Adopted harsh policy of birth control: involuntary sterilization; voted out in 1977
Reelected in 1980, but faced strong opposition from religious and ethnic groups
Crushed uprising of Sikhs; was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in 1984
Her son Rajiv Gandhi was elected in 1985, but was assassinated in 1991
Islamic resurgence in southwest Asia and north Africa
Muslim revival and Arab disunity
Cold war split Arab-Muslim world; pan-Arab unity did not materialize
Israel became a staunch ally of United States; many Arab-Islamic states allied with USSR
Israel defeated Egypt and Syria in 1967 and in 1973
Egypt's president, Anwar Sadat, ended alliance with USSR in 1976
Sadat signed peace treaty with Israel in 1980; was assassinated, 1981
Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin signed peace treaties in 1993-1995
Islamism: revival of Muslim traditions
Reasserting Islamic values in Muslim politics
Resentment at European and American societies
Extremists embraced jihad, or duty to defend Islam from attack; justified terrorism
The Iranian revolution, 1979
CIA helped anticommunist Shah Mohammed Pahlavi gain power, 1953
Repressive rule overthrown by Islamist followers of Ayatollah Khomeini, 1979
Khomeini attacked United States for support of the shah
Militants held sixty-nine Americans hostage for 444 days; shut down U.S. military bases
Movement encouraged other Muslims to undertake terrorist actions
Iran-Iraq war, 1980-1988
Iraqi president Saddam Hussein launched attack on Iran in 1980
War dragged on till 1988; killed one million soldiers
Next, Iraqis invaded Kuwait in 1990, inciting Gulf War, 1991
Politics and Economics in Latin America
Mexico after the revolution of 1910-1920
Liberal constitution of 1917 guaranteed land and liberty to Mexico
Subsoil assets claimed by Mexican government
Redistribution of land to peasants by government legalized
After 1930s, conservative governments dominated by Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI)
Argentina: return to military rule
Leader of Latin American struggle against U.S. and European intervention
Gradual shift to free elections, but often reverted to military rulers
Militarist Juan Peron was elected president, 1946; immensely popular
His wife, Eva Peron, was national heroine for her service to the poor
Peron ousted in 1955; three decades of military dictators followed
Late 1970s, death squads conducted "dirty war" against dissidents
Guatemala: destabilized
Cold war shaped U.S. policies in Central America
Guatemalan president Arbenz nationalized land held by United Fruit Co., 1953
CIA engineered overthrow of Arbenz and armed Colonel Castillo Armas
Castillo Armas established brutal military dictatorship; was assassinated, 1957
Nicaragua: American interference
Somoza regime (1934-1980), brutal dictators but anticommunist U.S. ally
Overthrown by Marxist Sandinistas in 1980
Carter administration did not interfere, restored Panama Canal to Panama
Reagan reversed policy; supported Contras, rebels opposed to the Sandinistas
Costa Rican president negotiated end to Contra war, new coalition government
Patterns of economic dependence in Latin America
Need to reorient economies from export to internal development
Raul Prebisch, Argentine economist, crafted theory of "economic dependency"
(a) developed nations controlled world economy at expense of undeveloped ones
(b) developing nations needed to protect domestic industries
War and peace in sub-Saharan Africa
Aftermath of decolonization
Organization of African Unity was created in 1963 to maintain peace and promote pan-African unity
Artificial boundaries imposed by colonialism were ruled inviolable
Ghana and many other states became one-party dictatorships
Transformation of South Africa
Gained independence in 1901, but denied civil rights to black population
South African economy strong, both mining and industry; prospered during WWII
Black workers demanded political change
Apartheid: harsh legal system imposed in 1948, designed to keep races separate
87 percent of South African land was for white residents, others classified by race
African National Congress, led by Nelson Mandela, launched campaign to protest apartheid
Severe government repression provoked international opposition after 1960
Black agitation and international sanctions brought end to apartheid in 1989
1994, under new constitution, Mandela won free election as first black president
Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire)
First prime minister, a Marxist, killed in a CIA-backed coup, 1961
Dictator Mobutu ruled from 1965 to 1997; plundered Zaire's economy
Mobutu ruled Zaire in dictatorial fashion and amassed huge personal fortune
Lawrence Kabila ousted Mobutu in 1997, changed country's name back to the Congo
Kabila killed, 2001; replaced by his son Joseph; no elections yet
Developing economies of Africa
Africa has 10 percent of world's population but less than 1 percent of industrial output
Rich in minerals, raw materials, agricultural resources
Lacking in capital, technology, foreign markets, and managerial class