The History Book Buffs

On This Day 14 May 1955: The Signing of the Warsaw Pact

20 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio On This Day 14 May 1955: The Signing of the Warsaw Pact

Descripción

Roger Moorhouse joins Antonia Senior for another episode of History Book Buffs: On This Day — and today we’re in Warsaw on 14 May 1955 for the signing of the Warsaw Pact. This was the treaty that formalised the Soviet bloc and defined the Cold War in Europe for the next 35 years. But why did the Soviet Union create the Warsaw Pact? Was it really a defensive alliance against NATO — or a mechanism for tightening Moscow’s grip on Eastern Europe after Stalin’s death? Antonia and Roger explore: * Why the Warsaw Pact barely appears in many Cold War histories * The crisis over Germany in the early 1950s * West Germany joining NATO and Soviet fears of encirclement * The death of Stalin and the instability inside the Soviet bloc * Khrushchev, Soviet control, and the “crystallisation” of the Iron Curtain * Why Austria escaped division but Germany did not * The strange reality behind Soviet military power * The Hungarian Uprising and Prague Spring * Why the Warsaw Pact became “the only defensive alliance in history to invade itself” From Soviet propaganda to Cold War paranoia, this episode explains how one treaty helped lock Europe into two armed camps for an entire generation. * Iron Curtain by Anne Applebaum * Khrushchev: The Man and His Era by William Taubman * The World of the Cold War, by Vladislav Zubok * Expansion and Coexistence: Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917–73 by Adam Ulam Subscribe to History Book Buffs for weekly deep dives into espionage, dictators, revolutions, Cold War history, Nazi Germany, Stalinism and the hidden stories behind the 20th century. Warsaw Pact, Cold War, NATO, Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Khrushchev, Stalin, Iron Curtain, West Germany, East Germany, Warsaw Pact explained, Cold War history, Soviet history, Prague Spring, Hungarian Uprising, Anne Applebaum, Roger Moorhouse, Antonia Senior, History Book Buffs, communist Europe, Soviet bloc, NATO vs Warsaw Pact, Cold War podcast, history podcast, 1955, Warsaw Treaty, Soviet propaganda

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The History Book Buffs!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

36 episodios

episode BOOK review: How the Soviet Union Died. The August Coup, by Robert Service artwork

BOOK review: How the Soviet Union Died. The August Coup, by Robert Service

In August 1991, a group of hardliners inside the Soviet leadership launched a desperate bid to save the USSR. Led by the head of the KGB, they placed Mikhail Gorbachev under house arrest, declared a state of emergency, and attempted to reverse the reforms of perestroika and glasnost. Instead, they accelerated the collapse of the Soviet Union. This week on History Book Buffs, Antonia Senior and Roger Moorhouse discuss historian Robert Service's gripping new account of the August Coup: the dramatic three days that changed the course of world history. They explore: * Why Gorbachev's reforms destabilised the Soviet system * The secret KGB recordings that helped trigger the coup * Boris Yeltsin's famous stand on a tank * Why the plotters failed to act decisively * How the coup directly led to the dissolution of the USSR * Whether the roots of Putinism can be found in 1991 * Why history may judge Yeltsin more kindly than it does today Along the way they discuss Soviet decline, Russian nationalism, the Baltic states, corruption, and the extraordinary speed with which a superpower disappeared. Robert Service – The August Coup: The Plot to Overthrow Gorbachev Buy the book here Featured Book

11 de jun de 202634 min
episode The Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich: Heroism, Terror and the Price of Resistance artwork

The Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich: Heroism, Terror and the Price of Resistance

Antonia Senior and Roger Moorhouse examine one of the most dramatic episodes of the Second World War: the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, the Nazi official known as the "Butcher of Prague" and one of the principal architects of the Holocaust. In May 1942, Czech and Slovak agents trained by Britain's Special Operations Executive launched Operation Anthropoid, a daring mission to kill one of Hitler's most feared lieutenants. The attack succeeded—but at a terrible cost. The Nazi reprisals that followed destroyed villages, killed thousands, and crushed much of the Czech resistance. Was the operation worth it? Did it advance the Allied cause, or was the human price simply too high? Antonia and Roger explore the difficult moral questions that continue to divide historians today. Along the way they discuss: * Who Reinhard Heydrich really was * How he rose to become one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany * The planning and execution of Operation Anthropoid * The role of Britain's Special Operations Executive (SOE) * The destruction of Lidice and the wider Nazi reprisals * The fate of the assassins Josef Gabčík and Jan Kubiš * Whether political assassination can ever be justified * How historians assess resistance movements in occupied Europe * The difficult question of whether the operation ultimately achieved its aims 📚 Resistance: The Underground War in Europe 1939–1945 — Halik Kochanski 📚 The Killing of SS Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich — Callum MacDonald 📚 Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich — Robert Gerwarth 📚 HHhH (novel) — Laurent Binet 🎬 Anthropoid (2016), starring Cillian Murphy and Jamie Dornan History Book Buffs is the podcast where Antonia Senior and Roger Moorhouse explore the most fascinating events in history through the books that bring them to life. Each episode combines historical debate, book recommendations and lively discussion about the people, ideas and decisions that shaped our world. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review and share it with fellow history lovers. #HistoryPodcast #WorldWarII #SecondWorldWar #ReinhardHeydrich #OperationAnthropoid #SOE #CzechResistance #Lidice #NaziGermany #Holocaust #HistoryBooks #RogerMoorhouse #AntoniaSenior Books & Resources MentionedAbout History Book Buffs

4 de jun de 202634 min
episode How Did Orwell Know? George Orwell, Stalin & the Power of Truth artwork

How Did Orwell Know? George Orwell, Stalin & the Power of Truth

George Orwell wrote Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four before the full reality of Soviet domination in Eastern Europe had unfolded. So how did he see it coming? In this episode of History Book Buffs, Antonia Senior and Roger Moorhouse discuss Orwell’s extraordinary political insight, his warnings about Stalinism and totalitarianism, and why his work still shapes political writing today. Prompted by Antonia Senior’s Orwell Prize shortlist for Stalin’s Apostles, the discussion explores Orwell’s legacy through the worlds of espionage, Soviet propaganda and Cold War history. Did people already know about Stalin’s crimes in the 1930s? What did Orwell understand that so many intellectuals missed? And what separates Orwell’s democratic socialism from the revolutionary communism embraced by figures such as Kim Philby and the Cambridge Five? The conversation covers Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Why I Write, the Spanish Civil War, Soviet propaganda, Harry Peter Smollett, Alexander Orlov, Kim Philby, Václav Havel, samizdat publishing and the continuing battle between truth and political myth. Topics discussed: • George Orwell • Animal Farm • Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) • Why I Write • Stalin and Stalinism • The Cambridge Five and Kim Philby • Soviet propaganda • Harry Peter Smollett • Spanish Civil War • Eastern Europe and dissident movements • Political writing and truth

21 de may de 202630 min
episode On This Day 14 May 1955: The Signing of the Warsaw Pact artwork

On This Day 14 May 1955: The Signing of the Warsaw Pact

Roger Moorhouse joins Antonia Senior for another episode of History Book Buffs: On This Day — and today we’re in Warsaw on 14 May 1955 for the signing of the Warsaw Pact. This was the treaty that formalised the Soviet bloc and defined the Cold War in Europe for the next 35 years. But why did the Soviet Union create the Warsaw Pact? Was it really a defensive alliance against NATO — or a mechanism for tightening Moscow’s grip on Eastern Europe after Stalin’s death? Antonia and Roger explore: * Why the Warsaw Pact barely appears in many Cold War histories * The crisis over Germany in the early 1950s * West Germany joining NATO and Soviet fears of encirclement * The death of Stalin and the instability inside the Soviet bloc * Khrushchev, Soviet control, and the “crystallisation” of the Iron Curtain * Why Austria escaped division but Germany did not * The strange reality behind Soviet military power * The Hungarian Uprising and Prague Spring * Why the Warsaw Pact became “the only defensive alliance in history to invade itself” From Soviet propaganda to Cold War paranoia, this episode explains how one treaty helped lock Europe into two armed camps for an entire generation. * Iron Curtain by Anne Applebaum * Khrushchev: The Man and His Era by William Taubman * The World of the Cold War, by Vladislav Zubok * Expansion and Coexistence: Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917–73 by Adam Ulam Subscribe to History Book Buffs for weekly deep dives into espionage, dictators, revolutions, Cold War history, Nazi Germany, Stalinism and the hidden stories behind the 20th century. Warsaw Pact, Cold War, NATO, Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Khrushchev, Stalin, Iron Curtain, West Germany, East Germany, Warsaw Pact explained, Cold War history, Soviet history, Prague Spring, Hungarian Uprising, Anne Applebaum, Roger Moorhouse, Antonia Senior, History Book Buffs, communist Europe, Soviet bloc, NATO vs Warsaw Pact, Cold War podcast, history podcast, 1955, Warsaw Treaty, Soviet propaganda

14 de may de 202620 min
episode WEIMAR GERMANY: Chaos, Culture and the Collapse of Democracy. Katja Hoyer and Victor Sebestyen reviewed artwork

WEIMAR GERMANY: Chaos, Culture and the Collapse of Democracy. Katja Hoyer and Victor Sebestyen reviewed

wo new books on Weimar Germany arrive at once: Victor Sebestyen’s Weimar Germany: Death of a Democracy and Katja Hoyer’s Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe. Antonia Senior and Roger Moorhouse discuss the fragile republic born after the First World War, the cultural explosion of 1920s Berlin, hyperinflation, the Great Depression, Hindenburg, Hitler’s rise to power, and the question historians return to again and again: how did ordinary people live through — and sometimes enable — the collapse of democracy? Sebestyen offers a sweeping political and cultural history of the Weimar Republic. Hoyer tells the story through the city of Weimar itself, following individual lives from Goethe’s city to the shadow of Buchenwald. Together, the books ask whether Weimar was doomed, whether Hitler’s rise was inevitable, and what it felt like to live inside history before anyone knew the ending. Weimar Germany, Weimar Republic, Katja Hoyer, Victor Sebestyen, Hitler rise to power, Nazi Germany, Buchenwald, German history, 20th century history, interwar Germany, Berlin 1920s, cabaret Berlin, hyperinflation Germany, Great Depression Germany, Hindenburg, democracy collapse, history books, History Book Buffs, Roger Moorhouse, Antonia Senior, book review, Weimar Life on the Edge of Catastrophe, Weimar Germany Death of a Democracy Tags / keywords

7 de may de 202644 min