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Description

Welcome to Mr. Hutchings History! In today’s episode, we explore the key factors behind the end of détente between the US and USSR. Despite early successes, détente unraveled due to issues like human rights,Soviet expansionism,economic challenges, and the pivotal Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. We will analyze primary sources to uncover the tensions that ended this period of Cold War cooperation.

Key Topics:

By the end of this episode, you’ll understand why détente ultimately failed, leading to a return of Cold War tensions in the 1980s. Through analysis of key events and differing historical interpretations, we will explore how these issues revealed the limitations of détente in bridging the ideological divide between the superpowers.

#Paper2WorldHistory #ColdWar #Détente #SovietUnion #USSR #HelsinkiAccords #SovietExpansionism #SovietInvasionOfAfghanistan #CarterDoctrine #ColdWarTensions

Works Cited

Crockatt, Richard. The Fifty Years War: The United States and the Soviet Union in World Politics, 1941-1991. Routledge, 1995.

Isaacs, Jeremy, and Taylor Downing. Cold War. Little, Brown, 1998.

Mason, John. The Cold War. Routledge, 1996.

Rogers, Keely, and Jo Thomas. The Cold War. Pearson Education, 2008.

Westad, Odd Arne. The Global Cold War. Cambridge UP, 2005.

Chapters

(0:00) Introduction: The High-Stakes Game of Détente
Détente was supposed to cool tensions between the superpowers, but was it ever truly stable?

(1:17) The Helsinki Accords (1975): Progress or Propaganda?
On paper, détente promised cooperation, but Soviet actions like the Prague Spring crackdown suggested otherwise.

(2:42) The Brezhnev Doctrine: A Contradiction to Peace?
The USSR reserved the right to intervene in socialist states, undermining the very trust détente required.

(3:50) Proxy Wars in Africa: Expanding the Cold War
The USSR and Cuba backed conflicts in Angola and Ethiopia, deepening US suspicions about Soviet intentions.

(5:24) The 1973 Ramadan War: A Turning Point
The war exposed US favoritism toward Israel, leaving the USSR feeling sidelined and intensifying Cold War divisions.

(7:11) The 1973 Oil Crisis: Economic Fallout of Détente
Western economies rebounded, but the Soviet Union’s weaknesses were exposed, widening the economic gap.

(9:00) The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan (1979): The Breaking Point
This single event shattered détente, leading to US sanctions, military aid to Afghan fighters, and renewed Cold War hostility.

(10:55) The End of Détente: US Retaliation and the Carter Doctrine
The US withdrew from arms talks, imposed economic sanctions, and boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics.

(12:10) Could Détente Have Been Saved?
Historians debate whether détente was always doomed or if better communication could have made it last.

(13:33) Conclusion: Lessons from the Cold War
Détente’s failure shows the complexity of diplomacy, the dangers of mistrust, and the importance of communication in global politics.