, one of the attempts at cooperation between the US and the USSR during the
détente Decolonization Cold War politics were affected by decolonization in Africa, Asia, and to a limited extent, Latin America as well. The economic needs of emerging
Third World states made them vulnerable to foreign influence and pressure. The era was characterized by a proliferation of anti-colonial
national liberation movements, backed predominantly by the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. The Soviet leadership took a keen interest in the affairs of the fledgling ex-colonies because it hoped the cultivation of socialist clients there would deny their economic and strategic resources to the West. Both nations promoted global decolonization as an opportunity to redress the balance of the world against Western Europe and the United States, and claimed that the political and economic problems of colonized peoples made them naturally inclined towards socialism. The great disparities of wealth in many of the colonies between the colonized indigenous population and the colonizers provided fertile ground for the adoption of socialist ideology among many anti-colonial parties. This provided ammunition for Western propaganda which denounced many anti-colonial movements as being communist proxies. The presence of significant numbers of white settlers in
Rhodesia complicated attempts at decolonization there, and the former actually issued a
unilateral declaration of independence in 1965 to preempt an immediate transition to majority rule. The breakaway white government retained power in Rhodesia until 1979, despite a United Nations embargo and a devastating
civil war with two rival guerrilla factions backed by the Soviets and Chinese, respectively. While declining to take a direct part in hostilities, the Soviet Union did provide the impetus for a successful Ethiopian counteroffensive to expel Somalia from the Ogaden. The counteroffensive was planned at the command level by Soviet advisers and bolstered by the delivery of millions of dollars' of sophisticated Soviet arms. About 11,000 Cuban troops spearheaded the primary effort, after receiving hasty training on the newly delivered Soviet weapons systems by East German instructors. shaking hands with Henry Kissinger in 1976 In
Chile, the
Socialist Party candidate
Salvador Allende won the
presidential election of 1970, thereby becoming the first democratically elected Marxist to become president of a country in the Americas. The CIA targeted Allende for removal and operated to undermine his support domestically, which contributed to unrest culminating in General
Augusto Pinochet's
1973 Chilean coup d'état. Pinochet consolidated power as a military dictator, Allende's reforms of the economy were rolled back, and leftist opponents were killed or detained in internment camps under the
Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional (DINA). Socialist states—with the exception of China and
Romania—broke off relations with Chile. The Pinochet regime would go on to be one of the leading participants in
Operation Condor, an international campaign of assassination and
state terrorism organized by right-wing military dictatorships in the
Southern Cone of South America that was covertly supported by the US government. ,
Angola, 1976 On 24 April 1974, the
Carnation Revolution succeeded in ousting
Marcelo Caetano and Portugal's right-wing
Estado Novo government, sounding the death knell for the Portuguese Empire. Independence was hastily granted to several Portuguese colonies, including
Angola, where the disintegration of colonial rule was followed by a civil war. There were three rival militant factions competing for power in Angola: the
People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), the
National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), and the
National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA). While all three had socialist leanings, the MPLA was the only party with close ties to the Soviet Union. Its adherence to the concept of a Soviet one-party state alienated it from the FNLA and UNITA, which began portraying themselves as anti-communist and pro-Western. When the Soviets began supplying the MPLA with arms, the CIA and China offered substantial covert aid to the FNLA and UNITA. The MPLA eventually requested direct military support from Moscow in the form of ground troops, but the Soviets declined, offering to send advisers but no combat personnel. Cuba was more forthcoming and began amassing troops in Angola to assist the MPLA. By November 1975, there were over a thousand Cuban soldiers in the country. The persistent buildup of Cuban troops and Soviet weapons allowed the MPLA to secure victory and blunt an abortive intervention by Zairean and
South African troops, which had deployed in a belated attempt to assist the FNLA and UNITA.
regime led by
Pol Pot, 1.5 to 2 million people died due to the policies of his four-year premiership. During the Vietnam War, North Vietnam
used border areas of Cambodia as military bases, which Cambodian head of state
Norodom Sihanouk tolerated in an attempt to preserve Cambodia's neutrality. Following
Sihanouk's March 1970 deposition by pro-American general
Lon Nol, who ordered the North Vietnamese to leave Cambodia, North Vietnam attempted to overrun Cambodia following negotiations with
Nuon Chea, the second-in-command of the Cambodian communists (dubbed the
Khmer Rouge) fighting to overthrow the Cambodian government. Sihanouk fled to China with the establishment of the
GRUNK in Beijing. American and South Vietnamese forces responded to these actions with a
bombing campaign and a
ground incursion, which contributed to the violence of the
civil war that soon enveloped all of Cambodia. US carpet bombing
lasted until 1973, and while it prevented the Khmer Rouge from seizing the capital, it accelerated the collapse of rural society, increased social polarization, and killed tens of thousands. After taking power and distancing himself from the Vietnamese, pro-China Khmer Rouge leader
Pol Pot killed 1.5 to 2 million Cambodians in the
Killing Fields, roughly a quarter of the population (commonly labelled the
Cambodian genocide).
Martin Shaw described these atrocities as "the purest genocide of the Cold War era." Backed by the
Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation, an organization of Khmer pro-Soviet Communists and Khmer Rouge defectors, Vietnam invaded Cambodia on 22 December 1978. The
invasion succeeded in deposing Pol Pot, but the new state struggled to gain international recognition beyond the Soviet Bloc sphere. Despite the international outcry at Pol Pot regime's gross human rights violations, representatives of the Khmer Rouge were allowed to be seated in the
UN General Assembly, with strong support from China, Western powers, and the member countries of
ASEAN. Cambodia became bogged down in a guerrilla war led from refugee camps located on the border with
Thailand. Following the destruction of the Khmer Rouge, the national reconstruction of Cambodia was hampered, and Vietnam suffered a punitive
Chinese attack. Although unable to deter Vietnam from ousting Pol Pot, China demonstrated that its Cold War communist adversary, the Soviet Union, was unable to protect its Vietnamese ally. Former U.S. Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger wrote that "China succeeded in exposing the limits of...[Soviet] strategic reach" and speculated that the desire to "compensate for their ineffectuality" contributed to the Soviets' decision to
intervene in Afghanistan a year later. ==French withdrawal from NATO military structures==