MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · October 9 · 1989
ON THIS DAY · 9 OCTOBER 1989
The Monday demonstrations

9 Oct 1989 — 70,000 march in Leipzig chanting “Wir sind das Volk”; the order to shoot never comes. Once the state blinks, every square in the GDR fills.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
Mikhail Gorbachev inherits, in March 1985, a superpower in slow-motion failure: growth near zero, a defense burden triple America’s share of a far smaller economy, life expectancy falling, a Politburo whose last three leaders died in office within thirty months. His program — perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (openness) — aims to save socialism, not bury it. Then Chernobyl explodes in April 1986, and the cover-up’s collapse radicalizes glasnost into something no Soviet leader had permitted: actual truth, compounding. Abroad, Gorbachev moves faster than the West can process: at Reykjavík he and Reagan improvise to the edge of abolishing nuclear weapons entirely (the marker in the far northwest); the INF Treaty (1987) eliminates an entire missile class — the first arms reduction of the age; and in December 1988 at the UN he renounces the Brezhnev Doctrine outright, cutting 500,000 troops. His spokesman later jokes that satellites now enjoy the “Sinatra Doctrine”: they do it their way.
From Chapter 11 — Gorbachev and the Unraveling of The Cold War, 1945–1991 (NOV 1989).
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TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Why reform — the numbers Gorbachev read. By the early 1980s Soviet growth was ~1% and possibly negative (the statistics themselves were fiction); grain imports ran 30–40 million tons a…
- The turn — Berlin, 9 November 1989, 18:53. Asked when new travel rules take effect, Politburo spokesman Schabowski shuffles his notes and guesses: “immediately, without delay.” Tens of…
- What it changed — Germany reunifies — inside the West. Eleven months from wall to unification (3 October 1990): Kohl outruns every ally’s caution, Bush backs him, and Gorbachev — against his generals,…
Then ask the room: Could a Soviet leader other than Gorbachev have held the bloc together — and for how long? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
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