Eastern Bloc
Soviet allies in eastern Europe, including Bulgaria, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Â Romania, and Hungary.
Iron Curtain
Term coined by British P.M. Churchill to describe the political division of Europe between free  (western Europe) and repressed (eastern Europe) during the cold war.
Marshall Plan
U.S. aid to western Europe after World War II helped it recover and concurrently staved off  Communist inroads made in the interim. Â
NATO
U.S.-led alliance including western Europe, Canada, and  Turkey against Soviet aggression there. Â
Warsaw Pact
Soviet response to NATO.
European Union
Final name of the Common Market; an economic and, later, political movement in Europe  that supported free markets to compete with the U.S. and eventually, the goal of forming a common government  in much of Europe.
New Feminism
A wave of women’s rights agitation reappeared in the 1960s promoting job opportunities and  other civil rights issues for women. Two early leaders were Simone de Beauvoir and Betty Friedan.
Solidarity
Trade union movement in Poland that developed into a political pressure group that supported  reforms from the Communist leadership. Â
Nikita Khrushchev
Leader of U.S.S.R. after Stalin’s death. Criticized his predecessor’s abuses, signaling a bit  of a thaw in the Cold War. After backing down in the Cuban Missile Crisis, he was removed from power and  exiled within the U.S.S.R. Â
Sputnik
First manned spacecraft in 1957; initiated a space race with the United States.
PRI
The political party in Mexico that dominated in the 20th  century.
NAFTA
Non-tariff policy between the U.S., Canada, and Mexico  that began in the 1990s.
Ernesto “Che” Guevara
Militant Argentine revolutionary who assisted Castro in Cuba and was killed  attempting a similar revolt in Bolivia.
Fidel Castro
Communist dictator of Cuba since 1959; overthrew Batista. Backed up by Soviet regime. The  Cuban Revolution he led inspired others to attempt similar models in Latin America.
Good Neighbor Policy
U.S. policy toward Latin America, begun in the 1930s, that promised less intervention.
Neocolonialism
Continued dominance of new nations by their former rulers.
Muslim Brotherhood
Egyptian religious and nationalist movement founded by Hasan al-Banna in 1928; Â became an example for later fundamentalist movements in the Islamic world.
Gamal Abdul Nasser
Member of the Free Officers Movement that seized power in Egypt in a 1952 military  coup; became leader of Egypt; formed a state-directed reforming regime; ousted Britain from the Suez Canal in  1956; most reforms were unsuccessful.
Jawaharlal Nehru
First leader of independent India; committed to programs of social reform, economic  development, and preservation of civil liberties.
Green Revolution
Agricultural revolution that increased production through improved seeds, fertilizers, and  irrigation; helped to support rising Asian populations.
Ayatollah Khomeini
Religious leader of Iran following the 1979 revolution; worked for fundamentalist  Islamic religious reform and elimination of Western influences.
Apartheid
Afrikaner policy of racial segregation in South Africa designed to create full economic, social, and  political exploitation of African majority.
ANC
South African political organization founded in 1912 to defend African  interests; became the ruling political party after the 1994 elections.
Nelson Mandela
ANC leader imprisoned by Afrikaner regime; released in 1990 and elected as president of  South Africa in 1994.
F.W. de Klerk
White South African prime minister in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Working with Nelson  Mandela and the African National Congress, de Klerk helped to dismantle the apartheid system and opened the  way for a democratically elected government that represented all South Africans for the first time
Great Leap Forward
Economic policy of Mao Zedong introduced in 1958; proposed small-scale  industrialization projects integrated into peasant communities; led to economic disaster and ended in 1960.
Cultural Revolution
Initiated by Mao Zedong in 1965 to restore his dominance over the pragmatists; Â disgraced and even killed bureaucrats and intellectuals; called off in 1968.
Ho Chi Minh
North Vietnamese leader who overthrew French colonial rule in 1954 and fought against the US in the 1960’s, became the communist leader of Vietnam in 1975.
Ngo Dinh Diem
Became president of South Vietnam with United States’ support in the 1950s; overthrown by  the military, with U.S. approval.
View Cong
The Communist guerrilla movement in southern Vietnam during the Vietnamese war.
Mikhail Gorbachev
Leader of the U.S.S.R. (1985-1991); inaugurated major reforms that led to the  disintegration of the Communist regime.
Glasnost
Term meaning openness; Gorbachev’s policy opening the opportunity to criticize the government.
Perestroika
Term meaning economic restructuring; Gorbachev’s policy for the economic rebuilding of the  U.S.S.R. by allowing more private ownership and decentralized economic control.
Boris Yeltsin
Successor to Gorbachev; failed to reform the economy; succeeded by Vladimir Putin in 1999.
Globalization
The increasing interconnectedness of all parts of the world; opposed by many environmental  and social justice groups.