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Summary GCSE Edexcel Cold War Detailed Notes

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This document involves detailed notes that carefully follow Edexcel's GCSE Cold War specification. There are circular bullet points that can be used in 'narrative account' questions and then the square bullet points can be used for both 'importance' and 'consequence' questions. These are the only notes I used for the Cold War section of my exam, scoring me 94% on the paper and a grade 9 overall.

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The Conferences
Tehran: November 1943
Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin
o USA and UK would open a ‘second front’ by attacking Nazi-occupied France.
ü USA and USSR – support in war and USSR were pleased to not be fighting
Germans alone.
û USA and UK – Roosevelt feared threat of British colonialism and Churchill
disappointed in his siding with Stalin and opening up a ‘second front’.
o USSR would help USA against Japan once Germany defeated.
o International body to be established after war to maintain international peace.

 Disagreement over Germany’s future:
- Churchill and Roosevelt believed Germany should be rebuilt.
- Stalin thought they should be punished to ensure they would never be a threat
again.
 Agreed to split Europe into two spheres of influence.

Yalta: February 1945
Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin
o Germany would pay $20 billion in reparations.
o Germany and Berlin divided into four zones.
o The right to join the UN.
o USSR agreed to fight Japan.
o Eastern Europe would be a Soviet ‘sphere of influence’ but all countries liberated
from Nazi control would be allowed free elections to choose their own governments.

 Soviet troops had not removed presence in Eastern Europe and made Churchill doubt
Stalin’s intentions.
 Communist government established by Stalin in Poland.
 Disagreed on meanings of free elections:
- Stalin believed it to be where people would vote for communism, as only
communism truly represented the people.
- Roosevelt and Stalin saw it to be where lots of parties competed for votes.

Potsdam: July 1945
Churchill (replaced midway by Attlee), Truman, and Stalin
o Germany still to be divided.
o Berlin divided.
o Nazi party banned and war criminals prosecuted.
o Democracy to be re-established in Germany.

 Arguments over boundaries of zones.
 Arguments over reparations Germany had to pay.
 Stalin learns of the Manhattan Project.
 Communist government established in Poland.

, Takeover of Eastern Europe: 1945-49
 Soviet satellite states appear.
 Rigged elections to establish communist dictatorships.
- Czechoslovakia last to fall fully communist in 1948.
 Access to new resources

 Fear of communist expansion leads to the Truman Doctrine and ‘policy of
containment’.
 All of Eastern Europe now communist.
 Creates a ‘buffer zone’ and expands Soviet sphere of influence.
 Churchill’s Iron Curtain Speech (1946)

Cominform: 1947
 In response to the Marshall Plan.
 Allowed Stalin to direct and control the governments of the satellite states, as well as
the communist parties in other European countries.
 Discouraged acceptance of Marshall Aid.
 Discouraged contact with non-communists.

 Brought together Eastern European communist parties for Stalin to reassert his
power over his satellite states.
 Removed opposition as it ensured loyalty to the USSR.

Comecon: 1949
 Established trade control between the Soviets and satellite states.
 Economic specialisation within the bloc.
 Discouraged trade with USA and the West.
 Minimised reliance on the West.

 Minimised US influence in Eastern Europe as it was in response to the Marshall Plan.
 Prevented the East from experiencing economic prosperity of the West, by making
themselves reliant on the Soviet bloc. This undermined communism against the
prospering West, and made it look weak.

 NATO
 Warsaw Pact
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