Nonaligned nations were newly independent countries (mostly in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East) that emerged from decolonization after WWII and refused to formally join either the U.S. or Soviet bloc, even as both superpowers competed for their allegiance with aid, alliances, and intervention.
After World War II, dozens of new countries emerged as European empires collapsed across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. The Cold War was raging, and both superpowers wanted these new states on their team. The United States offered economic aid and military alliances to pull them toward capitalism; the Soviet Union pushed communism as the path for formerly colonized peoples. Many of these nations looked at both options and said no thanks. They became the nonaligned nations, charting an independent course rather than signing on with either bloc.
The AP CED frames this exactly that way in Topics 8.7 and 8.8: postwar decolonization and powerful nationalist movements led both sides in the Cold War to seek allies among new nations, many of which remained nonaligned. The key idea is that nonalignment was a deliberate strategy, not passivity. Leaders like India's Nehru and Egypt's Nasser wanted development aid without becoming anyone's pawn, and some played the superpowers against each other to get it. Many of these states eventually organized formally, holding the 1955 Bandung Conference and creating the Non-Aligned Movement to resist Cold War pressure collectively.
This term lives in Unit 8 (Cold War and Social Change, 1945-1980) and supports two learning objectives. Under APUSH 8.7.A, you explain U.S. military and diplomatic responses to international developments, and the essential knowledge says outright that decolonization in Africa and the Middle East led both Cold War sides to court new nations, many of which stayed nonaligned. Under APUSH 8.8.A, the same dynamic in Asia helps explain the causes of the Vietnam War. The U.S. feared that if it didn't fight for influence in the decolonizing world, communism would fill the vacuum. Nonaligned nations matter for the America in the World theme because they show the Cold War wasn't just a U.S.-Soviet staring contest in Europe. It was a global competition for the loyalty of the postcolonial world, and that competition drove American interventions from Vietnam to Latin America.
Keep studying APUSH Unit 8
Decolonization (Unit 8)
Decolonization created the nonaligned nations. Without the collapse of European empires after WWII, there would have been no pool of new states for the superpowers to fight over. Think of decolonization as the cause and nonalignment as one possible response to it.
Containment (Unit 8)
Containment is why the U.S. couldn't just shrug at nonaligned nations. American policymakers feared any country that wasn't firmly in the Western camp could fall to communism, so they poured aid, covert operations, and sometimes troops into the decolonizing world to prevent it.
Dien Bien Phu (Unit 8)
Vietnam shows what happened when nonalignment broke down. After Vietnamese nationalists defeated the French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, the U.S. refused to let Vietnam slide toward communism, stepping into a decolonization conflict and turning it into a Cold War battleground.
Dollar Diplomacy (Unit 7)
Great continuity link for essays. Decades before the Cold War, the U.S. used economic leverage to control weaker nations in Latin America. Cold War competition for nonaligned and developing nations, including U.S. support for non-Communist regimes regardless of their commitment to democracy, continued that pattern with new ideological stakes.
Multiple-choice questions usually test this term as straight identification or as the punchline of a stimulus. Typical stems ask which term describes nations in Africa and Asia that refused to join either the Soviet bloc or the Western alliance, or which organization those nations formed to resist Cold War pressures (the Non-Aligned Movement). A trickier version gives you a scenario, like a Latin American dictatorship receiving U.S. aid despite crushing democracy, and asks you to connect it to Cold War foreign policy. That tests whether you understand the flip side of nonalignment: the U.S. backed non-Communist regimes with weak democratic credentials to keep countries out of the Soviet column. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but it's strong evidence for LEQs and DBQs on Cold War foreign policy, especially arguments about why the U.S. intervened in Vietnam or how decolonization globalized the Cold War.
Every nonaligned nation was a product of decolonization, but not every decolonized nation was nonaligned. Decolonization just means a country gained independence from a colonial empire. Plenty of new states picked a side (South Vietnam aligned with the U.S., North Vietnam with the communist bloc). Nonalignment was a specific Cold War choice to refuse formal membership in either bloc. On the exam, decolonization answers 'where did these countries come from,' while nonalignment answers 'what foreign policy stance did they take.'
Nonaligned nations were newly independent states, mostly in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, that refused to formally join either the U.S. or Soviet bloc during the Cold War.
Decolonization after WWII created these nations, and powerful nationalist movements made many of them determined to stay independent of both superpowers.
Both the U.S. and USSR competed hard for nonaligned nations' allegiance using economic aid, military alliances, and covert intervention.
This competition helps explain the Vietnam War, since the U.S. treated any nonaligned or decolonizing country as a potential domino that could fall to communism.
In Latin America, the same logic led the U.S. to support non-Communist regimes even when those regimes suppressed democracy.
Nonaligned nations organized collectively, most famously through the 1955 Bandung Conference and the Non-Aligned Movement, to resist Cold War pressure.
They were new countries that emerged from decolonization after WWII, mostly in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, that refused to formally ally with either the United States or the Soviet Union. Leaders like India's Nehru and Egypt's Nasser wanted independence from both blocs, not just from their old colonial rulers.
No, and that's a common trap. Nonaligned meant refusing formal bloc membership, not ignoring the Cold War. Many nonaligned leaders accepted aid from both superpowers, played them against each other, and took strong stances on issues like colonialism. Nonalignment was an active strategy, not isolation.
Decolonization is how these countries gained independence from European empires; nonalignment is the Cold War foreign policy stance some of them chose afterward. Plenty of decolonized nations did pick a side, like South Vietnam aligning with the U.S., so the two terms are connected but not interchangeable.
The Non-Aligned Movement, which grew out of the 1955 Bandung Conference in Indonesia, where Asian and African states met to coordinate resistance to Cold War pressure and colonialism. APUSH multiple-choice questions sometimes ask you to identify this organization by description.
The CED ties them directly to the causes of the Vietnam War (APUSH 8.8.A). Decolonization in Asia produced nationalist movements both superpowers wanted to win over, and U.S. fear of losing these new nations to communism, driven by containment, pulled America into Vietnam after the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
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