I like how 3rd world country term is now used to mean poor and unstable countries. Although many are stable and rich, just didnt join sides in the cold war.
Third World, (Tiers Monde) is an expression developed by Alfred Sauvy to name poor countries in reference to the social situations during the french old regime, it's later Third World became synonym for "non aligned."
For anyone wondering why Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan are nuclear powers towards the end: They inherited Soviet missiles once they became independent. History Matters made a video on it so I suggest you watch that for more info.
@@diranbodossian6061 All those countries no longer have any nukes, Russia took them back. Those countries probably neither have the codes to launch them nor the capacity to maintain them.
@@diranbodossian6061 they did for a couple months but America and other economically powerful nations got them to relinquish their nukes with good economic deals
Three corrections we've noticed: - Somalia should be listed as Other from 1977 to 1991. Because of Soviet support of Ethiopia during the Ogaden War, they no longer aligned with the Soviets. They turned to a United States partnership instead. Though remained socialist - New Zealand should be listed as Other starting in 1986 due to the country being suspended from ANZUS when it became a nuclear-free zone. - The Iran-Iraq War isn't even shown
Yugoslavia wasn't a soviet ally, it tried to maintain neutral relations with both sides and to trade with whom they can. Stalin even tried to assasinate Tito a few times, and Tito said that if he tries to assasinate Stalin once, he won't need to try again.
@SovietVodyanoy1949Yugoslavia liberated itself from Germany all on its own during WW2, hence why they were independant during the Cold War and not a puppet dictatorship under the soviets
@@krazownik3139 yeah but unofficial is good enough, it meant neither side could invade to bring communism or ‘democracy without being seen as the aggressor
@Debayan Bagchi india had just friendly ties with soviet because we had no choice as pak was with America , and USA and UK fully supported Pakistan that time , we had no other choice , and remember KGB killed our leader Lal bahadur shastri
for some reason I expected for this timelapse to go beyond 1991 and show NATO expanding into the former Warsaw Pact countries, the various changes in the Middle East, China's expanding influence, etc.
It's quite staggering how the Soviet Blitzkrieg into East Asia in the final days of WW2 is so overlooked when it played such a massive role in setting the tone of the Cold War and politics today. It essentially led to China's fall to Communism, the Korean War, and the ensuing US mindset that led to Vietnam and other interventions like Afganistan that proved to have disastrous consequences.
Man, this brings back memories. Your original Cold War video was the second video I watched from you when I was just starting to teach myself geography.
Hi, I'm a bit surprised by some elements: 1) Pakistan & Israël not shown as Nuclear powers 2) France being in the same blue all along while it leaft the NATO's military integrated command from 1967 to 2009 (keeping good relations & formal alliance, but not full member of NATO per se). I think a moment of lighter blue would have been more appropriate for a part of the video small critics, nothing problematic, & keep the good work
1. Pakistan got nukes in the 90s. Israel more than likely had nukes but it was never fully proven when they got them so I couldn’t pick a moment. 2. Too many shades of blue would have been difficult to tell apart for a lot of people.
@@EmperorTigerstar Yes, Israel's nukes are vague, but you could've picked either the Vela event (1979), generally considered a joint South Africa-Israel air test, or at least the Vanunu program disclosure (1986)
@@EmperorTigerstar Pakistan tested its nukes in the 90s but had the capability before. It was just waiting for India to test again so it would have justification to test its own nukes.
@@procyon6370 I dunno, I was gonna read the series then I realized there was over 90 books and I just don’t have the patience to read them all. I just found warriors when going down the UA-cam rabbit hole, something I definitely am interested in, just not patient enough to read.
America vs Russia: a tense rivalry that played a major role shaping and defining the world in the 2nd half of the 20th Century, but which doesn't seem to have ended or has been slowly making a comeback for the past decade.
First off, it's America vs Soviets. Second, no one outside of leftover political elites, short-sighted warhawks, and dumb sheep who watch mainstream media on both sides still think a backwater with nukes like Russia is somehow still the main rival of the US since the fall of the Soviet Union.
@@robertortiz-wilson1588 It wasn't America vs "Soviets", It was America vs Russia. You're naivë if you actually think that the USSR was about the "Soviets" and not Greater Russia/Russian Empire in disguise. Here's a fun fact from someone who lives in an ex USSR country: The Russians absolutely dominated minorities like us, and the policy of russification that was started by the Russian Empire? It still continued under the "Soviets", (still Russians) and if we haven't gotten our independence for another 2-3 decades, *our language and culture would've been completely wiped out, replaced by Russian.* It's hilarious how naivë people like you still exist. "Soviets" get out of here.
Some errors that I've noticed: • Between February 1958 and August 1958, Iraq 🇮🇶 and Jordan 🇯🇴 weren't supposed to have a border separating them, since both were under the Hashemite Arab Federation at the time, and basically, a single state (although the Iraqi 🇮🇶 part could've been shown blue, since it was a part of the Baghdad Pact, the Hashemite Arab Federation was composed of 2 sovereign states without someone controlling both); • You forgot to label the Sand War between September 1963 and February 1964, this war between Morocco 🇲🇦 and Algeria 🇩🇿 was related to the Cold War; • The Democratic Republic of the Congo 🇨🇩 (later the Republic of Zaire) should've been shown as an US ally (Blue and Green for being at the Non-Alligned movement) from November 1965 onwards, due to the extremely anti-communist dictatorship led by Mobutu Sese Seko that was backed by the CIA that the country was passing through; • From March 1968 onwards, Indonesia 🇮🇩 should've been shown as an US ally, due to its extremely anti-communist policies from its then dictator Suharto, that would last until May 1998; • From March 1970 onwards, the territories occupied by the Khmer Republic on modern-day Cambodia 🇰🇭 should have been shown as an US ally, since the Khmer Republic was an US-backed military dictatorship that fell to the genocidal Khmer Rouge on April 1975; • You forgot to show the 1971 Bolivian coup d'état 🇧🇴 on August 1971; • On multiple parts of this video before December 1971 (April 1953, October 1958, March 1969), you forgot to flash Bangladesh 🇧🇩 grey when a military coup happened in Pakistan 🇵🇰, since before that date, both were one country; • On April 1974, you forgot to flash Cabo Verde 🇨🇻 grey, all the other Portuguese 🇵🇹 colonies were shown with a flash of grey; • Mayotte 🇾🇹 was supposed to continue to be a part of France 🇫🇷 on July 1975, and not become a part of Comoros 🇰🇲; • Nicaragua 🇳🇮 shouldn't have been shown as an US ally between July 1979 and January 1985, since the country was going through an "...Unitary socialist provisional government under a military junta..." at the time, this government led by the Sandinista National Liberation Front was backed by the Soviet Union during the Nicaraguan Revolution; • Namibia 🇳🇦 should've joined the Non-Alligned Movement on September 1979, not on March 1990; • The Iran-Iraq War 🇮🇷🇮🇶 should've been shown on September 1980 to August 1988; • Senegal 🇸🇳 and The Gambia 🇬🇲 should've been shown as one single country between February 1982 and December 1989, due to both being under the Senegambia Confederation; • On January 1986, a military coup happened in Lesotho 🇱🇸, you missed that.
There is so much going on here month by month, I was rewinding constantly. "When did South Africa become a nuclear power?" "Did Turkey have another military coup?" "Ah, that's why the USSR intervened in Afghanistan; they were neighbors." "...When did South Africa stop being a nuclear power?"
@@edwinalexis593 Nah, that was the American-Afghan war. The Soviets were very successful in their campaign and managed to place an actual stable socialist government. The Americans then used Terrorists situated in Pakistan to attack and enslave Afghanistan.
Major flaw in this map. The European colonies were not part of NATO. NATO does not apply to any territory, integral or colonial south of the Tropic of Cancer. And even then Algeria was above the Tropic of Cancer and France asked for NATO help in suppressing Algerians because from France's point of view, Algeria was just another province of France. Despite this plea for help and Algeria being above the Tropic of Cancer the US declined because we didn't feel like it.
This was such a freaky time to live through, and technically I got only the tail end of it! Only, we didn't know that was true at the time. I remember hearing all the horror stories of how INSANELY hard it was to get over the Berlin Wall...and how many people tried anyway. I heard in school about how the Soviet citizens had to stand in bread lines, and suddenly realising they were just people too and feeling sorry for them. I remember watching one of the big meetings between Reagan and Gorbechev on TV, when I was a kid, and I remember how songs about how we might all die tomorrow in a firey armageddon...could be happy little pop tunes and almost hit the top of the charts! I also remember watching the Olympics opening ceremonies on TV, and the first time ONE Germany marched in, with ONE flag. Just one. And it suddenly hit me. Last but not least, I still have a globe from my school days, that has the U.S.S.R. and all the Communist Bloc countries still on it, with their Cold War names. It's gone from normal, to outdated, to EMBARRASINGLY outdated, to kinda cool because it's a historical thing. :) Sidenote but: Did any other oldsters pause on the exact month and year you were born, to really look at and soak in what the world looked like at that time? I did.
I wouldn't call the Falklands War a proxy war. Yes, the UK received help from United States, but Argentina didn't accept help from the USSR or another communist country
Cold war in a few sentences The world lives at daggers drawn in a cold war. With the Cold War almost over, the talks were a mere formality. Throughout the Cold War, the Allies asserted their right to move freely between the two Berlins. With the end of the Cold War, several warships were put into mothballs.
For those wondering why Namibia was listed separately from South Africa prior to March 1990, it's because although it was governed as part of South Africa, it was never *officially* annexed (although it should've been changed to light-green in 1966, as that's when the UN took direct controll).
Have you considered adding commentary to videos like this? It could be helpful to get some pointers of where to look or what is going on that isnt visible on a map. I love the detail you put in to these, it seems you really do your research.
I think that and the Six Day War just happened to be too short to be included in a timelapse based on monthly changes, even though both were important for the technology and tactics on display as well as for the geopolitics of the region.
@@supremo342-h6j The soviets were heavily backing the arab states, they equiped them with quite good tanks for the time as well as sent advisors. There were reports of soviet soldiers also fighting however those are questionable. The biggest thing they did was to provide SAM systems that hampered the Israeli air capabilities significantly resulting in huge losses for the Israeli airforce. The reasoning is more to ally the arab nations than to kill Israel. A lot of Israeli's ties to the US only really began after the 6 day war so were relatively recent at this point. It's a really interesting conflict and worth looking into!
@@Josephpesoj Were both to kill Israel (To ensure there was no more western influence on mid east) and to have arabs as ally resulting in the entire region being under soviet influence. Isn't required to say what was the result, I don't like too much ( ( that state ) ) but they really knows how to fight, was one of the major humilliations for the soviets, cuz while the US had to move from the other side of the world to get to Vietnam and the logistics itself were a huge challenge, the soviets and their allies didn't had that problem and also were surrounding the israelies.
There are many countries used to be western but now are eastern or neutral since they had reasons. Iran: Iran was simply Pahlavi and it was western until the change of government and the making of Israel they stopped being western and became Eastern. Iran also got close to China and Russia due to Iran Oil Reserves, Russian Fabric and Chinese Exports. Pakistan: People protested to be more powerful since at that time Pakistan’s resources were being taken too much by the West. Millions of Protests happened. And they became a nuclear power! Became Easternish-Westernish-Neutral but mostly Neutral since there situation with India is improving. UAE,Oman,Yemen: UAE: Wanted to be better alone and left the west. And they build the tallest skyscrapers. Oman: Same for UAE, but wanted to be traditional. Yemen: The west left Yemen. And instead threw bombs and made a civil war there. East Pakistan/East Bengal/Bangladesh: (In that time Bangladesh was East Pakistan) Bangladesh had a civil war from Pakistan. Yeah. This only shows the timeline of the Cold War. The thing they didn’t show was the part of there greatness.
If he hadn't lost, Vietnam and North Korea would not have been communist. China will be an ally of the United States. The concept of the four policemen of the United Nations is China, the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom. The United States has promoted him to the five permanent members of the United Nations.
Pretty cool video, although there are a few things to note: - There probably should have been a color for allies of the USSR that weren't necessarily Communist (such as Algeria from 1962). - As mentioned by a below comment, Somalia should be listed as Second World Other from 1987.
The map is highly problematic becuase there was much nuance in alignments. Syria was a more reliable Soviet ally than Romania. Greece and Turkey were NATO but they disliked each other much more than they disliked the Soviets etc.
Technically there shouldn't be a border between South Africa and Namibia until 1990, right? Namibia only became an independent country in 1990, breaking away from South Africa.
"Cold war is a mind game played by two to five players, known as playees; each turn is a day, where you have to deal with your enemies by diplomacy or start a nuclear war." -Own quote
What if South Africa kept his own nuclear and instead Russia soviet send nuclear to Angola and Mozambique and started nuclear war and also happens on Cuba?
Not sure if it fully counts as a proxy war but, if it does, you missed the Iran-Iraq War. It was a proxy war but only because the US backed Iraq but the CIA also sold weapons to Iran and then laundered the money to one side of the Nicaraguan Civil War.
One error: Somalia should be shown with the same colors as Yugoslavia from November 1977 to December 1990. This is because the USSR supported Ethiopia in the Ogaden War, and Somalia aligned itself with China instead of the Soviet Union given the Sino-Soviet split. Somalia cut ties with the USSR in the Ogaden War
@@wdwfanatic1394 The US did support Somalia during the Ogaden War, and it later adopted Somalia as an ally to counter USSR. In the context of the Sino-Soviet split however, Somalia remained communist until December 1990. Somalia aligned itself with China as China and the USSR competed for influence in the communist world, and Somalia cut ties with the USSR in 1977
During the Cold War, an American and Russian automaker decide to have a match race on a course through Moscow. The American car is much faster and wins easily. The next day, the Pravda headline read, "Moscow Race Results: Russian Car Finishes Second, American Car Finishes Next to Last".
A few questions just because I'm curious: 1. How exactly did you define an "ally" of the US and the USSR? I'm curious as to why a country like Ireland isn't an ally of the US but an other first world nation for example. 2. Why is Austria consistently a part of the third world when other European countries like Switzerland are labeled as an other first world nation? 3. Why did you show the individual republics in the Russian Federation at the very end? Is that just because the Russian Federation didn't form immediately after the USSR fell or due to something else? Amazing video as always. Been watching for like 7-8 years now and you continue to be amazing. I hope you don't think I'm being judgmental or nitpicking your work or whatever; I am asking these questions to expand my own knowledge on the subject
1. Allies are based off of military treaty agreements. 2. The first, second, and third world had conventional definitions. For the first world it was the hardest to define so it was just a list of countries and Austria was not included. Plus they had forced neutrality by treaty which would solidly put them in the third world camp.
There were a lot more openly Marxist-Leninist or Socialist African countries than are shown in this video, some were still Soviet aligned despite being officially neutral and others were openly pro Soviet as well. Such as Madagascar, Algeria, Egypt, Libya
How is Finland western block? We literally had an mutually assistance pact that other Warsaw Pact members had until 1991. (yya sopimus, finlandization, treaty of 1948 finland soviet)
@@karvainenhedelma1918 We had important economic relations with ussr, from the war reperations that started our economy to the huge market crises that happened after ussr collapsed. And this video isn't about culture, it's about politics and economy. Tigerstar just didn't bother researching about us.
Trading and economic systems are different things. You do realise that Finland was and still is a capitalist country? I'm not denying the importance of war reparations to the Finnish economy, but it's not same as Finnish economic system. How do you know something is or isn't about culture? Is there something in the video that shows it or...?
If Austria is marked as Third world Green then Finland deserves to be in the same category if not in non-aligned Red since Finland was technically allied with the Soviet Union though the Agreement of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance of 1948, not to be confused with the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, also known as the Warsaw pact.
Couple of things you missed: 1. Wouldn't it make more sense to list China as in the Western Bloc from 1961 to 1989 and Kampuchea from 1975 to 1979? 2. Central and South America were not as "non-aligned" during the Cold War as some make them out to be. The Rio Treaty was signed in 1947 and was made effective in 1948, so most of Central and South America should at least be blue from 1948. 3. A lot of the Middle East has nothing despite the Arab Cold War.
@@danielbuddenmusic1502 Normalizing relations doesnt mean your on the same side, just recently the US opened an embassy in Cuba but you wouldn't call Cuba part of the western world
@@Ducky27_ I know, but that's not all of what happened with China. The US and China were generally on the same side during wars, notably in the Third Indochina War.
No Forest Brothers war? It was essentially the Soviet Union's Vietnam in the Baltics with thousands of casualties lasting for years and inhibiting the Soviet's efforts in the region. I recommend using spotted/dash marks across the Baltics to represent the war going on in the region.
I don't think that's a proxy war so it makes sense it wasn't written(though I don't know since I don't know anything about that war), and this video doesn't show internal conflict on the map
@@firecreeper2249 The UK, US, and other Western powers were supporting the resistance fighters. They held a lot of territory and It's also not internal, because the war was essentially a continuation of the Soviets invasion and occupation of the Baltics in WW2 and the governments were still in exile.
@@compatriot852 what I meant by internal is that unless a state is proclaimed or a territory is annexed this video won't show it. it's not really a rule that relies on historical facts or a rule at all, it's just a thing that I've observed mappers do to save time. though I would it to be shown anyways
@@firecreeper2249 in 1949 Lithuania re-re-re declared independence since partisans were basically in control of all of Lithuania. I think that it should be marked in the video some how.
According to Mao's original definition China should be third world rather than the second world, which referred to the Soviet Bloc plus a number of developed countries not explicitly aligned with the US.
Thanks for the patience! Glad to be back.
NOTES:
- Rhodesia (modern day Zimbabwe) should be third world green from 1965 to 1978.
:D
:)
@@adfr3d470 thank you
You're welcome
Your welcome tigerstar
I like how 3rd world country term is now used to mean poor and unstable countries. Although many are stable and rich, just didnt join sides in the cold war.
its weird my country is labelled as first world. even south america is labelled as first world.
Third World, (Tiers Monde) is an expression developed by Alfred Sauvy to name poor countries in reference to the social situations during the french old regime, it's later Third World became synonym for "non aligned."
Switzerland is third world, while Pakistan is first world
@Lucas11m10 Brazil?? Stable and rich?? loool
@Lucas11m10 I'm Brazilian and the last 7 years of our history state against you.
So how many coups do you want?
Nigeria, Argentina, and Turkey: Yes
countryball and satw?
well turkey had 2 military coups
@@kaan732 3 actualy, with Turkish military momerandum it would be 5
Source: Wikipedia
Pakistan : Ametaurs
Greece with 13 coups in 11 years and 23 changes in goverment: Amateurs!
For anyone wondering why Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan are nuclear powers towards the end: They inherited Soviet missiles once they became independent. History Matters made a video on it so I suggest you watch that for more info.
citing history matters as a good source
@@duskpede5146 what ? you think he isn't ??
Oh geez, Lukashenko has NUKES?!?!
@@diranbodossian6061 All those countries no longer have any nukes, Russia took them back. Those countries probably neither have the codes to launch them nor the capacity to maintain them.
@@diranbodossian6061 they did for a couple months but America and other economically powerful nations got them to relinquish their nukes with good economic deals
Three corrections we've noticed:
- Somalia should be listed as Other from 1977 to 1991. Because of Soviet support of Ethiopia during the Ogaden War, they no longer aligned with the Soviets. They turned to a United States partnership instead. Though remained socialist
- New Zealand should be listed as Other starting in 1986 due to the country being suspended from ANZUS when it became a nuclear-free zone.
- The Iran-Iraq War isn't even shown
Ikr surprised the Iran Iraq war was not on here and the 6th day war
countryball and satw?
@@Redkodiak1994 this is every month 6 days war was less than 1 month
Man, I see you everywhere.
Israel is not shown as a nuclear power in this video
Yugoslavia wasn't a soviet ally, it tried to maintain neutral relations with both sides and to trade with whom they can. Stalin even tried to assasinate Tito a few times, and Tito said that if he tries to assasinate Stalin once, he won't need to try again.
Tito was the one who betrayed stalin
sheesh bro dropped a cold line on Stalin 🥶
hence why yugoslavia was shown as other
@SovietVodyanoy1949Yugoslavia liberated itself from Germany all on its own during WW2, hence why they were independant during the Cold War and not a puppet dictatorship under the soviets
@@chadzahirshah2588Actually we got much help from the Red Army
The virgin superpower versus the chad non-aligned movement
Non-aligned movement was a joke. In reality most of the member countries were unofficial allies of one side.
@@krazownik3139 Imagine actually declaring allegiance instead of holding up the pretense of neutrality
@@krazownik3139 yeah but unofficial is good enough, it meant neither side could invade to bring communism or ‘democracy without being seen as the aggressor
@Debayan Bagchi india was non aligned, we gave both america and the soviets the middle finger after testing the atomic bomb.
@Debayan Bagchi india had just friendly ties with soviet because we had no choice as pak was with America , and USA and UK fully supported Pakistan that time , we had no other choice , and remember KGB killed our leader Lal bahadur shastri
for some reason I expected for this timelapse to go beyond 1991 and show NATO expanding into the former Warsaw Pact countries, the various changes in the Middle East, China's expanding influence, etc.
Well that's not anymore the cold war
That was the sequel
The cold war never truly ended. China simply took the USSR's place as the bulwark of communism
@@compatriot852 no I feel like it did bc the trade war is what marked the new one in my opinion
@@compatriot852 It did end.
Really awesome video honestly, great job!
And thanks for using my video on the Portuguese Colonial War!
Austria: *sipping tea*
Austria didn't do so well in WW1 and WW2, wise idea to sit WW3 out.
*kaffee
More like munching on a schnitzel
Switzerland is watching a film.
*It wasn't Me, it was ger-*
had to put it at half speed to notice all the changes each month, but still, excellent video, man. i'd imagine that research alone took forever
I had to put it at quarter speed
I really love the choice of music. It's constantly building up but never drops or releases, very very fitting
It's quite staggering how the Soviet Blitzkrieg into East Asia in the final days of WW2 is so overlooked when it played such a massive role in setting the tone of the Cold War and politics today. It essentially led to China's fall to Communism, the Korean War, and the ensuing US mindset that led to Vietnam and other interventions like Afganistan that proved to have disastrous consequences.
it also caused japans surrender
@EmperorTigerStar myself wouldn't be me without you! Also great job!
Man, this brings back memories. Your original Cold War video was the second video I watched from you when I was just starting to teach myself geography.
In Seychelles 1977, there is supposed to be a coup, but it didn’t show up.
Because Seychells is too small or forgotten
@Greater Somalia oh ok
man jt literally is there its the ssquare near madasgasacar also does it matter
Hi, I'm a bit surprised by some elements:
1) Pakistan & Israël not shown as Nuclear powers
2) France being in the same blue all along while it leaft the NATO's military integrated command from 1967 to 2009 (keeping good relations & formal alliance, but not full member of NATO per se). I think a moment of lighter blue would have been more appropriate for a part of the video
small critics, nothing problematic, & keep the good work
1. Pakistan got nukes in the 90s. Israel more than likely had nukes but it was never fully proven when they got them so I couldn’t pick a moment.
2. Too many shades of blue would have been difficult to tell apart for a lot of people.
France was de facto a full NATO member, in case of war France would had automatically rejoin the integrated command.
@@EmperorTigerstar Yes, Israel's nukes are vague, but you could've picked either the Vela event (1979), generally considered a joint South Africa-Israel air test, or at least the Vanunu program disclosure (1986)
@@EmperorTigerstar where was the military coup in France?
@@EmperorTigerstar Pakistan tested its nukes in the 90s but had the capability before. It was just waiting for India to test again so it would have justification to test its own nukes.
Cold War become Hot War as soon as missile start to dance on the sky
dont look now... iron dome in the middle east
I just realized EmperorTigerstar is probably named after “Tigerstar” from the warrior cats book series and isn’t made up like I thought.
Everyone who has touched those books makes that realization sometime. Have they gotten better?
@@procyon6370 I dunno, I was gonna read the series then I realized there was over 90 books and I just don’t have the patience to read them all.
I just found warriors when going down the UA-cam rabbit hole, something I definitely am interested in, just not patient enough to read.
I read the first five series. Things got stale after the first two.
Also tigerstar wanted power like an emperor so lol.
I love how a historical mapper could’ve got inspiration from Warriors
America vs Russia: a tense rivalry that played a major role shaping and defining the world in the 2nd half of the 20th Century, but which doesn't seem to have ended or has been slowly making a comeback for the past decade.
It has ended, but now it's vs China considering that Russia is very weak compared to the US.
Honestly the modern tension between Russia and the US is stupid but I guess elites in both countries still want to milk it for power.
First off, it's America vs Soviets.
Second, no one outside of leftover political elites, short-sighted warhawks, and dumb sheep who watch mainstream media on both sides still think a backwater with nukes like Russia is somehow still the main rival of the US since the fall of the Soviet Union.
@@2hotflavored666 Russia is still 2nd on GFP lol
@@robertortiz-wilson1588 It wasn't America vs "Soviets", It was America vs Russia. You're naivë if you actually think that the USSR was about the "Soviets" and not Greater Russia/Russian Empire in disguise. Here's a fun fact from someone who lives in an ex USSR country: The Russians absolutely dominated minorities like us, and the policy of russification that was started by the Russian Empire? It still continued under the "Soviets", (still Russians) and if we haven't gotten our independence for another 2-3 decades, *our language and culture would've been completely wiped out, replaced by Russian.* It's hilarious how naivë people like you still exist. "Soviets" get out of here.
"Is it true that Stalin collects jokes with and about himself?"
"Yes it is true, but he also collects the people who make them"
...
Some errors that I've noticed:
• Between February 1958 and August 1958, Iraq 🇮🇶 and Jordan 🇯🇴 weren't supposed to have a border separating them, since both were under the Hashemite Arab Federation at the time, and basically, a single state (although the Iraqi 🇮🇶 part could've been shown blue, since it was a part of the Baghdad Pact, the Hashemite Arab Federation was composed of 2 sovereign states without someone controlling both);
• You forgot to label the Sand War between September 1963 and February 1964, this war between Morocco 🇲🇦 and Algeria 🇩🇿 was related to the Cold War;
• The Democratic Republic of the Congo 🇨🇩 (later the Republic of Zaire) should've been shown as an US ally (Blue and Green for being at the Non-Alligned movement) from November 1965 onwards, due to the extremely anti-communist dictatorship led by Mobutu Sese Seko that was backed by the CIA that the country was passing through;
• From March 1968 onwards, Indonesia 🇮🇩 should've been shown as an US ally, due to its extremely anti-communist policies from its then dictator Suharto, that would last until May 1998;
• From March 1970 onwards, the territories occupied by the Khmer Republic on modern-day Cambodia 🇰🇭 should have been shown as an US ally, since the Khmer Republic was an US-backed military dictatorship that fell to the genocidal Khmer Rouge on April 1975;
• You forgot to show the 1971 Bolivian coup d'état 🇧🇴 on August 1971;
• On multiple parts of this video before December 1971 (April 1953, October 1958, March 1969), you forgot to flash Bangladesh 🇧🇩 grey when a military coup happened in Pakistan 🇵🇰, since before that date, both were one country;
• On April 1974, you forgot to flash Cabo Verde 🇨🇻 grey, all the other Portuguese 🇵🇹 colonies were shown with a flash of grey;
• Mayotte 🇾🇹 was supposed to continue to be a part of France 🇫🇷 on July 1975, and not become a part of Comoros 🇰🇲;
• Nicaragua 🇳🇮 shouldn't have been shown as an US ally between July 1979 and January 1985, since the country was going through an "...Unitary socialist provisional government under a military junta..." at the time, this government led by the Sandinista National Liberation Front was backed by the Soviet Union during the Nicaraguan Revolution;
• Namibia 🇳🇦 should've joined the Non-Alligned Movement on September 1979, not on March 1990;
• The Iran-Iraq War 🇮🇷🇮🇶 should've been shown on September 1980 to August 1988;
• Senegal 🇸🇳 and The Gambia 🇬🇲 should've been shown as one single country between February 1982 and December 1989, due to both being under the Senegambia Confederation;
• On January 1986, a military coup happened in Lesotho 🇱🇸, you missed that.
Still quite a reminiscent & classical but also a more educational and enjoyable reboot
I quite miss these sometimes
Latin America throughout this hole video: Its complicated
1st world: Rich and peaceful
2nd world: strong and dominant
3rd world: poor and unstable also neutral in some countries
There is so much going on here month by month, I was rewinding constantly. "When did South Africa become a nuclear power?" "Did Turkey have another military coup?" "Ah, that's why the USSR intervened in Afghanistan; they were neighbors." "...When did South Africa stop being a nuclear power?"
Yet another good video! I see that you put a lot of time in effort into remaking the Cold War by every month
its pretty nice to see a remaster of this masterpiece
Every Masterpiece:
*Soviet-Afghan War*
Has it's Cheap Copy:
*USA Troops in Afghanistan*
Masterpieces:
Vietnam War
Rip off:
1979 Chinese invasion of Vietnam
Yeh, the Afghan-Soviet war is the masterpiece cuz the afghans managed to get down the USSR
@@edwinalexis593 Nah, that was the American-Afghan war. The Soviets were very successful in their campaign and managed to place an actual stable socialist government. The Americans then used Terrorists situated in Pakistan to attack and enslave Afghanistan.
@@mathskafunda4383soutc?
Major flaw in this map. The European colonies were not part of NATO. NATO does not apply to any territory, integral or colonial south of the Tropic of Cancer. And even then Algeria was above the Tropic of Cancer and France asked for NATO help in suppressing Algerians because from France's point of view, Algeria was just another province of France. Despite this plea for help and Algeria being above the Tropic of Cancer the US declined because we didn't feel like it.
I Don't Think That A Flaw because If Emperortigerstar Did, It Would Look Like The Colony were Given Independence and Made intro Middle African Powers.
maybe a shaded line of nato would make the distinction of it being an overseas colony
like the falklands war didnt cause nato to invade argentina
Releasing a cold war video in July, madness
It's rather cold where I am in the winter in Melbourne. It's snowing right now on some nearby hills.
Very well-made video about the cold war!
I'd love to see a video relating Ireland, like the 9 years war or something like that.
Egypt was pretty much fully in US camp when they signed the Camp David accords in 1979.
This was such a freaky time to live through, and technically I got only the tail end of it! Only, we didn't know that was true at the time. I remember hearing all the horror stories of how INSANELY hard it was to get over the Berlin Wall...and how many people tried anyway. I heard in school about how the Soviet citizens had to stand in bread lines, and suddenly realising they were just people too and feeling sorry for them. I remember watching one of the big meetings between Reagan and Gorbechev on TV, when I was a kid, and I remember how songs about how we might all die tomorrow in a firey armageddon...could be happy little pop tunes and almost hit the top of the charts! I also remember watching the Olympics opening ceremonies on TV, and the first time ONE Germany marched in, with ONE flag. Just one. And it suddenly hit me.
Last but not least, I still have a globe from my school days, that has the U.S.S.R. and all the Communist Bloc countries still on it, with their Cold War names. It's gone from normal, to outdated, to EMBARRASINGLY outdated, to kinda cool because it's a historical thing. :)
Sidenote but: Did any other oldsters pause on the exact month and year you were born, to really look at and soak in what the world looked like at that time? I did.
Baltics are always oversimplified for 1990-1991. Latvia and Lithuania weren't any more free than Estonia was during that period.
"Wretched and abundant,
Oppressed and powerful,
Weak and mighty,
Mother Russia!"
-Nikolay Nekrasov
War is Peace
Freedom is Slavery
Ignorance is Strengh
-1984
[FACTS] India was the 1st largest NAM country with a nuclear weapons. Together with Pakistan.
It takes some Mad skills to make a Mad collaboration project
this is better than my schools history class
I wouldn't call the Falklands War a proxy war. Yes, the UK received help from United States, but Argentina didn't accept help from the USSR or another communist country
Cold war in a few sentences
The world lives at daggers drawn in a cold war.
With the Cold War almost over, the talks were a mere formality.
Throughout the Cold War, the Allies asserted their right to move freely between the two Berlins.
With the end of the Cold War, several warships were put into mothballs.
That was 4 sentences
@@angusb99 got me
For those wondering why Namibia was listed separately from South Africa prior to March 1990, it's because although it was governed as part of South Africa, it was never *officially* annexed (although it should've been changed to light-green in 1966, as that's when the UN took direct controll).
I didn’t realise Russia broke hard after the Cold War with independent Sakha, Tuva, Udmurtia etc
before treaty of federation was signed, they simply did not agree to the Russian Federation before March 1992.
Have you considered adding commentary to videos like this? It could be helpful to get some pointers of where to look or what is going on that isnt visible on a map. I love the detail you put in to these, it seems you really do your research.
Is the Yom Kippur War missing in ‘73? It’s a pretty major war and was important for the soviets
I think that and the Six Day War just happened to be too short to be included in a timelapse based on monthly changes, even though both were important for the technology and tactics on display as well as for the geopolitics of the region.
@@fyeahusa The Yom Kippur War was a month long and had a serious amount of soviet backing compared to the 6 day war tbf
@@Josephpesoj Who were the soviets backing in the Yom Kippur War? And are the Russians enemies with Israel because of Israel’s direct ties to the US?
@@supremo342-h6j The soviets were heavily backing the arab states, they equiped them with quite good tanks for the time as well as sent advisors. There were reports of soviet soldiers also fighting however those are questionable. The biggest thing they did was to provide SAM systems that hampered the Israeli air capabilities significantly resulting in huge losses for the Israeli airforce. The reasoning is more to ally the arab nations than to kill Israel. A lot of Israeli's ties to the US only really began after the 6 day war so were relatively recent at this point. It's a really interesting conflict and worth looking into!
@@Josephpesoj Were both to kill Israel (To ensure there was no more western influence on mid east) and to have arabs as ally resulting in the entire region being under soviet influence.
Isn't required to say what was the result, I don't like too much ( ( that state ) ) but they really knows how to fight, was one of the major humilliations for the soviets, cuz while the US had to move from the other side of the world to get to Vietnam and the logistics itself were a huge challenge, the soviets and their allies didn't had that problem and also were surrounding the israelies.
Awesome video Emperor
1:04 You forgot to color bangladesh in the coup
There are many countries used to be western but now are eastern or neutral since they had reasons.
Iran: Iran was simply Pahlavi and it was western until the change of government and the making of Israel they stopped being western and became Eastern. Iran also got close to China and Russia due to Iran Oil Reserves, Russian Fabric and Chinese Exports.
Pakistan: People protested to be more powerful since at that time Pakistan’s resources were being taken too much by the West. Millions of Protests happened. And they became a nuclear power! Became Easternish-Westernish-Neutral but mostly Neutral since there situation with India is improving.
UAE,Oman,Yemen:
UAE: Wanted to be better alone and left the west. And they build the tallest skyscrapers.
Oman: Same for UAE, but wanted to be traditional.
Yemen: The west left Yemen. And instead threw bombs and made a civil war there.
East Pakistan/East Bengal/Bangladesh:
(In that time Bangladesh was East Pakistan)
Bangladesh had a civil war from Pakistan. Yeah.
This only shows the timeline of the Cold War. The thing they didn’t show was the part of there greatness.
After the end of World War II,
the world was split into two - East and West.
This marked the beginning of the era called the Cold War.
China: I want Tibet.
Tibet until 1960: Are you sure about that?
Surprised to see that the Kuomintang managed to hold their resistence on the Mainland for so long
Surprised that they lost in the first place
If he hadn't lost, Vietnam and North Korea would not have been communist. China will be an ally of the United States. The concept of the four policemen of the United Nations is China, the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom. The United States has promoted him to the five permanent members of the United Nations.
You should be surprised at how quickly their situation collapsed.
Pretty cool video, although there are a few things to note:
- There probably should have been a color for allies of the USSR that weren't necessarily Communist (such as Algeria from 1962).
- As mentioned by a below comment, Somalia should be listed as Second World Other from 1987.
December 1991:
The Soviet Union: *Ight imma head out*
Good job. Now you might have to do one for the Cold War II we are in today.
1:56 i liked the part when yugoslavia egypt indonesia india and ghana said “its non aligning time” and non aligned all over the place
The map is highly problematic becuase there was much nuance in alignments. Syria was a more reliable Soviet ally than Romania. Greece and Turkey were NATO but they disliked each other much more than they disliked the Soviets etc.
Probably one of his best videos yet!
Do 7th Grade Drama: Every hour
Technically there shouldn't be a border between South Africa and Namibia until 1990, right? Namibia only became an independent country in 1990, breaking away from South Africa.
"Cold war is a mind game played by two to five players, known as playees; each turn is a day, where you have to deal with your enemies by diplomacy or start a nuclear war."
-Own quote
What if South Africa kept his own nuclear and instead Russia soviet send nuclear to Angola and Mozambique and started nuclear war and also happens on Cuba?
Franco's dictatorship in Spain was clearly "allies" since the Pacts of Madrid in 1953, with the installation of 5 USA millitary bases in Spain.
When this same video is made about Cold War II (China vs USA) in 50 years time, Africa's going to go red real fast in the 2010s 😆
we're already in it 😔
@@Yosupitsme Why are you lot obsessed with acting like we are in war right now.
Why is Yugoslavia half green half red, Tito litterally made Non-aligned mouvement in Belgrade
Micronesia and other micro states be like: I could change the world!
Not sure if it fully counts as a proxy war but, if it does, you missed the Iran-Iraq War. It was a proxy war but only because the US backed Iraq but the CIA also sold weapons to Iran and then laundered the money to one side of the Nicaraguan Civil War.
One error: Somalia should be shown with the same colors as Yugoslavia from November 1977 to December 1990. This is because the USSR supported Ethiopia in the Ogaden War, and Somalia aligned itself with China instead of the Soviet Union given the Sino-Soviet split. Somalia cut ties with the USSR in the Ogaden War
Except...it wasn't China
during the Ogaden War they were supported by the United States
@@wdwfanatic1394 The US did support Somalia during the Ogaden War, and it later adopted Somalia as an ally to counter USSR. In the context of the Sino-Soviet split however, Somalia remained communist until December 1990. Somalia aligned itself with China as China and the USSR competed for influence in the communist world, and Somalia cut ties with the USSR in 1977
holy crap i just realized my dad was 16 when the cold war ended
i wanna point out something out here, in Peru a pro soviet dictatorship took over betwen 1968 and 1975 so the blue lines are incorrect
they were elected by the people, and then US invaded, just correcting tgis small part
@@76456 the us never invaded Perú that was some Island in the carribean
@@battleshippotemkin4633 Paraguai, Bolivia, Haiti. gonna go searching on Peru. Ok it was related to invasion of Panama
It's crazy how Africa turned all blue when France, UK, Portugal, Belgium and Italy joined NATO
During the Cold War, an American and Russian automaker decide to have a match race on a course through Moscow. The American car is much faster and wins easily. The next day, the Pravda headline read, "Moscow Race Results: Russian Car Finishes Second, American Car Finishes Next to Last".
perfectly describes the cold war
Correction: There was a coup by Sultan Qaboos Bin Said against his father in 1970.
Iran war be like: am I a *peace* to you?
it would be cool if you shown operations and missions from both sides aswell as the space race but other than that its cool
The advance of Castro guerrilla in 1958 was quite accurate!!
Yugoslavia, Switzerland, and austria: 🍿 👀
Cool vid emperor
ussr: *collapses*
albania: i'mma pretend i didn't see that, i'll chill until some revolutionaries will crush my army and my government
You know ther are the awesome time-lapse maps of nuclear tests someone should make a map like that but with orbiatl rocket launches instead.
A few questions just because I'm curious:
1. How exactly did you define an "ally" of the US and the USSR? I'm curious as to why a country like Ireland isn't an ally of the US but an other first world nation for example.
2. Why is Austria consistently a part of the third world when other European countries like Switzerland are labeled as an other first world nation?
3. Why did you show the individual republics in the Russian Federation at the very end? Is that just because the Russian Federation didn't form immediately after the USSR fell or due to something else?
Amazing video as always. Been watching for like 7-8 years now and you continue to be amazing. I hope you don't think I'm being judgmental or nitpicking your work or whatever; I am asking these questions to expand my own knowledge on the subject
Third World in Cold war is Neither allied to USA or USSR
1. Allies are based off of military treaty agreements.
2. The first, second, and third world had conventional definitions. For the first world it was the hardest to define so it was just a list of countries and Austria was not included. Plus they had forced neutrality by treaty which would solidly put them in the third world camp.
@@LuisAldamiz correct
@@LuisAldamiz and India has military agreement with soviet union but it still in third world
@@LuisAldamiz yeah it was friendship treaty not necessarily defense only
love ur mapping
Why was the coup in France in 1958 not shown?
In Algeria*
Impressive how much time did you spent on it?
There were a lot more openly Marxist-Leninist or Socialist African countries than are shown in this video, some were still Soviet aligned despite being officially neutral and others were openly pro Soviet as well. Such as Madagascar, Algeria, Egypt, Libya
Thank you for making this video!
How is Finland western block? We literally had an mutually assistance pact that other Warsaw Pact members had until 1991. (yya sopimus, finlandization, treaty of 1948 finland soviet)
Maybe it's a cultural thing or about economical system? I had the same question as you.
@@karvainenhedelma1918 We were mostly neutral, with some deals to ussr
I am aware of yya, but was wondering that maybe they consider cultural leanings and economic system more important than one or two deals
@@karvainenhedelma1918 We had important economic relations with ussr, from the war reperations that started our economy to the huge market crises that happened after ussr collapsed.
And this video isn't about culture, it's about politics and economy. Tigerstar just didn't bother researching about us.
Trading and economic systems are different things. You do realise that Finland was and still is a capitalist country? I'm not denying the importance of war reparations to the Finnish economy, but it's not same as Finnish economic system.
How do you know something is or isn't about culture? Is there something in the video that shows it or...?
Guys do most left-wingers today support the left-wing Soviet Union or the right-wing USA? TELL ME NOW BROTHERS
If Austria is marked as Third world Green then Finland deserves to be in the same category if not in non-aligned Red since Finland was technically allied with the Soviet Union though the Agreement of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance of 1948, not to be confused with the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, also known as the Warsaw pact.
you should've added a text box that says major events are than wars but good video anyways
wow, you remembered the 1955 coup in Brazil, brazilians don't even remember that
He remembered the 1968/9 aswell
Sorry for being nitpicky, but why is Rhodesia still shown as a nato member after udi i. 1965?
Choose Non-Aligned: It's more fun! Besides, war really bites!
Couple of things you missed:
1. Wouldn't it make more sense to list China as in the Western Bloc from 1961 to 1989 and Kampuchea from 1975 to 1979?
2. Central and South America were not as "non-aligned" during the Cold War as some make them out to be. The Rio Treaty was signed in 1947 and was made effective in 1948, so most of Central and South America should at least be blue from 1948.
3. A lot of the Middle East has nothing despite the Arab Cold War.
China was definitely not western bloc after the sino soviet split even with the normalizing of relations in 1972
@@Ducky27_ Why do you say that?
@@danielbuddenmusic1502 Normalizing relations doesnt mean your on the same side, just recently the US opened an embassy in Cuba but you wouldn't call Cuba part of the western world
@@Ducky27_ I know, but that's not all of what happened with China. The US and China were generally on the same side during wars, notably in the Third Indochina War.
Feels like half of the coups were just in Nigeria and Turkey
Perú in 1969-1975 was a allied of the soviet Union
Me at 4:40 God, please don't break this time, please
What's the relevancy of showing OPEC here?
No Forest Brothers war? It was essentially the Soviet Union's Vietnam in the Baltics with thousands of casualties lasting for years and inhibiting the Soviet's efforts in the region.
I recommend using spotted/dash marks across the Baltics to represent the war going on in the region.
I don't think that's a proxy war so it makes sense it wasn't written(though I don't know since I don't know anything about that war), and this video doesn't show internal conflict on the map
@@firecreeper2249 The UK, US, and other Western powers were supporting the resistance fighters. They held a lot of territory and
It's also not internal, because the war was essentially a continuation of the Soviets invasion and occupation of the Baltics in WW2 and the governments were still in exile.
@@compatriot852 what I meant by internal is that unless a state is proclaimed or a territory is annexed this video won't show it. it's not really a rule that relies on historical facts or a rule at all, it's just a thing that I've observed mappers do to save time.
though I would it to be shown anyways
lol
@@firecreeper2249 in 1949 Lithuania re-re-re declared independence since partisans were basically in control of all of Lithuania. I think that it should be marked in the video some how.
According to Mao's original definition China should be third world rather than the second world, which referred to the Soviet Bloc plus a number of developed countries not explicitly aligned with the US.
4:53 The best part of the Cold War