00:00:01
Alright, and so at the end of the last
00:00:03
videos talking about how the
00:00:05
European Union had been created on
00:00:07
the basis, really the Marshall Plan. And
00:00:10
gives it really in some ways to model
00:00:13
for perhaps how the world could go with
00:00:16
increasing integration.
00:00:17
It's difficult, It's messy, you don't like
00:00:19
working with others perhaps to set your own
00:00:22
economic and other policies.
00:00:24
But it's worked very well
00:00:27
in the European case and it may be that
00:00:28
this is one model for the future,
00:00:30
but perhaps not. You'll be the ones
00:00:32
that will decide this in the next
00:00:35
20 to 30 to 40 years.
00:00:36
Well that age of
00:00:39
post-War progress was not shared
00:00:44
fully by the Eastern Block under the Soviet Union.
00:00:47
Stalinist policies,
00:00:50
Stalinist control was imposed
00:00:51
murderously as I mentioned before and
00:00:54
these economic policies were not as productive.
00:00:57
The Eastern Europe still moved forward
00:01:00
with the higher rates of
00:01:03
education, longevity, and health.
00:01:07
Basic indicators that societies are
00:01:09
functioning at at least a basic level
00:01:12
but under the surface political
00:01:14
resentment was building against Soviet Control.
00:01:17
Now Stalin died in 1953 and
00:01:20
the new leader the Soviet Union again
00:01:22
was Nikita Khrushchev.
00:01:23
He wanted to build socialism
00:01:27
more peacefully, perhaps a less
00:01:29
oppressively he ended the most egregious
00:01:33
oppression of the Stalinist system.
00:01:35
People are no longer taken away
00:01:36
and shot in the middle the night for
00:01:38
example the way they had been under
00:01:40
Stalin.
00:01:40
The large
00:01:41
system of prison camps in which tens
00:01:43
of millions of people were eventually part
00:01:45
of the so-called gulag system of
00:01:47
prison camps in Russia that system
00:01:50
was eventually pretty much shut down
00:01:52
under Khrushchev. But
00:01:54
Khrushchev did believe he had to
00:01:56
maintain control over the empire in the
00:01:59
east, and the in 53, 56, 68
00:02:01
as you can see here there
00:02:03
episodes in which States tried to
00:02:05
break away perhaps or find greater
00:02:06
freedom within the soviet orbit.
00:02:10
In all these cases of even believed it
00:02:12
needed to maintain control his empire
00:02:14
because losing a piece of its empire
00:02:16
would be an additional
00:02:18
an addition to the United American
00:02:20
power, and we have that zero-sum game
00:02:22
the opposing alliance blocks as we talked
00:02:25
about before,
00:02:26
which
00:02:27
means that each side needs to be very
00:02:30
vigilant about maintaining its core
00:02:32
strength.
00:02:34
Now, Khrushchev tried to
00:02:37
have both guns and butter in a sense
00:02:41
by putting missiles in Cuba. They hope to
00:02:44
cheaply gain a sense of military parity
00:02:46
with the United States in military equality
00:02:48
with the United States. You can see here the
00:02:51
sketch showing the
00:02:53
radius of the missiles that would have
00:02:55
been could have been launched from Cuba.
00:02:57
This was really a sign of weakness
00:03:01
because the Americans could build a
00:03:03
much larger missiles, much more
00:03:04
effective missiles and we also did place
00:03:06
missiles very close to the Civil Union in
00:03:08
turkey and other places like this. So
00:03:11
Khrushchev felt this this was simply a
00:03:13
turnabout is fair play, but of course
00:03:15
Kennedy and the United States more
00:03:17
generally did not allow the
00:03:20
missiles to be placed in Cuba. There was a
00:03:23
Confrontation on the high Seas as American ships
00:03:26
prevented the Missiles from being
00:03:28
shipped and being installed in Cuba
00:03:30
although it may be there were some
00:03:32
missiles that were already there or
00:03:35
Where in the process of being built at
00:03:37
the very time of the confrontation.
00:03:40
Another sign of soviet Weakness was
00:03:42
the building of the Berlin wall in
00:03:44
1961. The Iron Curtain was a symbolic
00:03:47
wall the Berlin wall was a real wall as well
00:03:50
it was built around West
00:03:53
Berlin and then around really
00:03:56
along the Border between the East
00:03:58
and West More Generally with the period
00:04:00
after 1961 and
00:04:02
this was a tremendous
00:04:05
blow to soviet prestige having to build
00:04:08
wall to keep people into a system
00:04:10
they believed they said was the future
00:04:13
of humanity the soviet system the system
00:04:15
of Communism and Socialism and
00:04:17
yet people were trying to flee so much
00:04:18
that they had to build a wall.
00:04:20
So it was a sign of weakness not a it
00:04:22
looked aggressive, and in some ways it
00:04:24
was aggressive,
00:04:25
but just like the Cuba Missile Crisis
00:04:27
it really was a sign of underlying
00:04:29
weakness and some ways that makes it
00:04:31
more dangerous because when one is
00:04:33
feeling weak
00:04:34
Your back is against the wall you you
00:04:36
you can't see a way out. That's when you make
00:04:38
miscalculations, and when wars begin,
00:04:40
so it's really quite lucky in many ways that
00:04:43
the Cuban Missile Crisis particularly did
00:04:45
not lead to a global
00:04:46
nuclear confrontation nuclear war.
00:04:50
Now as you can see in as I mentioned
00:04:51
before after Khrushchev fall from power
00:04:53
and he fell from power in part because
00:04:55
of his failures in Cuba and elsewhere.
00:04:58
After Khrushchev fell from power
00:05:00
leader Brezhnev took over 1982 as you
00:05:02
can see and
00:05:04
institute a really crash program and
00:05:05
nuclear build up as we looked at those
00:05:07
numbers before of Nuclear weapons.
00:05:08
So the lesson the Soviet Union learned from its
00:05:12
humiliation in Cuba was they have to
00:05:14
get stronger and bigger, and they worked
00:05:16
very hard to do so becoming even more dangerous.
00:05:20
So here we have an opportunity for
00:05:21
another perhaps lesson
00:05:22
some have suggested for example
00:05:24
that in international affairs you you really
00:05:26
don't want to humiliate your opponent you
00:05:28
don't want to make them look too bad
00:05:29
because you know Russia is not going to go away.
00:05:31
They're going to be here they might
00:05:33
feel humiliated you might get your way in
00:05:34
a particular issue
00:05:35
but in the long term it may be that
00:05:38
you'll have to work together to solve
00:05:41
issues and humiliating and
00:05:44
triumphing over an opponent is
00:05:45
sometimes merely the foundation for a future conflict.
00:05:50
Well, Let's take a look at one example
00:05:53
of the cold war in the case of the two Germany's.
00:05:56
West Germany the Federal German
00:05:58
Republic Here East Germany the German
00:06:00
Democratic republic here
00:06:02
and here's Berlin behind the lines here
00:06:06
West Berlin was of course part of
00:06:10
West Germany. In a 1948
00:06:13
the Soviet Union tried to force the
00:06:16
western powers out of West Berlin here's Berlin
00:06:20
here's the Western sector the Eastern Sector Berlin
00:06:22
and there's Berlin in the Eastern zone
00:06:25
of the East Germany and this led to a
00:06:29
year in which
00:06:31
West Berlin was supplied by air.
00:06:33
This is the first large-scale
00:06:35
resupply of an entire city by air
00:06:38
It was a triumph of Western
00:06:39
technology, and just like the Berlin wall a
00:06:42
little bit later the brilliant blockade was a terrible
00:06:46
publicity defeat for the soviet Union.
00:06:49
Every plane that landed was bringing
00:06:51
medicine and food for poor starving
00:06:53
children as you can see the battle city new is trying to
00:06:57
starve widows and orphans and and
00:06:59
freeze people in the winter, so
00:07:02
the Berlin blockade was again another
00:07:04
sign that so the Union was not
00:07:07
Winning the war for the hearts and
00:07:10
minds of Europe and at this time.
00:07:13
But it the Berlin blockade did convince
00:07:15
the western powers that they needed to create a
00:07:19
military Alliance, I've already
00:07:20
mentioned it before the North Atlantic
00:07:22
Treaty Organization was formed in the
00:07:24
aftermath of the Berlin blockade. The
00:07:26
soviets eventually gave up on this and
00:07:28
allowed resupply of Berlin by Road is
00:07:30
according to their treaty
00:07:31
they should have allowed all the way
00:07:33
along. So Union for its part built a
00:07:36
military Alliance called the Warsaw
00:07:38
Pact and these then are the two military
00:07:40
sides of the cold War NATO versus
00:07:42
Warsaw pact essentially. Well as part
00:07:44
of NATO West Germany was rebuilt and here
00:07:47
They are busily building Volkswagen
00:07:49
of course the Volkswagen is created by
00:07:51
Ferdinand Porsche who
00:07:53
of course Porsche sports cars, and it
00:07:55
was designed under the during the nazi
00:07:57
regime as a kind of people's car the
00:07:59
Volkswagen and
00:08:01
It became a bit a symbol of the
00:08:03
German resurgence after World War 2.
00:08:05
began to first see Volkswagens on the
00:08:07
streets of the United states in the late 1950s
00:08:10
and if you can get your hands on the
00:08:12
1957 Volkswagen you should do, so
00:08:14
they're rather rare still today. Yeah, and
00:08:18
of course Volkswagen is still feature
00:08:19
of the American scene, so
00:08:21
Volkswagen was a sign of the
00:08:22
resurgence of German industry just like a
00:08:24
little bit later Japanese cars today
00:08:25
we have Korean cars in the roads
00:08:27
eight states and ten years we might have
00:08:29
Chinese car. So
00:08:31
Germany is going blazing that trail of
00:08:33
economic development
00:08:34
international trade and globalization in
00:08:38
the 1940s and 50s.
00:08:40
Building to a parliamentary democracy
00:08:43
becoming part of NATO a true a real
00:08:46
success story of the
00:08:49
government before this the Nazi
00:08:50
Regime was one of the worst tyrannies in
00:08:52
the history of humankind.
00:08:54
So the prospects for a truly free and
00:08:56
democratic government in Germany was
00:08:58
not a foregone conclusion and so again
00:09:00
we have
00:09:01
trying to stress in some ways some of
00:09:03
the success stories of history because
00:09:05
there is a lot to be depressed about but in some
00:09:07
cases in some cases we do have signs of hope.
00:09:10
Well East Germany on the other side
00:09:12
of the Berlin wall here is the Berlin wall being built and
00:09:15
there's the riots in 1953 already talked
00:09:17
about it when Stalin died there was there
00:09:19
where riots in East Germany to try to
00:09:22
perhaps break way or find it a more
00:09:24
freeway under the soviet domination.
00:09:27
East Germany was modeled after the soviet Union and
00:09:30
had some of the same successes that
00:09:32
so the Soviet Union had as I mentioned
00:09:34
before already in building a
00:09:36
relatively stable economic regime,
00:09:40
providing basic services to its people, but unable to create
00:09:47
military, excuse me a political system
00:09:49
that was anything close to free
00:09:52
really two leaders in the entire history
00:09:55
of East Germany across these 40 years
00:09:57
as you can see. And
00:10:00
also, East Germany was relied upon
00:10:02
secret service vast
00:10:06
infrastructure
00:10:07
network of secret police and spies
00:10:10
Which to this day even after the fall of
00:10:12
the Berlin wall is still
00:10:13
kind of scar on the German psyche.
00:10:15
Many people cooperate with the
00:10:16
police because the secret place of East
00:10:18
Germany because they felt they didn't
00:10:19
have an alternative.
00:10:21
People where informing upon each
00:10:23
other and in those files the East German
00:10:25
police are lots of secrets that
00:10:27
still West Germans even today are still
00:10:30
dealing with that that sense of
00:10:34
betrayal and of
00:10:36
oppression from the East European past.
00:10:40
That then is one look sort of on the
00:10:43
two sides of the iron curtain there is the
00:10:45
classic iron curtain as
00:10:47
Churchill said from Stetten on the
00:10:49
Baltic to Trieste on the Adriatic here the
00:10:52
an iron curtain has descended across
00:10:55
Europe as he said in
00:10:57
1946. And
00:10:59
that line became a line that also
00:11:01
divided the world the so-called free world
00:11:03
the world of the NATO alliance in Blue
00:11:05
here
00:11:07
Communist Russia
00:11:08
Eventually Communist China and its allies.
00:11:11
So this division of a bipolar world
00:11:13
world with two poles one about the united
00:11:16
states the other Russia this bipolar world
00:11:18
was really
00:11:19
started in Europe for European
00:11:21
reasons in many ways, but then was
00:11:23
extended to the rest of the world, and
00:11:25
that's the story of
00:11:27
decolonization in the cold war which
00:11:28
will be turning to more in the next module.
00:11:30
Thanks so much.