|
Key Term |
Definition |
|
Cold War |
The period of tension and rivalry between the USA and USSR after 1945. |
|
Arms Race |
Competition between countries to build larger and more powerful weapons. |
|
Nuclear Weapons |
Weapons using nuclear reactions to create enormous explosions. |
|
Atomic Bomb |
The first type of nuclear weapon used in 1945. |
|
Hydrogen Bomb |
A far more powerful nuclear weapon developed in the 1950s. |
|
Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) |
The idea that nuclear war would destroy both sides completely. |
|
NATO |
Western military alliance created in 1949 for collective defence. |
|
Warsaw Pact |
Communist military alliance created by the USSR in 1955. |
|
Collective Defence |
Agreement that countries defend each other if attacked. |
|
Eastern Bloc |
Communist countries in Eastern Europe allied with the USSR. |
|
ICBM |
Intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear weapons across continents. |
|
Polaris |
American submarine-launched nuclear missile system. |
|
Deterrent |
A threat designed to prevent attack from an enemy. |
|
Space Race |
Competition between the USA and USSR in space exploration and technology. |
|
Sputnik |
First artificial satellite launched into space by the USSR in 1957. |
|
Yuri Gagarin |
Soviet cosmonaut and first human in space. |
|
Apollo 11 |
American mission that achieved the first Moon landing in 1969. |
|
Neil Armstrong |
First human to walk on the Moon. |
|
Buzz Aldrin |
Apollo 11 astronaut who walked on the Moon. |
|
Propaganda |
Information used to influence public opinion, often biased or misleading. |
|
Superpower |
A country with enormous military and political influence. |
|
Capitalism |
Economic system based on private ownership and profit. |
|
Communism |
Political and economic system where the state controls industry and wealth. |
|
Missile |
A rocket-propelled weapon designed to hit distant targets. |
|
Submarine |
A naval vessel capable of operating underwater. |
|
Cosmonaut |
Soviet/Russian astronaut. |
7.1.1 The end of the Second World War
The end of the Second World War: Yalta and Potsdam Conferences; the division of Germany; contrasting attitudes and ideologies of the USA and the USSR, including the aims of Stalin, Churchill, Roosevelt, Attlee and Truman; effect of the dropping of the atom bomb on post-war superpower relations.
0/10
7.1.2 The Iron Curtain and the Evolution of East-West rivalry
The Iron Curtain and the evolution of East-West rivalry: Soviet expansion in East Europe; US policies; the Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan, their purpose and Stalin’s reaction; Cominform; Comecon; Yugoslavia; the Berlin Blockade and Airlift.
0/12
7.2.1 The significance of events in Asia for superpower relations
The significance of events in Asia for superpower relations: USSR's support for Mao Tse-tung and Communist revolution in China, and the military campaigns waged by North Korea against the UN and by the Vietcong against France and the USA.
0/10
7.2.2 Military rivalries
Military rivalries: the arms race; membership and purposes of NATO and the Warsaw Pact; the space race, including Sputnik, ICBMs, Polaris, Gagarin, Apollo.
0/12
7.2.3 The ‘Thaw’
The ‘Thaw’: Hungary, the protest movement and the reforms of Nagy; Soviet fears, how they reacted and the effects on the Cold War; the U2 Crisis and its effects on the Paris Peace Summit and the peace process.
0/12
7.3.1 Berlin Wall
Berlin Wall: reasons for its construction and Kennedy’s response.
0/12
7.3.2 Tensions over Cuba
Tensions over Cuba: Castro’s revolution, the Bay of Pigs and the missile crisis: the roles of Castro, Khrushchev, Kennedy; fears of the USA and reaction to missiles on Cuba; dangers and results of crisis.
0/12
7.3.3 Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia: Dubeck and the Prague Spring movement; USSR’s response to the reforms; the effects the Prague Spring had on East-West relations, including the Warsaw Pact; the Brezhnev Doctrine.
0/13
7.3.4 Easing of Tension
Easing of tension: sources of tension, including the Soviets' record on human rights; the reasons for Détente and for SALT 1; the part played by key individuals Brezhnev and Nixon.
0/13