The Globalization of World Politics
An Introduction to International Relations
Chapter 3
International history 1900-99
By Len Scott
Introduction
Modern total war
End of empire
Cold war
Conclusion
Reader's Guide
This chapter
examines some of the principal developments in world politics from 1900 to
1999: the development of total war, the onset of cold war, the advent of
nuclear weapons, and the end of European imperialism. The dominance of, and conflict
between, European states in the first half of the twentieth century was
replaced as the key dynamic in world affairs by confrontation between the
United States of America (USA) and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(USSR). The cold war encompassed ideological, political, and military interests
of the two states (and their allies), and extended around the globe. How far,
and in what ways, global conflict was promoted or prevented by the cold war
are central questions. Similarly, how decolonization became entangled with
East-West conflicts is central to understanding many struggles in the 'Third
World'. Finally, how dangerous was the nuclear confrontation between East and
West? The chapter explores the role of nuclear weapons in specific phases of
the cold war, notably in detente, and then with the deterioration of
Soviet-American relations in the 1980s.
Introduction
The First World War (also known as the
Great War) began between European states on European battlefields, but
extended across the globe. It was the first modern, industrialized total war, as the belligerents mobilized their populations and
economies as well as their armies, and as they endured enormous casualties over
many years. The Second World War was even more total in nature and global in
scope, and helped bring fundamental changes in world politics. Before 1939,
Europe was the arbiter of world affairs, when both the USSR and the USA
remained, for different reasons, preoccupied with internal development at the
expense of a significant global role. The Second World War brought the Soviets
and the Americans militarily and politically deep into Europe, and helped
transform their relations with each other. This transformation was soon
reflected in their relations outside Europe, where various confrontations
developed. Like the Second World War, the cold war had its origins in Europe,
but quickly spread, with enormous global consequences.
The Great War brought the demise of four
European empires: Russian, German, Austro-Hungarian, and Ottoman (in Turkey).
After 1945, European power was in eclipse. The economic plight of the wartime
belligerents, including the victors, was increasingly apparent, as was the
growing realization of the military and economic potential of the USA and the
USSR. Both emerged as ‘superpowers’, combining global political ambition with
military capabilities that included weapons of mass destruction. European political, economic, and military
weakness contrasted with the appearance of Soviet strength and growing Western
perception of malign Soviet intent. The onset of the cold war in Europe
marked the collapse of the wartime alliance between the UK, the USSR, and the
USA: whether this was inevitable after 1945 remains contentious. The most
tangible legacy of the war was the atomic bomb, built at enormous cost, and
driven by fear that Nazi Germany might win this first nuclear arms race. After
1945, nuclear weapons posed unprecedented challenges to world politics and to
leaders responsible for conducting post-war diplomacy. The cold war provided
both context and pretext for the growth of nuclear arsenals that threatened the
very existence of humankind, and which have continued (and continue to spread)
beyond the end of the East-West confrontation.
Since 1900, world politics has been
transformed in various ways, reflecting political, technological, and
ideological developments, of which three are examined in this chapter: (1) the
transition from European power politics crises to total war; (2) the end of
empire and withdrawal of European states from their imperial acquisitions; and
(3) the cold war: the political, military, and nuclear confrontation between
the USA and the USSR. There have, of course, been other important changes, and
indeed equally important continuities, which are explored in other chapters.
Nevertheless, the three principal changes outlined above provide a framework
for exploring events and trends that have shaped international politics and the
world we now inhabit.
Modern total
war
The origins of the Great War have long
been debated. For the victorious allies, the question of how war began became a
question of how far the Germans and their allies should be held responsible. At
Versailles, the victors imposed a statement of German war guilt in the final
settlement, primarily to justify the reparations they demanded. Debates among
historians about the war’s origins focused on political, military, and systemic
factors. Some suggested that responsibility for the war was diffuse, as its
origins lay in complex dynamics and military imperatives of the respective
alliances. An influential post-war interpretation came from West German
historian, Fritz Fischer, who in his 1967 book, Germany’s Aims in the First
World War, argued that German aggression, motivated by the internal
political needs of an autocratic elite, was responsible for the war.
However complex or contested the origins
were, in retrospect, the motivations of those who fought were more explicable.
The masses of the belligerent nations shared nationalist beliefs and patriotic
values. As they marched off to fight, most thought war would be short, victorious,
and, in many cases, glorious. However the reality of the European battlefield
and the advent of trench warfare was otherwise. Defensive military technologies,
symbolized by the machine gun, triumphed over the tactics and strategy of
attrition, although by November 1918 the allied offensive finally achieved the
rapid advances that helped bring an end to the fighting. War was total in that
whole societies and economies were mobilized: men were conscripted into armies
and women to work in factories. The western and eastern fronts remained the
crucibles of combat, although conflict spread to other parts of the globe, for
example when Japan went to war in 1914 as an ally of Britain. Most importantly,
America entered the war in 1917 under President Woodrow Wilson, whose vision of
international society, articulated in his Fourteen Points, was to drive the agenda of the Paris Peace Conference
in 1919. The overthrow of the Tsar and seizure of power by Lenin’s Bolsheviks
in November 1917 soon led Russia, now the USSR, to negotiate withdrawal from
the war. Germany no longer fought on two fronts, but soon faced a new threat as
the resources of the USA were mobilized. With the failure of its last great
military offensive in the West in 1918, and with an increasingly effective
British naval blockade, Germany agreed to an armistice.
The Versailles Peace Treaty promised both a new framework for European security
and a new international order. Neither objective was achieved. There were
crucial differences between the victorious powers over policies towards Germany
and principles governing the international order. The treaty failed to tackle
what was for some the central problem of European security after 1370 - a united
and frustrated Germany—and precipitated German revanchism by creating new
states and contested borders. Economic factors were also crucial. The effects
of the Great Depression, triggered in part by the Wall Street Crash of 1929,
weakened liberal democracy in many states and strengthened the appeal of
communist, fascist, and Nazi parties. The effect on German society was
particularly significant. All modernized states suffered mass unemployment,
but in Germany inflation was acute. Economic and political instability provided
the ground in which support for the Nazis took root. By 1933, Adolf Hitler had
achieved power, and transformation of the German state began. Three remain
debates about how far Hitler’s ambitions were carefully thought through and how
far he seized opportunities. A controversial analysis was provided by A. J. P.
Taylor in his 1961 book, The Origins of the Second World War, in which
he argued that Hitler was different from other German political leaders. What
was different was the philosophy of Nazism and the alliance of racial supremacy
with territorial expansion. British and French attempts to negotiate with
Hitler culminated in the Munich Agreement of 1938. Hitler’s territorial claims
on the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia were accepted as the price for peace, but
within months Germany had seized the rest of Czechoslovakia and was preparing
for war on Poland. Recent debates about appeasement have focused on whether there were realistic
alternatives to negotiation, given the lack of military preparedness.
By 1939, the defensive military
technologies of the Great War gave way to armoured warfare and air power, as
the German blitzkrieg brought speedy victories over Poland, and in the West.
Hitler was also drawn into the Balkans in support of his Italian ally,
Mussolini, and into North Africa. With the invasion of the USSR in June 1941,
the scale of fighting and scope of Hitler’s aims were apparent. Massive early
victories gave way to winter stalemate, and mobilization of Soviet peoples and
armies. German treatment of civilian populations and Soviet prisoners of war
reflected Nazi ideas of racial supremacy, and caused the deaths of millions.
German anti-Semitism and the development of concentration camps gained new
momentum after a decision on the ‘Final Solution of the Jewish Question’ in
1942. The term holocaust entered the political lexicon of the twentieth
century, as the Nazis attempted the genocide of the Jewish people and other
minorities, such as the Roma, in Europe.
The rise and fall of Japan
After 1919, international attempts to
provide collective security were pursued through the League of Nations. The US
Senate prevented American participation in the League, however, and Japanese
aggression against Manchuria in 1931, the Italian invasion of Abyssinia in
1935, and German involvement in the Spanish Civil War of 1936-9 were met with
ineffective international responses. In 1868, Japan had emerged from centuries
of isolationism to pursue industrial and military modernization, and then
imperial expansion. In 1937, China, already embroiled in civil war between
communists and nationalists, was invaded by Japan. Tokyo’s ambitions, however,
could only be realized at the expense of European empires and American
interests. President Roosevelt increasingly sought to engage the USA in the
European war, against strong isolationist forces, and by 1941 German submarines
and American warships were in an undeclared war. The imposition of American economic sanctions on Japan
precipitated Japanese military preparations for a surprise attack on the US
fleet at Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. When Germany and Italy declared war
on America in support of their Japanese ally, Roosevelt decided to prioritize
the European over the Pacific theatre. After a combined strategic bombing
offensive with the British against German cities, the allies launched a ‘second
front’ in France, for which the Soviets had been pressing.
Defeat of Germany in May 1945 came before
the atomic bomb was ready. The destruction of the Japanese cities, Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, remains a controversy (see Table 3.1). Aside from moral
objections to attacking civilian populations, there was fierce debate, particularly
among American historians, about why the bomb was dropped. Gar Alperovitz, in
his 1965 book Atomic Diplomacy, argued that, as President Truman already
knew Japan was defeated, his real motive was to coerce Moscow in pursuit of
post-war American interests in Europe and Asia. Such claims generated
angry and dismissive responses from other
historians. Ensuing scholarship has benefited from more historical evidence,
though debate persists over how far Truman dropped the bomb simply to end the
war, and how far other factors, including coercion of the Soviets in postwar
affairs, entered his calculations.
Table 3.1
Second World War estimated casualties
Hiroshima (6 August 1945): 70,000-80,000 'prompt'; 140,000 by end 1945; 200,000 by 1950
Nagasaki: (9 August 1945): 30,000-40,000 'prompt'; 70,000 by end 1945; 140,000 by 1950
Tokyo (9 March 1945): 100,000+
Dresden (13-15 February 1945): 24,000-35,000+
Coventry (14 November 1940): 568
Leningrad (siege 1941-4): 1,000,000+
Leningrad (siege 1941-4): 1,000,000+
Key Points
Debates about the origins of the Great War
focus on whether responsibility should rest with the German government or
whether war came because of more complex factors.
The Paris peace settlement failed to
address central problems of European security, and in restructuring the
European state system created new sources of grievance and instability.
Principles of self-determination, espoused
in particular by Woodrow Wilson, did not extend to empires of European colonial
powers.
The rise of Hitler posed challenges that
European political leaders lacked the ability and will to meet.
The German attack on the USSR extended the
scope of the war from short and limited campaigns to extended, large-scale, and
barbaric confrontation, fought for total victory.
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
brought America into the war in Europe and eventually forced Germany into war
on two fronts (again).
Debate persists about whether the atomic
bomb should have been used in 1945, and about the effect this had on the cold
war.
End of empire
The demise of imperialism in the twentieth
century marked a fundamental change in world politics. It reflected, and
contributed to, the decreasing importance of Europe as the arbiter of world
affairs. The belief that national self-determination
should be a guiding principle in
international politics marked a transformation of attitudes and values. During
the age of imperialism political status accrued to imperial powers. After 1945,
imperialism became a term of opprobrium. Colonialism and the United Nations
Charter were increasingly recognized as incompatible, although achievement of
independence was often slow and sometimes marked by prolonged and armed
struggle. The cold war often complicated and hindered the transition to
independence.
Various factors influenced the process of
decolonization: the attitude of the colonial power; the ideology and strategy
of the anti-imperialist forces; and the role of external powers. Political,
economic, and military factors played various roles in shaping the transfer of
power. Different imperial powers and newly emerging independent states had
different experiences of withdrawal from empire (see Table 3.2).
Britain
In 1945, the British Empire extended
across the globe. Between 1947 and 1980, forty-nine territories were granted
independence. In 1947, the independence of India,
the imperial ‘Jewel in the Crown’, created the world’s largest democracy,
although division into India and Pakistan led to inter-communal ethnic
cleansing and hundreds of thousands of deaths. Indian independence was largely
an exception in the early post-war years, as successive British governments
were reluctant to rush towards decolonization. End of empire m Africa came
towards the end of the 1950s and the early 1960s, symbolized by Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan’s speech in South Africa in February 1960 when he warned his
hosts of the ‘wind of change’ blowing through their continent.
British withdrawal from Empire was
relatively peaceful, save for conflicts in Kenya (1952-6) and Malaya 1948-60).
In Rhodesia/Zimbabwe, however, the transition to ‘one person one vote’ and
black majority rule was opposed by a white minority willing to disregard the
British government and world opinion. This minority was aided and abetted by
the South African government. Under apartheid, after 1948, South Africans engaged in what many saw as
the internal equivalent of imperialism, and South Africa conducted more
traditional imperialist practices in its occupation of Namibia. It also
exercised an important influence in postcolonial/cold war struggles in Angola
and Mozambique after the last European empire in Africa - that of Portugal - collapsed
when the military dictatorship was overthrown in Lisbon.
Table 3.2
Principal acts of European decolonization, 1945—80
Country
|
Colonial
state
|
Year of
independence
|
"dia
|
Britain
|
1947
|
Pakistan
|
Britain
|
1947
|
Surma
|
Britain
|
1948
|
Sri Lanka
|
Britain
|
1948
|
ndonesia
|
Holland
|
1949
|
Ghana
|
Britain
|
1957
|
Malaya
|
Britain
|
1957
|
French African colonies*
|
France
|
1960
|
Zaire
|
Britain
|
1960
|
Nigeria
|
Britain
|
1960
|
Sierra Leone
|
Britain
|
1961
|
Tanganyika
|
Britain
|
1961
|
Uganda
|
Britain
|
1962
|
Algeria
|
Britain
|
1962
|
Rwanda
|
Belgium
|
1962
|
Kenya
|
Britain
|
1963
|
Guinea-Bissau
|
Portugal
|
1974
|
Mozambique
|
Portugal
|
1975
|
Cape Verde
|
Portugal
|
1975
|
Sao Tome
|
Portugal
|
1975
|
Angola
|
Portugal
|
1975
|
Zimbabwe
|
Britain
|
1980
|
(*including Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad,
Gabon,
Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger,
Senegal, and Upper Volta).
France
The British experience of decolonization
stood in contrast to that of the French. France had been occupied during the
Second World War, and successive governments sought to preserve French
international prestige by maintaining its imperial status. In Indo-China after
1945, Paris attempted to preserve colonial rule, withdrawing only after
prolonged guerrilla war and military defeat at the hands of Vietnamese revolutionary
forces, the Viet Minh, led by Ho Chi Minh. In Africa, the picture was
different. The wind of change also blew through French Africa, and under
President Charles de Gaulle France withdrew from empire, while attempting to
preserve its influence. In Algeria, however, the French refused to leave.
Algeria was regarded by many French people as part of France itself. The
resulting war, from 1954 to 1962, led to hundreds of thousands of deaths, and
France itself was brought to the edge of civil war.
Legacies and consequences: nationalism or
communism?
From the perspective of former colonies,
the principles of self-determination that underpinned the new global order were
slow to be implemented, and required political, ideological, and in some cases
military mobilization. The pattern of decolonization in Africa was thus
diverse, reflecting attitudes of colonial powers, the nature of local
nationalist or revolutionary movements, and in some cases involvement of
external states, including cold war protagonists. Tribal factors were also an
ingredient in many cases. How far tribal divisions were created or exacerbated
by the imperial powers is an important question in examining the political
stability of newly independent states. Equally important is how capable the new
political leaderships in these societies were in tackling their political and
formidable economic problems of poverty and underdevelopment.
In Asia, the relationship between nationalism and revolutionary Marxism was
a potent force. In Malaya, the British defeated an insurgent communist movement
(1948-60). In Indo-China (1946-54) the French failed to do likewise. For the
Vietnamese, centuries of foreign oppression - Chinese, Japanese, and French - soon
focused on a new adversary - America. For Washington, early reluctance to
support European imperialism gave way to incremental and covert commitments,
and, from 1965, open involvement with the newly created state of South Vietnam.
American leaders spoke of a domino theory, in which if one state fell to
communism, the next would be at risk. Chinese and Soviet support provided
additional cold war contexts. Washington failed, however, to coordinate limited
war objectives with an effective political strategy, and once victory was no
longer possible, sought to disengage through ‘peace with honor. The Tet
(Vietnamese New Year) offensive of the ‘Viet Cong’ guerrillas in 1968 marked a
decisive moment, convincing many Americans that the war would not be won,
although it was not until 1973 that American forces finally withdrew, two
years before South Vietnam was defeated.
The global trend towards decolonization
was a key development in the twentieth century, though one frequently offset by
local circumstances. Yet, while imperialism withered, other forms of domination
or hegemony took shape. The notion of hegemony has been used as
criticism of the behaviour of the superpowers, notably with Soviet hegemony in
Eastern Europe, and US hegemony in Central America.
Key Points
The Great War precipitated the collapse of four European empires
(Russian, German, Austro-Hungarian, and the Ottoman Empire in Turkey).
Different European powers had different attitudes to decolonization after 1945:
some sought to preserve their empires, in part (the French) or whole (the
Portuguese).
The process of decolonization was relatively peaceful in many cases; however, it
led to revolutionary wars in others (Algeria, Malaya, and Angola), whose scale and
ferocity reflected the attitudes of the colonial power and the nationalist
movements.
Independence/national
liberation became embroiled in cold war
conflicts when the superpowers and/or their allies became involved, for example
in Vietnam. Whether decolonization was judged successful depends, in part, on
whose perspective you adopt-that of the European power, the independence
movement, or the people themselves.
The rise of the USA as a world power after
1945 was of paramount importance in international politics. Its conflict with
the Soviet Union provided one of the crucial dynamics in world affairs, and
one that affected— directly or indirectly—every part of the globe. In the West,
historians have debated with vigour and acrimony who was responsible for the
collapse of the wartime relationship between Moscow and Washington. The rise
of the USSR as a global power after 1945 is equally crucial in this period.
Moscow’s relations with its Eastern European ‘allies’, with the People’s
Republic of China (PRC), and with revolutionary forces in the Third World have
been vital issues in world politics, as well as key factors in Soviet-American
affairs.
Some historians date the origins of the
cold war to the ‘Russian Revolution’ of 1917, while most focus on events
between 1945 and 1950. Whether the cold war was inevitable, whether it was the
consequence of mistakes and misperceptions, or whether it reflected the response
of courageous Western leaders to malign and aggressive Soviet intent, are
central questions in debates about the origins and dynamics of the cold war.
Hitherto, these debates have drawn from Western archives and sources, and
reflect Western assumptions and perceptions. With the end of the cold war,
greater evidence has emerged of Soviet motivations and perceptions.
1945-53:
onset of the cold war
The onset of the cold war in Europe
reflected failure to implement the principles agreed at the wartime conferences
of Yalta and Potsdam. The future of Germany and various Central and Eastern
European countries, notably Poland, were issues of growing tension between the
former wartime allies. Reconciling principles of national self-determination
with national security was a formidable task. In the West, there was growing feeling
Soviet policy towards Eastern Europe was guided not by concern with security
but by ideological. In March 1947, the Truman administration justified limited
aid to Turkey and Greece with rhetoric designed to arouse awareness of Soviet
ambitions, and a declaration that America would support threatened by Soviet
subversion or expansion. The Truman doctrine and the associated policy of constainment expressed the self-image of the USA as inherently
defensive, and were underpinned by the Marshall Plan for European economic recovery, proclaimed in cue
1947, which was essential to the economic rebuilding of Western Europe. In
Eastern Europe, democratic socialist and other anti-communist forces were underused
and eliminated as Marxist-Leninist regimes, loyal to Moscow, were installed. The exception was in Yugoslavia, where
the Marxist leader, Marshal Tito, consolidated his position while maintaining
independence from Moscow. Tito’s Yugoslavia subsequently played an important
role in the Third World Non-Aligned Movement.
The first major confrontation of the cold
war took place over Berlin in 1948. The former German capital was left deep in
the heart of the Soviet zone of occupation, and in June 1948 Stalin sought to
resolve its status by severing road and rail communications. West Berlin’s
population and political autonomy were kept alive by a massive airlift. Stalin ended
the blockade in May 1949. The crisis saw the deployment of American long-range
bombers in Britain, officially described as atomic-capable’, although none were
actually armed with nuclear weapons. US military deployment was followed by
political commitment enshrined in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) treaty signed in April 1949. The key article of
the treaty—that an attack on one member would be treated as an attack on all— accorded with the principle of collective
self-defence enshrined in Article 51 of the UN Charter. In practice, the
cornerstone of the alliance was the commitment of the USA to defend Western
Europe. In reality, this soon meant the willingness of the USA to use nuclear
weapons to deter Soviet ‘aggression’. For the USSR, ‘political encirclement’
soon encompassed a growing military, md specifically nuclear, threat.
While the origins of the cold war were in
Europe, events and conflicts in Asia and elsewhere were also crucial. In 1949,
the thirty-year-long Chinese civil war ended in victory for the communists
under Mao Zedong. This had a major impact on Asian affairs and on perceptions
in both Moscow and Washington (see Case Study 1). In June 1950, the North Korean attack on South Korea
was interpreted as part of a general communist strategy, a test case for
American resolve and the will of the United Nations to withstand aggression.
The resulting American and UN commitment, followed in October 1950 by Chinese
involvement, led to a war lasting three years in which over 3 million people
died before pre-war borders were restored. North and South Korea themselves
remained locked in seemingly perpetual hostility, even after the end of the
cold war.
Assessing the impact of the cold war on
the Middle East is more difficult. The founding of the state of Israel in 1948
reflected the legacy of the Nazi genocide and the failure of British colonial
policy. The complexities of politics, diplomacy, and armed conflict in the
years immediately after 1945 cannot be readily understood through the prism of
Soviet-American ideological or geo-strategic conflict. Both Moscow and
Washington helped the creation of a Jewish state in previously Arab lands,
although in the 1950s Soviet foreign policy supported Arab nationalism. The
pan-Arabism of the charismatic Egyptian leader, Gamal Abdel Nasser, embraced a
form of socialism, but was far removed from Marxism-Leninism. The state of
Israel was created by force, and owed its survival to a continuing capacity to
defend itself against adversaries who did not recognize the legitimacy of its
existence. Israel developed relations with the British and the French,
culminating in their secret agreement to attack Egypt in 1956. Over time, a
more crucial relationship developed with the USA, with whom a de facto
strategic alliance emerged. Yet Britain, France, and America also developed a
complex of relationships with Arab states, reflecting historical, strategic,
and economic interests.
1953-69:
conflict, confrontation, and compromise
One consequence of the Korean War was the
build-up of American forces in Western Europe, lest communist aggression in
Asia distract from the potential threat to Europe. The idea that communism was
a monolithic political entity controlled from Moscow became an enduring
American fixation, not shared in London or elsewhere. Western Europeans nevertheless
depended on Washington for military security, and this dependence deepened as
cold war confrontation in Europe was consolidated. The rearmament of the Federal
Republic of Germany in 1954 precipitated the creation of the Warsaw Pact in 1955. The military build-up continued apace, with
unprecedented concentrations of conventional and, moreover, nuclear forces. As
the Soviets developed their ability to strike the USA with nuclear weapons, the
credibility of ‘extended deterrence’ was questioned as American willingness to
risk ‘Chicago for Hamburg’ was called into doubt. The problem was exacerbated
as NATO strategy continued to depend on the willingness of the USA not just to
fight, but to initiate, nuclear war on Europe’s behalf. By
the 1960s, there were some 7,000 nuclear weapons in
Western Europe alone. NATO deployed nuclear weapons to offset Soviet
conventional superiority, while Soviet ‘theatre nuclear’ forces in Europe
compensated for overall American nuclear superiority.
The death of Stalin in 1953 portended
significant consequences for the USSR at home and abroad. Stalin’s eventual
successor, Nikita Khrushchev, strove to modernize Soviet society, but helped
unleash reformist forces in Eastern Europe. While Poland was controlled, the
situation in Hungary threatened Soviet hegemony, and in 1956 the intervention
of the Red Army brought bloodshed to the streets of Budapest and international condemnation
of Moscow. Soviet intervention coincided with the attack on Egypt by Britain,
France, and Israel, precipitated by Nasser’s seizure of the Suez Canal. The
British government’s actions provoked fierce domestic and international
criticism, and the most serious rift in the ‘special relationship’ between
London and Washington. President Eisenhower was strongly opposed to his allies’
action, and in the face of what were effectively American economic sanctions
the British abandoned the operation (and their support for the French and
Israelis). International opprobrium at the Soviet action in Budapest was
lessened and deflected by what many saw as the final spasms of European
imperialism.
Khrushchev’s policy towards the West mixed
a search for political coexistence with the pursuit of ideological
confrontation. Soviet support for movements of national liberation aroused
fears in the West of a global communist challenge. American commitment to liberal
democracy and national self-determination was often subordinated to cold war
perspectives, as well as American economic and political interests. The cold
war saw the growth of large permanent intelligence organizations, whose roles
ranged from estimating the intentions and capabilities of adversaries to covert
intervention in the affairs of other states. Crises over Berlin in 1961 and
Cuba in 1962 marked the most dangerous moments of the cold war. In both, there
was a risk of direct military confrontation and, certainly in October 1962, the
possibility of nuclear war. How close the world came to Armageddon during the
Cuban missile crisis and exactly why peace was preserved remain matters of
debate among historians and surviving officials.
The events of 1962 were followed by a more
stable period of coexistence and competition. Nuclear arsenals, nevertheless,
continued to grow. Whether best characterized as an arms race, or whether
internal political and bureaucratic pressures drove the growth of nuclear
arsenals, is open to interpretation. For Washington, commitments to NATO allies
also provided pressures and opportunities to develop and deploy shorter-range
(‘tactical’ and ‘theatre’) nuclear weapons. The global nuclear dimension
increased with the emergence of other nuclear weapons states: Britain (1952), France
(1960), China (1964), India (1974), and Pakistan (1998). Israel and South
Africa also developed nuclear weapons, though the post-apartheid South African
government had these dismantled. Growing concern at the proliferation of
nuclear weapons led to negotiation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT) in 1968, wherein states that had nuclear weapons committed
themselves to halting the arms race, while those who did not promised not to
develop them (see Table 3.3).
Table 3.3
Cold war crises
1948-9
|
Berlin
|
USSR/USA/UK
|
1954-5
|
Taiwan straits
|
USA/PRC
|
1961
|
Berlin
|
USSR/USA/NATO
|
1962
|
Cuba
|
USSR/USA/Cuba
|
1973
|
Arab-Israeli war
|
Egypt/lsrael/Syria/
|
Jordan/USA/USSR
|
||
1983
|
Exercise Able Archer’
|
USSR/USA/NATO
|
1969-79: the rise and fall of detente
As America’s commitment in Vietnam was
deepening, Soviet-Chinese relations were deteriorating. Indeed, by 1969 the PRC
and the USSR fought a minor border war over a territorial dispute. Despite (or
perhaps because of) these tensions, the foundations for what became known as detente were laid between
Washington and Moscow, and for what became known as rapprochement between
Beijing and Washington. Detente in Europe had its origins in the Ostpolitik of
the German Socialist Chancellor, Willy Brandt, and resulted in agreements that
recognized the peculiar status of Berlin and the sovereignty of East Germany.
Soviet-American detente had its roots in mutual recognition of the need to
avoid nuclear crises, and in the economic and military incentives in avoiding
an unconstrained arms race. Both Washington and Moscow also looked towards
Beijing when making their bilateral calculations.
In the West, detente was associated with
the political leadership of President Richard Nixon and his adviser Henry
Kissinger (who were also instrumental in Sino- American rapprochement). This
new phase in Soviet-American relations did not mark an end to political
conflict, as each side pursued political goals, some of which were increasingly
incompatible with the aspirations of the other superpower. Both sides
supported friendly regimes and movements, and subverted adversaries. All this
came as political upheavals were taking place in the Third World (see Table
3.4). The question of how far the superpowers could control their friends,
and how far they were entangled by their commitments, was underlined in 1973
when the Arab-Israeli war embroiled both the USA and the USSR in what became a
potentially dangerous confrontation. Getting the superpowers involved in the
war—whether by design or serendipity—helped create the political
conditions for Egyptian-Israeli rapprochement. Diplomatic and strategic
relations were transformed as Egypt switched allegiance from Moscow to
Washington. In the short term, Egypt was isolated in the Arab world. For
Israel, fear of a war of annihilation fought on two fronts was lifted. Yet
continuing political violence and terrorism, and enduring enmity between
Israel and other Arab states, proved insurmountable obstacles to a regional
settlement.
Table
3.4
Revolutionary upheavals
in the Third World, 1974-80
Ethiopia
|
Overthrow of Haile Selassie
|
Sept. 1974
|
Cambodia
|
Khmer Rouge takes Phnom
|
April 1975
|
Penh
|
||
Vietnam
|
North Vietnam/'Viet Cong'
|
April 1975
|
take Saigon
|
||
Laos
|
Pathet Lao takes over state
|
May 1975
|
Guinea-Bissau
|
Independence from Portugal
|
Sept. 1974
|
Mozambique
|
Independence from Portugal
|
June 1975
|
Cape Verde
|
Independence from Portugal
|
June 1975
|
Sao Tome
|
Independence from Portugal
|
June 1975
|
Angola
|
Independence from Portugal
|
Nov. 1975
|
Afghanistan
|
Military coup in Afghanistan
|
April 1978
|
Iran
|
Ayatollah Khomeini installed
|
Feb. 1979
|
in power
|
||
Grenada
|
New Jewel Movement takes
|
March 1979
|
power
|
||
Nicaragua
|
Sandinistas take Managua
|
July 1979
|
Zimbabwe
|
Independence from Britain
|
April 1980
|
Source: F. Halliday (1986), The Making of the Second Cold War (London:
Verso): 92.
|
Soviet support for revolutionary movements
in the Third World reflected Moscow’s self-confidence as a ‘superpower’ and its
analysis that the Third World was turning towards socialism (see Table 3.4).
Ideological competition ensued with the West and with China. In America
this was viewed as evidence of duplicity. Some claimed that Moscow’s support
for revolutionary forces in Ethiopia in 1975 killed detente. Others cited the
Soviet role in Angola in 1978. Furthermore, the perception that Moscow was
using arms control agreements to gain military advantage was linked to Soviet
behaviour in the Third World. Growing Soviet military superiority was reflected
in growing Soviet influence, it was argued. Critics claimed the SALT (Strategic
Arms Limitation Talks) process enabled the Soviets to deploy multiple
independently targetable warheads on their large intercontinental ballistic
missiles (ICBMs), threatening key American forces. The USA faced a ‘window of
vulnerability’, it was claimed. The view from Moscow was different,
reflecting various assumptions about the scope and purpose of detente, and the
nature of nuclear deterrence. Other events were also seen to weaken American
influence. The overthrow of the Shah of Iran in 1979 resulted in the loss of an
important Western ally in the region, although the ensuing militant Islamic
government was hostile to both superpowers.
December 1979 marked a point of transition
in East-West affairs. NATO agreed to deploy land-based Cruise and Pershing II
missiles in Europe if negotiations with the Soviets did not reduce what NATO
saw as a serious imbalance. Later in the month, Soviet armed forces intervened
in Afghanistan to support their revolutionary allies. Moscow was bitterly
condemned in the West and in the Third World, and soon became committed to a
protracted and bloody struggle that many compared to America’s war in Vietnam.
In Washington, President Carter’s image of the Soviet Union fundamentally
changed. Nevertheless, Republicans increasingly used foreign and defence policy
to attack the Carter presidency. Perceptions of American weakness abroad permeated
domestic politics, and in 1980 Ronald Reagan was elected President, committed
to a more confrontational approach with Moscow on arms control, Third World
conflicts, and East-West relations in general.
1979-86: 'the second cold war'
In the West, critics of detente and arms
control argued that the Soviets were acquiring nuclear superiority. Some
suggested that America should pursue strategies based on the idea that victory
in nuclear war was possible. The election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 was a
watershed in Soviet-American relations. One issue Reagan inherited that loomed
large in the breakdown of relations between East and West, was nuclear missiles
in Europe. Changes in the strategic and European nuclear ‘balances’ had
generated new anxieties in the West about the credibility of extended
deterrence. NATO’s resulting decision to deploy land-based missiles capable of
striking Soviet territory precipitated great tension in relations between NATO
and the USSR, and political friction within NATO. Reagan’s own incautious
public remarks reinforced perceptions that he was as ill-informed as he was
dangerous in matters nuclear, although key arms policies were consistent with
those of his predecessor, Jimmy Carter. On arms control, Reagan was
uninterested in agreements that would freeze the status quo for the sake of getting
agreement, and Soviet and American negotiators proved unable to make progress
in talks on long-range and intermediate-range weapons. One particular idea had
significant consequences for arms control and for Washingtons relations with
its allies and its adversaries. The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), quickly
dubbed ‘Star Wars’, was a research programme designed to explore the
feasibility of space-based defences against ballistic missiles. The Soviets
appeared to take SDI very seriously, and claimed that Reagan’s real purpose was
to regain the nuclear monopoly of the 1940s. Reagan himself retained an
idiosyncratic attachment to SDI, which he believed could make nuclear weapons
impotent and obsolete. However, the technological advances claimed by SDI proponents
did not materialize and the programme was eventually reduced and marginalized.
The resulting period of tension and
confrontation between the superpowers has been described as the second cold war and
compared to the early period of confrontation and tension between 1946 and 1953
(see Table 3.5). In both Western
Europe and the Soviet Union there was real fear of nuclear war. Much of this was
a reaction to the rhetoric and policies of the Reagan administration. American
statements on nuclear weapons and military intervention in Grenada in 1983 and
against Libya in 1986 were seen as evidence of a new belligerence. Reagan’s
policy towards Central America, and support for the rebel Contras in Nicaragua,
were sources of controversy within the USA and internationally. In 1986, the
International Court of Justice found the USA guilty of violating international
law for the Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA’s) covert attacks on Nicaraguan
harbours.
Table: 3.5
Principal nuclear weapons states: nuclear arsenals,
1945-90
1945
|
1950
|
1955
|
1960
|
1965
|
1970
|
1975
|
1980
|
1985
|
1990
|
|
USA
|
6
|
369
|
3,057
|
20,434
|
31,982
|
26,662
|
27,826
|
24,304
|
24,327
|
21,004
|
USSR
|
-
|
5
|
200
|
1,605
|
6,129
|
11,643
|
19,055
|
30,062
|
39,197
|
37,000
|
UK
|
-
|
-
|
10
|
30
|
310
|
280
|
350
|
350
|
300
|
300
|
France
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
32
|
36
|
188
|
250
|
360
|
505
|
PRC
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5
|
75
|
185
|
280
|
425
|
430
|
Total
|
6
|
374
|
3,267
|
22,069
|
38,458
|
38,696
|
47,604
|
55,246
|
64,609
|
59,239
|
Source: R. S. Norris, and H. Kristensen (2006), 'Nuclear
notebook' Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists, 62(4) (July/Aug.): 66
The Reagan administration’s use of
military power was nonetheless limited: rhetoric and perception were at variance
with reality. Some operations ended in humiliating failure, notably in Lebanon
in 1983. Nevertheless, there is evidence that some in the Soviet leadership took
very seriously the words (and deeds) of the Reagan administration and were
anxious that Washington might be planning a nuclear first strike. In 1983,
Soviet were air defences shot down a South Korean civilian airliner in Soviet
airspace. The American reaction, and the imminent deployment of American
nuclear missiles in Europe, created a climate of great tension in East-West
relations. And in November 1983 Soviet intelligence misinterpreted a NATO
training exercise (codenamed Able Archer’) and may have believed that NATO was
preparing to attack them. How close the world came to a serious nuclear
confrontation in 1983 is not yet clear.
Throughout the early 1980s, the Soviets
were handicapped by a succession of ageing political leaders (Brezhnev,
Andropov, and Chernenko), whose ill-health further inhibited Soviet responses
to the American challenge and the American threat. This changed dramatically
after Mikhail Gorbachev became President in 1985. Gorbachev’s ‘new thinking’ in
foreign policy, and his domestic reforms, created a revolution, both in the
USSR’s foreign relations and within Soviet society. At home, glasnost (or openness) and perestroika (or
restructuring) unleashed nationalist and other forces that, to Gorbachev’s
dismay, were to destroy the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Gorbachev’s aim in foreign policy was to
transform international relations, most importantly with the USA. His domestic
agenda was also a catalyst for change in Eastern Europe, although, unlike
Khrushchev, he was not prepared to react with force or coercion. When
confronted with revolt in Eastern Europe, Gorbachev’s foreign ministry invoked
Frank Sinatra’s song ‘I did it my way’ to mark the end of the Brezhnev doctrine that
had limited Eastern European sovereignty and political development. The Sinatra doctrine meant
that Eastern Europeans were now allowed to ‘do it their way’. Throughout
Eastern Europe, Moscow-aligned regimes gave way to democracies, in what was for
the most part a peaceful as well as speedy transition (see Ch. 4). Most
dramatically, Germany was united and East Germany (the German Democratic
Republic) disappeared.
Gorbachev
paved the way for agreements on nuclear and conventional forces that helped
ease the tensions that had characterized the early 1980s. In 1987, he travelled
to Washington to sign the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, banning intermediate-range nuclear missiles,
including Cruise and Pershing II. This agreement was heralded as a triumph for
the Soviet President, but NATO leaders, including Margaret Thatcher and Ronald
Reagan, argued that it was a vindication of the policies pursued by NATO since
1979. The INF Treaty was concluded more quickly than a new agreement on
cutting strategic nuclear weapons, in part because of continuing Soviet
opposition to the SDI. And it was Reagan’s successor, George Bush, who
concluded a Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) agreement that reduced long-range
nuclear weapons (though only back to the level they had been in the early
1980s). Gorbachev used agreements on nuclear weapons to build trust and
demonstrate the serious and radical nature of his purpose. However, despite
similar radical agreements on conventional forces in Europe (culminating in the
Paris Agreement of 1990), the end of the cold war marked success in nuclear
arms control rather than nuclear disarmament (see Table 3.6). The
histories of the cold war and of the bomb are very closely connected, but while
the cold war is now over, nuclear weapons are still very much in existence.
Table
3.6
Principal arms control
and disarmament agreements
Treaty
|
Purpose of agreement
|
Signed
|
Parties
|
Geneva protocol
|
Chemical weapons: bans use
|
1925
|
100+
|
Partial Test Ban Treaty
|
Bans atmospheric, underwater,
outer-space nuclear tests
|
1963
|
100+
|
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
|
Limits spread of nuclear weapons
|
1968
|
100+
|
Biological Weapons Convention
|
Bans production/use
|
1972
|
80+
|
SALT 1 Treaty
|
Limits strategic arms*
|
1972
|
USA/USSR
|
ABM Treaty
|
Limits anti-ballistic missiles
|
1972
|
USA/USSR
|
SALT II Treaty
|
Limits strategic arms*
|
1979
|
USA/USSR
|
INF Treaty
|
Bans two categories of land-based
missiles
|
1987
|
USA/USSR
|
START 1 Treaty
|
Reduces strategic arms*
|
1990
|
USA/USSR
|
START 2 Treaty
|
Bans multiple independent re-entry
vehicles (MIRVs)
|
1993
|
USA/USSR
|
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty
|
Bans all nuclear test explosions in all
environments
|
1996
|
71 +
|
‘Strategic
arms are long-range weapons.
Source:
adapted from Harvard Nuclear Study Group (1985), 'Arms Control and Disarmament:
What Can and Can't be Done'
in
F. Holroyd (ed.), Thinking About Nuclear Weapons (Buckingham: Open
University): 96.
Key
Points
There are disagreements about when and why the cold war began, and who
was responsible. Distinct
phases can be seen in East-West relations, during which tension and the risk of
direct confrontation grew and receded.
Some civil and regional wars were intensified and prolonged by superpower involvement; others may
have been prevented or shortened.
Nuclear weapons were an
important factor in the cold war. How far the arms race had a momentum of its
own is a matter of debate. Agreements on limiting and controlling the growth of
nuclear arsenals played an important role in Soviet-American (and East-West)
relations.
The end of the cold war has not
resulted in the abolition of nuclear weapons.
Various international crises occurred in which there was the risk of nuclear war. How close we came
to nuclear war at these times remains open to speculation and debate.
Conclusion
The
changes that took place in twentieth-century politics were enormous. Assessing
their significance raises many complex issues about the nature of international
history and international relations. How did war come in 1914? What accounts
for the rise of Hitler? Who won
the cold war, how, and with what consequences? These are questions that have
generated robust debate and fierce controversy. Several points are emphasized
in this of empire, and cold war). However war came in 1914, the transformation
of warfare into industrialized total war
reflected a combination of technological, political, and social forces.
Political leaders proved incapable of restoring peace and stability, and
attempts to reconstruct the European state system after 1919 failed to address
enduring problems and created new obstacles to a stable order. The rise of Nazi
Germany brought a new conflagration and new methods of fighting and killing.
The scale of carnage and suffering was unprecedented. Nazi ideas of racial
supremacy brought brutality and mass murder across Europe and culminated in
genocide against the Jews. One consequence was the creation of Israel in 1948,
which helped set in motion conflicts and events that continue to have global
repercussions. The rise of an aggressive military regime in Tokyo likewise
portended protracted and brutal war across the Pacific.
The period since 1945 witnessed the end of
European empires constructed before, and in the early part of, the twentieth
century, and saw the rise and fall of the cold war. The relationship between
end of empire and cold war conflict in the Third World is a close, though
complex, one. In some cases, involvement of the superpowers helped bring about
change. In others, direct superpower involvement resulted in escalation and
prolongation of the conflict. Marxist ideology in various forms provided
inspiration to many Third World liberation movements, but provocation to the
USA (and others). The example of Vietnam is most obvious in these respects, but
in a range of anti-colonial struggles the cold war played a major part.
Precisely how the cold war influenced decolonization is best assessed on a
case-by-case basis. One key issue is how far the values and objectives of
revolutionary leaders and their movements were nationalist rather than Marxist.
It is claimed that both Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam and Fidel Castro in Cuba were
primarily nationalists, who turned to Moscow and to communism only in the face
of Western hostility. Divisions between the Soviet Union and the People’s
Republic of China also demonstrated diverging trends within the practice of
Marxism. In several instances, conflict between communists became as bitter as
between communists and capitalists. In other areas, notably the Middle East,
Marxism faced the challenge of radical political ideas (pan-Arabism,
revolutionary Islam) that held greater attraction for the peoples involved. The
role of the superpowers was still apparent, even if their involvement was more
complex and diffuse, though in moments of crisis was nevertheless significant.
Similarly, the relationship between cold
war and nuclear history is close, though problematic. Some historians contend
that the use of atomic weapons by the USA played a decisive part in the origins
of the cold war. Others would see the paranoia generated by the threat of
total annihilation as central to understanding Soviet defence and foreign
policy, and the unprecedented threat of devastation as crucial to understanding
the mutual hostility and fear of leaders in the nuclear age. Yet it is also
argued that without nuclear weapons direct Soviet-American conflict would have
been much more likely, and had nuclear weapons not acted as a deterrent, then
war in Europe would have been much more likely. There are also those who
contend that nuclear weapons played a limited role in East-West relations, and
that their importance is exaggerated.
Nuclear weapons have been a focus for
political agreement, and during detente nuclear arms agreements acted as the
currency of international politics. Yet how close we came to nuclear war in
1961 (Berlin), or 1962 (Cuba), or 1973 (Arab-Israeli war), or 1983 (Exercise
Able Archer’), and what lessons might be learned from these events, are crucial
questions for historians and policy-makers alike. One central issue is how far
cold war perspectives and the involvement of nuclear-armed superpowers imposed
stability in regions where previous instability had led to war and conflict.
The cold war may have led to unprecedented concentrations of military and
nuclear forces in Europe, but this was a period characterized by stability and
great economic prosperity, certainly in the West.
Both the cold war and the age of empire
are over, although across the globe their legacies, good and bad, seen and
unseen, persist. The age of ‘the bomb’, and of other weapons of mass
destruction (chemical and biological), continues. How far the clash of communist
and liberal/capitalist ideologies helped facilitate or retard globalization is
a matter for reflection. Despite the limitations of the human imagination, the
global consequences of nuclear war remain all too real. The accident at the
Soviet nuclear reactor at Chernobyl in 1986 showed that radioactivity knows no
boundaries. In the 1980s, scientists suggested that if only a fraction of the
world’s nuclear weapons exploded over a fraction of the world’s cities, it
could bring an end to life itself in the northern hemisphere. While the threat
of strategic nuclear war has receded, the global problem of nuclear weapons
remains a common and urgent concern for humanity in the twenty-first century.
Case
Study 1
China's cold wars
The
Communist Party of China under Mao Zedong came to power in 1949 after thirty
years of civil war (interrupted only by the Japanese invasion of 1937). Mao's
theories of socialism and of guerrilla warfare helped to inspire revolutionary
struggle across the Third World. Ideology framed China's internal development
and informed its external relations. Mao's attempts to modernize agriculture
and industry brought great change, though often at huge cost to the lives of
his people. The Great
was
consolidated. The rearmament of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1954
precipitated the creation of the Warsaw Pact in 1955. The
military build-up continued apace, with unprecedented concentrations of
conventional and, moreover, nuclear forces. As the Soviets developed their ability
to strike the USA with nuclear weapons, the credibility of ‘extended deterrence’
was questioned as American willingness to risk ‘Chicago for Hamburg’ was called
into doubt. The problem was exacerbated as NATO strategy continued to depend
on the willingness of the USA not just to fight, but to initiate, nuclear war
on Europe’s behalf.
Leap
Forward, launched in 1958, resulted in famine (and repression) on an enormous
scale. Estimates suggest that over 30 million people died as a consequence.
Mao's subsequent attempts at radical reform in the Cultural Revolution of 1968
brought political instability and further alienated China from the West.
Ideological
fraternity initially underpinned relations between Mao and Stalin, but under
Khrushchev ideological differences became more apparent. Mao was critical of
Khrushchev's aim of coexistence with the West. The Soviets ended support for
Beijing's atomic programme, but failed to stop China exploding an atom bomb in
1964. There was ideological and political competition for leadership of the
international socialist movement, particularly in the Third World. By 1969
Sino-Soviet relations deteriorated into a minor border war.
Beijing's
earlier involvement in the Korean War brought large- scale fighting between
Chinese and American troops. China's regional and ideological interests clashed
with those of the US in Korea, Formosa (Taiwan), and South East Asia in the
1960s. East-West detente, and America's search for negotiated withdrawal from
Vietnam, helped facilitate rapprochement between Washington and Beijing.
Western
perceptions of a communist monolith were further weakened in 1978 when newly
unified Vietnam invaded Kampuchea (Cambodia) and overthrew the genocidal Khmer
Rouge under Pol Pot, who was backed by Beijing. In 1979, communist China
launched a punitive attack on communist Vietnam and moved conventional forces
to the Sino-Soviet border in preparation for conflict with the communist
Soviet Union, Vietnam's ally.
In the 1980s, economic reform under Deng Xiaoping
embraced market principles. Economic reform wrought economic transformation,
though political structures-and the power of the communist party and the
People's Liberation Army-remained. Western-style democratic institutions and
human rights likewise failed to follow economic change.
Whereas
reform precipitated the collapse of the USSR, the PRC survived and prospered.
By 1999, China was becoming a global economic power, with the military
accoutrements of a 'superpower' and was increasingly influential in the UN
Security Council and the global politics of the post-cold war world.
Questions
Was Germany responsible for the outbreak
of war in 1914?
How did the Versailles Treaty contribute
to European political instability from 1919 to 1939?
Were there feasible alternatives to the
appeasement of Hitler?
Why were atomic bombs dropped on Japan?
Why did America become involved in either
the Korean or Vietnam wars?
Compare and contrast American and Soviet
objectives during detente.
Were the British successful at
decolonization after 1945?
Compare and contrast the end of empire in
Africa with that in Asia after 1945.
Did nuclear weapons keep the peace in
Europe after 1945?
How close did we come to nuclear war
during either the Berlin crisis (1961) or the Cuban missile crisis (1962)?
Further Reading
Best, A., HanhimakiJ. M., Maiolo, J. A.,
and Schulze, K. E. (2008), International
History of the Twentieth Century (London:
Routledge). A comprehensive and authoritative account of twentieth-century
history.
Betts, R. (2004), Decolonization (London:
Routledge). This book provides an introductory theoretical overview that
examines the forces that drove decolonization, and explores interpretations of
postcolonial legacies.
Chamberlain, M. E. (1999), Decolonization: The Fall of the European Empires (Oxford: Blackwell). An analysis of the end of British, French, and
smaller European empires on a region-by- region basis.
Keylor, W. R. (2011), The Twentieth-Century World and Beyond: An International History
since 1900 (Oxford: Oxford University Press). A comprehensive and balanced
assessment of twentieth-century international history.
Mueller, J. (1990), Retreat From Doomsday: The Obsolescence of Major War (New York: Basic Books). A distinctive perspective on twentieth-century
warfare and the importance (or otherwise) of nuclear weapons in international
politics.
Reynolds, D. (2001), One World Divisible: A Global History since 1945 (New York: W.
W. Norton). A highly authoritative, comprehensive, and nuanced analysis of
world politics since 1945.
Young, J., and Kent.J. (2003), International Relations since 1945
(Oxford: Oxford University Press). A comprehensive survey of the impact of the
cold war on world politics since 1945, providing an analysis of war in
the Middle East, the development of European integration, and the demise of the
European empires in Africa and Asia.
Online Resource Centre
Visit the Online Resource Centre that
accompanies this book to access more learning resources on this chapter topic
at www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/orc/baylis6exe/
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