Revision Diary

Peaceful Co-existence

       

Khrushchev’s policy of peaceful co-existence and the USA’s response;

      The beginnings of the Arms Race; space race.

 

 

As you revise this, you ought to know about Khrushchev's policies and their results (including the USA's response, the Arms Race and the Space Race).

    

  

  

Khrushchev's policies

Background

•   Stalin died in 1953 and, after a leadership battle, Nikita Khrushchev became leader.

•   In 1957, Khrushchev gave a speech calling Stalin a murderer and tyrant.

Meat

Khrushchev:

a    said he wanted 'destalinisation', and a relaxation of the tyranny in the countries of eastern Europe.  

•  he told Tito of Yugoslavia there were 'many roads to communism'.

b    said he wanted 'peaceful co-existence', and that the alternative was nuclear war and the end of humankind.  

•  he met Western leaders at summit meetings (e.g. Paris 1960/ Vienna 1961).  

BUT:

a    destalinisation and 'many roads to communism' did not mean he was going to let the Iron Curtain countries turn capitalist, or get free from Russian control:

•   he sent in troops when countries tried to leave Russian control (e.g. Poland and Hungary, 1956)

b    by peaceful co-existence, Khrushchev meant ‘free competition’:

•   he loved to argue (e.g. the kitchen debate with Nixon)

•   he built up allies (e.g. Afghanistan, Burma and Cuba) by giving economic aid in return for support.

•   he entered into the Arms Race (including forming the Warsaw Pact in 1955).

•   he entered into the Space Race

End

•   When Khrushchev came to power, the West saw him as a jolly, laughing man who they hoped would end the Cold War.

•   In fact, Khrushchev's policies INCREASED tension, and 1955-1963 was the time of greatest danger in the Cold War.

     

  

Results of Khrushchev's policies

a    When Khrushchev came to power, the West saw him as a jolly, laughing man who they hoped would end the Cold War. They hoped that 'destalinisation' would give Iron Curtain countries freedom, and that 'peaceful co-existence' meant Russia would be less expansionist.

b    In fact, Khrushchev's policies INCREASED tension, and 1955-1963 was the time of greatest danger in the Cold War.   Crisis after 1955 included Poland and Hungary (1956), U2 crisis (1960), Berlin Wall (1961) and the Cuban Missiles crisis (1962).

 

c    America's response was aggressive:

•   In the 1950s, McCarthy conducted a 'witchhunt' for Communists in America

•   America tried to build up allies (especially in Central America)

•   America supported wars against communists (e.g. in Vietnam)

•   America entered the Arms Race with Russia

•   America entered the Space Race with Russia.

•   American U2 planes spied on Russia

•   In 1961 the Americans elected a new president (Kennedy), who promised to get tougher on Communism.   

 

  

  

The Arms Race

Both sides raced to build up as many weapons as possible.   The idea was that this would be a 'deterrent' to the other side, to stop them daring to attack.   America had more nuclear weapons, Russia had more conventional forces.

By the 1960s, both sides had enough ICBMs, trained on the other, to destroy every living thing on earth many times over (= '100x overkill')

1945        America  – Atomic Bomb

1949        Russia – Atomic Bomb

1949        NATO formed

  

1955        Warsaw Pact set up

1955        NATO agreed to an army of 0.5million men in West Germany

  

  

The Space Race

Both sides argued that they were exploring space for its military, or mineral, possibilities - but really, they were just trying to prove that they were more 'advanced' than the other.  

Although the Americans were the first to put a man on the moon (1969), it was the Russians who led the space race at first.

1957        Russia – Sputnik (first satellite)

1958        America  – NASA set up

  

1961        Gagarin  – first astronaut to orbit the earth

1961        Kennedy promises to put a man on the moon by 1969

 

 

Revision Focus

This is a Paper 1 topic, so concentrate on learning:

1.   WHAT happened

2.   EFFECTS/ Importance

  

Links

e-book on Khrushchev.

  

  

Online revision sheet  

  

 

Spidergram:

  •  Khrushchev & Cold War