Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Spread of Soviet-Backed Communism Across Eastern Europe after 1945
The Spread of Soviet-Backed Communism Across Eastern Europe after 1945      In seeking to provide an answer to the question, ââ¬Å"Was the spread of   Soviet-backed communism inevitable across Eastern Europe after 1945?,â⬠ I   would like to point to the words of a contemporary specialist. At the end of   World War II, R. R. Betts, the Masaryk Professor of Central European History   at London University, asserted that much of the ââ¬Å"revolution in central and   eastern Europeâ⬠ is ââ¬Å"native and due to the efforts of the peoples and their   own leaders . . . [making it] ââ¬Å"clear that even if the Soviet Union had not   been so near and so powerful, revolutionary changes would have come at the   end of so destructive and subversive a war as that which ended in 1945â⬠   (Betts 212, in Mazower, 255). Though Betts points simply to the war and   native efforts as the essential impetus for radical solutions where many   points can be made implicating pre-war issues and outside intervention (or   lack thereof) in the same causal fashion, the thrust of his argument is what   I would like to echo in my paper. The radical situation following World War   II in Eastern Europe was untenable and called almost uniformly for a radical   solution. However, that the solution was necessarily Soviet-backed communism   is not fully supported by the facts. A radical solution? Yes.   Authoritarianism? Quite likely. Soviet-backed communism? Very probable,   but by no means inevitable.     While there is much evidence and scholarship to support the deterministic   viewpoint implied by the principal query, it seems a naà ¯ve view of history to   suggest that what happened absolutely could not have happened any other way.   To respond in kind to the simplistic discourse of ââ¬Ëin...              ...ore or less might   not have found a marginally different path at some point along the way. An   argument of inevitability is not sufficient to understand the subtleties of   history.    Works Cited:    Betts, R. R. ed. Central and South East Europe, 1945-1948. London, 1949.    Lewis, Paul. Central Europe Since 1945. London: Longman, 1994.    Mazower, Mark. Dark Continent: Europeââ¬â¢s 20th Century. London: Penguin, 1999.    Roberts, Geoffrey. ââ¬Å"Moscow and the Marshall Plan: Politics, Ideology and the   Onset of the Cold War, 1947â⬠ Europe-Asia Studies 46:8, Soviet and East   European History (1994), 1371-1386.    Rothschild, Joseph and Nancy M. Wingfield. Return to Diversity: A Political   History of East Central Europe since World War II. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford UP,   2000.    Swain, Geoffrey and Nigel Swain. Eastern Europe Since 1945. 2nd ed. London:   Macmillan, 1998.                         
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