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Topic 13.12History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

Europe during and after the Cold War (1945–2020)

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Card 1 of 3613.12.1
13.12.1
Question

What caused the breakdown of the wartime alliance by 1949?

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All Flashcards in Topic 13.12

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13.12.112 cards

Card 1concept
Question

What caused the breakdown of the wartime alliance by 1949?

Answer

Ideological incompatibility (democracy/capitalism vs communism), broken promises over free elections in Poland, and the economic split caused by the Marshall Plan and Cominform.

Card 2definition
Question

Truman Doctrine (March 1947)

Answer

US pledge to support 'free peoples' resisting communist takeover, starting with aid to Greece and Turkey — the start of the policy of containment.

Card 3definition
Question

Marshall Plan (June 1947)

Answer

US offer of $13 billion in economic aid to rebuild Europe, open to all states including the USSR; Stalin refused it and forbade Eastern Bloc states from joining.

Card 4definition
Question

Cominform (September 1947)

Answer

The Communist Information Bureau, set up by Stalin to tighten Soviet control over Eastern European communist parties in response to the Marshall Plan.

Card 5comparison
Question

Orthodox vs revisionist vs post-revisionist views on Cold War origins

Answer

Orthodox: Stalin was the aggressor. Revisionist: US economic self-interest provoked confrontation. Post-revisionist: both sides acted from genuine, mutual security fears.

Card 6process
Question

Why did Stalin blockade Berlin in 1948-49?

Answer

To force the Western Allies out of Berlin after they introduced the Deutschmark currency in their zones, which Stalin saw as a move toward a permanent, Western-aligned Germany.

Card 7example
Question

How did the West respond to the Berlin Blockade?

Answer

The Berlin Airlift — flying food and coal into West Berlin around the clock for eleven months — forced Stalin to lift the blockade in May 1949 without a war.

Card 8process
Question

Direct consequence of the Berlin Blockade

Answer

It sped up the creation of NATO (April 1949) and directly led to the formal division of Germany into the FRG (West) and GDR (East) in 1949.

Card 9concept
Question

Why was the Berlin Wall built in 1961?

Answer

To stop the 'brain drain' — roughly 2.7 million East Germans had fled to the West through Berlin between 1949 and 1961, threatening the GDR's economy and stability.

Card 10comparison
Question

West Germany vs East Germany, 1961-1990

Answer

West: multi-party democracy, market economy 'economic miracle', free travel. East: one-party SED rule, Stasi surveillance, planned economy, but job security and free childcare.

Card 11process
Question

What triggered the fall of the Berlin Wall (9 November 1989)?

Answer

Gorbachev's reforms signalled no Soviet military intervention; Hungary opened its border with Austria (May 1989); mass peaceful 'Monday demonstrations' in Leipzig; Honecker was forced out.

Card 12example
Question

How was German reunification achieved (3 October 1990)?

Answer

Chancellor Helmut Kohl negotiated the Two Plus Four Treaty with the US, USSR, Britain and France, securing international agreement for full reunification.

13.12.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What is NATO and when was it founded?

Answer

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a military alliance of the USA, Canada, and Western European states founded in April 1949, built on collective defence (Article 5).

Card 14process
Question

What event directly triggered the founding of NATO?

Answer

The Berlin Blockade (1948–49), which convinced Western leaders the USSR was expansionist and Western Europe needed a collective defence alliance.

Card 15definition
Question

What was the EEC and when was it created?

Answer

The European Economic Community, created by the Treaty of Rome in 1957, forming a tariff-free common market between France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg.

Card 16comparison
Question

Give two rival explanations for why the EEC was founded.

Answer

1) Genuine idealism for lasting peace through interdependence (Monnet, Schuman). 2) Cold War necessity — building a strong bloc to resist Soviet pressure and stay loyal to the USA.

Card 17process
Question

How did relations between Western Europe and the USA change over time?

Answer

From dependent gratitude (Marshall Plan, late 1940s) to friction (de Gaulle pulled France out of NATO's integrated command in 1966) to renewed alignment under Cold War pressure (1979 dual-track missile decision).

Card 18concept
Question

What were 'salami tactics'?

Answer

The method Soviet-backed communist parties used to seize power in Eastern Europe gradually — sharing coalition government first, then purging rivals, then banning opposition entirely, 1945–48.

Card 19definition
Question

What was the Warsaw Pact and why was it founded in 1955?

Answer

A Soviet-led military alliance of the USSR and seven Eastern European states, founded in May 1955 directly in response to West Germany joining NATO.

Card 20example
Question

What was COMECON and what was its real economic effect?

Answer

The Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (1949), the USSR's answer to the Marshall Plan; in practice it forced economic specialisation and unequal trade that mostly benefited the USSR over its satellite states.

Card 21example
Question

Give one example of the social impact of Soviet control in the East.

Answer

Surveillance by secret police such as East Germany's Stasi, censorship of media, restricted travel, and the Berlin Wall (built 1961) preventing citizens leaving.

Card 22process
Question

Why could Josip Broz Tito defy Stalin in 1948 when other Eastern European leaders could not?

Answer

Yugoslavia was liberated by Tito's own communist partisans, not the Red Army, so no Soviet troops occupied the country and Tito had his own military and political base independent of Moscow.

Card 23concept
Question

What was 'Titoism'?

Answer

Tito's independent path to socialism after breaking from Moscow in 1948, including worker self-management in factories rather than strict Soviet-style central planning.

Card 24example
Question

Name three instances of opposition to Soviet control that were crushed by force.

Answer

The East German uprising (1953), the Hungarian Revolution (1956), and the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia (1968) — all suppressed by Soviet or Warsaw Pact forces.

13.12.312 cards

Card 25definition
Question

What was the Maastricht Treaty (1992)?

Answer

Treaty that turned the EEC into the **European Union**, created the euro currency plan, and introduced EU citizenship.

Card 26concept
Question

Name the two waves of EU expansion after the Cold War.

Answer

1995 (Austria, Finland, Sweden — rich, neutral states) and 2004 (the 'Big Bang' — 10 states, mostly ex-communist Central/Eastern Europe, e.g. Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic).

Card 27definition
Question

What is the Schengen Area?

Answer

A zone of EU (and some non-EU) countries with **no passport checks** at internal borders.

Card 28definition
Question

What is the Eurozone?

Answer

The group of EU states that adopted the **euro** as their shared currency, starting 1999/2002.

Card 29comparison
Question

Give one economic benefit and one economic cost of the euro.

Answer

Benefit: easier trade, no exchange-rate risk. Cost: countries lose control of their own interest rates — seen sharply in the 2010s Greek debt crisis.

Card 30concept
Question

What social policies did the EU expand after the Cold War?

Answer

Freedom of movement for workers, common social/employment rights, funding for poorer regions (Cohesion Funds), and Erasmus student exchange.

Card 31example
Question

What was UKIP and what did it campaign for?

Answer

The UK Independence Party, led by Nigel Farage — campaigned for Britain to leave the EU, citing sovereignty and immigration concerns.

Card 32example
Question

What was the result of the 2016 Brexit referendum?

Answer

52% voted to Leave the EU, 48% to Remain. The UK formally left on 31 January 2020.

Card 33concept
Question

Name two named reasons for political resistance to the EU (besides Brexit).

Answer

Loss of national sovereignty (laws made in Brussels) and anger over immigration/free movement; also resentment at austerity rules imposed during the debt crisis.

Card 34example
Question

Give one example of post-Cold War social change in a European country (e.g. Germany).

Answer

Reunified Germany (1990) faced a persistent East-West gap in wages and unemployment — a divide still visible decades later.

Card 35definition
Question

What is 'democratic deficit' as applied to the EU?

Answer

The criticism that unelected EU bodies (like the Commission) hold too much power over elected national governments.

Card 36process
Question

What Paper 3 skill does this micro mainly train?

Answer

Evaluating a historical argument ('to what extent') by weighing benefits against costs/resistance and reaching a substantiated judgement.

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