Hang tight while we fetch the video data and transcripts. This only takes a moment.
Connecting to YouTube player…
Fetching transcript data…
We’ll display the transcript, summary, and all view options as soon as everything loads.
Next steps
Loading transcript tools…
The Cold War - OverSimplified (Part 1) | OverSimplified | YouTubeToText
YouTube Transcript: The Cold War - OverSimplified (Part 1)
Skip watching entire videos - get the full transcript, search for keywords, and copy with one click.
Share:
Video Transcript
Video Summary
Summary
Core Theme
This content provides a simplified, narrative overview of the origins and early escalation of the Cold War, focusing on the ideological conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union, and key events that shaped their global rivalry.
Mind Map
Click to expand
Click to explore the full interactive mind map • Zoom, pan, and navigate
I've decided that in order to sell more merch, I should do a face reveal wearing it. So are you ready?
Here we go!
Boom.
New minimalist and Cold War merch available now.
And get the new limited edition Churchill character pin before it sells out,
with more characters coming in the future.
Link in the description down below.
The year is 1917.
Fighting rages on the eastern front of the First World War.
Both Germany and Russia are on the brink of collapse.
- "Soldier, I need you to bring me this man."
- "Got it."
- "Found him, sir."
- "Wha-... who ... NO..."
"Not LennON!"
"LenIN! The Russian communist! What!?"
"Why would I need a Beatle?! Lenin! The Russian communist! He was exiled to Switzerland!"
- "You know what? I'll do it myself."
- "Who wants to start a revolution?!!"
*USSR ANTHEM STARTS TO PLAY*
- The Germans put Lenin on a train and sent him all the way back to Russia,
hoping he and his mates would create an internal crisis.
And create an internal crisis they did.
The government was overthrown and Lenin was in charge.
He immediately pulled out of the First World War,
made the country Communist,
started a three-year long civil war,
got shot,
broke the economy,
caused a famine,
and then he died.
On his deathbed, he said,
- "Hey, man, tell whoever's in charge of giving people jobs not to let that jerk Stalin become the next leader."
"By the way, who did I put in charge of giving people jobs?"
- "That would be Stalin, sir."
*dies*
- Stalin was a rising force in the Communist Party.
He still had some opponents but conveniently, all of them were arrested or disappeared.
So that was lucky.
And so Stalin took over.
He implemented his Five-Year Plans
which transformed the country from an agriculture-based economy
to an industrial one.
And like Lenin before him, he reigned with terror.
Anyone who dared criticize or oppose him
would either be killed or left to rot
in the horrendous Soviet work camps.
Then, a short man with a silly mustache
tried to take over the world,
punched the Russians all the way to Moscow,
and then the Russians,
with some help from their faithful ally,
the Winter,
punched them all the way back to Berlin.
At this point, being allies,
America, the UK and the Soviet Union were good chums.
They held a couple of conferences near the end of the war
to decide what would happen next.
- "Hey Stalin, after all your trials and tribulation,"
"you must be pretty happy to be standing here in Berlin."
- "Tsar Alexander made it all the way to Paris."
- "Uhhh..."
"Hey, uh,"
"j-just"
"give me a second"
(whispering) "Hey man, I think something's up with Stalin."
- "I know, right?"
"What should we do?"
- "Shall I tell him about the bomb?"
- "Yeah, tell him about the bomb."
"That will scare him."
- "Sooo..."
"we got this crazy new big A-bomb"
"that can destroy an entire city in one go."
- "Yes, my spies told me already."
"Oh wait, I meant to act surprised."
"WOW! THAT'S AMAZING!"
- "He already knew!"
"How?!"
- "Ummm..."
- "Am I sure I want to send nuclear secrets via"
"unsecure, public, coffee-shop Wi-Fi?"
"AM I EVER!"
- "Dude, use a VPN."
- And speaking of VPNs...
If, like me, you take Internet safety seriously,
then you need Nord VPN.
Nord VPN hides your online activities from outside intruders
preventing anyone from stealing your personal data,
and stopping your service provider selling your data to advertisers.
With over 5,000 servers in 62 countries,
it allows you to surf the net anonymously
and securely.
And it's simple to use.
With just a click of a button,
you can connect to a server halfway across the world,
even allowing you to access streaming services
from that specific territory.
Say, for example,
you wanted to watch a certain OverSimplified video
that for some reason
has been blocked in your country.
With NordVPN,
you can!
It works seamlessly across PC, mobile and tablet.
Go to nordvpn.com/oversimplified
to get an amazing 75% off.
That's just $2.99 per month
with an additional month free for limited time.
So again, that's nordvpn.com/oversimplified,
also in the description box down below.
Now, where were we?
Oh, yeah.
- "Does the 'A' stand for atomic or ass?"
- Then America dropped their big 'A' bomb on Japan
and World War II officially came to an end.
- "Hooray! We won!"
"Okay, so now it's time to establish the New World Order."
"Stalin, you're in charge of Eastern Europe."
"Now, we want you to let them all hold elections."
- "Oh, yes, of course."
"Elections."
- "And these elections will be free and fair, right?"
Uh-oh. Kennedy just told Khrushchev that the USA wouldn't interfere
in what the Soviets did with their section of Berlin.
So Khrushchev came up with a new idea:
- "We're gonna build a wall, and it's gonna be a big beautiful wall,"
"and it's gonna keep out all the Mexicans."
*Whisper* No, Sir that's wrong, its going to keep in the East Berliners.
- "Oh, sorry. It's gonna keep IN all the Mexicans."
*facepalm*
On August 13th, 1961,
Berliners woke up to find their city divided into two;
with barbed wire and guards blocking the border
between East and West.
Over time, a wall was constructed throughout the city.
Families were torn apart.
Thousands would risk their lives escaping over the wall
and hundreds would die trying.
To the despair of Berliners, the West were unable to do anything about it.
But the wall did put on full display the failure of the communist system.
As Kennedy said:
"Democracy is not perfect,"
"but we have never had to put a wall up to keep our people in."
As part of the agreement between the two sides
US diplomats were still allowed to travel to East Berlin.
But suddenly East Berlin crossing guard started giving them the business
and Kennedy was like: "nu-uh".
In October the US rolled tanks up to the crossing point at Checkpoint Charlie as a show of strength.
The Soviets did the same and the two were in a standoff.
They stayed like that for sixteen hours and the world braced for nuclear Armageddon.
Thankfully though, Kennedy called Khrushchev directly and was like:
- "Hey man, this is getting way too hot!"
"How about you back your tanks up by an inch and we'll do the same?"
- "Sounds good. Okay."
- "How about you back your tanks up by another inch and we'll follow suit?"
- "All right... Hey, you wanna do another inch?"
And they both very slowly inched away from the apocalypse.
- "PHEW! Let's hope that's the biggest crisis of my presidency!"
It wasn't...
Click on any text or timestamp to jump to that moment in the video
Share:
Most transcripts ready in under 5 seconds
One-Click Copy125+ LanguagesSearch ContentJump to Timestamps
Paste YouTube URL
Enter any YouTube video link to get the full transcript
Transcript Extraction Form
Most transcripts ready in under 5 seconds
Get Our Chrome Extension
Get transcripts instantly without leaving YouTube. Install our Chrome extension for one-click access to any video's transcript directly on the watch page.