The Cold War: The Battle Between Two Superpowers — Fexingo History

The 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War: A Cold War Genocide

8 min · 6 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War: A Cold War Genocide

Descripción

In 1971, the Cold War turned hot on the Indian subcontinent as Pakistan descended into a brutal civil war. When the Pakistani military launched Operation Searchlight to crush Bengali nationalism in East Pakistan, it sparked a nine-month genocide that killed up to 3 million people and displaced 10 million refugees into India. This episode examines the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War through the lens of superpower intervention: why the United States under Nixon and Kissinger backed West Pakistan despite the atrocities, how the Soviet Union signed a treaty with India and deployed a naval task force to the Indian Ocean, and how China made veiled threats along the Himalayan border. We explore key figures like Bengali leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Pakistani generals Yahya Khan and Tikka Khan, and Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. We also cover the December 1971 war itself—the swift Indian advance, the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani troops in Dhaka, and the birth of Bangladesh. This episode unpacks the Cold War calculus that allowed a genocide to unfold and shows how the conflict redrew South Asia's map. #BangladeshLiberationWar #OperationSearchlight #SheikhMujiburRahman #IndiraGandhi #Genocide #ColdWar #Pakistan #India #Bangladesh #1971 #Nixon #Kissinger #YahyaKhan #TikkaKhan #RacialSupremacy #SouthAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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141 episodios

Portada del episodio The 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War: A Cold War Genocide

The 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War: A Cold War Genocide

In 1971, the Cold War turned hot on the Indian subcontinent as Pakistan descended into a brutal civil war. When the Pakistani military launched Operation Searchlight to crush Bengali nationalism in East Pakistan, it sparked a nine-month genocide that killed up to 3 million people and displaced 10 million refugees into India. This episode examines the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War through the lens of superpower intervention: why the United States under Nixon and Kissinger backed West Pakistan despite the atrocities, how the Soviet Union signed a treaty with India and deployed a naval task force to the Indian Ocean, and how China made veiled threats along the Himalayan border. We explore key figures like Bengali leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Pakistani generals Yahya Khan and Tikka Khan, and Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. We also cover the December 1971 war itself—the swift Indian advance, the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani troops in Dhaka, and the birth of Bangladesh. This episode unpacks the Cold War calculus that allowed a genocide to unfold and shows how the conflict redrew South Asia's map. #BangladeshLiberationWar #OperationSearchlight #SheikhMujiburRahman #IndiraGandhi #Genocide #ColdWar #Pakistan #India #Bangladesh #1971 #Nixon #Kissinger #YahyaKhan #TikkaKhan #RacialSupremacy #SouthAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jul de 20268 min
Portada del episodio The 1980 Moscow Olympics Boycott: Sport as Cold War Weapon

The 1980 Moscow Olympics Boycott: Sport as Cold War Weapon

When the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979, the world of amateur athletics became a front line of the Cold War. This episode explores the dramatic US-led boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, a decision that transformed the Games from a symbol of global unity into a stage for superpower confrontation. We follow the internal White House debates, the intense lobbying of the International Olympic Committee, the painful choices faced by athletes like the US track team, and the alternative 'Olympic Boycott Games' in Philadelphia. We also examine the Soviet perspective—how Moscow poured billions into a showcase it saw as validation of communism—and the long-term consequences for the Olympic movement, including the retaliatory Soviet boycott of Los Angeles in 1984. Along the way, we meet key figures: President Jimmy Carter, IOC president Lord Killanin, White House national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, and athletes such as decathlete Bruce Jenner and rower Anita DeFrantz. This is a story of idealism clashing with geopolitics, where the five rings became a battleground. #Moscow1980 #OlympicBoycott #ColdWar #JimmyCarter #Afghanistan #SovietUnion #ZbigniewBrzezinski #LordKillanin #BruceJenner #AnitaDeFrantz #Philadelphia #InternationalOlympicCommittee #AmateurAthletics #BoycottGames #LosAngeles1984 #History #FexingoHistory #Geopolitics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jul de 20268 min
Portada del episodio The 1975 Helsinki Accords: Human Rights vs Superpower Diplomacy

The 1975 Helsinki Accords: Human Rights vs Superpower Diplomacy

In the summer of 1975, 35 nations gathered in the Finnish capital to sign what would become one of the Cold War's most paradoxical documents: the Helsinki Final Act. The Accords, signed by the US, Soviet Union, Canada, and nearly every European state, aimed to ease tensions through three 'baskets' — security cooperation, economic ties, and human rights. But it was Basket Three — freedom of movement, speech, and conscience — that became a ticking time bomb for the Eastern Bloc. Dissidents like physicist Yuri Orlov and the Moscow Helsinki Group used the Accords' language to demand accountability, while Western leaders from Gerald Ford to Jimmy Carter wielded them as a moral cudgel. This episode unpacks the negotiation battle over Basket Three, the emergence of Helsinki monitoring groups in Moscow, Prague, and Warsaw, and how a diplomatic handshake morphed into the Soviet Union's human rights headache. #HelsinkiAccords #ColdWar #Détente #BasketThree #HumanRights #MoscowHelsinkiGroup #YuriOrlov #GeraldFord #LeonidBrezhnev #CSCE #SovietDissidents #1970s #Finland #History #FexingoHistory #EasternBloc #Diplomacy #IronCurtain Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio The 1979 Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan: Brezhnev's Vietnam

The 1979 Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan: Brezhnev's Vietnam

In December 1979, Soviet troops rolled into Afghanistan in what began as a rescue mission for a faltering communist ally and ended as a decade-long quagmire that bled the Red Army and helped bring down the Soviet Union. This episode follows the pivotal months leading up to Operation Storm-333: the assassination of Afghan President Hafizullah Amin, the role of KGB adviser Alexander M., the chaos of the Saur Revolution of 1978, the rise of the mujahideen, and the decisions in Moscow that trapped Brezhnev in a war with no exit. We also explore the CIA's first Stinger missiles and the battle of Zhawar in 1986, where Afghan fighters turned the tide. Along the way, we touch on the political illusions of détente, the limits of Soviet power projection, and the human cost on both sides—from the frozen passes of the Hindu Kush to the streets of Peshawar. This is the story of how a forgotten conflict became the Soviet Union's Vietnam and set the stage for the end of the Cold War. #SovietAfghanWar #OperationStorm333 #HafizullahAmin #SaurRevolution #Mujahideen #CIA #StingerMissiles #Brezhnev #KGB #BattleOfZhawar #HinduKush #Peshawar #ColdWar #1979 #1980sWar #FexingoHistory #TheColdWar #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio The 1978 Camp David Accords: Egypt, Israel, and the Cold War

The 1978 Camp David Accords: Egypt, Israel, and the Cold War

In September 1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin met at Camp David under the watchful eye of US President Jimmy Carter. The result was the Camp David Accords, a framework for peace that ended decades of war between Egypt and Israel, but also reordered Cold War alliances in the Middle East. Sadat stunned the world by visiting Jerusalem in 1977, breaking the Arab taboo of negotiating with Israel. The accords led to the Egypt-Israel peace treaty in 1979, for which Sadat and Begin shared the Nobel Peace Prize. But the deal came at a cost: Egypt was expelled from the Arab League, Sadat was assassinated in 1981 by Islamist extremists, and the Palestinian question remained unresolved. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union watched warily as its former ally Egypt pivoted to the US, deepening their Cold War rivalry. This episode explores the personalities, secret negotiations, and lasting legacy of one of the 20th century's most consequential peace agreements. #CampDavidAccords #AnwarSadat #MenachemBegin #JimmyCarter #EgyptIsraelPeace #ColdWarMiddleEast #NobelPeacePrize #1978 #ArabIsraeliConflict #PalestinianQuestion #SovietUnion #UnitedStates #Knesset #SinaiPeninsula #WestBank #History #FexingoHistory #PeaceProcess Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 20267 min