-The Baltic States-Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia-which the soviet union had seized in 1940, regained full indipendance in 1991.
  • Eastern European Independance

    East Germany resisted Gorbachez’s call for change. Germany’s communists blocked moves towards a market economy or greater political freedom. When Hungary opened its border with Austria in 1989, thousands of East Germans fled through Hungary and Austria to West Germany. Thousands more held demonstrations across East Germany demanding change.
  • Eastern European Independance

    By late 1989, a powerful democracy movement was sweeping throughout the region. Everywhere, people took to the streets, demanding reform. One by one, communist governments fell.
  • Eastern European Independance

    In Poland in 1990, Lech Walesa was elected President of Poland. The new government began a difficult, but peaceful, translation from a command economy to a market economy. A flowering of opposition and reform movements spread across the Eastern European countries.
  • Soviet Union Falls

    The end of 1991-The remaining soviet republics separated to form 12 independant nations, in addition to the Baltic States.
  • Eastern European Independance

    They dissolved the Warsaw Pact in1991 and requested that Russian troops leave. By then, the Soviet Union itself had crumbled.