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Détente, 1969-1972

  

  

BEFORE WE START ...  what a mess!

  • ‘Détente’ meant different things to different people.  It is originally a French word meaning ‘relaxation’.  The Soviets used Lenin’s word razryadka meaning ‘reduction’.  The USA never liked either word, and President Gerald Ford replaced it with the phrase ‘peace through strength'.

  • Neither is (or was) anyone sure what it involved – was it a policy, a process, an aspiration? 

  • Some historians say there were two separate détentes – one between the USA and the USSR, and the other between east and west in Europe

  • Historians on both sides have argued that, whilst our side really wanted better relations, the other side was merely using it as a smokescreen, and a means towards their end. 

  • And while most historians see détente as ending with the Afghanistan War in 1979, they place the date it started variously at 1920, 1953, 1962 or 1969.  The British historian Mike Bowker (2002) considered Brezhnev's razryadka in the 1970s as simply a "continuation of Khrushchev's thaw".

Some historians have suggested that this lack of clarity was a reason détente failed in 1979.

 

Going Deeper

The following links will help you widen your knowledge:

Basic accounts from BBC Bitesize and from History.com

Textbook draft extract

 

YouTube

Cold War détente - clear narrative from Mr Marr

Détente explained - Hip Hughes's lively account.

   

Background

You saw how both Kennedy and Khrushchev came out of the Cuban Missiles Crisis with a ‘never-again’ desire.  Although Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, and Khrushchev was displaced in 1964, their successors continued this carefulness during the late 1960s:

  • During the 1967 Six Day War between Israel (US-backed) and the Arab states (Soviet-backed) Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin used the hotline to propose that the two nations use their influence to achieve a ceasefire.

  • In July 1967 Kosygin met US President Lyndon B Johnson at Glasborough in America, and the two explored the possibility of using their influence to end the Vietnam War.  Although nothing was agreed, the 'Spirit of Glassboro' was “amicable” not confrontational.

  • The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in August temporarily ended dialogue, but neither did it cause a crisis; the US tacitly left the USSR to sort out its satellite states in eastern Europe.

  • In 1968 the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty agreed to restrict nuclear weapons technology to the US, the USSR, China, France and Great Britain.

 

 

 

Why did the US and USSR seek détente?  [NIECE]

Détente came about in the 1970s because it was in the interests of the superpowers to have better relations.

AQA GCSE Revision textbook (2003)

 

 

USA

A number of issues meant that the 'US-versus-Communism' model of the post-war Cold War was no longer relevant, and pushed the US to adopt a more conciliatory foreign policy:

  

USSR

A number of issues calmed Soviet fears of the West and pushed them to adopt a friendlier foreign policy:

  

1.  Nuclear Warrries

By the late 1960s, the USSR had caught up with the USA in nuclear weapons, and had much larger conventional forces.  A nuclear war would be Mutually Assured Destruction, and NATO exercises in Germany focussed on retreating as fast as possible. 

This meant that the US was no longer confident of victory if there was a war.  Instead, after his visit to Russia in 1959, Nixon had proposed:

“one world where different people live under the different systems they choose, but where there is freedom of communication and exchange, and cooperation in achieving mutual goals...  In other words, peaceful competition”. 

Meanwhile, the cost of the Cold War, particularly of the arms race and the war in Vietnam, was preventing spending on pressing social and economic issues in the USA. 

  

1.  Nuclear Warries

By the late 1960s, the USSR had caught up with the USA in nuclear weapons.  At the same time, the Soviet dominance in conventional forces made it confident of winning a conventional war with the USA (though not so much with China). 

Also, razryadka was a Leninist concept, and Khrushchev had promoted Peaceful coexistence/competition. 

Meanwhile, a US Air Command paper in 1987 estimated that Soviet spending on the defence budget was around 12 to 14% of Gross National Product, and was growing at 4-5% a year.  As time went on, the Soviet leadership became concerned to reduce this burden. 

  

2.  International Difficulties

By 1967, American’s war in Vietnam was going disastrously, and unrest at home was mounting.  In 1968, President Johnson opened peace negotiations to try to end “that bitch of a war”.  But the US needed the Soviet Union to influence North Vietnam to bring about peace. 

At the same time also, America’s influence in Europe was diminishing as its European allies – led by France and West Germany – made trade and treaty agreements with the Iron Curtain countries. 

Historian Jussi Hanhimäki believed (2013) that détente arose from the diminishing power and prestige of the United States, which found it could no longer be assertive. 

  

2.  International successes

After the Berlin Wall and Czechoslovakia, relations within the Warsaw Pact countries stabilised. 

France signed a trade agreement in 1964 and withdrew from NATO in 1966. 

West German Chancellor Willy Brandt’s Ostpolitik policy was seeking rapprochement with East Germany and the Soviet Union. 

This greatly reduced any threat to the USSR from Europe - the Soviet Union felt a lot safer for razryadka napryazkennosti (a reduction in tension).

  

3.  Economic and Social Problems

Aerica was undergoing a period of ‘stagflation’ (rising prices and economic recession).

In the late 1960s/early 1970s, oil supplies became unreliable because of:
(a)  the Biafran War in Nigeria (1967-70);
(b)  the Six-Day War (1967) and Yom Kippur War (1973) between Israel and the Arab states; and
(c)  the decision of the oil-producing ‘OPEC’ nations to raise the price. 
(d)  During the Arab-Israel conflict the Suez Canal was closed for six years, causing tankers to have to take a long route round the south of Africa. 

The entire Western economy and way-of-life depended on the price of oil, which threatened production, caused inflation, and increased the cost of armaments and the military. 

Meanwhile, in addition to the anti-Vietnam protests, there was increasing social and industrial unrest at home.  American historian Jeremi Suri suggested (2005) that détente was just the two governments clubbing together because they found themselves challenged from below!

  

3.  Economic and political problems

Soviet faming struggled to feed the nation, and by 1980 subsidies to agriculture took a fifth of the government’s budget.  Industrial growth slowed, and corruption and the black market flourished.  The Birth Rate fell, life expectancy stalled, housing was in crisis, and alcoholism was the highest in the world.  Dumping of industrial waste was destroying the environment.  ‘Dissidence’ (internal opposition to communism) was growing. 

After the "adventurist" Khrushchev years, Brezhnev wanted stability, and peace would help. 

  

4.  China

In 1969, strained relations between the USSR and China almost led to a nuclear war.  It was no longer possible for the USA to present itself as the defender of freedom against a global ‘communist’ threat. 

  

4.  China

China had broken relations with the USSR in 1962 over the Cuban Missiles Crisis, and in 1969 armed conflict had broken out along the Sino-Soviet border, which for a time raised the prospect of nuclear war. 

In 1969 Nixon criticised the USSR over the border conflict with China, and Brezhnev worried that China might seek America as an ally, and that the USSR would end up facing a hostile two-superpower alliance.  This fear of isolation made it important to reduce tensions with the USA. 

  

5.  Endorsed by the Leadership

When he came into office in 1969, President Nixon was determined to get out of the Vietnam War and to earn the title ‘peacemaker’. 

On 3 November 1969 he announced what became known as the ‘Nixon Doctrine’ (i.e. that, beyond existing treaties, it was up to each country to defend itself against communism), and he took steps to build better international relations:

  • Soviet Ambassador to the US Anatoly Dobrynin had regular lunch meetings at the White House with Nixon and his foreign adviser Henry Kissinger.

  • Kissinger used ‘shuttle diplomacy’ flying all over the world seeking understanding between different nations, and in particular engaging in ‘triangular diplomacy’ between America, Russia and China.

5.  Endorsed by the Leadership

On the face of it, Brezhnev appeared to distrust détente.  In 1964 he made it clear that razryadka did not mean an end to the struggle between communism and capitalism.  And he refused to link razryadka to other areas, such as human rights, or Soviet policies in the ‘Third World’. 

However, the Russian-born historian Vladislav Zubok (2009) found that Brezhnev’s personal views and attitudes were crucial in promoting razryadka in the Politburo. 

 

 

Achievements of détente, 1969-72

 

With China

  1. In April 1971 a US table-tennis team visited China (the so-called ‘Ping-pong diplomacy’).

  2. In October 1971, the US abandoned its support of the Taiwan government, and China was admitted to the United Nations.

  3. In 1972 Nixon formally visited China, where he very publicly shook the hand of Chinese Prime Minister Zhou Enlai.  The resultant Shanghai Communique acknowledged that “there is but one China”, and affirmed the two countries’ desire for better economic and cultural contacts, “peaceful co-existence” and “the relaxation of tension in Asia and the world”.  The Chinese stopped denouncing the USA as the capitalist enemy.

 

With the USSR

  1. In May 1972 Nixon went to Moscow, resulting in:

    • The USA and the USSR agreed the ‘Basic Principles of Relations Between the USA and the USSR’ (Nixon regarded this as one of his greatest achievements).

    • A Trade Agreement allowed the Soviets to buy American grain at a very low price; trade with Russia 1971-1973 rose sevenfold.

    • Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I).  This ended construction of new ICBMs, maintaining the narrow Soviet lead in these types of nuclear weapons.  Agreement was not reached on the deployment of long-range bombers or of ballistic missiles, and the USSR continued to expand its conventional forces, and nuclear weaponry not covered by the Treaty.

  2. Also in 1972, a Biological Weapons Convention and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty were concluded, and talks on SALT II began.

  3. In 1973, at the Washington Summit, Nixon, Kissinger, Brezhnev and Kosygin discussed oceanography, transportation, agricultural research and cultural exchange, and signed the Prevention of Nuclear War Agreement.

 

In Europe

  1. In 1970, West Germany signed the Treaty of Moscow with the USSR, renouncing the use of force and recognizing current European borders, and in 1972 West and East Germany signed the ‘Basic Treaty’ of mutual recognition.

 

After 1972...

  1. In July 1975 American and Soviet astronauts docked their Apollo and Soyuz spacecraft together.

  2. The Helsinki Accords 1975:

    • Often cited as ‘the high point of détente’, the Accords, signed by 33 European countries as well as the USA and Canada, confirmed international borders as of 1945 (this satisfied Soviet security concerns in Europe).  The Soviets agreed to give 21 days’ notice of military manoeuvres.

    • Clauses regarding respect for human rights were inserted after Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko reassured Brezhnev that they could ignore them; the Soviet Union continued to commit human rights violations, notably suppressing critics, and persecuting Jews and Muslims, which led to increasing tension after 1975.

  3. Attempts at a SALT2 Treaty failed and all ither attempts at détente ended when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979.

 

 

 

Source A

Here is what the Chinese gave up:
They performed routine rhetorical exercises on the themes of world peace.

Here is what the United States gave up:
We issued a communiqué in which the Red Chinese asserted and re-asserted their absolute right to conquer Taiwan; while we uttered not one word on the principles of self-government and independence to the people of Taiwan.

That staggering capitulation… to dump Taiwan.  We have lost – irretrievably – any remaining sense of moral mission in the world.

Conservative anti-communist writer William F Buckley, writing in the National Review, March 1972 about Nixon's Shanghai Comminique.

 

Source B

To the US imperialists the reality behind the glowing rhetoric [about détente] is profits.

The Soviet Union desperately needs US manufactured machinery and technology to shore up its sagging economy.  They have promised huge orders of expensive equipment for their steel, chemical and oil plants.  Sales of these industrial goods promise a profit bonanza for the US monopolies.

Comment by the Philadelphia Workers Committee, a communist organisation in the USA, in November 1975 after the joint Apollo-Soyuz space shot.

 

   

Consider:

What would be your personal (explained) reactions to the following issues of contention about détente?

a.  Détente was just Khrushchev's 'thaw' continued?

b.  Both countries were just using détente to achieve their aims?

c.  The main cause of détente was the USA's diminishing power & prestige?

d.  Détente was about profits, not peace?

e.  Détente was a sell-out to the Soviet Union and the Chinese?

f.  Nothing was achieved by détente except 'rhetorical exercises'/ 'glowing rhetoric'?

 


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