1945–1991 In 1945 the
Allies of World War II had defeated all significant opposition to them. They established the United Nations to govern international relations and disputes. A looming question was how to handle the defeated Axis nations and the shattered nations that the Axis had conquered. Following the
Yalta Conference, territory was divided into zones for which Allied country would have responsibility and manage rebuilding. While these zones were theoretically temporary (such as the eventual fate of
occupied Austria, which was released to independence as a neutral country), growing tensions between the
Western Bloc, led by the United States, with the
Eastern Bloc, led by the
Soviet Union, meant that many calcified into place. Countries in Soviet zones of Eastern Europe had communist regimes installed as
satellite states. The
Berlin Blockade of 1948 led to a Western Airlift to preserve
West Berlin and signified a cooling of East-West relations. Germany split into two countries in 1949, liberal-democratic
West Germany and communist
East Germany. The conflict as a whole would become known as the
Cold War. The Western Bloc formed
NATO in 1949 while the Eastern Bloc formed the
Warsaw Pact in 1955. Direct combat between the new Great Powers was generally avoided, although
proxy wars fought in other countries by factions equipped by one side against the other side's faction occurred. An
arms race to develop and build
nuclear weapons happened as policymakers wanted to ensure their side had more if it came to a war. In East Asia
Chiang Kai-shek's
Republic of China was overthrown in the
Chinese Communist Revolution from 1945–1949.
His government retreated to Taiwan, but both the nationalist
KMT government and the new communist mainland government under
Mao Zedong continued to claim authority over all of China.
Korea was divided similarly to Germany, with the Soviet Union occupying the North and the United States occupying the South (future
North Korea and
South Korea). Unlike Germany, the conflict there turned hot, as the
Korean War erupted from 1950–1953. Korea was not reunified under either government, however, due to strong support from both the US and China for their favored side; it became a
frozen conflict instead. Japan was given a
new constitution foreswearing aggressive war in 1947, and the
American occupation ended in 1952, although a treaty of mutual aid with the US was soon signed. The US also granted the
Philippines their independence in 1946 while keeping close relations. The Middle East became a hotbed of instability. The new Jewish state of Israel declared its independence, recognized by both the United States and the Soviet Union, after which followed the
1948 Arab–Israeli War. Egypt's weak and ineffective king
Farouk was overthrown in the
1952 Egyptian revolution, and replaced by General
Nasser; the
1953 Iran coup saw the American-friendly shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi remove the democratic constraints on his government and take power directly; and Iraq's
Western-friendly monarchy was
overthrown in 1958. Nasser's Egypt would go on to face the
Suez Crisis in 1956, briefly unify with Syria as the
United Arab Republic (UAR) from 1958 to 1961, and expensively intervene in the
North Yemen civil war from 1962 to 1970.
Decolonization was the most important development across Southeast Asia and Africa from 1946–1975, as the old British, French, Dutch, and Portuguese colonial empires were dismantled. Many new states were given their independence, but soon found themselves having to choose between allying with the Western Bloc, Eastern Bloc, or attempting to stay neutral as a member of the
Non-Aligned Movement.
British India was granted independence in 1947 without an outright war of independence being required. It was
partitioned into Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan (
West Pakistan and
East Pakistan, future
Pakistan and
Bangladesh);
Indo-Pakistani wars were fought in 1947, 1965, and 1971.
Sukarno took control of an independent
Indonesia in 1950, as attempts to reinstate Dutch rule in 1945–1949 had largely failed, and took an independent-to-Eastern leaning stance. He would later be overthrown by
Suharto in 1968, who took a pro-Western stance. The
Federation of Malaya was granted independence in 1957, with the concurrent fighting of the
Malayan Emergency against communist forces from 1948–1960. The French unsuccessfully fought the
First Indochina War in an attempt to hold on to
French Indochina; at the
1954 Geneva Conference, the new states of
Cambodia,
Laos, the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and the eventual
Republic of Vietnam were created. The division of Indochina eventually led to the
Vietnam War in the 1960s and 70s (as well as the
Laotian Civil War and
Cambodian Civil War), which ended in communist North Vietnam unifying the country in 1975. In Africa, France fought the grinding
Algerian War from 1954–1962 that saw the end of
French Algeria and the rise of a new independent
Algeria. The British and French both slowly released their vast holdings, leading to the creation of states such as
First Nigerian Republic in 1963. Portugal, on the other hand, fiercely held onto their Empire, leading to the
Portuguese Colonial War from 1961–1974 in Angola, Guinea-Bissau, and Mozambique until the
Estado Novo government fell. Meanwhile,
apartheid-era South Africa remained fiercely anti-communist, but withdrew from the British Commonwealth in 1961, and supported various pro-colonial factions across Africa that had lost support from their "home" governments in Europe. Many of the newly independent African governments struggled with the balance between being too weak and overthrown by ambitious coup-plotters, and too strong and becoming dictatorships. Latin America saw gradual economic growth but also instability in many countries, as the threat of coups and military regimes (
juntas) were a major threat. The most famous was the
Cuban Revolution that overthrew
Fulgencio Batista's American-friendly government for
Fidel Castro's Soviet-aligned government. This led to the
Cuban Missile Crisis in 1963, generally considered one of the incidents most dangerously close to turning the Cold War into a direct military conflict. The
1968 Peruvian coup d'état and also installed a Soviet-friendly government. Despite this, the region ultimately leaned toward the US in this period, with the
CIA supporting American-friendly factions in the
1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, the
1964 Brazilian coup d'état, the
1973 Chilean coup d'état, and others. Nicaragua suffered the most, with the
Nicaraguan Revolution seeing major military aid from both great powers to their favored factions that extended a civil war in the country for decades. Mexico escaped this unrest, although functioned largely as a one-party state dominated by the
PRI.
Argentina had a succession of idiosyncratic governments that courted both the US and USSR, but generally mismanaged the economy. The Middle East saw events that presaged later conflicts in the 70s and 80s. A few years after the end of the UAR's union between Egypt and Syria, Syria's government was overthrown in the
1966 Syrian coup d'état and replaced with the Neo-Baathist Party, eventually leading to the leadership of the
Al-Assad family. Israel and its neighbors fought the
Six-Day War in 1967 and the
Yom Kippur War of 1973. Under
Anwar Sadat and later
Hosni Mubarak, Egypt switched from
Nasserism to favoring the Western Bloc, and signed a peace treaty with Israel. Lebanon, once among the most prosperous countries in the region and a cultural center, collapsed into the decade-long
Lebanese Civil War from 1975–1990. Iran's unpopular pro-American government was overthrown in the 1979
Iranian Revolution and was replaced by a new Islamic Republic headed by
Ruhollah Khomeini. Iran and Baathist Iraq under
Saddam Hussein then fought each other in the
Iran–Iraq War from 1980–1988, which ended inconclusively. In East Asia, China underwent the
Cultural Revolution from 1966 to 1976, a major internal struggle that saw an intense program of
Maoism and persecution of perceived internal enemies. China's relations with the Soviets deteriorated in the 1960s and 70s, resulting in the
Sino-Soviet split, although the two were able to cooperate on some matters. "
Ping-pong diplomacy" led to a rapprochement between the US and China and
American recognition of the Chinese communist government in the 1970s. China's pro-democracy movement was suppressed after the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests, and China's government survived the tensions that would roil the Soviet-aligned bloc during the 1980s. South Korea (in the
June Democratic Struggle) and Taiwan (with the
lifting of martial law) would take major steps toward liberalization in 1987–1988, shifting from Western-aligned one-party states to more fully participatory democracies. The 1980s saw a general retreat for the communist bloc. The
Soviet–Afghan War (1979–1989) is often called the "Soviet Union's Vietnam War" in comparison to the American defeat, being an expensive and ultimately unsuccessful war and occupation. More importantly, the intervening decades had seen that Eastern Europe was unable to compete economically with Western Europe, which undermined the promise of communist abundance compared to capitalist poverty. The Western capitalist economies had proven wealthier and stronger, which made matching the Soviet defense budget to the American one strain limited resources. The
Pan-European Picnic in 1989 then set in motion a peaceful chain reaction with the subsequent
fall of the Berlin Wall. The
Revolutions of 1989 saw many countries of Eastern Europe throw off their communist governments, and the USSR declined to invade to re-establish them.
East and West Germany were reunified.
Client state status for many states ended, as there was no conflict left to fund. The
Malta Summit on 3 December 1989, the failure of the
August Coup by Soviet hardliners, and the formal
dissolution of the Soviet Union on 26 December 1991 sealed the end of the Cold War.
1991–2001 The end of the Cold War left the United States the world's sole superpower. Communism seemed discredited; while China remained an officially communist state, Deng Xiaoping's
reform and opening up and
socialism with Chinese characteristics allowed for the growth of a capitalist private sector in China. In Russia, President
Boris Yeltsin pursued a policy of privatization, spinning off former government agencies into private corporations, attempting to handle budget problems inherited from the USSR. The end of Soviet foreign aid caused a variety of changes in countries previously part of the Eastern Bloc; many officially became democratic republics, though some were more accurately described as authoritarian or
oligarchic republics and
one-party states. Many Western commentators treated the development optimistically; it was thought the world was steadily progressing toward free, liberal democracies. South Africa, no longer able to attract Western support by claiming to be anti-communist,
ended apartheid in the early 1990s, and many Eastern European countries switched to stable democracies. While some Americans had anticipated a "peace dividend" from budget cuts to the Defense Department, these cuts were not as large as some had hoped. The
European Economic Community evolved into the European Union with the signing of the
Maastricht Treaty in 1993, which integrated Europe across borders to a new degree. International coalitions continued to have a role; the
Gulf War saw a large international coalition undo Baathist Iraq's annexation of Kuwait, but other "police" style actions were less successful.
Somalia and
Afghanistan descended into long, bloody civil wars for almost the entirety of the decade (
Somali Civil War,
Afghan Civil War (1992–1996),
Afghan Civil War (1996–2001)). Russia fought a
brutal war in Chechnya that failed to suppress the insurgency there from 1994–1996; war would resume during the
Second Chechen War in 1999–2000 that saw a resumption of Russian control after Russia successfully convinced enough rebels to join their cause with promises of autonomy. The
breakup of Yugoslavia also led to a series of
Yugoslav Wars; NATO eventually intervened in the
Kosovo War. In the Middle East, the
Israeli–Palestinian peace process offered the prospect of a long-term peace deal to many; the
Oslo Accords signed in 1993 seemed to offer a
"roadmap" to resolving the conflict. Despite these high hopes, they would be largely dashed in 2000–2001 after a breakdown of negotiations and the
Second Intifada.
2001–present In 2001 the
September 11 attacks—the deadliest terrorist attacks in human history—were carried out by
al-Qaeda against the United States. In response, the United States declared the
war on terror, a global conflict against
Islamist terrorism. US-led coalitions launched a
war in Afghanistan (2001–2021) against the
Taliban-ruled
Islamic Emirate and the
Iraq War (2003–2011) that deposed Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein. The US
killed al-Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden in 2011 and
withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021, after which the
Taliban retook control of the country. The US also led interventions against militant groups across Africa and the Middle East, including the
war against the Islamic State.
After the 11 September attacks, many countries expanded the powers of law enforcement to combat terrorism and several other terrorist attacks took place across the world. China has sought to challenge the United States's global hegemony. Under
Barack Obama, the US
pivoted its foreign policy focus to East Asia;
China–US relations deteriorated further under
Xi Jinping in China and
Donald Trump in the US. The two countries have engaged in
a trade war and fought for influence in the
developing world. In later years, China escalated
disputes in the South China Sea and over Taiwan and has led
BRICS as forum for
emerging powers, while the US formed the
Quad grouping with Australia, India, and Japan. Disputes between India and China led to
skirmishes between the two countries (2020–2021), and after North Korea
obtained nuclear weapons in 2006, the threat of their use caused the
North Korean crisis (2017–2018). Elsewhere in Asia, Nepal abolished its monarchy in 2008 after the end of the
Nepalese Civil War; a 2015
nationwide ceasefire after
a series of reforms (2011–2015) ended the
Myanmar conflict until
a coup d'état began
a new civil war in 2021; and a 2024
a pro-democracy uprising in Bangladesh overthrew
Sheikh Hasina. In 2025, Nepal's former government was
overthrown forming a new government. in
Cairo, Egypt, during the
Egyptian revolution, 2011 In the
Arab world, a series of anti-government protests, uprisings, and armed resistances known as the
Arab Spring (2010–2012) began after a
revolution in Tunisia that ended the country's dictatorship. The
Egyptian revolution in 2011 led to
a political crisis and a second change of power in
a 2013 coup d'état; in
Libya and
Yemen, successful revolutions gave way to protracted political crises and civil wars. Protests against Syrian leader
Bashar al-Assad led to
a multi-sided civil war (2011–2024) that ultimately ended after the
fall of the Assad regime in 2024 amid
a regional crisis triggered by the
October 7 attacks in 2023 and subsequent
Gaza war. The Gaza war also led to an
Israeli invasion of Lebanon that largely destroyed
Hezbollah and
a significant escalation of the
Iran–Israel proxy conflict. Fears of
Iran's nuclear program led to
a 2015 international deal to limit it and growing
Arab–Israeli normalization which included the 2020 signing of the
Abraham Accords. In 2026, a
US–Israeli war on Iran began intended to remove the Iranian regime through air strikes, which killed
Ali Khamenei and resulted in retaliatory Iranian strikes against several Middle Eastern nations.
Conflicts in the former Soviet Union continued;
Russia invaded Georgia in 2008 and
seized Crimea from
Ukraine in 2014 after
a pro-Western revolution in Ukraine, beginning
a conflict that led to
a full-scale Russian invasion of the country in 2022. The
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict ended after Azerbaijan's victories in
a war with Armenia (2020) and in
a later offensive (2023) incorporated
Artsakh into the country.
Serbia and Montenegro dissolved in 2006 and
Kosovo declared
independence from Serbia two years later to
partial recognition. NATO and the European Union
continued to expand eastward; by 2024,
11 more countries had joined NATO and
13 had joined the EU, while the United Kingdom
left the EU in 2020 after
years of negotiations. In Africa, the end of the
Second Sudanese Civil War allowed
South Sudan to declare independence in 2011, and a
subsequent civil war (2013–2020) ended in a ceasefire. Beginning in the 2020s,
a series of coups d'état primarily in the
Sahel installed military juntas
in Mali,
in Guinea,
in Burkina Faso,
in Niger, and
in Gabon amid
a regional Islamist insurgency and initiated
a standoff (2023–2024) between
ECOWAS and juntas in Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso, which formed the
Alliance of Sahel States in 2023 and established a confederation in 2024. A
2021 coup in Sudan ended
the country's transition to democracy and resulting political crises began
a civil war in 2023. The
East African Community has developed and expanded across the continent while
a military conflict between Rwanda and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo has persisted since 2022. ==Economic history==