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Topic 13.11History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

The USSR and post-Soviet Russia (1945–2020)

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Card 1 of 3613.11.1
13.11.1
Question

When did the Great Patriotic War end and Stalin's final decade begin?

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All Flashcards in Topic 13.11

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13.11.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

When did the Great Patriotic War end and Stalin's final decade begin?

Answer

1945 — the USSR emerged victorious but devastated; Stalin ruled until his death in March 1953.

Card 2definition
Question

What was the Fourth Five-Year Plan (1946)?

Answer

Stalin's post-war reconstruction plan; prioritised heavy industry over consumer goods, rebuilt factories fast but kept living standards low.

Card 3example
Question

What happened to Soviet POWs who returned home after 1945?

Answer

Many were treated as traitors under Stalin's order that surrender was betrayal; sent to filtration camps, and thousands ended up in the Gulag.

Card 4example
Question

What was the Leningrad Affair (1949-50)?

Answer

A purge of Leningrad Communist Party leaders, several executed; showed Stalin's paranoia and terror continued after the war.

Card 5example
Question

What was the Doctors' Plot (1953)?

Answer

Stalin's accusation that Jewish doctors were plotting to kill Soviet leaders; part of rising antisemitism and paranoia just before his death.

Card 6concept
Question

What was the Secret Speech (1956)?

Answer

Khrushchev's speech to the 20th Party Congress denouncing Stalin's cult of personality and crimes, kept from the public but leaked internationally.

Card 7definition
Question

What is de-Stalinization?

Answer

Khrushchev's process of reducing Stalin's image and legacy: renaming cities, releasing Gulag prisoners, reforming the party after 1956.

Card 8example
Question

What was the Virgin Lands Campaign (1954)?

Answer

Khrushchev's scheme to plough huge new areas of Kazakhstan/Siberia for grain; strong early yields, but soil erosion caused later failures.

Card 9example
Question

What satellite and human spaceflight did the USSR achieve first?

Answer

Sputnik 1 (1957), first satellite; Yuri Gagarin (1961), first human in orbit — both under Khrushchev, boosting Soviet prestige.

Card 10process
Question

How and when was Khrushchev removed from power?

Answer

October 1964 — ousted in a bloodless Politburo coup, replaced by Leonid Brezhnev; officially retired for 'health reasons'.

Card 11comparison
Question

Give two reasons the Politburo turned against Khrushchev by 1964.

Answer

Erratic policymaking (failed Virgin Lands harvests, farm reorganisations) plus humiliation abroad (Cuban Missile Crisis climbdown, 1962) and colleagues resenting his unpredictable style.

Card 12comparison
Question

Compare Stalin's and Khrushchev's approach to terror.

Answer

Stalin used mass terror/Gulag to control the party (Leningrad Affair, Doctors' Plot); Khrushchev denounced this terror and released many prisoners, though he still purged rivals politically, not violently.

13.11.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What year did Khrushchev fall from power, and who replaced him?

Answer

October 1964 — replaced by Alexei Kosygin (Premier) and Leonid Brezhnev (General Secretary).

Card 14concept
Question

What did the 1965 Kosygin reforms try to do?

Answer

Give factory managers more autonomy and judge them on profit/sales rather than just output quotas, to make the economy more efficient.

Card 15process
Question

Why did the Kosygin reforms stall by around 1970?

Answer

Central planners kept overruling local decisions, prices stayed fixed by the state, and post-1968 Prague Spring fears made the leadership nervous about any loosening of control.

Card 16definition
Question

Define: nomenklatura

Answer

The privileged class of senior Communist Party officials who filled key approved posts across the USSR and enjoyed special access to goods, housing and healthcare.

Card 17definition
Question

Define: stagnation (zastoi)

Answer

The term historians use for the Brezhnev era (1964–1982) — slow economic and political decline hidden beneath a surface of outward stability.

Card 18example
Question

Name two famous Soviet dissidents and how the state treated them.

Answer

Alexander Solzhenitsyn — exiled abroad in 1974. Andrei Sakharov — sent into internal exile in Gorky in 1980.

Card 19concept
Question

What was "punitive psychiatry"?

Answer

Declaring dissidents mentally ill and committing them to psychiatric hospitals to silence them without a public political trial.

Card 20definition
Question

What year did Gorbachev become General Secretary, and how old was he?

Answer

March 1985, aged 54 — the youngest Soviet leader in decades.

Card 21comparison
Question

Compare perestroika and glasnost.

Answer

Perestroika = economic restructuring (enterprise autonomy, limited private cooperatives). Glasnost = political openness (relaxed censorship, freer public debate). Both were meant to renew the system but instead exposed its weaknesses.

Card 22example
Question

What happened at the 1989 Congress of People's Deputies elections?

Answer

The first genuinely competitive Soviet elections since 1917; multiple candidates could stand, and reformers/critics won seats in nationally televised proceedings.

Card 23process
Question

Outline the August 1991 coup and its outcome.

Answer

Hardliners placed Gorbachev under house arrest (19 Aug 1991) fearing his new Union Treaty; Yeltsin rallied resistance from atop a tank in Moscow; the coup collapsed within three days, fatally weakening Gorbachev's authority.

Card 24definition
Question

When did the Soviet Union formally dissolve, and how?

Answer

8 December 1991 — Russia, Ukraine and Belarus signed the Belavezha Accords; Gorbachev resigned 25 December 1991 as the Soviet flag was lowered over the Kremlin.

13.11.312 cards

Card 25definition
Question

What was "shock therapy"?

Answer

Yeltsin's rapid 1992 removal of Soviet price controls and subsidies to force an immediate transition to a market economy, causing severe inflation and hardship.

Card 26example
Question

What happened in the October 1993 constitutional crisis?

Answer

Parliament tried to impeach Yeltsin; he ordered tanks to shell the parliament building (White House), killing over 100 — resolved with a new constitution giving the president sweeping powers.

Card 27process
Question

What was "loans-for-shares"?

Answer

A 1995–96 scheme where bankers lent the cash-strapped government money in exchange for shares in valuable state companies; when the state defaulted, bankers kept the firms cheaply — this created the oligarchs.

Card 28example
Question

Why did Yeltsin win re-election in 1996 despite deep unpopularity?

Answer

Oligarch-owned media ran relentless pro-Yeltsin coverage and oligarchs personally funded his campaign in exchange for future favours.

Card 29example
Question

What happened in the First Chechen War (1994–96)?

Answer

Russia invaded to crush Chechen independence but was fought to a standstill; the 1996 Khasavyurt Accord saw Russia withdraw, a major humiliation for Yeltsin.

Card 30process
Question

How does the Second Chechen War connect Yeltsin to Putin?

Answer

Launched in 1999 after apartment bombings blamed on Chechen militants, it was led by Putin as prime minister and let him present himself as the strong leader Yeltsin never was — his launchpad to power.

Card 31concept
Question

What was the "tandem" (2008–2012)?

Answer

Putin, barred from a third consecutive presidential term, became prime minister while ally Dmitry Medvedev served as president — widely seen as Putin retaining real power before returning as president in 2012.

Card 32example
Question

Give an example of repression under Putin.

Answer

Journalist Anna Politkovskaya (murdered 2006), opposition leader Boris Nemtsov (assassinated 2015), and Alexei Navalny (poisoned 2020, later imprisoned) — all critics of Putin's government.

Card 33process
Question

How did Putin bring the oligarchs under control?

Answer

He let them keep their wealth if they stayed out of politics; those who defied him, like Khodorkovsky (arrested 2003), lost their companies and freedom.

Card 34comparison
Question

Compare Yeltsin's and Putin's relationship with regional power.

Answer

Yeltsin allowed regions significant autonomy amid state weakness; Putin reversed this, creating federal districts with his own appointees and stripping governors of national political power.

Card 35comparison
Question

What happened in Georgia (2008) and Crimea (2014)?

Answer

Both show Putin using force against former Soviet states drifting toward the West: war with Georgia over separatist regions (2008), and annexation of Crimea plus backing Donbas separatists in Ukraine (2014).

Card 36concept
Question

What economic factor most helped Putin's early popularity?

Answer

Rising global oil and gas prices funded rising wages, debt repayment and a growing middle class, contrasting sharply with the economic collapse of the Yeltsin years.

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IB History (2028+) HL Topic 13.11 Flashcards | The USSR and post-Soviet Russia (1945–2020) | Aimnova | Aimnova