World History Chapters 26-30 – Flashcards

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Why was it difficult to gain an advantage over the enemy in trench warfare?
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the machine gun made it nearly impossible to advance
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The major rivals in the Cold War were
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the US and the Soviet Union
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World War I was more destructive than earlier wars because
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modern weapons were more deadly
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On the eve of World War I, Bosnia was ruled by
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Austria-Hungary
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The nation that suffered the greatest number of both civilian and military dead and wounded in World War II was
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the Soviet Union
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In response to Asix aggression in the 1930s, western democracies followed a policy of
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appeasement
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"Operation Barbarossa" refers to Hitler's plan to conquer
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the Soviet Union
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The Allied forces ended the war in Europe by
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taking Berlin
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Which of the following weapons contributed most to the stalemate on the Western Front during World War I
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the automatic machine gun
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In 1918, Europe was
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in ruins
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Which nation suffered the highest number of casualties in World War II
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the Soviet Union
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The Battle of Midway was the turning point that
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allowed the United States to take the offensive in the Pacific
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Which of the following cities was the target of a Nazi blitz for two months in 1941?
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London
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Which free country shared a bored with the Soviet Union?
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Turkey
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Which country was divided after World War II?
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Germany
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Which of the following Eastern European countries remained free of Soviet control?
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Greece
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Which of the following areas was added to the soviet Union after World War II?
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Latvia
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Germany joined the Triple Alliance to protect itself against
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France
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The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii,
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brought the United States into the war
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Which of the following best describes how the Germans are portrayed in the poster?
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as cruel barbarians
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The war in Europe ended with
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taking Berlin
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"D-Day" refers to the
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Allied invasion of France
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In waging a ____, a nation channels all of its resources into the war effort.
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total war
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Stories of ___ are often used in propaganda.
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atrocities
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After the war, Ottoman lands were divided into ___.
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mandates
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For much of the war the US followed a policy of ____.
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neutrality
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____ was one of the forces that led to the outbreak of war in Europe.
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militarism
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Japanese city destroyed by an atomic bomb dropped by the US in 1945
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Hiroshima
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Town that was brutally attacked by Germany during the Spanish Civil War
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Guernica
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Site of a battle in Egypt that became a turning point in World War II
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El Alamein
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Beach on the English Channel were Allied troops were rescued from advancing Nazis
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Dunkirk
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Naval base in Hawaii that was attacked by Japan in 1941
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Pearl Harbor
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Payments for war damage
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reparations
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Ideas that are spread in order to promote a cause or to damage an opposing cause
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propaganda
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A final set of demands
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ultimatum
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The glorification of the military
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militarism
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to prepare military forces for war
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mobilize
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Nationalist general who created a Fascist dictatorship in Spain
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Francisco Franco
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Ethiopian king who appealed to the League of Nations for help
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Haile Selassie
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Prime Minister who rallied Britain to fight against the Nazi aggression
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Winston Churchill
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President who issued a policy stating that Americans would resist Soviet expansion in the world
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Harry Truman
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Supreme Allied commander in Europe
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Dwight Eisenhower
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"The only lasting peace will be a peace without victory"
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Woodrow Wilson
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"It is my hope that this prize will help bring about peace in the world"
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Alfred Nobel
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"I will continue to run this hospital despite the German invasion"
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Georges Clemenceau
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"Germany will be punished so that it will never again threaten France"
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Edith Cavell
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"Death to the tyrant!"
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Gavrilo Princip
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Opposition to all war
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pacifism
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Giving in to the demans of an aggressor in order to keep the peace
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appeasement
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Limiting communism to areas already under Soviet control
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containment
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Deliberate destruction of a group of people
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genocide
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State of tension and hostility among nations without armed conflict
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cold war
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One who cooperates with an enemy force occupying a country
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collaborator
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Lightning war
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blitzkrieg
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Japanese pilots who undertook suicide missions to attack American warships
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kamikaze
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French representative to the Paris Peace Conference who demanded that Germany be punished
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Georges Clemenceau
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German leader who supported Austria's war with Serbia
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Kaiser William II
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Which of the following helped turn World War I into a global war?
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airplanes
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Which of the following was an effect of militarism in Europe in the late 1800s?
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Nations made political and military alliances
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Which of the following statements is true regarding the role of women during World War I?
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They kept their nations' economies going during the war
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Which of the following became a dress rehearsal for World War II by demonstrating the destructive power of modern warfare?
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The Spanish Civil War
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Which of these battles was a turning point after which the United States took the offensive in the Pacific?
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Midway Island
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Which of the following statements is true regarding the Ottoman empire in WWI?
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It joined the Central Powers
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Which of the following ended Russia's involvement in WWI?
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the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
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Which of the following helped the Allies to achieve the breakthrough they sought in WWI?
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the involvement of the United States
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The term Holocaust refers to the
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massacre of more than six million Jews
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European Union
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an international organization of European countries formed after World War II to reduce trade barriers and increase cooperation among its members; "he tried to take Britain into the Europen Union"
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Potsdam
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a city in northeastern Germany; site of the Potsdam Conference in the summer of 1945
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Cold War
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The state of political hostility that existed between the Soviet bloc countries and the US-led Western powers from 1945 to 1990
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Levant
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Run away, typically leaving unpaid debts
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Katyn Forest
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The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre (zbrodnia katyńska, 'Katyń crime'; Катынский расстрел), was a mass murder of Polish nationals carried out by the Soviet secret police NKVD in April-May 1940
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Iron Curtain
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The notional barrier separating the former Soviet bloc and the West prior to the decline of communism that followed the political events in eastern Europe in 1989
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Berlin Wall
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A fortified and heavily guarded wall built on the boundary between East and West Berlin in 1961 by the communist authorities, chiefly to curb the flow of East Germans to the West. It was opened in November 1989 after the collapse of the communist regime in East Germany and subsequently was dismantled
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George Kennan
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George F. Kennan (1904-2005), diplomat and historian; the explorer's cousin and architect of the U.S. containment policy during the Cold War
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Winston Churchill
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Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, (30 November 187424 January 1965) was a British politician and statesman known for his leadership of the United Kingdom during the Second World War (WWII). He is widely regarded as one of the great wartime leaders
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Truman Doctrine
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The principle that the US should give support to countries or peoples threatened by Soviet forces or communist insurrection. First expressed in 1947 by US President Truman in a speech to Congress seeking aid for Greece and Turkey, the doctrine was seen by the communists as an open declaration of the Cold War
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Khrushchev
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Soviet statesman; premier 1958-64. He came close to war with the US over the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 and also clashed with China, which led to his being ousted by Brezhnev and Kosygin
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East Germany
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(official name German Democratic Republic) The former independent nation created in 1949 from the area of Germany occupied by the former Soviet Union after World War II. It was reunited with West Germany after the fall of its communist government in 1990. German name Deutsche Demokratische Republik
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Check point Charlie
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Checkpoint Charlie "Checkpoint C" was the name given by the Western Allies to the best-known Berlin Wall crossing point between East Germany and West Germany during the Cold War.
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Ich bin ein Berliner
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"Ich bin ein Berliner" (translation: "I am a citizen of Berlin") is a quotation from a June 26, 1963 speech by U.S. President John F. Kennedy in West Berlin
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Treaty Paris
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The Treaty of the European Steel and Coal Community, the first and founding instrument of the European Union and the EU Constitution, defines the main European institutions, albeit in a initial form. It was signed on 18 April 1951 and came into force on 25 July 1952.
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EU Headquarters
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The European Union has its headquarters in the Berlaymont Building in Brussels, which is the capital of Belgium. The choice of location as Brussels is partly due to the fact that Brussels is relatively central within the north and west of Europe (originally when the predecessor to the EU, the European Economic Community was formed, there were only six countries involved). So although now the EU is spreading ever eastwards, historically it was very much in the centre of the European alliance.
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MAD
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Mutual assured destruction (M.A.D.) is a doctrine of military strategy and national security policy in which a full-scale use of nuclear weapons by two opposing sides would effectively result in the destruction of both the attacker and the defender.
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Titan Missle
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Titan was a family of U.S. expendable rockets used between 1959 and 2005. A total of 368 rockets of this family were launched, including all the Project Gemini manned flights of the mid-1960s
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Counter Force
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In nuclear strategy, a counterforce target is one that has a military value, such as a launch silo for intercontinental ballistic missiles, an airbase at which nuclear-armed bombers are stationed, a homeport for ballistic missile submarines, or a command and control installation
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ABM
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antiballistic missile: a defensive missile designed to shoot down incoming intercontinental ballistic missiles; "the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks placed limits on the deployment of ABMs"
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SALT
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Strategic Arms Limitation Talks: negotiations between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics opened in 1969 in Helsinki designed to limit both countries' stock of nuclear weapons
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ICBM
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intercontinental ballistic missile: a ballistic missile that is capable of traveling from one continent to another
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Pope John Paul II
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The Soviet Union's Cold War Against the Catholic Church. Mining mostly East German and Polish secret police archives, Koehler says the assassination attempts were "KGB-backed" and gives details. During John Paul II's reign there were many clerics within the Vatican who on nomination, declined to be ordained, and then mysteriously left the church. There is wide speculation that they were, in reality, KGB agents.
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Ronald Reagan
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Reagan: 40th President of the United States
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George Bush
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Bush: 43rd President of the United States; son of George Herbert Walker Bush (born in 1946)
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Erich Honecker
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Erich Honecker (25 August 1912 - 29 May 1994) was a German Communist politician who led the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) from 1971 until 1989.
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Solidarity
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An independent trade union movement in Poland that developed into a mass campaign for political change and inspired popular opposition to communist regimes across eastern Europe during the 1980s
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The 1956 uprising in Hungary showed that
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the USSR had extreme power over them and they didn't like it.
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In 1948 the Soviet Union tried to drive the Western Powers led by the US out of Berlin by
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On 1 June, America and France announced that they wanted to create the new country of West Germany; and on 23 June they introduced a new currency into 'Bizonia' and western Berlin. The next day the Russians stopped all road and rail traffic into Berlin. The Soviet Union saw the 1948 Berlin crisis as an attempt to undermine Soviet influence in eastern Germany; Stalin said he was defending the east German economy against the new currency, which was ruining it.
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The US is an example of planned or command economy.
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False
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In a free market economy price is determined by
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laws of supply and demand
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Vaclav Havel
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Havel: Czech dramatist and statesman whose plays opposed totalitarianism and who served as president of Czechoslovakia from 1989 to 1992 and president of the Czech Republic since 1993 (born in 1936)
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Lech Walesa
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Polish politician, trade-union organizer, and human-rights activist. A charismatic leader, he co-founded Solidarity (Solidarność), the Soviet bloc's first independent trade union, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1983, and served as President of Poland 1990-95.
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Mikhail Gorbachev
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Soviet statesman whose foreign policy brought an end to the Cold War and whose domestic policy introduced major reforms
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Helmut Kohl
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a German conservative politician and statesman. He was Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998 (of West Germany between 1982 and 1990 and of a reunited Germany between 1990 and 1998)
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Richard Nixon
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vice president under Eisenhower and 37th President of the United States; resigned after the Watergate scandal in 1974
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Marshal Tito
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Yugoslav statesman who led the resistance to German occupation during World War II and established a communist state after the war
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Deng Xiaoping
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Chinese communist statesman; vice-premier 1973-76 and 1977-80; vice-chairman of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party 1977-80. Discredited during the Cultural Revolution, he was reinstated in 1977 and became the leader of China
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Fidel Castro
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Cuban socialist leader who overthrew a dictator in 1959 and established a Marxist socialist state in Cuba
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Mujahedin
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Guerrilla fighters in Islamic countries, esp. those who are Islamic fundamentalists
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John F. Kennedy
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John Fitzgerald "Jack" Kennedy (May 29, 1917 - November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials JFK, was the 35th President of the United States, serving from 1961 until his assassination in 1963.
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Margaret Thatcher
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served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 and Leader of the Conservative Party from 1975 to 1990. She is the only woman to have held either post.
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Boris Yeltsin
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Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin (1 February 1931 - 23 April 2007) was the first President of the Russian Federation, serving from 1991 to 1999.
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Ho Chi Minh
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Vietnamese communist statesman
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Konrad Adenauer
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German statesman; chancellor of West Germany
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