GCSE History Revision Guide – Paper One Name: History Teacher: A017: International Relations with USA Land of Freedom 1945-1975 Exam Date: Monday 6th June 2016 (9:00) The first part of your exam is on International Relations. The International Relations part of this booklet runs from Page 4 to Page 32 It is in three sections: - Soviet control of Eastern Europe (1948-49) - Terrorism since 1969 - The Iraq War of 2003 Tick red if you’re very unsure. Tick amber when you think you’re getting there. Tick green when you think you’re ready for that question on the exam. Be honest with yourself. Page Key Questions KEY TOPIC 1: SOVIET CONTROL OF EASTERN EUROPE (1948-1989) 5 1.1: How did Russia take control of Eastern Europe? 6 1.2: What was the role of Khrushchev? 6 1.3: How did the Russians deal with opposition in Eastern Europe? 7 - Hungarian Uprising (1956) 8 - Czechoslovakia – The Prague Spring (1968) 9 - The Berlin Wall (1961) 10 1.4: Why did Soviet control in Eastern Europe collapse? 10 - Solidarity in Poland 11 - The Role of Gorbachev 12 Timeline – Soviet Control of Eastern Europe KEY TOPIC 2: TERRORISM (SINCE 1969) 14-15 2.1: What were the key features of the IRA? 16-17 2.2: What were the key features of the PLO? 18-19 2.3: What were the key features of Al-Qaeda? 20-21 2.4: What are the key events in terrorism since 1969? 22 Summary of terrorist groups KEY TOPIC 3: THE IRAQ WAR (2003) 24 3.1: What was the background to the conflict in Iraq? 25 3.2: Why did the USA invade Iraq? 26 3.3: Why was there so much opposition to the Iraq War? 27 3.4: What were the key features of the Iraq War of 2003? 28 3.5: What was the Iraqi insurgency and what was its impact? 29 3.6: Why did the invasion of Iraq go so wrong? 30 3.7: How successful was the handover to transitional government? 31 3.8: What were the consequences of the war in Iraq? 32 Timeline – Iraq War RED AMBER GREEN RED AMBER GREEN RED AMBER GREEN The second part of your exam is on USA Land of Freedom 1945-1975 The Land of Freedom part of this booklet runs from Page 33 to Page 43 It is in four sections: - The Red Scare & McCarthyism - Black Civil Rights in the 1950s - Black Civil Rights in the 1960s - Civil Rights of other groups (women, Hispanics, Native Page Key Questions KEY TOPIC 4: THE RED SCARE & McCARTHYISM 34 4.1: How were capitalist and communist beliefs different? 34 4.2: How did international events lead to a Red Scare in the USA? 34 4.3: How did the Red Scare develop in the USA? 35 4.4: What was the impact of McCarthyism in the USA? KEY TOPIC 5: BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE 1950s 36 5.1: What was the situation for African Americans after WW2? 36 5.2: Why was the struggle for desegregated education so important? 37 5.3: What was the significance of the Montgomery Bus Boycott? 37 5.4: How much progress had been made in black civil rights by 1960? KEY TOPIC 6: BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE 1960s 38 6.1: What was the role of Martin Luther King? 38 6.2: What was the role of Malcolm X and the Black Power Movement? 39 6.3: What was the role of President Kennedy? 39 6.4: What was the role of President Johnson? 39 6.5: What was the role of President Nixon? KEY TOPIC 7: CIVIL RIGHTS OF OTHER GROUPS 40 7.1: What was the impact of World War Two on women? 40 7.2: How did the women’s movement develop in the 1950s and 60s? 40 7.3: What progress did the women’s movement achieve? 41 7.4: How did the women’s movement develop in the 1970s? 41 7.5: Why were there so many Hispanics in the USA? 41 7.6: What was Chicano Nationalism? 42 7.7: What problems did Native Americans face in the USA? 42 7.8: How did Native American protest? 43 Timeline – USA Land of Freedom RED AMBER GREEN RED AMBER GREEN RED AMBER GREEN RED AMBER GREEN The last bit of your booklet contains some other useful information. Page 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 INFORMATION All Past Questions on International Relations All Past Questions on USA Land of Freedom How to answer DESCRIBE-type questions (4 marks) How to answer EXPLAIN-type questions (6 or 8 marks) How to answer MESSAGE OF THE SOURCE-type questions (6 or 7 marks) How to answer PURPOSE OF THE SOURCE-type questions (7 marks) How to answer JUDGEMENT-type questions (10 marks) 51 Summary of exam technique International Relations 1948-2005 4.SOVIET CONTROL OF EASTERN EUROPE – TITLE PAGE Key Topic 1: Soviet Control of Eastern Europe (1948-89) 1.How did the Russians take control of Eastern Europe after World War Two? 2.What was the role of Khrushchev? 3.What were the causes, events and consequeunces of the Hungarian Uprising of 1956? 4.What were the causes, events and consequences of the Prague Spring of 1968? 5.What were the causes, events and consequeunces of the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961? 6.What was the role of Solidarity in the collapse of Communism? 7.What was the role of Gorbachev in the collapse of Communism? Key Question 1.1: How did Russia take control of Eastern Europe after World War Two? THE SOVIET TAKEOVER OF EASTERN EUROPE When the Nazis retreated at the end of WW2, they left behind a political vacuum in the countries they had occupied. Stalin helped the Communist parties in those countries to take over. He used COMINFORM to bring about Soviet dominance of these countries. Stalin put Soviet troops in each country to: o Maintain law and order o Support the Communist government. In those countries, Communist government took over the whole of society. Eastern Europe was ragged after WW2, so Stalin used Comecon to ensure that those countries traded with the Soviet Union in return for Soviet financial aid. This topic has never been on the exam, but it is good background knowledge anyway. A map showing the Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe after World War Two COMINFORM AND COMECON COMINFORM (‘Communist Information Bureau) Set up in 1947 by Stalin to co-ordinate the Communist Parties of Eastern European countries. This meant that Stalin could send out instructions to the Communist Parties of these countries telling them what to do. This meant that Stalin effectively controlled all of the SATELLITE COUNTRIES on the above map. Yugoslavia was left out of Cominform because it refused to do what the Soviet Union told it to do. COMECON (‘The Council for Mutual Economic Assistance’) Set up in 1949 by Stalin to control the industries and trade of the SATELLITE COUNTRIES. Members of Comecon were ordered to trade with each other and the Soviet Union rather than the west. THE IMPACT ON ORDINARY PEOPLE IN EASTERN EUROPE THE HOPE Some believed that the Communist Soviet Union brought them hope after the horrors of being occupied by Nazi Germany. Soviets made these countries feel secure as the Soviet Union was one of the world’s superpowers. THE REALITY Free speech was taken away. Newspapers were censored. Many non-Communists were thrown in prison. People were not allowed to travel to the west. People became poorer in Eastern Europe. They were not allowed to ask for help from the west. At times, people didn’t have enough food or fuel. People had no access to consumer goods. Joseph Stalin, leader of Communist Soviet Union 1924-1953 Cominform (1947) Comecon (1949) Key Terminology to answer key question 1.1 Joseph Stalin Soviet Union / The USSR Satellite countries The Eastern Bloc Cominform Comecon Key Question 1.2: What was the role of Khrushchev? KHRUSHCHEV’S RISE TO POWER Many in Soviet Union saw Stalin as a hero as he had defeated Hitler. Stalin had also made the Soviet Union a nuclear superpower. Stalin died in 1953, and was replaced by Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev at first seemed different to Stalin. He was less aggressive, and talked of ‘peaceful co-existence’ with the west. Khrushchev closed down Cominform, and hinted that he would let the satellite Key Terminology to answer key question 1.2 Nikita Khrushchev Peaceful co-existence Secret speech Destalinisation DESTALINISATION You need to know this to understand what follows. Khrushchev at first seemed different to Stalin. He was less aggressive, and talked of ‘peaceful co-existence’ with the west. Khrushchev closed down Cominform, and hinted that he would let the satellite countries have independence. In 1956, Khrushchev made an astonishing ‘secret speech’ criticising Stalin and the way he had treated people. He called Stalin a wicked tyrant. He also began a process of ‘de-Stalinisation’, including releasing political prisoners. In the end, though, Khrushchev went back on THE WARSAW PACT Nikita Khrushchev, Soviet leader 1955-64 Khrushchev, like Stalin before him, still wanted a ‘buffer zone’ in Eastern Europe. In 1955, Khrushchev created the Warsaw Pact, which was a military alliance of the Soviet Union and all the satellite countries. If any member of the Warsaw Pact was Key Question 1.3: How did the Soviet Union deal with opposition in Eastern Europe? The next three pages deal with three crises faced by the Soviet Union in its Eastern European satellites, and how the Soviets dealt with those crises. These are quite easy to understand and remember, because they all follow the same pattern: STAGE 1 STAGE 2 This topic is always on the exam. You NEED to know all about Hungary 1956, Czechoslovakia 1968 and Berlin 1961. STAGE 3 People in a Soviet satellite country get fed up of living under Communism and try to make changes. The Soviet Union uses its military strength to bring an end to the developments in Stage 1. USA disapproves but does nothing as long as Communism isn’t spreading any further west. Soviet tanks are sent to Hungary to crush the uprising. The USA criticises the Soviet Union’s actions, but does nothing. The people rise up and try to get rid of Soviet influence in Czechoslovakia. Soviet tanks are sent to Czechoslovakia to crush the uprising. The USA criticises the Soviet Union’s actions, but does nothing. Thousands of East Berliners leave the Communist east to live in the Capitalist west. The Soviets order the building of a wall to keep East Berliners in the east. The USA criticises the Soviet Union’s actions, but does nothing. The people rise up and try to get rid of Soviet influence in Hungary. 1.Hungary 1956 The Hungarian Uprising What was the background? Hungary was led by a Communist called Matyas Rakosi. He was very cruel to Hungarians, and took away their freedom of speech. Stalin protected Rakosi, and in return Rakosi allowed Soviet troops in Hungary. Even street signs in Hungary were written in Russian. Hungarians even had to pay for the Soviet troops to be there, even though they didn’t want them there. Stalin died in 1953, and Hungarians PAST EXAM QUESTIONS Describe the events in Hungary in 1956. (4) (Jan 2010) Describe the Soviet response to the Hungarian Uprising of 1956. (4) (June 2012) What was the Soviet response? At first, Khrushchev seemed to accept the reforms. But when Hungary said it would leave the Warsaw Pact, Khrushchev changed his mind and sent thousands of Soviet troops and tanks into Budapest. Hungarians fought back, leading to two weeks of fighting in which 3,000 Hungarians and 8,000 Russians were killed. Many Hungarians fled across the border into Austria to escape the Soviets. Imre Nagy and his fellow leaders were arrested and executed by the Soviets. Hungarian resistance was crushed. Western nations voiced their disapproval but, crucially, did nothing. Khrushchev put Janos Kadar in charge of Hungary, who had 35,000 antiCommunist activists arrested and 300 executed. So a puppet leader was back in charge What happened in 1956? With Stalin dead, a group in Hungary opposed Rakosi. When he appealed to the Soviet Union for help, Khrushchev refused and told Rakosi he had to resign. Rakosi was replaced with another puppet leader, Erns Gero, who was no better. 23rd Oct: Huge demonstrations in Budapest, and a statue of Stalin was pulled down by protestors. Khrushchev seemed to show that he was different to Stalin when he allowed Hungarians to set up a new government of their own under the popular Imre Nagy. Soviet troops began to withdraw from Hungary, and this seemed to be the beginning of the end of Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. Nagy’s new government began to make plans, and demanded the complete withdrawal of Soviet troops. Key Terminology for answering questions about the Hungarian Uprising Nikita Khrushchev Matyas Rakosi Puppet leader Secret speech Uprising Imre Nagy Warsaw Pact Refugees 2.Czechoslovakia 1968 The Prague Spring What was the background? Czechoslovakia had been liberated by the Soviets at the end of WW2. The Soviets had then put a hardline Communist government in charge in Czechoslovakia, and backed up that government with force when necessary. Czechoslovakia was a satellite Soviet state with a puppet government. Source A – An American cartoon published in 1968. The Russian soldier is saying ‘she might have What was the Soviet response? Soviets were not happy about the developments in Czechoslovakia. Also, the Soviets worried that these new ideas might spread to other satellite states. Communist leaders of other satellite countries feared that the Prague Spring might spread, so wanted Brezhnev to crush the developments in Czechoslovakia. Albania even resigned from the Warsaw Pact because it felt the Soviet Union was being too soft. Discussions between Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia seemed to have eased tensions, but on 20th August Soviets sent tanks into Czechoslovakia. Little resistance from Czechs. Dubcek removed as leader, and Czechoslovakia became an obedient satellite country again. Brezhnev announced the Brezhnev Doctrine which said that all satellite countries must: What happened in Czechoslovakia? Puppet leader was replaced by Alexander Dubcek, who said there should be no censorship and there should be freedom of speech. New Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was concerned, but Dubcek promised that Czechoslovakia would not withdraw from the Warsaw Pact or from COMECON. The Czech opposition was led by students and intellectuals who opposed Communism. The spring of 1968 became known as ‘The Prague Spring’, with anti-government ideas appearing everywhere because the people now had freedom of speech. Czech people even began to openly talk about creating a new, non-Communist Key Terminology for answering questions about Czechoslovakia 1968 Liberated Hardline government Puppet leader Satellite state Reform Leonid Brezhnev Prague Spring Warsaw Pact PAST EXAM QUESTIONS Explain why the Soviet Union was worried by developments in Czechoslovakia in 1968. (6) (Jan 2010) Study Source A (above) abou the Soviet crushing of the uprising in Prague. What is the message of this cartoon? (7) (Jan 2012) Explain why the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia in 1968. (6) (June 2012) What was the ‘Prague Spring’? (4) (Jan 2013) 3.Berlin 1961 The Berlin Wall What was the background? Berlin lay behind the iron curtain in East Germany, but was divided into capitalist West and communist East (see map). It was a constant worry for the Soviet Union that the people of East Berlin could see the relative wealth of capitalist West Berlin and would envy it. In the West, shops were full of goods, there was freedom and variety. The USA had built the West up with this intention. Many in East Berlin were escaping to the capitalist West. Even worse for the Communists was that it was the most highly educated, qualified and skilled people who were fleeing the east – this was known as the What was the reaction of the West? 27th October 1961: Soviets put tanks at Checkpoint Charlie to stop any Westerners visiting the East. US tanks arrived there too, leading to a tense 18-hour stand-off. Khrushchev ordered Ulbricht (leader of East Germany and East Berlin) to never allow tension to get so high again. Back in the USA, Kennedy said about the wall ‘It’s not a very nice solution, but a wall is a lot better than a war’. The wall stayed, and became a symbol of the division between Communist East and Capitalist West. Communists called it a protection wall, keeping the people of East Berlin safe from Western corruption. The West called it a prison wall, keeping Key Terminology for answering questions about the Berlin Wall (1961) Iron Curtain Division of Berlin Nikita Khrushchev Brain drain Protection wall Checkpoint Charlie What happened in 1961? Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev thought he could bully new US President John F Kennedy. He demanded that the USA withdraw from West Berlin. The USA refused. In response, overnight on 13th August 1961, East German soldiers were ordered to set up barbed wire along the East/West border in Berlin. Over the next few days this was turned into a concrete wall, stopping all travelling from east to west. The only way through from East to West Berlin was through the heavily guarded ‘Checkpoint Charlie’. The wall divided families and caused chaos to people’s lives. Border guards shot people who tried to Source A – An American cartoon about the Berlin Wall from 1962. The man in the picture is Khrushchev. PAST EXAM QUESTION Study Source A. What is the message of this cartoon? Explain your answer. (7) Key Question 1.4: Why did Soviet control in Eastern Europe collapse? This topic is usually on the exam. You need to know all about Solidarity and the role of Gorbachev as reasons for Soviet collapse. 1.Poland 1980-81 ‘Solidarity’ What did the Polish government give in to Solidarity at first? Nearly all workers in the most important industries and nearly all the skilled workers were in Solidarity, so if they went on strike it would bring Poland to a standstill. Many members of Solidarity were also in Communist Party, so government didn’t see Solidarity as a threat to them. Leader of Solidarity Lech Walesa talked in private with the Polish government to ensure there was no violence. Lech Walesa became a hero to millions and the government did not want to be seen to be on the opposite side to him. The Catholic Church, which was very powerful in Poland, supported Solidarity and the government did not want to go against them. The Polish and Soviet governments knew that Solidarity were getting a lot Why was ‘Solidarity’ so important? It showed that Polish people no longer trusted their Communist leaders. It showed the world that only force could keep the Communists in charge. It showed that Communists would do anything to hang onto power against the will of the people. It showed the world that Communism had failed to provide good living standards for ordinary people. It showed that it was possible for ordinary people to form an organisation (in this case, ‘Solidarity’) which could put the Communist What was the background? Lots of protests in Communist Poland in the past, but these were usually about food prices or wages. They had never before protested to get rid of the Communist government altogether. Workers in Poland knew how bad their living standards were compared to the west. July 1980: Polish government announced increase in price of meat. August 1980: Workers at the Gdansk shipyard, led by Lech Walesa, created a trade union called ‘Solidarity’. They made 21 demands of the government. The Polish government agreed to these demands, seeing the power of Solidarity. Oct 1980: Solidarity had membership of 7 million. Jan 1981: Solidarity had membership of 9.4 Why did the Polish government end up clamping down on Solidarity? The puppet leader of Poland resigned in Feb 1981 and was replaced by leader of Polish army, General Jaruzelski, who took a more aggressive approach towards Solidarity. At the same time, Solidarity said they were now fighting for the rights of all citizens in the satellite countries, not just in Poland. This made them more of a threat to Communism. Soviet leader Brezhnev now ordered the Polish government to clamp down. 10,000 Solidarity leaders including Lech Walesa were put in prison, and General Jaruzelski introduced martial law (which means the army taking charge of the country). Catholic priests who had supported Solidarity were beaten up or murdered. Solidarity was banned. Jaruzelski and Brezhnev said they were doing this because Solidarity were o Behaving like a political party (nonCommunist pol.parties were banned). Key Terminology for answering questions about the ‘Solidarity’) Solidarity Solidarnosc Lech Walesa Trade union Strike General Jaruzelski Brezhnev Martial law PAST EXAM QUESTIONS Explain why the ‘Solidarity’ movement was important. (8) (Jan 2012) Explain why the Polish government was unable to stop the ‘Solidarity’ Movement. (6) (Jan 2013) Why did the Polish government find it difficult to 2.The Role of Mikhail Gorbachev What did Gorbachev realise when he became leader? He was REALISTIC: He realised that the Soviet Union was in a bad state as a result of the arms race and the Afghanistan War. He realised the Soviet Union had to change itself if Communism was to survive. He realised that just using brute force was not a satisfactory way to keep Communism going. He was IDEALISTIC: He believed Communism should make ordinary people’s lives better. He believed Communism was right and hated its bad reputation around the world. He was OPTIMISTIC: He believed he could save Communism and make the people of Eastern Europe proud to live in Communist countries. What reforms did Gorbachev make? GLASNOST (meaning ‘openness’) This meant that he would allow free speech and open discussion. He believed this was the right way to run a Communist country, rather than by using brute force and fear to keep power. PERESTROIKA (meaning ‘restructuring’) This meant allowing people in Communist countries to make personal profit and for people to buy and sell things for profit. This made these countries less Communist and more like the west. LESS SPENDING ON THE MILITARY He reduced the number of people in the Red Army and cut down on the number of nuclear weapons being made. He also withdrew Soviet troops from Afghanistan and tried to build international trust rather than starting wars. THE SATELLITE COUNTRIES In March 1985, Gorbachev called a meeting of all Warsaw Pact countries and told them that the Soviet Union would no longer be backing them up with force. The puppet leaders were now Gorbachev became leader of the Soviet Union in 1985 and was the first to realise that Communism in Eastern Europe had to either change or be destroyed. He is regarded as a hero of history because, even though he was a Communist, he was honest enough to see that What was the impact of Gorbachev’s reforms? Puppet leaders now knew they didn’t have the backing of the Soviet Union as they had in the past. The rest of the world saw that the Soviet Union was ready to change. It marked the beginning of the end of Communism because, without fear of the Soviet Union, people wanted to overthrow their cruel Communist leaders. Gorbachev’s reforms brought the end of Communism, but he Dominoes – The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe May 1989: People in HUNGARY began dismantling the barbed wire fence between Hungary and Austria. June 1989: Free elections held in POLAND for the first time. ‘Solidarity’ wins nearly all the votes, and Lech Walesa becomes leader of Poland (first non-Communist leader in Eastern Europe) September 1989: EAST GERMANS start to travel through Hungary to escape into the west through Austria. October 1989: Gorbachev visits EAST GERMANY and there are anti-Communist protests in all East German cities. The East German leader orders the army to fire at the protestors, but the army refuses. Gorbachev also refuses to help support the East German communist leader (Erich Honecker). November 1989: Thousands people in EAST GERMANY march to the Berlin Wall, the guards throw down their weapons, and the ordinary people of East Germany pull down the Berlin Wall. Germans demand that East and West Germany be unified. This happens a year later. December 1989: A violent revolution in ROMANIA ends with the execution of Communist puppet leader Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife December 1989: Communist Party of HUNGARY announces there will be free elections. December 1989: People in BULGARIA protest against their Communist government. March 1990: Parts of SOVIET UNION such as Lithuania and Latvia begin to demand their independence. August 1991: Hardline Communists in the SOVIET UNION take Gorbachev prisoner and say they are now in control of the country. But they have to give in and release him when they realise no one else is on their side. International Relations 1948-2005 Key Topic 1: Soviet Control of Eastern Europe (1948-89) - Timeline 1945 End of First World War and the end of the ‘Grand Alliance’ between the USA and Communist Russia. 1947 COMINFORM set up by Stalin to co-ordinate the actions of all European Communist Parties. 1949 COMECON set up by Stalin to control the industries and trade of the Communist Satellite states. 1953 Death of Stalin. 1955 Creation of Warsaw Pact. 1956 Khrushchev’s ‘secret speech’ criticising Stalin. 1956 Hungarian Uprising 1961 Building of Berlin Wall. 1968 The Prague Spring (uprising in Czechoslovakia) 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. War is disastrous and expensive, lasts until 1988 and is the beginning of the end for Communism in Europe. 1981 Solidarity in Poland rises to 9.4 million members, makes demands, and is crushed by Polish government with Soviet backing. 1985 Gorbachev becomes leader of Soviet Union. 1989 Collapse of Communist governments throughout Eastern Europe and fall of the Berlin Wall. 1991 End of the Soviet Union as it breaks up into independent countries (Russia, Ukraine, etc) International Relations 1948-2005 13.TERRORISM TITLE PAGE Key Topic 2: Terrorism since 1969 1.Why is it difficult to define terrorism? 2.What are the basic origins, beliefs and aims of the IRA, PLO and Al-Qaeda? 3.Who were the key people within these groups and what did they do? 4.Why did each of these groups resort to terrorism? 5.What are the strengths of each of these groups? 6.What methods did each of these groups use? 7.How did governments respond to each of these groups? 8.How successful was each of these groups? Case Study 1: The IRA Anger about Northern Ireland being part of Britain. Anger at the presence of the British army in Northern Ireland. Anger at the way nationalists were treated. The IRA had a political party attached to it called Sinn Fein. Its leaders were Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness. The intention of Sinn Fein was to negotiate with the British government on behalf of the IRA. THE BASICS The IRA are also known as the ‘Provisional IRA’ or ‘the Provos’. They want Britain out of Northern Ireland. They come from the nationalist, Catholic minority in Northern Ireland. Nationalists are also known as republicans. (1) To defend nationalist communities. (2) To get British troops out of Northern Ireland. (3) To end discrimination against nationalists. (4) To get a united Ireland. The nationalist communities in Northern Ireland were a lot poorer than the unionist communities. Nationalists were made to feel like second class citizens in Northern Ireland. The IRA believed that the British had no right to be in Northern Ireland. They saw the British army as a foreign force who were discriminating against nationalists in Northern Ireland. In the Great Famine of the 1840s, millions of Irish people died of starvation while the British did nothing, and in 1972 peaceful unarmed nationalist demonstrators were shot by British troops. This became known as ‘Bloody Sunday’. Northern Ireland was supposed to part of a democratic country (the UK) but the nationalists believed they were being discriminated against and the only way to get the British Why government did the IRA use terrorism to listen to them would be violence. The British army and police were highly developed and rather than negotiation? Ireland became an independent country in 1916, but six counties in the north, where the majority of people were unionists, remained part of the United Kingdom. This was called Northern Ireland. The nationalists who lived there did not want to be part of Britain. They were fighting against an external foreign enemy Nationalists were republicans. This means they wanted Case Study 1: The IRA Why was the IRA such a problem for the British government? Irish nationalism had a strong culture with lots of murals and songs about the struggle against the British occupiers. The media in Ireland and Britain gave a lot of attention to the IRA. For example, hunger strikers like Bobby Sands were well known because newspapers and TV carried so much coverage of them. This meant the IRA’s struggle was in the forefront of people’s minds. The IRA had strong control over the nationalist areas of Northern Ireland. Most nationalists would support the IRA and do what the IRA told them. The government of Libya supported the IRA with money. There were also many people in the USA of Irish descent who sent money to help the IRA in their struggle against the British army/police. At first, these were mainly aimed at soldiers and police in Northern Ireland. They were then used against unionist civilians in Northern Ireland, and after 1973 they were used against targets in mainland Britain, including civilian targets (e.g. Manchester and Warrington bombs). An example of this was the Brighton Bombing in 1984 where 5 people were killed and 34 injured by an IRA bomb in the hotel where the British government were staying in Brighton. This gave security forces the right to arrest and aggressively interrogate anyone they liked. This caused resentment as it was only ever used against nationalists. It actually convinced more people to join the IRA. British governments responded to the IRA by increasing the number of British forces in Northern Ireland, and by using the SAS. The British government used informers and technology to try to foil the IRA and stop them before they carried out their attacks. For example, six unarmed SUSPECTED IRA terrorists were shot by the British government in 1988 in Gibraltar because it was BELIEVED they were planning an attack. In the 1980s, Thatcher’s government said that Sinn Fein / IRA should not be allowed a voice in the British media, and banned Gerry Adams from speaking on British television. Was the IRA In 1972, there was a brief attempt to talk with the IRA by British politician William Whitelaw, but it failed. In the 1990s, Sinn Fein/IRA began to focus on negotiation, realising there was a stalemate and terrorist tactics were not getting them anywhere. In 1998, successful in achieving its aims? Case Study 2: The PLO After WW2, the Jews declared A new Jewish state in the Middle-East – they called it Israel. This was on land which where Palestinians lived, and many now had to flee the area and live in refugee camps. THE BASICS The PLO is the name for the ‘Palestinian Liberation Organisations’. They were formed in anger at the creation of Israel and the treatment of Palestinians who had lived in the area before. A more extreme group of Palestinian terrorists called Hamas has grown out of the PLO. They have used terrorist attacks on the state of Israel. In recent years, compromise has been reached where To create a Palestinian State for Palestinian Arabs. To bring an end to the state of Israel and get the land back for Palestinians to live in. Yasser Arafat spent his life campaigning for the Palestinian cause. He once sent a letter to the Egyptian leader written in his own blood which said ‘don’t forget Palestine’. He created the Fatah Movement and took control of the Intifada in 1967, before becoming overall leader As you can see in the maps on the right, in 1946 there was very little Jewish land in Palestine but Israel has increased in size. This has led to Palestinians having to flee and led to the PLO being set up to fight back. Most people who joined the PLO were from very poor Palestinian refugee camps, and they blamed the Israelis for their poverty of their families. Palestinians believed that the Israelis had stolen ‘their’ land after World War Two. Events such as the massacre of Palestinians by Israeli forces in 1982 convinced many more Palestinians to join the cause of the PLO. The Israeli army is one of the strongest and most advanced in the world. There is no way that the PLO could take on the Israeli army in conventional warfare, so they have resorted to terrorist tactics. The Palestinians were fighting to establish their own homeland in Israel, so they were nationalists fighting for their Why did the PLO use terrorism rather than negotiation? The Intifada (1987) Case Study 2: The PLO Why was the PLO such a problem for the Israeli government? Young Palestinians have learnt and been taught how Israel treated their people in 1948. The takeover of land by Israel is still very fresh in the mind and the vast majority of Palestinians would support the cause of the PLO. First Jordan and then Lebanon (see map) have allowed the PLO to base themselves there. One of the problems the PLO has is not having a country to base their attacks from. The support of these other countries in the region has given them secure bases from which to attack Israel. Yasser Arafat was a clever and charismatic leader. He managed to unite Was the PLO successful in achieving its aims? This long distance rocket fire enabled the PLO to attack Israel from over the border in Jordan or Lebanon. This removed the problem of having to get terrorists into Israel undetected. During the 1970s there were several plane hijackings by the PLO (usually flights with a lot of Israeli passengers). They would demand the release of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the safe return of the hostages. The PLO kidnapped 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in Germany in 1972. When German forces tried to rescue them, the hostages were murdered by the PLO. This caused shock around the world. This was a large-scale uprising in the Gaza Strip and West Bank (see map) in 1987 against the Israelis. The harsh Israeli response convinced even more people to join the PLO. The Israeli government generally has tried to get tough with the PLO. This has included targeted assassinations such as the assassination of PLO commander Abi Jihad in 1998. More recently these assassinations have been carried out by missiles or aircraft, which has meant that innocent Palestinian citizens have been killed too. This has caused fury among Palestinians and around the world, though the Israelis accuse the PLO of putting terrorists in amongst the general Palestinian population so that the Israelis cannot avoid accidentally killing civilians as well. The Intifada was an uprising in the Gaza Strip and West Bank (see map) against the Israelis in 1987. In response, the Israelis placed curfews on Palestinians and shut down all Palestinian schools saying it was radicalising young Palestinians. This actually led to more worldwide sympathy for the Palestinians and made the PLO look like the victims. Yasser Arafat tried to take advantage of this to create a Palestinian state, but in return he had to, for the first time, accept that Israel had a right to exist. After the creation of Hamas, new Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin did a deal with the PLO in order to weaken Hamas. After secret talks in Norway in 1993, Yasser Arafat (PLO leader) and Yitzhak Rabin (Israeli leader) announced that: (a) A Palestinian authority would be set up to control daily life in Case Study 3: Al-Qaeda Muslim tribal leaders, known as the Mujahideen, fought against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. The Mujahideen were funded by the USA (who wanted to stop Communism) and Saudi Arabia (who wanted to defend the Muslim country Afghanistan). Bin Laden was Bin Laden was the very rich son of a billionaire Saudi. He came to fight in Afghanistan with the Mujahideen in 1979. It was there that he fell under the influence of extremist preacher Abdullah Azzam, who taught him that Islam was under threat and that all Muslims must join together in ‘Jihad’ (Holy War) to defend their religion. This led to the creation of Al-Qaeda. When Saddam Hussein threatened Saudi Arabia in 1990, Bin Laden offered his help, but was rejected by the Saudis who instead got American help. This made Bin Laden furious. He set up his terrorist group in THE BASICS Al-Qaeda is a terrorist network with ‘terror cells’ around the world (see map). Their leader was Bin Laden. They wanted an end to US involvement in the Muslim world. They used terrorist tactics which shocked the world such as suicide bombings. Their most famous atrocity was the 9/11 attack. Destuction of US influence in the Muslim world and removal of US-friendly Muslim governments. The destruction of Israel altogether. All Muslims to join together in ‘Jihad’ (meaning ‘Holy War’) against the West. For every Muslim country to follow extreme and strict version of Islam. The red areas on the world map above are the areas where the US believe there are Al-Qaeda terror cells (this means organised groups of terrorists who are ready to launch terrorist attacks). This wide spread of terror cells makes it very difficult for the US to defeat Al-Qaeda, and makes them a worldwide danger. Why does Al-Qaeda exist? Anger that the oil in Muslim countries such as Kuwait, which should have made ordinary Muslims rich, was in fact making Americans rich. The belief that the USA had no business being in Muslim parts of the world in the first place. The presence of US troops led to more recruits for Al-Qaeda. Frustration and anger at westernisation of Muslim world (e.g. secular law courts and women at university). Felt that their way of life was being destroyed. Despite massive wealth, Al-Qaeda was no match for the richest and most powerful nation on earth (the USA), so had to resort to One of the main aims of Al-Qaeda is to follow that all Muslim countries follow an extreme version of Islam. Al-Qaeda terrorists often refer to the USA as ‘the Great Satan’. They believe that the capitalist, money-driven world of the west is evil and hate when it spreads into the Muslim parts of the world. They believe countries should be run strictly according to their version of Islam, and do not accept any compromise. Because of the above, AlQaeda terrorists have come to see anyone from an enemy country as a legitimate target, as we can see in the indiscriminate 9/11 attacks. Al- Why is AlQaeda so difficult to deal with? Case Study 3: Al-Qaeda Bin Laden was a clever and charismatic leader who had proved himself as a fighter and was generous to his followers. His deputy Ayman Al-Zawahiri was also widely respected in Al-Qaeda. It is difficult to combat Al Qaeda because they do not have a specific country. They are split up into many different countries (see map). Also, many people are inspired by Al-Qaeda but not formally linked to them. So individuals carry out random acts of terrorism, inspired by Al Qaeda. An example is Ramzi Yousef who attacked the World Trade Center with a truck bomb in 1993, killing six people. He said he was inspired by Bin Laden, but had no links to Al-Qaeda. Bin Laden himself brought massive personal wealth to support Al-Qaeda. They also have generous financial support from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and used to get lots of money from the Afghan drug trade. Followers of Al-Qaeda are extremely committed to their cause. They were How also able to successful train in Afghanistan under the protection of the Taliban. The USA, has the war on terror been? It was easy for Al-Qaeda to attack US embassies around the world as they were not wellguarded. US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were attacked with truck bombs in 1998, killing over 200 people in total. Suicide bombers drove a boat packed with explosives into the side of a US warship called USS Cole in October 2000, killing seventeen US soldiers. The fact that AlQaeda’s terrorists are prepared or even keen to die for their cause makes them even more dangerous. Al-Qaeda stunned the world by flying two planes into the World Trade Center and one into the Pentagon (a fourth plane was brought down). Almost 3,000 people died, almost all civilians. The event was celebrated by Al-Qaeda, with Bin Laden issuing a video of himself praising the attackers. After 9/11, George W Bush demanded that the Taliban hand over Bin Laden. When they refused, the US (with the help of Britain) invaded Afghanistan. The Taliban were no match for the Americans, but there was still no sign of Bin Laden. Bush declared a ‘war on terror’. Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and the Taliban were completely defeated and Afghanistan got a new government. The terrorist training camps in Afghanistan were destroyed. Most of Al-Qaeda’s weapons were destroyed or captured and the group lost most of its communication equipment. Countries were sympathetic to the USA after 9/11 so they had a lot of support. The war on terror allowed other countries to clamp down on terrorists in their own countries. Security at airports became much tighter, making it much harder to hijack planes. USA was able to send experts, equipment and training to help countries fight terrorism. US held suspected terrorists for years and even used torture to get information (they were criticised around the world for this). There have been no further attacks in the USA since 9/11. Afghanistan has been a nightmare to control as Taliban and AlQaeda continue to attack US forces. USA failed to win the support of Afghan people, who resented the US presence there. Heroin production in Afghanistan increased. The USA’s actions increased the worldwide support Terrorism - Key Moments & Events You could be asked a question on: - The reasons why they resorted to terrorism - Their strengths - Their methods - The government response - Whether they were successful or not Whichever one you’re writing about, you should try to fit some of the key moments & events on this page into your answer. During a peaceful civil rights march by nationalists in Derry in Northern Ireland, protestors began to clash with police. Stones were thrown at the police, and the police opened fire into the crowd. Nine unarmed nationalist protestors were killed. This caused shock around the world and became known as ‘Bloody Sunday’. It led to an increase in the number of people joining or at least supporting the IRA, and increased resentment towards the police and the British in general. Bobby Sands was a member of the IRA. He went on hunger strike in the Maze prison. He was protesting because he believed that IRA prisoners were ‘political prisoners’ and should be treated better than common criminals, but the British government disagreed. Bobby Sands was also an elected MP for Sinn Fein. Sands’s hunger strike received massive publicity, and he eventually died in prison. His coffin was carried by IRA terrorists, and there are many songs and murals about him. The Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher (1979-1991) had adopted a ‘zero-tolerance’ policy towards the IRA, and refused to give any ground. The IRA grew angry and frustrated at this. The Conservative Party Conference in 1984 was in Brighton, which meant that all the government and their families would be staying in a hotel on the Brighton seafront. IRA man Patrick Magee put a bomb in the hotel, which exploded killing four people, but no members of the government. Even so, the bomb shocked the country. Thatcher survived narrowly, but the IRA sent a chilling warning saying ‘today you were lucky, but remember, we only have to be lucky once’. Five years earlier, the IRA assassinated Lord Mountbatten, a member of the royal family. The British Labour government (under Tony Blair) negotiated with Sinn Fein/IRA and both signed the Good Friday Agreement. The British government had to agree to respect the civil rights of the nationalist community, and some of the power of running Northern Ireland was ‘devolved’ (this means that Northern Ireland was run partly from London, and partly from Belfast). In return the IRA agreed to a ceasefire (an end to terrorist attacks). American President Bill Clinton also played a big part in the agreement. It caused controversy on both sides in Northern Ireland, but it was ultimately successful and pretty much brought about an end to the era of IRA terrorism. Whichever theme the question focuses on, to get the highest marks, you will need to show off your KNOWLEDGE of these SPECIFIC EVENTS. For example… Terrorism - Key Moments & Events After the Second World War (and the Holocaust), Jews known as Zionists declared a new country called Israel. This was on land that had previously been occupied by Palestinian Arabs, leading to many Arabs ending up in refugee camps. The new country of Israel was immediately accepted and recognised in the west, but it caused a great deal of resentment in Arab countries. Since 1947, Israel has grown inside and the Palestinian Arab areas have shrunk. Communist Russia invaded Afghanistan in 1979 and the war continued throughout the 1980s. Thousands of Muslims from around the world came to fight for Afghanistan. They became known as the Mujahidin. One of these was Bin Laden. Because they were fighting against Communist Russia, the Mujahidin were given money and weapons by the USA. These weapons would later be turned against the USA. In 1993, Ramzi Yousef attacked the World Trade Center in New York with a truck bomb, killing six people. Far more famously, on 11th September 2001, four planes were hijacked by members of Al Qaeda. One plane was brought down, one was flown into the Penatgon, and the other two were flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, live on television, killing almost 3,000. Eleven Israeli athletes were kidnapped by a PLO group called Black September. During an attempted rescue by German security forces, the terrorists murdered the athletes, causing shock around the world. This did not when the PLO any support, but it overshadowed the whole Olympics and brought the world’s attention to what was happening in Palestine and Israel, which would have been the terrorists’ intention. The Intifada was a large-scale uprising by the Palestinian Arabs against the Israelis. It was lead and organised by Yasser Arafat, but it mainly involved spontaneous uprising by ordinary Palestinians. The Israelis responded very harshly to the Intifada, bringing in curfews and closing down Palestinian schools, claiming that they were creating terrorists in schools Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1991 and threatened to attack Saudi Arabia (the holiest place in Islam). Bin Laden offered his Mujahidin to help protect Saudi Arabia, but they rejected his help and instead accepted the help of the USA. This was an insult to Bin laden who was furious that the USA now had soldiers on the most holy Muslim land. This was the turning point as Bin Laden’s Mujahidin from this point began to become what we know as Al-Qaeda. Al Qaeda has carried out several more attacks since 9/11, including suicide bombings in London in 2005 which killed 52 people, and also in the island of Bali killing 202 people in 2002. The USA, meanwhile, has invaded Aghanistan and removed the Taliban who had been sheltering Bin Laden. Bin laden himself has been assassinated. The USA has also invaded Iraq. President George Bush said this was all part of a ‘war on terror’. After the snub by Saudi Arabia, Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda grew in strength and carried out several attacks, usually on American targets, around the world. For example, they bombed the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing 200 people in the process. Embassies were a ‘soft target’ 22.SUMMARY OF TERRORIST GROUPS (LANDSCAPE) International Relations 1948-2005 Key Topic 3: The Iraq War 2003 1.What was the background to the conflict in Iraq? 2.Why did the USA invade Iraq in 2003? 3.Why was there so much worldwide opposition to the Iraq War? 4.What were the key features of the Iraq War of 2003? 5.What was the Iraqi insurgency and what was its impact? 6.Why did the invasion of Iraq go so badly wrong? 7.How successful was the handover to transitional government? 8.What were the consequeunces of the war in Iraq? Key Question 3.1: What was the background to the conflict in Iraq? 1.British Influence (1918-) British took over the area in 1918. Created a country which was mixture of Shi’a, Sunni and Kurds. Iraq gained independence in 1932. British retained an interest in Iraq because of discovery of vast oil reserves there. 3.The Iran/Iraq War (1980-1988) 1979: Islamic (Shi’a) revolution in Iran. Saddam worried it would spread to Iraq. USA also worried about the Islamic revolution in Iran spreading. USA sent weapons to Saddam, which he used against Iran. Included chemical weapons, which he used to kill 100,000 Iranians. ¼ million Iraqis died in the world. Iraq went into $80 billion of debt. 5.The Situation in 1991 Saddam had survived in power. US army had left Iraq. United Nations put strict terms on Saddam: o UN Resolution 678 demanded that all Saddam’s WMDs be destroyed, and that he had to let a UN inspection team check this was happening. o UN Resolution 688 demanded that Saddam stop attacking his 6.Saddam remained a problem because He obstructed UN weapons inspectors. He criticised the USA frequently. He built up good relations with France, Russia and China, so they would vote against any United Nations invasion of Iraq. He treated his people terribly. Malnutrition, disease and infant mortality were high in Iraq, but Saddam and his family lived in luxury. He played the different groups in Iraq off against each other. He gave his close family and friends all of the top important jobs in Iraq. He used bribery and threats. He had many opponents murdered. 2.Rise of the Ba’ath Party 1958: Iraqi monarchy overthrown. 1968: Ba’ath Party take control of Iraq Rise of Saddam Hussein 1979: Became leader of Ba’ath Party and leader of Iraq. Came from poor, Sunni Muslim background. Hard-working and charming. Ruthless with his enemies. 500 members of his own party executed within a year of taking over. Wanted to be leading figure in the 4.The First Gulf War (1991) Saddam’s Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1991 because: o Iraq was in billions of $ of debt and wanted to take control of Kuwait’s vast oil wealth. o Saddam wanted to show he was still a major player in the Arab world. o Saddam wanted to teach Kuwait a lesson. o Saddam wanted to show the strength of Iraq’s weapons. US President George Bush Snr led attack on Iraqi forces and removed Saddam’s troops from Kuwait with ease. US killed thousands of Iraqis and the war lasted just a few months. Bush initially intended to get rid of Saddam, but stopped short of this, hoping that Saddam’s Shi’a and Kurdish enemies would get rid of him themselves. The Shi’a and Kurds did rise up, but ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - Why the USA supported Saddam Hussein in the Iran/Iraq War. Why the USA attacked Iraq in 1991. What rules were imposed on Saddam after the 1991 war. How Saddam Hussein kept power. How Saddam Hussein treated his own people. Why Saddam Hussein was a problem for the USA Key Question 3.2: Why did the USA invade Iraq in 2003? 1.George Bush Jnr Became President in 2001. Brash and headstrong. Prepared to act unilaterally, and not too bothered what the rest of the non-American world thought about it. Believed if something was right for the USA, it was automatically right. Controversially called Iraq, Iran and North Korea ‘the axis of evil’. Particular dislike and distrust of 3.Support from UK British PM Tony Blair was a strong ally and supporter of the USA. Blair wanted Britain to be the USA’s closest and most loyal supporter. Provided British military and diplomatic support for US invasion of Iraq. US had plenty of other allies too such as Spain, Italy and Australia, Poland and Denmark, but UK was the 5.Saddam Hussein’s Behaviour Saddam kept disobeying the United Nations. Broke the rules imposed on him. Kicked weapons inspectors out of the country. Now, no one knew if Saddam had WMDs or not. In truth, he had no WMDs, but he wanted people to think that he MIGHT 2.The Neo-Conservatives A group in the USA led by Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney believed that the only way to deal with Iraq was ‘regime change’ (getting rid of Saddam). Wanted to invade Iraq, remove Saddam, take control of the country, and then set up a democratic gov’t. Many of the neo-conservatives owned oil companies, and knew that Saddam was a threat to their wealth. 4.Failure of Iraqi people to get rid of Saddam Saddam had lots of enemies in Iraq. In 1998 alone, the USA gave $100 million to Saddam’s enemies to help them get rid of him, but they had failed. By 2001, the Iraqi economy was stronger than ever and everyday life was getting better for Iraqis. Saddam was now stronger than ever, and there was no sign of Iraqi people 6.The 9/11 Attacks Attacks shocked USA and convinced most Americans of the need for a response. US attacked Taliban in Afghanistan who were sheltering Bin Laden. Suspicion in the USA that Saddam had been involved in 9/11, despite there being no evidence for this. Quick victory over Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, so the USA turned its ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - Reasons why the USA invade Iraq in 2003. The personality of George Bush Jnr. The role of the neoconservatives. The attitude of Tony Blair and the UK The strengthening of Saddam’s position by 2001. Saddam’s behaviour over WMDs. Key Question 3.3: Why was there so much worldwide opposition to the Iraq War? 1.Anger in the Muslim world Many Muslims believed Iraq was only been attacked because it was a Muslim country. Many also believed that the USA was only invading Iraq so it could control Iraq’s massive oil reserves. 3.Absence of WMDs Weapons inspectors returned to Iraq in November 2002. Head of weapons inspectors Hans Blix said there were no WMDs in Iraq and no nuclear weapons. The Americans found Iraqi informers who told them there WERE WMDs in Iraq. Blair told the British people that he had clear evidence that Saddam had WMDs. It has since been proved that there were NO WMDs in Iraq at all. The only debate now is whether Bush and Blair knew this and were telling lies, or whether they were genuinely mistaken. The BBC famously said that the reports of WMDs in Iraq had been ‘sexed up’ by the British government to make an invasion more justifiable. Despite the lack of evidence of WMDs, Bush and Blair went ahead with the 2.The War was illegal For an invasion to be LEGAL, the United Nations have to vote in favour of it. 2002: The UN passed a resolution saying Saddam should face ‘serious consequences’ if he didn’t let weapons inspectors into Iraq, but didn’t say what ‘serious consequences’ meant. Bush and Blair believed that ‘serious consequences’ meant war. Many other countries (Russia, China and France among them) criticised Bush and Blair and said that the UN had to pass a SECOND RESOLUTION before any invasion could happen. Bush and Blair ignored the UN, realising they would never get legal permission to invade Iraq. 4.Opposition in the USA and UK Many British MPs were Against the war because of its illegality. Some important members of Blair’s government resigned (Claire Short, Robin Cook) because they believed the invasion of Iraq was bad and illegal. In the USA, many politicians expressed doubts about the invasion. Well over a million people in Britain joined the ‘stop the war’ protest in London in February 2003. ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - Reasons why there was opposition to the invasion. Reasons for Muslim anger. The illegal nature of the invasion. The issue of WMDs The protests around the world, and in London in particular. Key Question 3.4: What were the key features of the Iraq War of 2003? 1.Key Facts about the war 17th March 2003: Bush gave Saddam two days to leave Iraq. He didn’t. ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’ began with a failed attempt to kill Saddam with a bomb. Next came a huge air attack on Iraqi military targets. 130,000 US troops and 30,000 from other coalition countries entered Iraq. US-led coalition defeated the Iraqis easily because: o They had advanced aircraft and the Iraqis had no airforce. o The Iraqis had no anti-aircraft missiles. o The Americans used the latest technology to locate their targets and carry out accurate attacks. The immediate casualties were: o 10,000 Iraqi armed forces. o 6,000 Iraqi civilians o 140 American armed forces Saddam fled into hiding but was 2.Immediate Consequences of the war Mass looting – very poor people took an opportunity to steal anything of value from hospitals, museums, schools, universities, factories and even homes. There was no government and no police force to stop this. Electricity supplies collapsed and dayto-day life became impossible for millions in Iraq. Thousands of Iraqis fled across the border into Iraq. Rivalries and arguments – Groups within Iraq who were previously kept down by Saddam’s iron fist now began to emerge again. Iraq descended into chaos as the different groups 3.Response of Iraqi people Most Iraqis were not sad to see the back of Saddam Hussein. However: Millions of Iraqis now lived in chaotic conditions with no law and order. Most resented the presence of Americans, and many thought that the Americans were to blame for the problems. Most were angry at the looting and lawlessness. Many Iraqis were afraid, and so they armed themselves and looked for groups who would protect them. This led to undesirable groups becoming powerful in Iraq, and led to ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - The key points about the war. The consequences of the war. The reaction of ordinary Iraqi people to the war. Key Question 3.5: What was the Iraqi insurgency and what was its impact? 1.The Power Vacuum With Saddam gone, Iraqis turned to various different groups for their security. Many turned to ancient sources of authority such as family, tribe or local community. But many more turned to local warlords (little more than gangsters). o To add to this problem, Iraq was now full of weapons so it was easy for local warlords to get hold of lots of weapons and intimidate local communities. Many Shi’a Iraqis turned to popular Shi’a leader Muqtada al-Sadr. He helped to distribute food to desperate Iraqis and brought them some security. o But he also set up a militia to rule over East Baghdad, which became known as Sadr City. He went on to control much of Shi’a Iraq (the south) and was regarded as a major threat to the Americans. There were lots of Sunnis who were exIraqi soldiers, and they were joined in Iraq by leading members of Al-Qaeda, who entered the country knowing that it was moving towards all out war between a Muslim country (Iraq) and the Americans, something Al Qaeda desperately wanted. o This meant that there were now lots of well-trained Iraqi soldiers waiting to be led, and lots of ideological Al-Qaeda extremists ready to lead them. The leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) was Al5.Impact of insurgency on Iraqi people Average of 16 civilian deaths per DAY from suicide bombers in 2006. Average salary, life expectancy and access to clean water all dropped massively. Child mortality and maternal mortality rate increased dramatically. Complete breakdown in law and order. Prisons opened and criminals escaped. New police force unable to cope. No border controls, so free access for terrorists with weapons. Lots of kidnapping for profit. 60% of country unemployed. Insurgents attacked oil pipes, gas depots and power stations to stop the ‘American Iraq’ from working. 5 million Iraqis displaced by violence. 2.Groups within the insurgency Left-over members of Saddam’s government, who were trained in warfare and hoped for a return to power once the Americans left. Sunni Muslims, who had dominated Iraq under Saddam and feared losing their power to the Shi’a and the Kurds. Many of these Sunnis were leaning towards AlQaeda and Mohammad Al-Zarqawi (leader of AQI) Left-over members of the Iraqi Army who now had no army to fight for. They took their weapons, went back to their local communities, and ruled them through violence and terror. Al-Qaeda, whose presence was growing in Iraq. They found it easy to get in and out of Iraq, and to get weapons in, because there was no border control. They were getting closer to the all-out war between Islam and the West that they craved. Shi’a Muslims in the south, led by Muqtada al-Sadr, who wanted the USA out of Muslim lands. They received training and weapons from Islamic Iran (a long3.Insurgents’ methods Roadside bomb attacks Sniper attacks Suicide bombers. Kidnapping and executions. 4.Reasons for insurgents’ success Good knowledge of the territory. Most were well-trained military men from the old Iraqi Army. Local people were sympathetic to them and would protect and shelter them. ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - Why there was an insurgency. Who the different insurgent groups were. The growth of Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) The role of Muqtada-al-Sadr The methods used by insurgents. Reasons why the insurgents were successful. How the Iraqi insurgency affected the people of Iraq. Key Question 3.6: Why did the invasion of Iraq go so wrong? 1.Not enough troops Only 130,000 US troops and 30,000 British troops were sent. It would have needed at least twice as many to control Iraq. 2.Bad planning The US military planned how to invade Iraq and get rid of Saddam, but didn’t really plan out what would happen afterwards. When they first took over Iraq, the US set up the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) but it had no offices, no telephones 3.Underestimating the damage done to Iraq The US had underestimated the chaos in Iraq after the war. Years of wars and sanctions had done massive damage to Iraq. Railways, roads and other facilities had been destroyed in the war. Computer networks and important data had been lost or looted during the 4.Mistakes and Assumptions USA assumed there would be a complete surrender by the Iraqis. What actually happened was Iraqi soldiers left the army, but took their weapons and went back in amongst the population. USA also assumed they would be greeted as heroic liberators. What actually happened was most Iraqis were glad to be rid of Saddam, but saw the Americans as invaders and enemies. Bush and Blair continued to say the invasion would ‘free the Iraqi people’, but 5.Wrong People and Wrong Tactics Paul Bremer was head of the CPA, and had no experience of the Middle East. He made two major mistakes: Firstly, he banned anyone who had been a member of Saddam’s Ba’ath Party from holding any position in public services. This was a mistake because, under Saddam, you had to join the Ba’ath Party to even get a job, so the Americans were in fact ruling a lot of the most able people out of the most important jobs. Secondly, he got rid of the Iraqi army and security services altogether. This put 300,000 armed and trained men out of work and made them angry and resentful. 6.The Green Zone The USA based themselves in a secure area of Baghdad called ‘The Green Zone’. It was cut off from what was really happening in Iraq. The only Iraqis they consulted were those returning to the country who had been kicked out by Saddam. 75% contracts for rebuilding Iraq were given to American companies, and only 2% to Iraqi companies. This angered the people of Iraq as it seemed like Americans were getting rich from the destruction they had caused in Iraq. Bremer began drafting a new constitution for Iraq, but this caused more anger. The top Shi’a in Iraq, Ayatollah Al-Sistani, said that it was not acceptable for foreigners to decide the constitution of Iraq. Bremer had to reluctantly agree. July 2003: Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) was set up to voice Iraqi view and to work on the new Iraqi constitution. 7.The Battle for the Hearts and Minds of Iraqis Americans were seen by most Iraqis as occupiers and invaders. 10,000 Iraqis were held without trial in USrun detention camps, which to the Iraqis seemed no different to what used to happen under Saddam. A scandal at the American-run Abu Ghraib prison camp in Baghdad did further damage to the American reputation. Photographs were found showing American soldiers torturing and abusing Iraqi prisoners (who had not been found guilty of anything). Mistakes and scandals such as these only ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - The mistakes made by the Americans and their allies in planning the war. The wrong assumptions made. The attitude of Iraqis to the Americans. The mistakes made in the aftermath of the war. The role of Paul Bremer The problems over the new Iraqi constitution The problems with the ‘Green Zone’ Key Question 3.7: How successful was the handover to transitional government? 1.The Transition Ayad Allawi was appointed (not elected) Prime Ministerin June 2004, and made security and an end to the insurgency his top priority. He targeted armed groups but ignored low-level violence such as violence, kidnapping and general crime. This made him unpopular with Iraqis, especially as they hadn’t voted for him. January 2005: First Iraqi elections. Only 58% of country voted. Sunnis boycotted the vote altogether. Shi’a politician Ibrahim al-Jafari became Prime Minister, largely because no Sunnis 2.Unresolved issues Disagreement over the new constitution: o Many Shi’as and some Sunnis wanted the new law to be based on Islam. o Educated Iraqi women feared this as it would probably lead to their freedom being restricted. o The Kurds wanted Iraq to split up into three secular states rather than a single country. Ministers in the new government – Kurds, Sunnis and Shi’as, saw this as an opportunity to dominate their historical rivals. This led to a fierce power struggle. Ordinary Iraqis still saw the new government as an American one, so didn’t respect it. Food shortages and water shortages continued. The new government, even with American help, could not stop the insurgency, and civilian casualties increased even more. ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - - The role of Ayad Allawi. The attitude of Iraqis towards the transitional government. The results of the first Iraqi elections. Disagreements over the new constitution. The power struggle in Iraq. Problems faced by Key Question 3.8: What were the consequences of the war in Iraq? 1.International Consequences Iraq War caused deep divisions in UK and US governments, including many resignations. The war damaged relations between the USA and many European countries, especially France and Russia who strongly disapproved of the invasion. The war also increased support for extremist Islamic groups around the world, and led directly to the creation of Islamic State. The war also made the USA and the UK particular targets for terrorists (such as the 7/7/2005 attack on London). The Iraqi insurgency showed that a determined terrorist movement could not be dealt with just by America’s military power. The war is internationally regarded by most people as a badly handled mistake, 2.The Wider Signficance The biggest impact of the war was obviously in Iraq – deaths, injuries, homelessness, chaos and fear. The Iraq War seems to be having a wider significance, with both sides fighting for a bigger prize than just the future of Iraq: o The US saw it as a wider war against Islamic extremists and terrorists after 9/11, and an opportunity to show the world that America would not be scared or pushed around. o The insurgents saw it as a wider war against the US and its allies, and a defence of the whole Middle East and a defence of Islam, rather than just a defence of Iraq itself (remember, the country of ARE YOU ABLE TO DESCRIBE & EXPLAIN: - - - The damage done to USA and UK’s reputation by the Iraq War. The increased danger to the USA and the UK as a result of the Iraq War. International opinion on the Iraq War. The impact of the war on Iraqis. The ‘wider fight’, as International Relations 1948-2005 Key Topic 3: The Iraq War - Timeline 1918 Britain takes over the area and calls it ‘Iraq’ with a mixture of Kurds, Shi’as and Sunni Muslims. 1932 Iraq becomes independent, but still with most oil controlled by British companies. 1958 The Iraqi monarchy is overthrown. 1968 The Ba’ath Party take control of Iraq. 1979 Saddam Hussein becomes leader of the Ba’ath Party and dictator of Iraq. 1980 Saddam’s Iraq goes to war (supported by the USA) with the Islamic Republic of Iran. The war is long, bloody and very costly. 1991 Saddam’s Iraq invades Kuwait. 1991 USA attacks Iraqi forces following invasion of Kuwait. Iraqi forces are beaten easily, but USA stop short of getting rid of Saddam, thinking the Iraqis will do it. 1991 The UN places certain terms and conditions on Saddam Hussein, mainly that he has to allow weapons inspectors into Iraq. 2000 Saddam, his power restored, begins obstructing weapons inspectors, leading some to suspect that he has WMDs. 2001 Terrorist attack on World Trade Centre in New York kills nearly 3,000. Some, including President Bush, believe that Saddam Hussein is connected in some way. 2003 USA invades Iraq and wins the war easily. Saddam Hussein is captured. 2003-Present 2006 Chaos in Iraq. Insurgency. Different groups in Iraq at war with each other and many also at war with US forces. Growth of Al-Qaeda in Iraq and IS (Islamic State). Saddam Hussein executed following a long trial. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 4.USA LAND OF FREEDOM – TITLE PAGE 1.The Red Scare & McCarthyism 2.Black Civil Rights in the 1950s 3.Black Civil Rights in the 1960s and 1970s 4.Civil Rights of other groups USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 36.RED SCARE & McCARTHYISM (1) Key Topic 4: The Red Scare & McCarthyism Key Question 4.1: What were the main differences between capitalist and communist beliefs? COMMUNIST (RUSSIAN) BELIEF People should get roughly the same pay for every job. Everyone should have around the same wealth. No one should be allowed to make personal profit The government should control what is made There is no need for any choice in consumer goods. There should not be elections – all power to the Communists. CAPITALIST (AMERICAN) BELIEF People should be paid different amounts. Some people should be richer than others if they deserve it. Everyone should try to make personal profit. Private individuals decide what to make according to demand. People should be given as much choice as possible. People should be allowed to choose who leads the country. Key Question 4.2: How did international events lead to a Red Scare in the USA? 1945-49: COMMUNIST TAKEOVER OF EASTERN EUROPE – Countries such as Czechoslovakia and Hungary were taken over by Communist Russia at the end of WW2. This increased fear of Communism spreading across Europe and the rest of the world. 1948-49: BERLIN CRISIS – Stalin closed all routes into West Berlin in an effort to force the capitalist western nations out of the city. In the end the Americans flew supplies into West Berlin. This increased fear and tension because it showed that the USA and Russia were now enemies. 1949: COMMUNIST EXPANSION INTO ASIA – This showed that Communism was spreading even more than the Americans had feared. China became Communist, and half of Korea (the North). This increased fear of Communism because it made Americans convinced that Communists had plans to dominate the world. 1949: RUSSIAN ATOMIC BOMB – Until this point, the USA were the only country who had nuclear weapons, but now the Russians had developed nuclear weapons. This increased fear of Communism because it meant the USA was no longer necessarily the most powerful nation. 1940s: REJECTION OF TRUMAN DOCTRINE – The USA offered financial help to all the countries of Eastern Europe to help them recover from World War Two. The Communist countries rejected this (because Stalin told them to). This increased fear of Communism in the USA because it again showed that Russia was now an enemy and not a friend. Key Question 4.3: How did the Red Scare develop in the USA? FELP (Federal Employee Liability Programme) – This organisation was set up by the government to investigate the backgrounds of every person who worked for the US government to try to root out Communist spies. J EDGAR HOOVER – In the 1940s and 50s, J Edgar Hoover was leader of the FBI. He was obsessively anti-Communist and believed the country was being over-run by spies. He spent millions of dollars using the FBI to try to track down Communists. HUAC (House of Unamerican Activities Committee) – This organisation was set up by the government to investigate Hollywood and the film industry. They believed that Communist spies could be hiding subliminal messages in their films. THE HOLLYWOOD TEN – These were ten Hollywood directors, producers and actors who refused to answer the questions of HUAC. They believed it violated their civil rights and was an abuse of their privacy. They were put in prison. This shows the hysteria of America at the time. ALGER HISS – He was a government employee who was accused of being a Communist spy. No evidence of this was ever found, but police did find government papers hidden in a pumpkin at his house. He was sent to prison for five years for perjury, despite no evidence to show he was a spy THE ROSENBERGS – These were a Jewish-American couple who were accused of being spies. There was very little evidence against them, but because of the hysteria in America at the time they were found guilty of sending nuclear secrets to the Russians, and executed by electric chair. THE McCARRAN ACT – This new law said that anyone who had ever joined the Communist Party now had to give their details to the US government, so that the US government could keep an eye on them. It also gave the government the right to put Communists in detention centres without trial. THE SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES CONTROL BOARD – This law increased the government’s powers to ‘spy’ on people they thought were suspicious. It also banned people with Communist connections from working in armaments factories. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 4: The Red Scare & McCarthyism Key Question 4.4: What was the impact of McCarthyism in the USA? McCARTHY’S CLAIMS McCarthy claimed he had a list of 205 communist spies working for the US government. Senator Tydings was put in charge of investigating McCarthy’s claims, but McCarthy accused HIM. There was no evidence, but Senator Tydings was voted out at the next election, showing McCarthy’s power. Events like this were known as ‘the McCarthy witch-hunts’ McCARTHY’S METHODS BLACKLISTING – People would be put on a blacklist and unable to find work once McCarthy had accused them. THE MEDIA – McCarthy had a lot of friends in the US media who printed and publicised his claims. FEAR – People were too scared to stand up to McCarthy because they knew he could easily accuse them next. SPECIAL POWERS – McCarthy was given the power to decide if books should be withdrawn from bookshops if he believed they had ‘Communist messages’. McCARTHY’S FALL ARMY TRIALS – McCarthy went too far when he accused several army generals of being communists. The trials were televised and the general came across as polite and nice, whereas McCarthy came across as rude and aggressive. This meant he lost a lot of his support. LOSS OF POWER – President Eisenhower took over control of hunting for communists, which reduced McCarthy’s power. THE INTERNATIONAL SITUATION – There was a temporary easing of tension between Russia and the USA, which meant people were less scared in the USA. McCARTHY’S LEGACY DESTROYED LIVES – People had been blacklisted. REDUCED FREEDOM – People were no longer allowed to be in the Communist Party. CLIMATE OF FEAR – People were scared to do or be anything ‘different’ for fear of being accused. SLANG TERMS – Such as ‘pinko’, ‘commie’ or ‘leftie’. How did McCarthyism work? McCarthy accuses someone of being a Communist. No evidence is found, and the accused person goes free. Most people still believe the accused person is guilty. The person is interrogated aggressively by McCarthy behind closed doors. The accused person is unable to find work or rebuild their life. The media support McCarthy’s claims that the person is a Communist. The accused person is blacklisted and forced to leave their job. People who can see through McCarthy’s lies are too scared to say anything, fearing they will be accused next. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 38.CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE 1950s (1) Key Topic 5: Black Civil Rights in the 1950s Key Question 5.1: What was the situation for African Americans immediately after the Second World War (1945)? JIM CROW LAWS: These laws were laws which existed in the southern states (‘the deep south’) of the USA. They allowed segregation of various things such as schools, transport, parks, toilets and restaurants – they also did not allow inter-racial marriage. THE ARMED FORCES: During World War Two, millions of African Americans served in the American armed forces. Throughout the war, the army was segregated. President Truman ended segregation in the army after WW2. THE DOUBLE V CAMPAIGN: African Americans saw the irony of fighting against Hitler’s racist empire in Europe, but facing racism themselves back home. So they set up the ‘Double V Campaign’ – this meant ‘V’ for ‘Victory’ over Hitler, but also victory over racism back home in the USA. DISCRIMINATION: Slavery had been abolished by the 14th Amendment in 1866. However, nearly 100 years later, blacks still lived in the worst areas and faced discrimination in education and employment. They were not allowed to attend the top universities, and always had to live with segregated, inferior facilities. CIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS: African Americans had started to form organisations to campaign for their civil rights. The NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People) and CORE (Campaign for Racial Equality) were set up by African Americans to stand up for their rights (usually by taking people who discriminated against black people to court). VOTING RIGHTS: Most Presidents and politicians did little or nothing to help black people because black people rarely voted. This was either because of literacy tests, which prevented a lot of black people from voting by saying only literate people could vote (many black people could not read and write because of their bad education) or they were prevented from voting by racist violence and intimidation. Key Question 5.2: Why was the struggle for desegregated education so important? THE SITUATION BEFORE 1954 – Most schools in the deep south were segregated. Judge Jules Waring said that this was ok as long as the schools were ‘separate but equal’, but in reality they never were. BROWN v TOPEKA BOARD OF EDUCATION (1954) – Linda Brown was an 8 year old black girl in Topeka, Kansas who had to walk several miles to her nearest black school, even though she lived next door to a ‘white’ school. Her parents took the town (Topeka) Board of Education to court, and Judge Earl Warren ruled that she should be allowed to go to her local ‘white’ school. He ruled that segregation was illegal and unconstitutional. This was a massive breakthrough as it meant all black children across the USA had the right to go to their local school. LITTLE ROCK HIGH SCHOOL (1957) – Following the Brown ruling (above), nine black students were due to start their studies at Little Rock High School in Arkansas in September 1957. Governor of Arkansas Orval Faubus did not want school integration, so he sent state guardsmen to prevent the students from entering the school and the students could not get in. President Eisenhower sent US troops down to Arkansas to ensure the students got into the school, but when they went in they suffered horrific racial and physical abuse from students and teachers. Orval Faubus even closed the school completely for a year to try to stop integration. In the end, the students settled at the school but Orval Faubus, the racist governor who tried to keep segregation, was voted one of the most popular men in the USA, showing that many ordinary Americans were still in favour of segregation. This event was important because it showed that black people would not give in to racist intimidation. JAMES MEREDITH AND ‘OLE MISS’ (1962) – Mississippi University (in the deep south) had never had a black student, but in 1962 James Meredith (an African American) qualified for the university. The university tried to stop him entering but President Kennedy sent troops down to get him in. After much fighting and rioting in which 2 people were killed, Meredith eventually studied at the university, another important breakthrough. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 5: Black Civil Rights in the 1950s Key Question 5.3: What was the significance of the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955/56)? ROSA PARKS – Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus for a white person and was arrested and imprisoned. BOYCOTT – The NAACP and Martin Luther King set up a boycott of the bus company and also set up the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) to campaign for integration. IMPACT OF BOYCOTT – 70% of bus users were black, so the boycott hit the bus company hard. However, the boycott was not easy as people could no longer get to work or to school. The NAACP paid for taxis to take thousands of people to work/school to keep the boycott going. Also, boycott leaders were arrested and their homes attacked. Eventually, after much publicity, the Supreme Court said segregation on buses was illegal. SIGNIFICANCE – The boycott showed what non-violent direct action could achieve. It showed what people could achieve by working together. Martin Luther King became wellknown. White racist groups such as the KKK stepped up violent attacks and lynchings on black people. Key Question 5.4: How much progress had been made in African American civil rights by 1960? THE 1957 CIVIL RIGHTS ACT – President Eisenhower brought in the new law which said that black people could serve on juries. He also set up the Commission on Civil Rights to investigate cases where black people were being prevented from voting. It also gave the President the right to intervene if black people were not being allowed to vote. THE 1960 CIVIL RIGHTS ACT – This new law just added that people could be fined if they were preventing black people from voting. This law did not make much difference, and many people believed that President Eisenhower was not going to do anything to help black people because few of them voted. This made voting rights into the key issue. SIT-INS – These were protests where black people and white people who supported them would ‘sit in’ segregated, white-only areas in restaurants, diners or libraries, for example. This would attract publicity and would also lead to violent attacks on them by white racists. This showed the protestors in a good light, but it was essential that they themselves remained non-violent. FREEDOM RIDERS – These were civil rights campaigners who rode, black and white mixed together, on buses into the deep south. When they got there, they were often attacked and fire-bombed by the KKK and other racist groups. This again attracted national attention and showed that the civil rights campaigners were innocent and the white racists were the ‘bad guys’. BY 1960 – Civil rights was now front page news, and slow, gradual progress was being made. The USA was still an unfair, unequal and very racist country though. The 1960s was to be the golden era for civil rights. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 6: Black Civil Rights in the 1960s Key Question 6.1: WHAT WAS THE ROLE OF MARTIN LUTHER KING? IDEAS & METHODS: Believed in non-violent protest and direct action such as sit-ins, freedom rides and boycotts. He was leader of the SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference) which organised non-violent protests about black civil rights. INCREASING SUPPORT: MLK’s methods appealed to students, and he helped to set up the SNCC (Student Non-violent Co-ordinating Committee). Many members of the SNCC dropped out of university to work for the SNCC full time. The SNCC was similar to the SCLC in its aims, but was even more deliberately provocative. THE VOTER EDUCATION PROJECT: MLK organised a meeting of SNCC, CORE, SCLC and NAACP – all four civil rights groups – with Attorney-General Robert Kennedy. Together they set up the Voter Education Project, designed at getting more black people to vote. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA (1963): MLK organised a march in the racist, segregated town of Birmingham in Alabama, aiming to bring national attention to the racist segregation there. The town’s racist police chief, Bull Connor, turned dogs and fire-hoses on the peaceful protestors and over 1,000 protestors were arrested (including King). The police’s behaviour had the effect that MLK had intended – massive increase in support for civil rights campaigners across the country, which in turn put pressure on the president to help black people. The police looked brutal and violent, and the protestors looked like innocent, peaceful people who had been attacked. THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON (1963): MLK organised a march of 200,000 blacks and 50,000 whites to the White House in Washington to put pressure on President Kennedy to introduce a Civil Rights Bill (new laws to help black people). The event snowballed and became famous across the world, and MLK gave his famous ‘I have a dream speech’. This was the pinnacle of the civil rights movement. FREEDOM SUMMER (1964) – Thousands of people across the country joined protests for African American civil rights, and 430,000 African-Americans registered to vote for the first time. Black people were making a lot of progress, but not fast enough for some. SELMA (1965) – MLK organised a march through Selma to protest against racist sheriff Jim Clark. Marchers were attacked by police and racist white groups. This became known as ‘Bloody Sunday’. King organised another march but compromised with the police by moving it away from the town. This turned a lot of black Americans against MLK as they thought he wasn’t fighting hard enough. VOTING RIGHTS BILL (1968) – This new law, brought about by MLK-led protests, said that government agents would inspect voting procedures in every state to make sure they were fair, and also ended literacy tests which had stopped a lot of black people from voting. The vote was very important because, if black people voted, it would force the president to listen to their concerns. Key Question 6.2: WHAT WAS THE ROLE OF MALCOLM X AND THE BLACK POWER MOVEMENT? IDEAS & METHODS OF MALCOLM X: Believed that black people should TAKE their rights rather than BEG for them. Malcolm X accused MLK of behaving like a white man and encouraging white men to continue discriminating. MX wanted black people to TAKE their rights ‘by any means necessary’. He referred to white people as ‘the devil’. Ultimate aim was a return of all black people to Africa. MX believed in segregation whereas MLK believed in integration. MX believed MLK’s progress was too slow and would never achieve equality. MX encouraged violence in self-defence, believing that whites would never listen to reason. BACKGROUND & AIMS OF MALCOLM X: MX came from a very poor background and had spent time in prison, whereas MLK came from a religious, wealthy background and had been to university.MX was from the north of the USA where blacks lived in poverty whereas MLK was from the south where they were subjected to violent racist attacks. MX’s aims were to solve more immediate problems such as poverty and lack of jobs, whereas MLK focused on more long-term things such as education and voting rights, which wouldn’t make a difference straight away. In a way, both had similar aims (equality, end to discrimination, etc), but had very different methods. Both were assassinated (MX by a black man in 1965; MLK by a white racist in 1968). MX had begun to soften his views before his death, which angered many of his followers. GROWTH OF ‘BLACK POWER’: During the race riots (see next page), Stokely Carmichael and other members of the SNCC wanted blacks to take power for themselves. He wanted blacks to have pride in their heritage and promoted African forms of dress and appearance. Carmichael left the SNCC and became associated with the Black Panthers before moving to Africa in 1969. The Black Power movement got publicity at the 1968 olympics when the US relay team all gave Black Power salutes and were kicked out of the US Olympic team and received death threats. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 6: Black Civil Rights in the 1960s Key Question 6.2 (continued): RACE RIOTS (1965-67) – Despite the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act, many black Americans were unhappy with high rates of unemployment, poverty, discrimination and police violence. In August 1965, this frustration exploded onto the streets with a major riot in the Watts District of LA, leaving 34 dead and 10,000 injured. 4,000 people were arrested and $40 million of damage caused. Race riots continued across America, peaking in 1967 when there were riots in 125 US cities. The two largest were in Newark (26 killed, 1,000 injured) and Detroit (40 killed, 1,000 injured, 7,000 arrested). The riots in total cost the USA $700 million. THE BLACK PANTHERS – Inspired by Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam movement, the Black Panthers were a uniformed and armed group with 2,000 members. They were set up by Huey Newton and Bobby Searle, both of whom were heavily influenced by Malcolm X, in response to racist attacks on black people. They often clashed violently with police. Nine police officers were killed between 1967 and 1969. The Black Panthers were the most extreme aspect of Black Power, and some believed that the USA was on the brink of civil war at this point. They were prepared to work with white racist groups if this would help to prevent integration and bring down the American system. The Black Panthers wanted an end to capitalism and to create a Socialist society. They carried weapons and wore uniforms. In 1969, 27 Panthers were killed. They were harassed by the police. The group stopped having so much influence in the 1970s, and ceased to exist in 1982. THE NATION OF ISLAM – One of the main influences in the Black Power Movement was the Nation of Islam or ‘the Black Muslims’. They wanted segregation and abandoned their ‘slave names’ (e.g. Malcolm Little changed his name to Malcolm X). They believed in Islam rather than MLK’s Christianity. 75% of the members of the Nation of Islam were black men aged 17-35. The leader of the NAACP Thurgood Marshall called them ‘a bunch of thugs organised from prisons’, and many members of the civil rights movement did not approve of the Nation of Islam as they were seen as anti-white racists. Elijah Mohammed was leader of the Nation of Islam but its most famous member was Malcolm X, until he softened his views after visiting Mecca and started to believe in integration (shortly before his assassination). Three members of the Nation of Islam assassinated Malcolm X in 1965. Key Question 6.3: How much progress was made under President Kennedy (1960-1963): ACHIEVEMENTS – JFK wanted to make improvements and genuinely supported blacks in their quest for civil rights. He put forward the Civil Rights Bill in 1963 before his assassination. SHORTCOMINGS – Unemployment remained twice as high for black people. Many blacks moved north to get away from the racist south, causing racial tension in the north. Southern states ignored a lot of JFK’s integration laws. JFK began to do less about civil rights once he realised it was losing him southern support. Key Question 6.4: How much progress was made under President Johnson (1963-1968): Key Question 6.5: How much progress was made under President Nixon (1968-74)?: ACHIEVEMENTS – Introduced affirmative action, which forced companies and universities to accept a certain number of blacks. SHORTCOMINGS – Stopped the system of ‘bussing’, which had been set up to help achieve a racial balance in southern schools. Did very little for civil rights in general for fear of losing his support in the south. CIVIL RIGHTS ACT 1964: Put forward by JFK and signed by Johnson in 1964. Made it illegal for states to discriminate in housing and employment. Banned segregation and ended bans on inter-racial marriages. ACHIEVEMENTS – Appointment of first ever black person to White House Cabinet and Supreme Court. Immigration Act 1965 ended racial quotas on immigration to USA. Johnson set up government-funded healthcare for elderly and families on low incomes. Increased minimum wage from $1.25 to $1.40. Increased funding with Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). Set up VISTA programme to get people jobs in poor inner-city areas. Provided funding for schools in poor areas and Model Cities Act 1966 helped to clean slums and provided parks and sport facilities. SHORTCOMINGS – Did not have JFK’s charisma or popularity. Criticised by some for spending too much on civil rights and welfare, criticised by others for not spending enough. Led USA into Vietnam which took attention away from civil rights. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 7: Civil Rights of Other Groups Key Question 7.1 – What was the impact of WW2 on women? WORK – By 1945, one third of industrial workers were women (there were hardly any before the war). ARMED FORCES – Over 350,000 women served in the army and 6 million worked in production factories. WOMEN’S ROLE IN SOCIETY – Women proved they could do jobs in male-dominated areas such as shipyards. When men returned at the end of the war, some women resented losing that independence that a salary had given them (though others left work willingly). Women were still generally excluded from the top jobs though and earned only 50-60% of what a man would earn for the same work. Key Question 7.2 – How did the Women’s Movement Develop in the 1950s & 1960s? WOMEN ROLE IN THE 1950s – By the 1950s, women were losing the progress they had made during the war. Women were being encouraged to adopt traditional family roles and be ‘typical’ mothers. Women who worked were treated with suspicion from the rest of society, as were unmarried women. WOMEN’S ACTION IN THE 1950s – Many middle class women became frustrated with their housewife role and felt there must be more to life than looking for a husband then bringing up children. By this time, women were much better educated in general, but their choices of work were very limited once they got married. THE 1960s – Many female teenagers were influenced by the ‘Swinging 60s’ in which they were encouraged to rebel and challenge traditional lifestyles. THE PILL - The contraceptive pill enabled women to postpone having children, allowing them to have a career if they wanted. ELEANOR ROOSEVELT - Eleanor Roosevelt made an important contribution when she ordered a commission into the status of women at work – she had long been a supporter of female rights but now President Kennedy appointed her officially to look into women’s role in the USA. The report of the commission revealed that 95% of company managers were men, and 85% of technical workers were men. Only 7% of doctors and 4% of lawyers were women, and women were earning half the wages of a man who did the same job. THE FEMININE MYSTIQUE – This was a book written by Betty Frieden which put into words the thoughts of many women at the time about how there should be more to life than just being a housewife. Frieden called on women to stop being ‘traditional women’ and to demand equality in the workplace. She also demanded that bringing up a family should be a shared role between husband and wife. LIMITED PROGRESS – The 1963 Equal Pay Act & 1964 Civil Rights Act made slight improvements to women’s position. NATIONAL ORGANISATION OF WOMEN (NOW) – This organisation was set up in 1966 to campaign for women’s rights. Key Question 7.3 – What progress did the women’s movement achieve? Date 1963 Key Development Equal Pay Act Achievement Women to be paid the same as men. 1964 Civil Rights Act Illegal to discriminate on grounds of gender 1966 National Organisation for Women (NOW) Set up by middle class white women to attack discrimination. Organised demonstrations. Got some back-pay for women who had been underpaid. 1967 Sport 1972 Education Act Previously, women had not been allowed to compete in marathons but a woman entered in 1967. 2 years later, this was legalised. Stopped discrimination in education. Limitation Did not address discrimination against women in job interviews. Equal Opportunities Commission did not take sex discrimination seriously. Methods were too moderate and slow for some campaigners, and discrimination was hard to prove. Female tennis players were still played less money than male tennis players. Took a long time to become law. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 Key Topic 7: Civil Rights of Other Groups Key Question 7.4 – How did the women’s movement develop in the 1970s? WOMEN’S LIBERATION MOVEMENT – With more radical aims than NOW, they were also known as ‘feminists’ and were much more active in challenging discrimination. All signs of male supremacy were to be removed, including male control of employment, politics and the media. They believed in wearing no make-up and burnt their bras as a symbol of rebellion against female enslavement. In 1968, they picketed the Miss America beauty contest. They had much support, but also attracted much ridicule and criticism, and ultimately became a distraction from the real issues of the women’s movement (pay, education, equal opportunities, etc). THE CAMPAIGN TO LEGALISE ABORTION – Abortion was illegal in the USA. Feminists challenged this, saying it aws wrong to force women to have a child they didn’t want. Estelle Griswold challenged the abortion laws in Connecticut. Her lawyers argued that preventing her having an abortion was against her right to privacy. They won the case. Jane Roe had three children, all of which had to be taken into care, and when she fell pregnant again she wanted an abortion. Again, she won her right to an abortion in court, and this changed the law for all women on abortioni. OPPOSITION TO THE WOMEN’S MOVEMENT – Some women opposed the women’s movement because they believed NOW was dominated by middle class white women. Others objected to the extreme demands and methods of the Women’s Libbers, and many women actually approved of the ‘traditional role’. Other women were anti-abortion, which brought them into disagreement with the women’s movement. The most influential opponent to the women’s movement was Phyllis Schlafly, who set up STOP ERA. ERA was the Equal Rights Amendment Act to change the constitution to give women equal rights. Schlafly disapproved of this because ERA would require women to fight in wartime, which she felt would damage family values and family life. She was successful in stopping ERA being passed. Key Question 7.5 - Why were there so many Hispanics in the USA MEXICAN AMERICANS – By far the biggest group of Hispanics in the USA were the MexicanAmericans. Mexico was right on the border of the USA and Mexican immigrants came into the USA throughout the 20th century, particularly in the 1930s (after the Depression) and then again during the Second World War (plenty of jobs). Mexico was very poor compared to the USA and Mexicans were attracted by the ‘American Dream’ of better work and higher wages, which could then be sent to their family back home. FARM WORK – The most common place for Mexicans to find work was on farms as many Mexicans had experience of working on farms back in Mexico. The 1942 Bracero Program brought in by the US government brought thousands of Mexicans to work on American farms as labourers in areas such as Texas, Arizona, California and New Mexico The program continued until 1964, at which point many Mexicans decided to stay and settle in the USA rather than go back to Mexico as had been intended. IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY ACT 1965 – This new law allowed farmers’ families to come from Mexico to join them – led to much more immigration. ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION – As well as the many Mexicans who entered the USA legally, there were many of illegal immigrants. By 1978, there were around 7 million Hispanics in the USA (with 1 million in Los Angeles alone). Key Question 7.6 – What was Chicano Nationalism? DISCRIMINATION FACED BY HISPANICS - Similar discrimination to black Americans – high unemployment, bad treatment and low wages in the work place, poor housing, educational segregation and discrimination by police (and police brutality). Discouraged from voting or joining trade unions or political parties. Very few Mexican-Americans involved in politics – very few voted, and very few stood for election – so very few people would fight Hispanics’ corner. CHICANO NATIONALISM – REIES TIJERINA – Mexican Americans began to see themselves as separate and refer to themselves as ‘Chicanos’. Chicano Nationalism grew in the form of asserting national pride and identity. In the mid1960s Reies Tijerina launched a legal campaign to return large areas of land in New Mexico to Chicanos. This was rejected, so Tijerina led a raid on a court house in New Mexico. Despite the failure, it showed the problems facing Chicanos in the USA and encouraged young Chicanos to value their background and identity. CHICANO NATIONALISM – RODOLFO ‘CORKY’ GONZALES – Gonzales founded the Crusade for Justice in Denver. He was part of Martin Luther King’s Poor People’s Campaign aimed at ending discrimination in the USA. Gonzales led Chicanos on a protest march in Washington in 1968 to protest against racism, poverty and the Vietnam War. USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 44.CIVIL RIGHTS OF OTHER GROUPS (3) Key Topic 7: Civil Rights of Other Groups Key Question 7.6 (continued) – What was Chicano Nationalism? CESAR CHAVEZ – Chavez was the most famous of the Chicano campaigners – he believed in peaceful protest. He was cofounder of the United Farm Workers (UFW) which represented Hispanic farm labourers. In 1966, he led a strike by Californian grape-pickers for higher wages and safer working conditions, and went on hunger strike himself. The UFW called on the USA to boycott grapes in protest at the treatment of grape-pickers. The strike attracted national attention. Most farm-workers got better pay and working conditions as a result of the strike, but Hispanics remained one of the poorest and most discriminated-against groups in American society. HIGH-SCHOOL BLOW-OUTS – Very few Chicanos went onto college courses after high school due to high school drop-out rates. Chicanos were segregated from white students and suffered from poor equipment and poor buildings. There was a lack of Hispanic teachers and young Hispanics had to learn a curriculum that was largely irrelevant to them. In 1968, 20,000 students walked out of schools in Los Angeles. It was successful as it gained lots of media attention. Robert Kennedy spoke to the drop-outs’ leaders, but nothing changed (despite more walk outs in 1971-74). There were also violent clashes between students and police, who had been brought in to force students back to school. Key Question 7.7 – What problems did Native Americans face in the USA? RESERVATIONS – Native Americans were forced to live on reservations with no job opportunities, poor education and no prospects. This led to high rates of alcoholism, mental health problems, economic problems, illiteracy and crime – the highest rates among any American group. MIGRATION TO TOWNS – By 1980, there were 1 million Native Americans, many of whom had migrated to US towns to find work. A government programme was set up to help this but they met the same discrimination and problems as other minorities. Most returned to the reservations disappointed. FORCED STERILISATION – In the 1970s, the US government made Native American women undergo forced sterilisation. One sad story tells how a Native American woman in 1972 walked into a doctor’s surgery and asked for a ‘womb transplant’, because she did not know that sterilisation was permanent. 25% of Native American women were sterilised. Key Question 7.8 – How did Native Americans protest? RED POWER – In 1969, a female Native American wrote a book called ‘Custer died for your sins’. In this book she attacked the US government for how it had treated Native Americans, and demanded ‘Red Power’ (just like Black Power – see pages 38-39). AIM – The American Indian Movement (AIM) was a group of Native American protestors. In 1969 they occupied Alcatraz Island and demanded that the US government sell it to them for $24 (the same price a white settler had paid the Native Americans for New York in 1600). MARCH ON WASHINGTON – In 1972, native Americans marched to Washington in protest at their treatment, and took over the offices of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (the government department in charge of Native Americans. The Bureau had been doing a very bad job of looking after Native Americans. WOUNDED KNEE – In 1973, Native American protestors occupied the trading post at Wounded Knee saying it had to become an independent Native American land (Wounded Knee was where hundreds of Native Americans were massacred by the US Army in 1890). They demanded an end to segregation and an end to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, accusing its boss Dick Wilson of stealing money from it to build his own private army. They also wanted to draw attention to the bad situation of Native Americans. The siege lasted 71 days with 2 deaths. It attracted huge public interest and forced the government to act. GOVERNMENT ACTION – In 1969, President Nixon appointed a Native American as Commissioner for Indian Affairs and returned 48,000 acres of sacred land to Native Americans. In 1974, the Indian Child Welfare Act was passed which prevented children from being taken away from reservations and forced to go to white schools. The 1975 Self Determination Act ended the policy of integration and allowed Native Americans to govern themselves (while still receiving help and protection from the US government). USA Land of Freedom? 1945-1975 - Timeline 1942 – Double V Campaign launched by African Americans. 1942 – Bracero Program introduced to bring Mexican farm labourers to the USA. 1945 – End of Second World War. Communist takeover of Eastern Euope. 1947 – Communist countries of Eastern Europe reject American help in the Truman Doctrine. 1947 – Creation of FELP (Federal Employee Liability Programme) 1947 – The imprisonment of the Hollywood Ten 1948/49 – Berlin Crisis. USA and Russia almost go to war with each other over West Berlin. 1949 – Communist expansion into Asia – China and North Korea become Communist. 1949 – Russians create and test their first atomic bomb. 1950 – Creation of the McCarran Act and the Subversive Activities Control Board 1953 – Execution of the Rosenbergs as communist spies 1954 – Army hearings in which McCarthy’s reputation was destroyed. 1954 – Brown v Topeka case 1955 – Arrest of Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott (lasting until 1956) 1957 – Little Rock High School (‘the Little Rock Nine’) 1957 – First Civil Rights Act passed. 1960 – Second Civil Rights Act passed. 1961 – Contraceptive pill becomes available 1962 – James Meredith and Ole’ Miss (Mississippi University) 1963 – March in Birmingham, Alabama 1963 – March on Washington and the ‘I Have a Dream’ Speech 1963 – Civil Rights Bill proposed 1963 – President Kennedy assassinated 1963 – Johnson becomes President 1963 – Equal Pay Act 1963 – Publication of ‘The Feminine Mystique’ by Betty Friedan. 1964 – The Freedom Summer 1964 – Third Civil Rights Act passed. 1964 – End of Bracero Program 1965 – Voting Rights Bill proposed 1965 – Selma – Bloody Sunday 1965 – Assassination of Malcolm X 1965 – Immigration & Nationality Act 1965 – Race Riots – lasting until 1967 1966 – Creation of National Organisation for Women (NOW) 1966 – Grape-pickers strike led by Cesar Chavez 1967 – Black Panthers rise to prominence (9 police officers killed by 1969) 1968 – Voting Rights Act passed 1968 – Black Power salutes at Mexico Olympics 1968 – Women’s Liberation Movement picket the Miss World beauty contest 1968 – Hispanic March on Washington led by Rodolfo ‘Corky’ Gonzales 1968 – Assassination of Martin Luther King 1968 – Nixon elected president 1968 – Hispanic High School Blow-Outs 1969 – Publication of ‘Custer Died for Your Sins’ 1969 – Native American occupation of Alcatraz Island 1972 – Education Act stops discrimination in education 1972 – Native American March on Washington 1973 – Native American occupation of Wounded Knee 1974 – Indian Child Welfare Act 1975 – Roe v Wade – legalisation of abortion 1975 – Self Determination Act The Red Scare & McCarthyism Civil Rights in the 1950s Civil Rights in the 1960s & 1970s Civil Rights of other groups 44.NEW WORLD PAST QUESTIONS (LANDSCAPE) 45.LAND OF FREEDOM PAST QUESTIONS (LANDSCAPE) How do I answer exam questions? ‘DESCRIBE’-type questions (4 marks) These are the simplest questions on the exam. You will have to answer two of these questions. This is the ONLY question in which you can just list factors and the ONLY one in which you can use bullet points. You should DEFINITELY use bullet points as this will save time. Example Question – Describe the methods of the Black Panthers (June 2015 question) This answer would score 4 out of 4 because it also has 4 specific, separate points. CANDIDATE ONE They wore uniforms. They carried guns. They frequently clashed with police. They wanted people to be proud of being black. This answer would also score 4 out of 4 because it also has 4 specific, separate points. CANDIDATE TWO They wore uniforms. They carried guns and said they were going to defend the black community. They frequently clashed with police. This answer would also score 2 out of 4. It has 3 ACCURATE points, but only 2 of them are RELEVANT to the question. This answer would score full marks – 4 out of 4. HOWEVER, this candidate has wasted 5 or 6 minutes writing this answer, when they could have got exactly the same mark (4 out of 4) in less than a minute if they had done bullet points like Candidates One and Two. CANDIDATE THREE The Black Panthers were a group of people who lived in the USA during the time of civil rights campaigns. They were created by Bobby Searle and Huey Newton. They were military uniforms and they carried guns which they would use to protect themselves if they got into fights. CANDIDATE FOUR The Black Panthers wore military-style uniforms. This made them seem like a paramilitary army. This caused a lot of fear in communities and led them to get into a lot of fights with police. For example, on 4th December 1969, between 4 and 4:30am, a fight broke out between police and black panthers in Illinois and 3 Black Panthers and 2 policemen were killed, and several more injured. They also carried guns, which added to the fear as most people in America were not armed at that time, and it made black people appear more threatening than they did when following Martin Luther-King’s non-violent beliefs. They wanted to promote a black pride, and a sense of black people’s heritage, encouraging African-style dress and encouraging people to be ‘black and proud. How do I answer exam questions? ‘EXPLAIN’-type questions (6 marks or 8 marks) You will have to answer 3 of these questions (two 6 markers and one 8 marker) on the exam. You need a MULTI-CAUSAL explanation with each factor backed up with specific CK. For 8 markers, try to explain THREE different factors for the top marks. Example Question – Explain why there was opposition to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. (6) (June 2015) This answer would score full marks – 6 out of 6 – because it is a MULTI-CAUSAL EXPLANATION with SPECIFIC DETAILS. Make sure you have two, clearly separate factors. This will ensure that you have a MULTI-CAUSAL argument (Level 3 once you add contextual knowledge). Put more than two if you feel able to. For eight markers, try to have at least three. This answer would be stuck in Level 1 (2 out of 6) because the candidate has just listed reasons rather than explained them. Firstly, there was opposition to the invasion because many believed that the war was legal. In 2002, the UN had passed a resolution saying that Saddam should face ‘serious consequences’ if he obstructed weapons inspectors in Iraq, but they didn’t specify what ‘serious consequences’ meant. Bush and Blair wanted to go to war with Iraq, so they took ‘serious consequences’ to mean invasion. Most other countries believed that the UN had not given permission to the USA and Britain to invade Iraq, so the invasion was illegal, which made people angry about the war. Secondly, there was opposition because of the lack of WMDs in Iraq. Head of weapons inspector Hans Blix said there were no WMDs in Iraq, but Blair and Bush chose to believe an Iraqi informer instead – an informer who said that Saddam did have WMDs. The British government was accused of exaggerating (‘sexing up’) this ‘evidence’ so they could justify going to war, and government ministers Claire Short and Robin Cook resigned. It also led many people around the world to think that Bush and Blair had been lying along, and therefore they opposed the war. CANDIDATE TWO There was opposition to the invasion because Muslims were angry about a Muslim country being attacked. Also people were angry because there was no evidence of WMDs. Many people also believed the war was illegal. At this point this is a monocausal answer (Level 2) Give SPECIFIC CK whenever possible. Now it is a multi-causal explanation (more than one cause explained), and therefore in Level 3. The specific CK puts it at the top of Level 3. Notice how, in this answer, there is no contextual knowledge. It has been answered in the style of a four marker, with just a list of reasons. MARK SCHEME FOR EIGHT MARKERS Level 3 – Multi-causal explanation with CK given for at least two factors (three factors with developed and specific CK for 8 marks; two factors with developed and specific CK for 7 marks; 2 or more factors with general CK for 6 marks) MARK SCHEME FOR SIX MARKERS Level 3 – Multi-causal explanation with CK given for at least two factors (developed and specific CK for 6 marks; general CK for 5 marks) Level 2 – Mono-causal explanation with CK given (developed and specific CK for 4 marks; general CK for 3 marks) 6 = A* Level 1 – Mentioned or described 5=A valid reason(s) (two or more 4=C factors for 2 marks; one factor for 1) It only becomes an ‘explanation’ when you make a P-E-E paragraph like this. Make your point, add contextual knowledge, then link it back to the question. 3=D 2=E 1=G 0=U Level 2 – Mono-causal explanation with CK given (developed and specific CK for 5 marks; 8 = A* general CK for 4 marks; basic CK for 3) 7=A 6=B Level 1 – Mentioned or described valid 5=C reason(s) (two or more factors for 2 marks; one factor for 1 mark) 4=D 3=E 2=F 1=G 0=U How do I answer exam questions? ‘MESSAGE’-type questions (6 marks or 7 marks) For this type of question, you will need to answer one 7 marker and one 6 marker. You NEED to be aware of what this question is asking you – not only do you have to explain the message of the source, you MUST USE CONTEXTUAL KNOWLEDGE AS WELL! Example Question – Study Source A. What is the message of this cartoon. Use details of the source and your own knowledge to explain your answer. (June 2013) Describe the source in a sentence at the beginning. This guarantees a mark. You don’t need to do this if you’re VERY confident about the rest of the question. This would be a Level 5 answer (7 out of 7) because it gives the MAIN message of the source and supports it with DETAILED and SPECIFIC CK, linking that CK to the cartoon. If you can, try to link your contextual knowledge directly to the cartoon. The source shows a defenceless old lady being brutally beaten up by a man, with a policeman watching on and supporting the violent man. The main message of this source is that Russia, represented by the policeman, is backing up the cruel Polish government (represented by the violent man) against Solidarity (represented by the old lady). The message is that the cartoonist disapproves of Russia’s actions, as what the man is doing in the cartoon is clearly bad, yet Russia is allowing it and in fact even supporting it. Another message could be that Russia approves of violence to crush Solidarity. Another message could be that Solidarity has done nothing wrong and does not deserve to be treated like this. Solidarity was a trade union in Poland led by Lech Walesa which had 9.4 million members. The Communist government of Poland at first allowed Solidarity to exist because they did not want to be unpopular with the Polish people but eventually the Communist puppet leader General Jaruzelski turned on Solidarity. Its leaders were arrested and beaten up, despite having done nothing wrong, as represented by the cartoon, and Solidarity was banned. This showed the world that Communist governments could only survive through force, violence and brutality, as represented by the man in the cartoon. MARK SCHEME FOR A SEVEN MARKER Level 5 – Identify the MAIN message of the source and add specific CK linked to the cartoon (7) Level 4 – Identify the MAIN message of the source and add CK (specific for 6 marks; general for 5 marks) (5-6) Level 3 – Identify a SUB message of the cartoon and add CK (specific for 4 marks; general for 3 marks) (3-4) Level 2 – Identify the MAIN message or a SUB message of the cartoon (2) Level 1 – Describe cartoon at face value (1) 7 = A* 6=A 5=B 4=C 3=D 2=E 1=G 0=U There is no real difference between a six-marker and a seven-marker in terms of how you should answer it. The seven-marker will be a compulsory question in the International Relations section, and the six-marker will be a compulsory question in the Land of Freedom section. Just remember, for both questions, you need a paragraph on the message of the source, and another paragraph of contextual knowledge (linking the two together for the top mark). Identify the main message of the source as soon and as clearly as you can. If you’re not sure about the message, give a few different messages. It doesn’t matter if some of them are wrong, as long as one of them’s right. Then in your second paragraph you add contextual knowledge. MARK SCHEME FOR A SIX MARKER Level 5 – Identify the MAIN message of the source and add specific CK linked to the cartoon (6) Level 4 – Identify the MAIN message of the source and add CK (5) Level 3 – Identify a SUB message of the cartoon and add CK (specific for 4 marks; general for 3 marks) (3-4) Level 2 – Identify the MAIN message or a SUB message of the cartoon (2) Level 1 – Describe cartoon at face value (1) 6 = A* 5=A 4=C 3=D 2=E 1=G 0=U How do I answer exam questions? ‘PURPOSE’-type questions (7 marks) There will only be one of these type of questions on the exam. It will be in the compulsory bit of the Land of Freedom section. It is similar to a ‘message of the source’ question, but then with an extra bit about the PURPOSE of the source (with CK of course). Example Question – Study Source B. Why was this cartoon published in 1962? (7 marks) Just like the message question, start by describing the source briefly. This is a Level 1 answer at this point. This bit is not necessary if you are confident in the rest of your answer. At this point it is a Level 2 answer, because they have the message but there is no contextual knowledge. This is SPECIFIC contextual knowledge because it gives actual facts and details – such as saying Linda Brown was 8 years old or saying that she had to walk 5 miles to school. This would be a Level 4 answer (7 out of 7) because it identifies the message & purpose of the source, and supports it with detailed CK. The source shows a little black girl saying that it is eight years since the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was illegal. She is sat outside a school called ‘Jim Crow School’. The main message of this cartoon is that, despite the court’s decision in 1954 in Brown v Topeka that segregation in schools was illegal, schools were continuing with segregation in some areas of the USA – particularly the south. The school is called ‘Jim Crow School’ because the Jim Crow Laws were the old laws in some American states which kept black and white people separate (this was called segregation). In 1954 the family of an 8 year old girl called Linda Brown took the Topeka Board of Education to court. They felt it was unfair that Linda had to walk eight miles through dangerous places to get to her nearest ‘black’ school, when there was a ‘white’ school just yards from her house. The court ruled in the family’s favour, but years later many schools had carried on with segregation, and it was difficult for black people to get access to ‘white’ schools, such as in the case of Little Rock High School where black people were abused as they tried to use their legal right to go to their local school. The purpose of this cartoon is to convince people that not enough is being done to ensure that segregation has ended. It is meant to shock people that segregation is still going on, and make them feel sorry for the black girl who is not allowed into the school even though the law says she should be. MARK SCHEME Level 4 – Identify the MAIN PURPOSE of the cartoon and add CK (specific and developed CK for 7 marks; more general for 6 marks) (6-7) Level 3 – Identify the MAIN MESSAGE of the cartoon and add CK (specific and developed CK for 5 marks; more general for 4 marks) (4-5) Level 2 – Identify a SUB-MESSAGE or the MAIN MESSAGE, or a SUB-PURPOSE or the MAIN PURPOSE, but without CK (main for 3 marks; sub for 2 marks) Level 1 – Describe cartoon at face value 7 = A* 6=A 5=B 4=C 3=D 2=E 1=G 0=U Next you need to explain what the MESSAGE of the source is. Now that plenty of CK has been added, it is a Level 3 answer (message of the source together with contextual knowledge). And now the purpose has been identified, it is a Level 4 answer – main purpose supported by contextual knowledge. How do I answer exam questions? ‘JUDGEMENT’-type questions (10 marks or 7 marks) There will be one source-based question where you have to make a judgement using your own knowledge and the source (in the compulsory Land of Freedom section, worth 7 marks). There will also be two questions each worth 10 marks where you have to make a judgement with no sources. You will have to choose one in the Land of Freedom section and one in the International Relations section. Example Question – How successfully have governments responded to terrorism? Explain your answer with reference to specific terrorist groups. (January 2011) In some ways, governments have been successful when dealing with terrorism. For example, the British government was able to negotiate with the IRA in order to bring about the Good Friday Agreement in 1998. This agreement gave some power to the Catholics in Ireland but also brought about a permanent ceasefire from the IRA. In this respect the British government was successful. The British government was also successful in using covert operations to deal with the IRA. They used informers, spies and technology to stop the IRA before they carried out their attacks. For example, six unarmed suspected IRA terrorists were shot in Gibraltar by British security forces in 1988 because the British had evidence that the men were planning a terrorist attack. This would be a Level 5 answer (10 out of 10) because it gives detailed CK on both sides of the argument, and then gives a strong conclusion with a ‘clinching argument’. The Israeli government has also been successful at times in dealing with the PLO. They have used targeted assassinations such as the killing of PLO Commander Abi Jihad in 1998. They have also successfully used missiles or aircraft to kill PLO leaders. They got tough with the PLO during the Intifada, introducing a curfew on all Palestinians and closing down Palestinian schools. Similarly, the USA has been successful in dealing with Al Qaeda in that Bin Laden and most of the original Al Qaeda leaders have been killed or captured as part of the war on terror. On the other hand, governments have sometimes made mistakes in dealing with terrorists. For example, the British government used internment which allowed security forces to arrest and interrogate anyone they suspected of terrorism, even without evidence. This seemed like ‘getting tough’, but actually only increased the number of recruits to the IRA as people were angry about it. Also, Thatcher’s government in the 1980s made itself look foolish when it banned Gerry Adams from talking on British TV and used an actor’s voice. The Israeli government has also made mistakes when dealing with the PLO, such as causing fury by killing innocent Palestinian civilians with bombs aimed at PLO leaders. This has caused anger and led more people to join the PLO. Also, the USA made itself look very bad by having a prison on Guantanamo Bay where terror suspects were held and tortured by the US Army. This damaged the USA’s reputation around the world. In conclusion, governments have made some good moves but also some mistakes in dealing with terrorists. The Israeli government has been the toughest on terrorists but has still ended up having to negotiate with terrorists in the end. The British government tried lots of different responses but was only successful once it started negotiating. The Americans have only been partly successful in dealing with Al-Qaeda. The problem governments have is that when you are tough with terrorists, you kill innocent people and end up creating more terrorists than were there to begin with, which is why governments have had limited success in dealing with terrorists. Level 5 – Discuss both sides of the argument with specific CK, and give a reasoned judgement in a conclusion which should also contain a clinching argument (10) Level 4 – Discuss both sides of the argument with CK (specific and detailed for 9 marks, more general for 7 marks) and make a final judgement in a conclusion (7-9) Level 3 – Discuss both sides of the argument but largely descriptively (though with some CK), without making a clear and reasoned judgement (5-6) Level 2 – Discuss only one side of the argument with CK (3-4) Level 1 – Just make basic comments about the issue (1-2) 10=A* 9=A 8=A 7=B 6=C 5=D 4=E 3=F 2=G 1=U No need for an introduction. The candidate has jumped straight in by talking about ways in which government HAS been successful, giving specific examples from the IRA, PLO and Al Qaeda. Use SPECIFIC details whenever you can. At this point it is a Level 2 answer (4/10) because it has given ONE side of the argument with detailed and specific CK The second part of the essay is where you discuss the OPPOSITE side of the argument, again using specific and detailed CK. Your conclusion should give a final clinching argument as to which side of the argument you are on and why. REMEMBER, THE FIRST TEN MARKER ALSO HAS 6 MARKS FOR SPELLING, PUNCTUATION AND GRAMMAR. You will also get a source-based knowledge question. It will ask something like ‘How far do you agree with the view that….’ – use the source and your own knowledge. Or it might say ‘are you surprised by this source’. Whatever it says, you need to give two sides of the argument and then make a judgement. Obviously less is required for the source-based 7 markers than for the knowledge-based 10 markers (though plenty of CK is needed for both. 51 – EXAM TECHNIQUE SUMMARY SHEET (LANDSCAPE) The Exam is on MONDAY 6th JUNE at 9:00 am You can IGNORE SECTION A (Questions 1,2 and 3) - we don’t do this. SECTION B – You MUST do Question 4 – it is COMPULSORY. It will be on EITHER Soviet control, terrorism or Iraq. Part (a) will be a message of a source-type question (7) Part (b) will be an explain-type question (8) SECTION B – You must do EITHER Question 5 (a, b and c) OR Question 6 (a, b and c) – you can’t mix and match. Questions 5 & 6 will be on whichever two of Soviet control, terrorism and Iraq were not covered in the compulsory Question 4. Part (a) will be a describe-type question (4) Part (b) will be an explain-type question (6) Part (c) will be a judgement-type question (10) Part (c) also has 6 marks for SPAG SECTION C – You MUST do Question 7 – it is COMPULSORY It will be on EITHER the Red Scare, black civil rights in the 50s, black civil rights in the 60s or civil rights for other groups You MUST answer all three parts of Question 7 (a, b and c) One of these will be a message of a source-type question (6) One of them will be a purpose of a source-type question (7) One of them will be a judgement-type question (using a source) (6) SECTION C – You must do EITHER Question 8 (a, b and c) OR Question 9 (a, b and c) – you can’t mix and match. Question 8 will be on one of the Red Scare, black civil rights in the 50s, black civil rights in the 60s, or civil rights of other groups. So will Question 9. Part (a) will be a describe-type question (4) Part (b) will be an explain-type question (6) Part (c) will be a judgement-type question (10) You can answer the questions in any order, but remember to write the question number clearly in the margin.