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End of Cold War, USSR Collapse & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Social Science CBSE Theory Chapter 1 — The Cold War Era ⏱ ~28 min
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Class 12 · Political Science · Contemporary World Politics

End of the Cold War, Disintegration of the USSR & India's Response — Exercises

By 1985 the Soviet Union — a country covering one-sixth of the earth's land surface, with 290 million people, the world's largest army and a vast nuclear arsenal — was running out of breath. Within six years it would no longer exist. How did this happen? What did Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost and perestroika set in motion? Why did the Berlin Wall fall on 9 November 1989? What did the end of the Cold War mean for India — and for the world we live in today?

3.0 The Soviet System on the Eve of Collapse

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), born from the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, was a giant union of 15 republics under the rule of a single party — the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). For seven decades it was the world's leading socialist state, the country that defeated Nazi Germany at Stalingrad, the first to launch a satellite (Sputnik, 1957) and a human into space (Yuri Gagarin, 1961). It was the leader of the Eastern bloc and the rival of the United States.

And yet, by the 1980s, deep cracks were visible. Behind the proud facade of the May Day parades on Red Square, the USSR suffered from problems that its own citizens called the "Era of Stagnation".

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Economic Stagnation
Soviet productivity, technology and consumer-goods quality lagged increasingly behind the West. Food imports rose every year. Long queues outside shops became normal.
⚔️
Arms-Race Burden
Maintaining nuclear parity with the USA, supporting Eastern European satellites and waging the war in Afghanistan absorbed an enormous share of national resources.
🏛
Political Closure
A one-party system with no opposition, no real elections, secret police (KGB) surveillance, censorship and corruption alienated ordinary citizens.
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Information Gap
As radio, TV and tape cassettes leaked into the USSR, citizens saw the gap between Soviet propaganda and Western abundance — and lost faith in the official story.

Reform was no longer a choice; it had become urgent. The man who tried it was Mikhail Gorbachev.

3.1 Gorbachev: Glasnost and Perestroika (1985)

In March 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev — then 54, the youngest member of the Soviet Politburo — was elected General Secretary of the Communist Party. He chose two reform slogans that would echo around the world.

📖 Glasnost & Perestroika — The Twin Reforms
Glasnost? ("openness") meant freer speech, freer media, the release of dissidents from prison camps, public discussion of past Soviet crimes (the Stalin terror, the Afghan war), and gradual political opening — including, after 1989, multi-party elections. Perestroika? ("restructuring") meant reforming the Soviet economy by allowing some private enterprise, decentralising state planning, ending price controls, and inviting foreign investment. Together, they were intended to save Soviet socialism by modernising it. They ended up dismantling it.

3.1.1 What Gorbachev Did Right — and What Went Wrong

Gorbachev did three things that historians broadly praise. First, he ended the arms race: he agreed with US President Ronald Reagan to scrap an entire class of nuclear missiles in Europe (the INF Treaty of 1987). Second, he withdrew Soviet troops from Afghanistan in 1989 — admitting the war had been a costly mistake. Third, in October 1989 he announced that Warsaw Pact members were free to choose their own futures — a doctrine quickly dubbed the Sinatra Doctrine ("They can do it their way"). This abandonment of Brezhnev's old rule of intervention removed the iron threat that had kept Eastern Europe in line for forty years.

What went wrong? Reform, once started, could not be controlled. Glasnost let citizens criticise the system openly — and they did, faster than the Party could respond. Perestroika dismantled state planning before any working market system was in place — leading to chronic shortages, inflation and the collapse of supply chains. Nationalist movements, long suppressed, surged in the Baltic republics, Ukraine, Georgia and Caucasus. The result was a runaway crisis that even Gorbachev's allies could not steady.

📜 Gorbachev Reflects
My great mistake was that I underestimated how fast the reforms would unleash forces I could no longer control. I wanted to give the people air; I did not realise the building had no foundations.
— Paraphrase of Mikhail Gorbachev's later interviews

3.2 The People Bring Down the Wall — 1989

The year 1989 was extraordinary. Across Eastern Europe, one communist regime after another collapsed under pressure from peaceful mass demonstrations. The Soviet Union — under Gorbachev's new line — did not intervene. The transition that followed is sometimes called the "Revolutions of 1989".

1989 — The Year That Changed Europe
June 1989Poland: Solidaritywins free elections Aug-Sept 1989Hungary opensborder to Austria 9 Nov 1989Berlin WallFALLS Nov-Dec 1989Czechoslovakia:Velvet Revolution Dec 1989Romania:Ceauşescu falls Oct 1990GermanyREUNIFIED

3.2.1 The Moment of Drama — 9 November 1989

The fall of the Berlin Wall was almost an accident. On the evening of 9 November 1989, an East German Politburo spokesperson, Günter Schabowski, was asked when new travel rules would come into effect. Confused by his briefing notes, he replied: "As far as I know, immediately, without delay." Within hours, tens of thousands of East Berliners flooded to the wall. Border guards, baffled, opened the gates. By dawn the world saw images of ordinary people standing on the Wall, dancing, hammering chunks out of the concrete. The greatest symbol of the Cold War had been brought down — not by armies, but by ordinary citizens.

Less than a year later, on 3 October 1990, Germany was officially reunified. NATO, which had been built to contain the Soviet Union, suddenly stretched to the doorstep of Russia.

3.3 The Disintegration of the USSR (1991)

The shock waves of 1989 hit the Soviet Union itself in 1991. We follow the timeline of disintegration step by step.

Timeline of the Disintegration of the Soviet Union, 1985–1991
March 1985Gorbachev elected General Secretary of CPSU; appoints Yeltsin head of Moscow party; reforms begin. June 1988Independence movement begins in Lithuania; spreads to Estonia and Latvia. October–November 1989USSR declares Warsaw Pact members free to choose their futures; Berlin Wall falls 9 November 1989. February 1990Gorbachev strips CPSU of its 72-year monopoly on power and permits multi-party politics. March–June 1990Lithuania first republic to declare independence; Russian parliament declares its own independence. August 1991Communist Party hardliners stage an abortive coup against Gorbachev; Yeltsin resists and emerges as national hero. December 1991Russia, Belarus and Ukraine annul the 1922 USSR Treaty and form the CIS. On 25 December 1991 Gorbachev resigns; the Soviet Union is dissolved.

3.3.1 The August 1991 Coup — and Boris Yeltsin's Stand

In August 1991, a group of Communist Party hardliners arrested Gorbachev at his holiday house in Crimea and tried to seize power in Moscow. They wanted to halt the reforms before the Soviet Union dissolved further. The coup failed within three days — partly because the Soviet army split, partly because hundreds of thousands of Muscovites poured into the streets. The standout image was of Boris Yeltsin, the popularly elected President of the Russian Republic, standing on a tank outside the Russian parliament and reading out a defiant statement against the coup. Yeltsin emerged as a national hero. Within months, real power had shifted from the Soviet centre to the elected leaders of the republics — especially Russia.

3.3.2 December 1991 — The End

On 8 December 1991, the leaders of Russia (Yeltsin), Ukraine (Kravchuk) and Belarus (Shushkevich) met in the Belavezha forest and declared the 1922 USSR Treaty dissolved. They created the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)? — a loose association of former Soviet republics. By 21 December, eight more republics had joined the CIS. On 25 December 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as President of a country that no longer existed. The red flag was lowered over the Kremlin. The Russian tricolour replaced it. The Soviet Union was no more. Russia took over the USSR's UN Security Council seat and its nuclear arsenal.

USSR's 15 Successor States — From One Country to Fifteen
RUSSIA Estonia Latvia Lithuania Belarus Ukraine Moldova Georgia Armenia | Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Russian Federation Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) Eastern Slavic + Moldova Caucasus (Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan) Schematic only — not to geographic scale.

3.4 Why Did the Cold War End? — Multiple Causes

Historians debate the relative weight of different factors, but most agree on a combination of internal weaknesses and external pressures.

Five interlocking causes of the end of the Cold War
CauseMechanism
1. Soviet economic stagnationFailure of central planning to keep up with Western productivity, technology, consumer goods. By the 1980s the gap was visible to ordinary Soviet citizens.
2. Arms-race burden + Afghan warMaintaining nuclear parity, supporting client regimes, and the failed war in Afghanistan (1979–89) drained Soviet resources.
3. Information revolutionRadio (Voice of America, BBC), tape cassettes, fax machines and television made it impossible to seal Soviet citizens off from awareness of Western prosperity.
4. Reform movements in Eastern EuropeSolidarity in Poland (from 1980), Hungarian and Czechoslovak reformers — when Gorbachev refused to crush them, the dominoes fell.
5. Gorbachev's reformsGlasnost and perestroika opened space for criticism; nationalism within Soviet republics surged; the system could not be re-frozen.
💡 The Polish Spark — Solidarity
In 1980, Lech Wałęsa, an electrician at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk, helped found Solidarność (Solidarity) — the first independent trade union in any Warsaw Pact country. Banned, then revived, Solidarity won partially-free elections in June 1989, formed the first non-communist government in Eastern Europe in over forty years, and inspired similar movements across the bloc.

3.5 Consequences — A New World Map

The disintegration of the second world had profound consequences for world politics. We highlight three broad categories.

3.5.1 End of Bipolarity, Rise of US Unipolarity

The most immediate consequence was the end of the bipolar world order. With the USSR gone, the United States was left as the only superpower. For about two decades, scholars described this as the unipolar moment. American military bases extended further than ever; American banks, brands, technology and culture spread worldwide. The institutions that the US had built or led — the IMF, the World Bank, NATO, the WTO — became powerful global players. Liberal democracy emerged, in many minds, as the only legitimate way to organise political life.

3.5.2 The Birth of Many New States

Out of the USSR alone came 15 successor states: Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Out of Yugoslavia came Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, North Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro and (later) Kosovo. Czechoslovakia split peacefully in 1993 into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Germany was reunified in 1990. Each new state had its own foreign policy choices to make. The Baltic states and most Eastern European states chose to join the European Union and NATO; the Central Asian states sought their own balance with Russia, China and the West.

3.5.3 End of the Ideological Challenge to Capitalism

For most of the twentieth century, capitalism had a serious rival: state socialism. After 1991, that rival was gone. Some commentators went so far as to declare "the end of history" — meaning that no serious alternative to liberal democracy and the market remained. Others were more cautious: China retained Communist Party rule while embracing markets; new movements for social democracy, environmental sustainability and economic justice continued to challenge unfettered capitalism. But the specific Soviet model of central planning was no longer a contender.

3.6 The Painful Transition — "Shock Therapy"

How did the post-Soviet states get from the planned economy to the market? Most followed a programme called shock therapy, designed by World Bank and IMF advisers. Its logic: do everything quickly — privatise state firms, end price controls, open to foreign trade and investment, dissolve old trade alliances — so that the pain of transition is over fast and a market economy can emerge.

In practice, shock therapy in Russia and several Eastern European countries was a disaster for ordinary people. About 90% of Russian state industries were sold off, often at throwaway prices in the famous "largest garage sale in history". Inflation wiped out savings; the rouble crashed; the collective farm system disintegrated; the old social-welfare safety net was withdrawn. Russian GDP in 1999 was below 1989 levels. A small group of well-connected oligarchs grew enormously wealthy; tens of millions of ordinary citizens fell into poverty. Many post-Soviet states began to recover only after 2000, helped by oil and gas exports.

⚠ Why "Shock Therapy" Disappointed
Three reasons stand out. (i) The reforms were imposed too fast and uniformly, without adapting to local conditions. (ii) Building democratic institutions was given lower priority than dismantling the planned economy — leading to authoritarian presidents in Central Asia and oligarchic capitalism in Russia. (iii) The old trade alliances among ex-Soviet bloc countries broke down with no real alternative in place, so output collapsed.

3.7 India and the End of the Cold War

The collapse of the USSR was a shock to India. The Soviet Union had been India's most reliable diplomatic partner, its largest arms supplier, a buyer of Indian goods at concessional rates, and a steady backer at the UN Security Council. Now that partner was gone — and India needed a new strategy.

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Balance-of-Payments Crisis
India faced a foreign-exchange crisis in 1990–91 (partly aggravated by the loss of Soviet trade and the Gulf War oil shock). Foreign exchange reserves fell to barely two weeks of imports.
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Economic Liberalisation 1991
Under PM Narasimha Rao and FM Manmohan Singh, India launched the historic 1991 reforms: rupee devaluation, lifting of the licence-permit raj, opening to foreign investment, liberalisation of trade.
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Recalibrated Foreign Policy
India built closer ties with the United States while keeping the Russia friendship alive (Indo-Russian Strategic Partnership 2000). It opened a "Look East" policy to ASEAN, and reached out to Israel, China and the EU.
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Strategic Autonomy
India redefined non-alignment as strategic autonomy: partnerships with many powers, alliance with none, principled stands on each issue — adapted to a unipolar (and now multipolar) world.

The continuity in Indo-Russian relations is striking. Russia continued to be India's largest arms supplier into the 2020s, supplied cryogenic rockets for the Indian space programme, signed over 80 bilateral agreements as part of the 2001 Strategic Partnership, and shared India's vision of a multipolar world order. At the same time, US–India ties grew dramatically, including the 2008 Indo-US civil nuclear deal and the 2020s Quad partnership. The end of the Cold War therefore did not "end" Indian foreign policy — it widened it.

LET'S EXPLORE — Two Maps
Bloom: L3 Apply

Compare a map of Europe in 1989 with a map of Europe in 2024. Identify and list:

  1. Three countries that exist in 2024 but did not exist in 1989.
  2. Two old states that have now joined NATO (post-1999 expansion).
  3. One country that has joined the European Union after 2004.
  4. One Eastern European border that disappeared (German reunification).
✅ Hints
Examples: (1) Slovakia, Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Czech Republic, Belarus, Ukraine, the three Baltic states. (2) Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic (1999); Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania (2004); Croatia, Albania (2009); Finland (2023); Sweden (2024). (3) Most of those NATO 2004 members joined the EU in 2004. (4) East Germany–West Germany — reunified 1990.
📋

Competency-Based Questions — Part 3

Case Study: By the late 1980s, the Soviet economy is in deep stagnation. New General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev launches glasnost and perestroika in 1985 to modernise the system. By November 1989 the Berlin Wall falls; through 1990 Eastern European communist regimes collapse one by one. By December 1991, the Soviet Union itself dissolves into 15 republics, and the Russian Republic takes the USSR's UN Security Council seat.
Q1. Which of the following pairs correctly explains Gorbachev's two reform slogans?
L1 Remember
  • (A) Glasnost = restructuring; Perestroika = openness
  • (B) Glasnost = openness; Perestroika = restructuring
  • (C) Glasnost = arms control; Perestroika = arms race
  • (D) Glasnost = communism; Perestroika = capitalism
Answer: (B) — Glasnost = openness (in speech, media, politics). Perestroika = restructuring (of the economy and party institutions).
Q2. The 1991 economic reforms in India were partially driven by the disintegration of the USSR because:
L4 Analyse
  • (A) The USSR refused to trade with India
  • (B) The collapse of Soviet trade contributed to a balance-of-payments crisis that forced India to liberalise
  • (C) The USSR demanded India repay all its loans in dollars
  • (D) The USSR cancelled its arms exports to India
Answer: (B) — The end of the rupee-rouble trade and the loss of a guaranteed Soviet market, combined with the 1990–91 Gulf oil shock, helped trigger India's foreign-exchange crisis. Under PM Rao and FM Manmohan Singh, India responded with the historic 1991 reforms.
Q3. In 6 sentences, evaluate the statement: "The end of the Cold War was caused by Gorbachev's reforms alone." Use at least three other causes in your answer.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Gorbachev's reforms were the immediate trigger but not the sole cause of the end of the Cold War. The Soviet economy had stagnated for two decades — productivity, consumer goods and technology lagged behind the West. The arms race and the failed Afghan war (1979–89) drained Soviet resources. The information revolution made it impossible to keep ordinary citizens unaware of Western prosperity. Eastern European reform movements — especially Poland's Solidarity from 1980 — built up pressure that, once Gorbachev refused to use Soviet tanks, brought down regime after regime. Gorbachev's own reforms then opened up Soviet politics so fully that nationalist movements in the republics could no longer be contained. The collapse was thus the joint product of structural weakness and reformist agency.
HOT Q. Imagine you are an Indian foreign-policy planner in January 1992. The USSR has just dissolved. Draft a 6-point memo (about 200 words) to the Prime Minister recommending how India should reposition its foreign policy. Cover (a) Russia, (b) the United States, (c) economic reforms, (d) China, (e) NAM, (f) one regional priority.
L6 Create
Hint: A strong memo would: (a) preserve the Russia partnership through a new Strategic Partnership Treaty (signed 2000), continue arms cooperation; (b) deepen ties with the US — economic, scientific, defence — without losing autonomy; (c) accelerate the 1991 economic reforms; (d) use the new fluid moment to engage China seriously while remaining vigilant about the border; (e) modernise NAM into "strategic autonomy" — partnerships with many, alliance with none; (f) launch a "Look East" policy with ASEAN to balance the new geopolitics. The exercise tests whether you grasp that India's response to 1991 was a multi-vector strategy, not a swing from Moscow to Washington.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 3
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): The fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 is treated as the symbolic end of the Cold War.
Reason (R): The Wall was the most visible boundary between the capitalist West and the communist East, and Gorbachev's USSR did not intervene when ordinary East Berliners broke through it.
Answer: (A) — Both true; R correctly explains A. Soviet non-intervention under Gorbachev's "Sinatra Doctrine" was decisive.
Assertion (A): "Shock therapy" rapidly delivered prosperity to the post-Soviet republics.
Reason (R): Privatisation, currency convertibility and the collapse of old trade alliances led to inflation, mass unemployment, and a fall in Russian GDP below 1989 levels by 1999.
Answer: (D) — A is false: shock therapy did not deliver rapid prosperity; for most ordinary people, it produced years of hardship. R is true and is exactly why A is false.
Assertion (A): India launched major economic reforms in 1991.
Reason (R): India faced a balance-of-payments crisis aggravated by the disintegration of the USSR, the Gulf War oil shock and structural weaknesses in the economy.
Answer: (A) — Both true; R correctly explains A. The 1991 reforms (rupee devaluation, end of licence-permit raj, opening to FDI) responded to the crisis.

3.8 NCERT Chapter Exercises — Full Model Answers

The questions below are taken from the NCERT chapter "The End of Bipolarity" (Class 12, Contemporary World Politics, Chapter 1). Click Show Answer on each question.

Question 1 — Multiple Choice

Which among the following statements that describe the nature of Soviet economy is wrong?
  1. Socialism was the dominant ideology
  2. State ownership/control existed over the factors of production
  3. People enjoyed economic freedom
  4. Every aspect of the economy was planned and controlled by the State
Answer: (c) "People enjoyed economic freedom" is the wrong statement. The Soviet economy was a planned economy in which the state owned and controlled almost all factors of production; private property and free enterprise were not allowed. Citizens did receive guaranteed minimum incomes, subsidised housing, free education and healthcare, but they did not have the freedom to choose what to produce, where to work or how to spend in a market sense.

Question 2 — Chronological Order

Arrange the following in chronological order:
  1. Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
  2. Fall of the Berlin Wall
  3. Disintegration of the Soviet Union
  4. Russian Revolution
Correct order: (d) Russian Revolution — 1917 → (a) Soviet invasion of Afghanistan — December 1979 → (b) Fall of the Berlin Wall — 9 November 1989 → (c) Disintegration of the Soviet Union — 25 December 1991.

Question 3 — Multiple Choice

Which among the following is NOT an outcome of the disintegration of the USSR?
  1. End of the ideological war between the US and USSR
  2. Birth of CIS
  3. Change in the balance of power in the world order
  4. Crises in the Middle East
Answer: (d) "Crises in the Middle East" is not a direct outcome of the disintegration of the USSR. Crises in the Middle East have a long history involving Israel-Palestine, Arab nationalism, oil politics and great-power competition that pre-dates and is largely independent of the USSR collapse. The other three (a, b, c) are direct outcomes of the disintegration.

Question 4 — Match the Following

Match the following:
i. Mikhail Gorbacheva. Successor of USSR
ii. Shock Therapyb. Military pact
iii. Russiac. Introduced reforms
iv. Boris Yeltsind. Economic model
v. Warsawe. President of Russia
Correct matches: i — c (Mikhail Gorbachev introduced reforms — glasnost and perestroika from 1985). ii — d (Shock Therapy was the rapid economic transition model). iii — a (Russia is the successor state of the USSR — took its UN Security Council seat). iv — e (Boris Yeltsin became the first elected President of Russia in 1991). v — b (Warsaw Pact was the military alliance led by the USSR, 1955–1991).

Question 5 — Fill in the Blanks

Fill in the blanks.
  1. The Soviet political system was based on _________________ ideology.
  2. _________________ was the military alliance started by the USSR.
  3. _________________ party dominated the Soviet Union's political system.
  4. _________________ initiated the reforms in the USSR in 1985.
  5. The fall of the _________________ symbolised the end of the Cold War.
Answers: (a) Communist / Socialist ideology. (b) The Warsaw Pact (1955). (c) The Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). (d) Mikhail Gorbachev. (e) Berlin Wall (9 November 1989).

Question 6

Mention any three features that distinguish the Soviet economy from that of a capitalist country like the US.
Model Answer: Three distinguishing features of the Soviet economy were: (i) State ownership of the means of production — almost all factories, farms, banks and natural resources were owned and run by the Soviet state, in contrast to predominantly private ownership in the US. (ii) Central planning — production targets, prices and the allocation of investment were decided by state agencies (such as Gosplan) according to five-year plans, while in the US these are largely decided by market signals of supply and demand. (iii) Guaranteed welfare and employment — the Soviet state ensured a minimum standard of living through subsidised housing, free healthcare and education, and assured employment, but at the cost of consumer choice and economic freedom. The US economy delivered greater consumer variety and innovation, but with higher inequality and no universal welfare guarantees.

Question 7

What were the factors that forced Gorbachev to initiate the reforms in the USSR?
Model Answer: Several deep factors forced Mikhail Gorbachev to launch reforms in 1985. (i) Economic stagnation: for nearly two decades the Soviet economy had been falling behind the West in productivity, technology and consumer goods; food imports rose every year and shortages became chronic. (ii) Burden of the arms race and Afghan war: matching US military capabilities and waging the unwinnable war in Afghanistan from 1979 drained the budget. (iii) Information revolution: the Soviet Union lagged behind the West in computers, telecommunications and biotechnology, and ordinary citizens — through smuggled radios, cassettes and TV — could see the disparity. (iv) Political stagnation: a one-party system, secret-police surveillance, censorship, corruption and the privileges of the Communist Party bureaucracy alienated ordinary citizens. (v) Loss of legitimacy: a large section of Soviet society no longer believed the official propaganda. Gorbachev concluded that without rapid reform — economic restructuring (perestroika) and political openness (glasnost) — the Soviet system would collapse on its own.

Question 8

What were the major consequences of the disintegration of the Soviet Union for countries like India?
Model Answer: The collapse of the USSR had multiple consequences for countries like India. (i) End of bipolarity: the world moved toward a unipolar structure dominated by the United States, ending the Cold War framework within which India had practised non-alignment. (ii) Economic shock and reform: the loss of the rupee-rouble trade and a guaranteed Soviet market for Indian goods, combined with the Gulf War oil shock, contributed to India's 1990–91 balance-of-payments crisis. India responded with the historic 1991 economic reforms — rupee devaluation, opening to foreign investment and dismantling of the licence-permit raj. (iii) Recalibrated foreign policy: India built closer ties with the United States, Israel and ASEAN ("Look East" policy) while preserving its strategic relationship with Russia (Indo-Russian Strategic Partnership 2000). (iv) Loss of an ally at the UN: India lost the consistent Russian-language Soviet vote on Kashmir at the Security Council, though Russia has continued to be supportive on most issues. (v) Reinterpretation of non-alignment: non-alignment was redefined as strategic autonomy — partnerships with many powers, alliance with none, principled stands on each issue. (vi) New states, new opportunities: the 15 successor states opened new diplomatic and economic opportunities, especially in Central Asia for energy cooperation.

Question 9

What was Shock Therapy? Was this the best way to make a transition from communism to capitalism?
Model Answer: Shock therapy was the rapid, comprehensive economic transition model influenced by the World Bank and IMF and applied in Russia, Central Asia and Eastern Europe in the 1990s. Its core features were: complete privatisation of state firms; immediate price decontrol; sudden removal of trade barriers and currency convertibility; and the dismantling of old trade alliances among Soviet bloc countries.

Was this the best way? Most evidence suggests it was not. (i) In Russia, about 90 per cent of state industries were sold off rapidly, often at throwaway prices in the so-called "largest garage sale in history". (ii) The rouble crashed; high inflation wiped out citizens' savings. (iii) Collective farms collapsed; food security suffered; Russia even started importing food. (iv) Russia's real GDP in 1999 was below its 1989 level. (v) The middle class shrank, a small group of well-connected oligarchs gained enormous wealth, and a mafia emerged to control much economic activity. (vi) Building democratic institutions was given lower priority than economic transformation, leading to authoritarian presidents in Central Asia. A more gradual, sequenced transition — like that followed by China since 1978 — might have caused less hardship. Shock therapy is therefore widely judged to have been too fast, too one-size-fits-all, and to have neglected institution-building.

Question 10

Write an essay for or against the following proposition: "With the disintegration of the second world, India should change its foreign policy and focus more on friendship with the US rather than with traditional friends like Russia".
Model Essay (against the strong form of the proposition):

The collapse of the second world certainly required India to update its foreign policy — but updating is not the same as switching sides. India should diversify its partnerships, not abandon old ones for new. The argument for the proposition is real: the United States is the world's largest economy, the largest source of foreign investment in India, and the leading power in technology, defence research and global institutions. Closer Indo-US relations have already delivered the 2008 civil nuclear deal and the Quad partnership, and the United States is a critical balance to a more assertive China.

But four reasons argue strongly against abandoning the relationship with Russia. (i) Strategic autonomy: India's foreign-policy strength has always been its ability to act independently rather than as an appendage of any great power. Switching from one bloc orientation to another contradicts that tradition. (ii) Defence dependence: a large share of Indian military hardware comes from Russian sources; transitioning fully to US suppliers would take decades and reduce diplomatic flexibility. (iii) Multipolarity: India and Russia share a strategic vision of a multipolar world order in which no single state dominates — a vision that serves India's long-term interest. (iv) Energy and connectivity: Russia is important for India's oil imports, nuclear energy plans, and access to Central Asia.

The wiser course is to deepen ties with the United States, Europe, Japan, Israel and ASEAN while preserving the historic partnership with Russia. India should not change one set of friends for another; it should add. This is the meaning of strategic autonomy in a post-Cold War world. The proposition, in its sharper form, is therefore wrong.

(One could equally argue for the proposition by stressing US economic and technological leadership, declining Russian power after the 2022 Ukraine war, and growing convergence of Indo-US strategic interests on China. A balanced essay acknowledges both views before concluding.)

3.9 Chapter Summary

Key Takeaways — Chapter 1

  • Cold War (1945–1991): intense rivalry between the USA-led capitalist West and the USSR-led socialist East — never a direct shooting war between the superpowers.
  • Bipolarity: two opposed power blocs — NATO (1949) and the Warsaw Pact (1955) — organised most of world politics.
  • Cuban Missile Crisis (October 1962): the closest the Cold War came to nuclear war; resolved by Kennedy and Khrushchev through 13 days of secret diplomacy.
  • Deterrence and MAD: the threat of mutual assured destruction prevented direct US-USSR war but produced an open-ended arms race and proxy wars.
  • Arenas of the Cold War: Berlin (1948 airlift, 1961 wall), Korea (1950–53), Hungary 1956, Vietnam (1954–75), Czechoslovakia 1968, Afghanistan (1979–89).
  • Non-Aligned Movement (NAM): founded at Belgrade in 1961, building on the Bandung Conference of 1955; led by Nehru (India), Tito (Yugoslavia), Nasser (Egypt), Sukarno (Indonesia), Nkrumah (Ghana). Now ~120 members.
  • NIEO (1974): NAM-led demand for fairer terms of trade, sovereignty over natural resources, and reform of the IMF and World Bank.
  • India's Cold War: non-alignment as principled, active, mediatory; closer Soviet ties after the 1971 Indo-Soviet Treaty.
  • Gorbachev (1985): launched glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring); ended the arms race and the Afghan war; permitted Eastern European reform.
  • 1989 Revolutions: Solidarity in Poland, Hungary opens border, Berlin Wall falls 9 November, Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, fall of Ceauşescu in Romania, German reunification 1990.
  • USSR dissolves 25 December 1991: 15 successor states; Russia takes the UN Security Council seat. CIS formed.
  • Consequences: end of bipolarity, US unipolar moment, NATO eastward expansion, painful "shock therapy" transition, end of the ideological challenge to capitalism.
  • For India: 1991 economic liberalisation, recalibrated foreign policy, redefinition of non-alignment as strategic autonomy.

3.10 Key Terms

Cold WarThe 1945–1991 ideological-political-military rivalry between the USA and the USSR with no direct armed conflict between the superpowers.
BipolarityAn international system organised around two opposed centres of great power.
DeterrenceStrategy of preventing attack by threatening unbearable retaliation.
MADMutual Assured Destruction: doctrine that any nuclear first-strike would still leave the victim able to retaliate massively.
Iron CurtainThe figurative line dividing post-1945 Europe between the Soviet-controlled East and the Western democracies. Phrase popularised by Churchill in 1946.
NATONorth Atlantic Treaty Organisation (1949) — the Western alliance led by the USA.
Warsaw PactThe Soviet-led military alliance (1955–1991) of the USSR and East European socialist states.
NAMNon-Aligned Movement; founded at Belgrade 1961.
Bandung Conference1955 meeting in Indonesia of 29 newly free Asian and African states; precursor of NAM.
Belgrade SummitFirst NAM summit, 1961.
PanchsheelFive Principles of Peaceful Coexistence (India-China, 1954).
NIEONew International Economic Order — 1974 declaration demanding fairer global economic rules.
UNCTADUN Conference on Trade and Development (1964).
Glasnost"Openness" — Gorbachev's political-information reforms from 1985.
Perestroika"Restructuring" — Gorbachev's economic reforms from 1985.
Berlin WallBuilt 1961, fell 9 November 1989; the most visible symbol of the Cold War.
SolidarityThe Polish trade-union movement (1980 onwards) that led the first non-communist Eastern European government in 1989.
Shock TherapyThe rapid, IMF-influenced model of post-communist economic transition.
CISCommonwealth of Independent States — formed by the Belavezha Accords of December 1991.
Strategic AutonomyIndia's contemporary doctrine: partnerships with many powers, alliance with none.
First / Second / Third WorldCold War labels for capitalist West, socialist East, and developing countries respectively.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the Cold War end?

The Cold War ended because the Soviet economy could no longer sustain superpower competition, Gorbachev's reforms (perestroika and glasnost) released forces he could not control, Eastern European communist regimes collapsed in 1989 (Berlin Wall, Velvet Revolution), and the USSR itself disintegrated on 25 December 1991 into 15 independent republics.

What were perestroika and glasnost?

Perestroika ("restructuring") was Mikhail Gorbachev's 1985 economic reform programme to introduce market elements into the Soviet command economy. Glasnost ("openness") was his political reform allowing free speech, criticism of the Communist Party, and gradual democratisation. Together they were meant to revive Soviet socialism but instead hastened the USSR's collapse.

When and how did the Berlin Wall fall?

The Berlin Wall fell on 9 November 1989 after East Germany announced new travel rules amid mass protests across Eastern Europe. Citizens flooded the border checkpoints and began physically dismantling the Wall. Germany was officially reunified less than a year later on 3 October 1990.

When did the USSR formally disintegrate?

The USSR formally dissolved on 25 December 1991, when President Gorbachev resigned and the Soviet flag was lowered over the Kremlin. The Soviet Union split into 15 independent republics: Russia (the largest), Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, the three Baltic states and seven others.

What is the "unipolar moment"?

The unipolar moment is the post-1991 period in which the United States stood as the world's sole superpower — dominant in military, economic, technological and cultural terms. The phrase was coined by Charles Krauthammer in 1990. Many scholars argue this moment is now ending as China, India, the EU and Russia rise.

How did the end of the Cold War affect India?

India lost its trusted partner with the USSR's collapse, faced a 1991 balance-of-payments crisis, and adopted economic liberalisation. Foreign policy moved from formal non-alignment to strategic autonomy — partnerships with the USA, Russia, EU, Japan and Israel without joining any military alliance.

What is "strategic autonomy" in Indian foreign policy?

Strategic autonomy is India's post-Cold War doctrine of maintaining independent decision-making by building partnerships with many powers — the USA, Russia, the EU, Japan, Israel and others — while avoiding formal alliance with any. It is the contemporary updating of non-alignment for a multipolar world.

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