The End of Bipolarity
Introduction
For nearly half a century after the Second World War, the world was BIPOLAR — dominated by two rival superpowers: the United States of America (capitalist, democratic, NATO) and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (communist, authoritarian, Warsaw Pact). Each possessed enough nuclear weapons to destroy the other many times over. The world was divided into two camps.
Then, between 1989 and 1991, the Soviet bloc UNRAVELED — rapidly, dramatically, and (remarkably) almost PEACEFULLY. On 25 December 1991, the Soviet flag was lowered over the Kremlin for the last time. The USSR — the 'second superpower' — had ceased to exist. This chapter explains how and why.
'The Soviet Union was the only empire in history that died of a heart attack — not a bullet wound.'
1. What Was the Soviet System?
The Soviet Union was formed in 1922 after the Bolshevik Revolution (1917). It was a ONE-PARTY state ruled by the Communist Party. Key features:
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Political System | ONE-PARTY state. The Communist Party was the ONLY legal party. No political competition. No free elections. Dissent was SUPPRESSED. |
| Economic System | STATE-OWNED and CENTRALLY PLANNED. Gosplan (State Planning Committee) set production targets for EVERY factory and farm. Prices were SET by the state — not by supply and demand. Private property was ABOLISHED for the 'means of production.' |
| Ideology | MARXISM-LENINISM. The state claimed to represent the 'dictatorship of the proletariat' — the working class. In reality: the Communist Party elite ruled. |
| Empire | The USSR was a MULTI-ETHNIC empire — 15 republics (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, the Baltic states, etc.) with dozens of nationalities. |
Why the Soviet System Was Vulnerable
By the 1980s, the Soviet system was DEEPLY UNWELL:
| Vulnerability | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Economic Stagnation | The planned economy could NOT innovate. Consumer goods were SCARCE and of TERRIBLE quality. 'People queued for bread in a nuclear superpower.' GDP growth slowed to near ZERO. |
| Arms Race | The Cold War arms race with the USA consumed an estimated 25-40% of Soviet GDP. 'Guns, not butter.' The economy was being drained to fund missiles that could never be used. |
| Afghanistan War (1979–1989) | The Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to prop up a communist government. The war became a QUAGMIRE — 'the Soviet Vietnam.' 15,000 Soviet soldiers killed. Demoralising. Unwinnable. The mujahideen resistance, backed by the USA, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, BLEED the USSR. |
| Nationalist Aspirations | The Soviet republics — especially the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania), Ukraine, and Georgia — had NEVER accepted Russian domination. Nationalist sentiment grew. |
| Technological Backwardness | The Soviet Union lagged FAR behind the West in computers, electronics, and consumer technology. 'The USSR could build a space station. It could not build a reliable toaster.' |
| Lack of Legitimacy | The Soviet people no longer BELIEVED in communism. The system survived on INERTIA and REPRESSION — not popular support. 'When Gorbachev loosened the reins, the system COLLAPSED because no one was willing to defend it.' |
2. Gorbachev and His Reforms
Mikhail GORBACHEV became General Secretary of the Communist Party in 1985 — the youngest Soviet leader since Stalin. He recognised that the Soviet Union was in DEEP TROUBLE. His response: REFORM.
| Reform | What It Meant | Consequences |
|---|---|---|
| Glasnost (Openness) | Greater political freedom. Censorship was RELAXED. People could CRITICISE the government and the Communist Party. Political prisoners were released. The crimes of Stalin were openly discussed. | 'Once the lid was opened, grievances — suppressed for decades — FLOODED OUT.' Nationalists. Dissidents. Ordinary citizens — they all demanded MORE than Gorbachev was ready to give. |
| Perestroika (Restructuring) | Economic reforms. Some private enterprise was ALLOWED. Central planning was partially DECENTRALISED. Market mechanisms were introduced — cautiously. | FAILED to revive the economy. 'Gorbachev tried to reform an unreformable system. The planned economy was a DINOSAUR — tinkering could not save it.' |
| 'New Thinking' in Foreign Policy | Gorbachev ended the arms race. Signed nuclear arms reduction treaties with the USA (INF Treaty, 1987). Withdrew from Afghanistan (1989). Declared that the USSR would NO LONGER intervene in Eastern Europe. | 'Without the threat of Soviet tanks, communist regimes in Eastern Europe fell like DOMINOES. Gorbachev's refusal to use force was NOBLE — but it sealed the fate of the Soviet bloc.' |
'Gorbachev wanted to REFORM the Soviet Union. He ended up DESTROYING it. His tragedy — and his greatness — was that he refused to use force to save the system.'
3. The Unraveling — The End of the Soviet Bloc
The Fall of the Berlin Wall (1989)
The Berlin Wall — built in 1961 to stop East Germans from fleeing to the West — was the ULTIMATE SYMBOL of the Cold War. On 9 November 1989, the East German government, under pressure from mass protests, announced that citizens could cross into the West. Thousands GATHERED at the wall. Border guards — confused, without orders — LET THEM THROUGH. The wall was BREACHED. Within days, it was being dismantled by crowds wielding hammers.
'The fall of the Berlin Wall was the moment the Cold War ENDED — emotionally, symbolically, irreversibly. No shots were fired. The wall did not fall because of an army. It fell because ordinary people had LOST THEIR FEAR.'
The Domino Effect in Eastern Europe (1989-1990)
Without Soviet military backing, communist regimes collapsed one after another: Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Romania (where the dictator Ceausescu was executed). All transitions were largely PEACEFUL — except for Romania.
The Dissolution of the USSR (1991)
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| March 1990 | Lithuania declared independence — the first Soviet republic to do so. |
| June 1990 | Russia (the largest republic), under its new President BORIS YELTSIN, declared SOVEREIGNTY — its laws would take precedence over Soviet laws. |
| August 1991 | HARD-LINE COMMUNISTS attempted a COUP against Gorbachev. They placed him under house arrest. The coup FAILED — massively. Citizens, led by Yeltsin, DEFENDED the Russian parliament. The army refused to fire on civilians. The coup plotters were arrested. 'The coup was a FARCE. But it FATALLY WEAKENED Gorbachev. The real winner was YELTSIN.' |
| September–November 1991 | One by one, Soviet republics declared independence. |
| 8 December 1991 | Leaders of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus met and declared: 'The USSR has CEASED TO EXIST as a subject of international law and geopolitical reality.' They formed the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). |
| 25 December 1991 | Gorbachev resigned as President of the USSR. The Soviet flag was lowered from the Kremlin. The USSR was FORMALLY DISSOLVED. 'It ended not with a bang, but with Gorbachev's televised resignation — dignified, exhausted, alone.' |
4. Aftermath — Shock Therapy and the New Russia
The Soviet collapse left Russia and the other former Soviet republics facing a QUESTION: how do you transition from a centrally planned economy to capitalism?
Shock Therapy
Boris Yeltsin's Russia adopted 'SHOCK THERAPY' — a RAPID, simultaneous transition to capitalism. It had THREE pillars:
| Pillar | What It Meant | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Privatisation | State-owned industries were SOLD to private owners. | Most were bought by politically connected insiders at THROWAWAY prices — creating a class of super-rich 'OLIGARCHS.' |
| Price Liberalisation | Prices were freed from state control. | HYPERINFLATION. Savings were WIPED OUT. Pensions became worthless. |
| Free Trade | Markets were opened. | Russian industry — uncompetitive — COLLAPSED. Cheap imports flooded in. |
The human cost was CATASTROPHIC:
- GDP FELL by ~40% in the 1990s
- Life expectancy for Russian men DROPPED by 5 years (from 63 to 58) — driven by alcoholism, suicide, and poverty
- Inequality EXPLODED — a handful of oligarchs became BILLIONAIRES while millions fell into desperate poverty
- 'The 1990s were the WORST decade in Russian history since the Second World War. The West celebrated the 'triumph of capitalism.' For ordinary Russians, it was a humanitarian DISASTER.'
5. The New World Order — After Bipolarity
With the Soviet Union gone, the USA became the SOLE SUPERPOWER. The world had changed:
| School of Thought | Key Idea |
|---|---|
| 'End of History' (Francis Fukuyama, 1992) | Liberal democracy had TRIUMPHED. The great ideological struggle was OVER. The future belonged to democracy and capitalism. |
| 'Clash of Civilizations' (Samuel Huntington, 1993) | Cultural and religious identities — not ideologies — would be the primary source of CONFLICT in the post-Cold War world. |
| Unipolar Moment | The USA was the undisputed hegemon. BUT: new powers were rising — especially CHINA. Russia, under Putin (from 2000), would seek to REVISE the post-Cold War order. |
'The post-Cold War world did NOT settle into Fukuyama's peaceful, democratic end-state. The 21st century brought terrorism (9/11), wars (Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine), the rise of China, and the resurgence of authoritarian Russia. History, it turned out, had NOT ended.'
6. Key Events Timeline
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1985 | Gorbachev becomes Soviet leader. Launches reforms. |
| 1988 | Gorbachev announces the USSR will not intervene in Eastern Europe. |
| 1989 | Berlin Wall falls (November). Communist regimes collapse across Eastern Europe. |
| 1990 | German reunification. Lithuania declares independence. |
| August 1991 | Coup against Gorbachev Fails. Yeltsin emerges as the real leader. |
| December 1991 | USSR formally dissolved. Gorbachev resigns. |
| 1992 | Shock therapy begins in Russia. |
| 2000 | Vladimir Putin elected President of Russia. |
7. Exam Focus
| Question Type | Marks | Likely Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Long Answer | 6 | Why did the Soviet Union collapse? Evaluate the consequences |
| Short Answer | 4 | Explain Gorbachev's policies of Glasnost and Perestroika |
| Short Answer | 2 | What was 'Shock Therapy' in post-Soviet Russia? |
| Short Answer | 2 | What was the significance of the fall of the Berlin Wall? |
| Map/Sequence | 4 | Timeline of the Soviet collapse 1989-1991 |
Self-Test
Q1. Why did the SOVIET UNION COLLAPSE? A1. (1) ECONOMIC STAGNATION — the centrally planned economy could not innovate or produce consumer goods. (2) ARMS RACE DRAIN — 25-40% of GDP on military. (3) AFGHANISTAN WAR (1979-89) — unwinnable quagmire, 15,000 Soviet dead. (4) NATIONALIST ASPIRATIONS — Soviet republics (Baltic states, Ukraine, Georgia) wanted independence. (5) GORBACHEV'S REFORMS — Glasnost unleashed suppressed grievances. Perestroika failed to revive the economy. His refusal to use force to preserve the bloc led to the domino collapse. (6) LACK OF LEGITIMACY — no one believed in communism anymore. 'When Gorbachev loosened the reins, no one defended the system.'
Q2. What were GLASNOST and PERESTROIKA? What were their consequences? A2. GLASNOST (openness): Greater political freedom. Relaxed censorship. People could criticise the government. Political prisoners released. CONSEQUENCE: grievances suppressed for decades FLOODED OUT. Nationalist and democratic movements surged. PERESTROIKA (restructuring): Economic reforms. Some private enterprise allowed. Central planning partially decentralised. CONSEQUENCE: FAILED to revive the economy. The unreformable planned economy could not be saved by tinkering. Together, these reforms UNLEASHED forces Gorbachev could not control — leading to the collapse of the Soviet bloc.
Q3. What was SHOCK THERAPY? What were its effects on Russia? A3. Shock therapy was the RAPID transition from a planned economy to capitalism in post-Soviet Russia (1992). THREE PILLARS: (1) Privatisation — state industries sold to private owners, mostly to politically connected 'oligarchs' at throwaway prices. (2) Price liberalisation — prices freed from state control → hyperinflation, savings destroyed. (3) Free trade — Russian industry collapsed. CONSEQUENCES: GDP fell ~40%. Life expectancy for men DROPPED 5 years (63→58). Inequality EXPLODED — a few billionaires, millions in poverty. 'The 1990s were the worst decade in Russian history since WWII.'
