front 1 Betray | back 1 to break someone’s trust or turn against them, especially when loyalty is expected (for example, a country breaking a promise to an ally). |
front 2 Buffer | back 2 something that protects or creates space between opposing sides; in world history it often means a country located between rival powers to prevent conflict. |
front 3 Accusation | back 3 a claim that someone did something wrong or illegal, even before it is proven true. |
front 4 Suppression | back 4 the use of force or strict control to stop protests, ideas, or movements that a government sees as a threat. |
front 5 Diplomacy | back 5 the practice of solving problems between countries through meetings, negotiations, and agreements instead of war. |
front 6 International Organizations | back 6 groups formed by multiple countries that work together to solve global issues like war, poverty, and human rights. |
front 7 United Nations | back 7 a worldwide organization created in 1945 after WWII to maintain peace, provide humanitarian aid, protect human rights, and encourage cooperation between countries. |
front 8 Universal Declaration of Human Rights | back 8 a 1948 document stating that all people are born with basic rights and freedoms such as freedom of speech, religion, and protection from discrimination. |
front 9 NATO | back 9 a military alliance formed in 1949 by the United States, Canada, and Western European countries that promised to defend each other if any member was attacked. |
front 10 Warsaw Pact | back 10 a military alliance created in 1955 by the Soviet Union and Eastern European communist countries to counter NATO. |
front 11 Collective Security | back 11 the idea that countries agree to protect each other from threats so that an attack on one country is treated as an attack on all. |
front 12 Zionism | back 12 a political movement that began in the late 1800s calling for a Jewish homeland in Palestine due to centuries of persecution and the desire for safety and self-determination. |
front 13 Resolution 181 (1947 UN Partition Plan for Palestine) | back 13 the UN plan to divide Palestine into two separate states—one Jewish and one Arab—while making Jerusalem an international city; Jews accepted the plan, but many Arab nations rejected it, leading to conflict. |
front 14 Yalta Conference | back 14 a 1945 meeting between the US, USSR, and Britain to plan the end of WWII and decide how Europe—especially Germany—would be divided and rebuilt. |
front 15 Geopolitical | back 15 relating to how geography (location, resources, borders) affects political power and relationships between countries. |
front 16 Command Economy | back 16 an economic system where the government makes major decisions about production, jobs, and prices instead of businesses and consumers. |
front 17 Containment (Truman Doctrine & Marshall Plan) | back 17 the US strategy to stop the spread of communism by giving money, aid, and support to countries so they would stay democratic and economically stable. |
front 18 Soviet Satellite State | back 18 a country in Eastern Europe that was officially independent but heavily controlled by the Soviet Union politically, economically, and militarily. |
front 19 Iron Curtain | back 19 the term used to describe the political and physical divide between communist Eastern Europe and democratic Western Europe during the Cold War. |
front 20 Berlin Airlift | back 20 a US and Allied mission (1948–49) to fly food and supplies into West Berlin after the Soviet Union blocked all land routes into the city. |
front 21 Berlin Wall | back 21 a concrete barrier built in 1961 by East Germany to stop people from escaping communist East Berlin to democratic West Berlin; it became a major symbol of the Cold War. |
front 22 De-Stalinization | back 22 the process started by Nikita Khrushchev to reduce fear and terror in the Soviet Union by ending many of Stalin’s harsh policies and criticizing his rule. |
front 23 Proxy War | back 23 a conflict where powerful countries support opposing sides with money, weapons, or troops but do not fight each other directly (example: Korea and Vietnam). |
front 24 Domino Theory | back 24 the belief that if one country became communist, nearby countries would soon become communist as well. |
front 25 Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) | back 25 a heavily guarded border created after the Korean War that separates communist North Korea from democratic South Korea. |