In this video Heimler walks you through the effects of the Cold War including military alliances (NATO and the Warsaw Pact), proxy wars (Korea, Angola, and Nicaragua), and nuclear proliferation.
All of this aligns with Unit 8 Topic 3 (8.3) of the AP World History Curriculum.
Content
0.099 -> Well hey and welcome back to Heimler’s History.
1.34 -> Now we’ve been working our way through Unit
8 of AP World History, and one of the main
4.95 -> themes of this unit is the Cold War between
the United States and the Soviet Union.
9.38 -> Now I’ve been saying that the Cold War didn’t
involve any direct fighting between these
12.96 -> two powers, and that’s true, as far as it
goes, but it’s not the whole story.
16.309 -> So in this video we’re going to consider
the effects of the Cold War and how these
19.59 -> two powers actually did fight, but not really,
I mean they sort of did… but you know, well,
24.33 -> let’s just get to it.
25.33 -> So the Cold War did not produce open warfare
between the United States and the Soviet Union,
29.96 -> but it did produce the following: new military
alliances, proxy wars, and the buildup of
34.399 -> nuclear weapons.
35.399 -> So let’s begin by considering the military
alliances formed as a result of the Cold War.
39.3 -> I mentioned in the last video that after World
War II the Soviet Union occupied much of Eastern
43.28 -> Europe into what’s called the Soviet Bloc,
or the communist bloc.
46.539 -> In doing this, they installed commuist governments
in those countries and made their economies
49.71 -> to serve the Soviet Union and not their own
populations.
52.17 -> Now, because of this, the countries in Western
Europe got a little twitchy at the thought
55.769 -> of having all those dang communists in their
backyards.
58.41 -> So as a result of this, these western nations
decided to form a mutual military alliance
62.35 -> called North Atlantic Treaty Organization
or (NATO) in 1949.
66.6 -> And essentially this was an alliance of nations
against the Soviets that included the United
70.619 -> States, Great Britain, France, Canada, Belgium,
Norway, Luxembourg, Denmark, Portugal, Iceland,
76.32 -> Italy, and the Netherlands.
78.17 -> And not to be outdone, the Soviets formed
their own military alliance in 1955 called
82.38 -> the Warsaw Pact.
83.38 -> And this alliance included the Soviet Union,
Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Romania, Hungary,
88.32 -> Poland, Albania, and Bulgaria.
90.45 -> Now there were other military alliances formed
as a result of the Cold War, but these are
93.93 -> the major ones.
94.93 -> Okay, so the effect of the Cold War number
one: military alliances.
98.179 -> Effect number two: proxy wars.
99.9 -> Now because the Cold War was cold, that means
by definition there was no direct fighting
104.619 -> between the two powers.
105.86 -> But there was all sorts of indirect fighting,
and the name for that is a proxy war.
109.82 -> Now a proxy, by definition, is just when one
thing that stands in for another thing.
113.82 -> So these proxy wars were just these small,
localized wars in Asia, and Africa, Latin
118.59 -> America, and the Caribbean, but they took
on this global significance when the United
122.359 -> States and Russia started taking different
sides of these little wars.
125.54 -> Now, there are lots of these we could possibly
consider during this time, but we’re only
129.03 -> going to look at three: one in Korea, one
in Angola, and one in Nicaragua.
133 -> So first, the Korean War.
134.69 -> So after World War II ended the Allies divided
Korea into North and South Korea.
138.75 -> Now the north was occupied by the Soviets
and the South was occupied by the U.S. and
142.97 -> its allies.
143.97 -> Well in 1950 North Korea invaded South Korea
in order to create a single state under its
148.48 -> own leadership.
149.48 -> And the United Nations came to the aid of
South Korea, and I say the United Nations,
152.56 -> but it was mostly the United States.
153.95 -> Now the Soviets didn’t apply any troops
to the North Koreans in order to help, but
157.34 -> they did send tons of guns and boom boom.
159.75 -> And in this way, the United States and the
Soviet Union fought each other without actually
163.8 -> fighting each other.
164.8 -> And so as the war went on, the UN forces pushed
the North Koreans all the way up to the Chinese
169.47 -> border.
170.47 -> Now China saw this and started to fear that
the UN forces would then go ahead and invade
173.71 -> China, so what they did is they sent troops
to aid the North Koreans.
176.68 -> And with that fortification, the North Koreans
pushed the UN forces all the way back below
181.04 -> the 38th parallel.
182.3 -> And by 1953 the conflict ended in a stalemate
because everything in the two countries remained
187.51 -> largely as they were before the war, except
that three million people were dead as a result.
192.84 -> Okay now the second proxy war we’re going
to consider is the Angolan Civil War which
196.96 -> started in 1975.
198.61 -> So Angola was a colony of Portugal and as
is the custom with imperial powers, they went
202.37 -> ahead and drew borders around rival people
groups and just threw them together under
205.85 -> one government.
206.85 -> Now each of these groups fought against the
Portuguese and actually won their independence.
210.75 -> But once they were free, the real question
became: which one of these rival groups is
214.79 -> actually going to have power in a free Angola?
217.77 -> Now again, this seems like a nice, tidy little
conflict down in Sub-Saharan Africa.
222.24 -> They’ll figure it out for themselves, there’s
no need for anybody else to get involved OH
226.82 -> HERE COMES THE COLD WAR.
228.12 -> And as it goes, the United States backed one
of these groups, the Soviet Union backed another,
231.75 -> and then South Africa, backed yet another.
233.64 -> And thus the Angolan Civil War became another
battle ground for the larger conflict of the
237.98 -> Cold War.
238.98 -> Okay, now the third proxy war to consider
is the Contra War in Nicaragua.
243 -> In 1979 the Sandinista National Liberation
Front, who were self-proclaimed socialists,
247.29 -> seized power in Nicaragua.
248.65 -> And at that, the United States was all like,
“Ain’t no socialists gonna be on my continent.”
252.18 -> And so, two years later the U.S. backed a
group of contras who tried to overthrow the
256.76 -> Sandinistas, who in turn had support from
the Soviet Union.
259.56 -> In this attempted overthrow the contras committed
many human rights violations, and in the end
264.07 -> the conflict ended in a cease-fire and the
Sandinistas were handily defeated in the next
268.89 -> election.
269.89 -> Okay, now the third effect of the Cold War
that we need to talk about is the proliferation,
273.64 -> or the buildup of nuclear weapons.
275.38 -> Now I already mentioned the arms race between
the United States and the Soviet Union in
278.89 -> the last video.
279.89 -> But the crisis moment for this race came in
1962 with the Cuban Missile Crisis.
284.94 -> So after a failed attempt by the United States
to oust communist leader Fidel Castro in Cuba,
289.24 -> the Soviet leader Nikita Khruschev shipped
a whole buttload of nuclear missiles to Cuba.
294.14 -> Now I mentioned in the previous video that
the Soviets had already developed missiles
297.3 -> that were capable of carrying nuclear warheads
and could hit targets in the U.S.
301.49 -> And that was fearful enough, but now these
missiles were right in our backyard.
304.96 -> I mean, look at it.
306.36 -> There’s Cuba.
307.36 -> There’s the United States.
308.63 -> From here, you could blow all this up.
310.49 -> And so in 1962 U.S. spy planes discovered
these missile sites, and understandably the
315.38 -> U.S. was outraged.
317.05 -> But back up that outrage train just a little
bit.
319.36 -> It’s not as though America’s hands were
clean in this respect.
322.02 -> They had basically done the same thing by
placing nuclear missiles in Turkey which shared
325.88 -> a border with the Soviet Union.
327.43 -> But anyway, after the discovery of these missiles,
U.S. President Kennedy ordered a naval blockade
331.639 -> to surround the island of Cuba.
333.08 -> Now just to be clear, if you’re Fidel Castro
and the U.S. navy send warships to surround
337.12 -> your island, that is not a neutral action.
339.43 -> In fact, it is nigh unto a declaration of
war.
342.42 -> And so for thirteen intense and anxiety filled
days, everybody in America, and around the
347.06 -> world was starting to wonder: is this the
day I’m going to get blown up?
351.51 -> Well, I’m happy to report that they never
actually fired those missiles and that everybody
355.06 -> eventually backed down.
356.55 -> But what this event did was to show the world
that the buildup, or proliferation of nuclear
360.76 -> weapons was a real problem.
362.389 -> Therefore in 1968 we see the creation of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
366.45 -> And what it did, among other things, was to
call on nuclear powers to prevent non-nuclear
370.37 -> nations from developing such disastrous weapons.
372.791 -> Alright, that’s what you need to know about
Unit 8 Topic 3 of AP World History.
376.7 -> If you want help getting an A in your class
and a five on your exam in May, then click
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