The Cold War - Mrs. O`Bryan
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Transcript The Cold War - Mrs. O`Bryan
Cold War Conflicts
Chapter 18
What was the
Cold War?
State of hostility
between the US
and Soviets,
without a direct
war between
them.
Cold War Beginnings
Russian Revolution – 1917
– President Wilson sent troops
• Supported anti-communist
resistance
U.S. delays recognizing Soviet
government - 1933
Cold War Beginnings
WWII Conflicts
– Non-Aggression Pact
– Allies wait to invade Europe
• Soviets suffer severe losses
Yalta Conference
– Soviet reparations request
denied
• Asked for $20 billion in
German reparations
Yalta Conference-1945
Big Three agree to
govern Germany jointlyzones
Soviets agree to leave &
allow free elections in
Poland, E. Europe - don’t
do it
Soviets are denied
request for reparations
from Germany
Cold War Beginnings
United Nations forms – 1945
– 50 nations adopt charter in San Francisco
– Settle differences peacefully
– Promote justice/cooperation
– Stop current wars, prevent future ones
Security Council
– 11 Countries
– U.S., Soviets, Great Britain, France, China
• Have veto power
Cold War Beginnings
President Truman
– Becomes President 2 weeks before UN
meeting
– Potsdam Conference
• Final wartime conference – 1945
• U.S., Soviet Union, Great Britain
• Each takes reparations from zones
• Clear Soviet goals and U.S. goals – very
different
US & Soviets: Superpowers, natural rivals
– Ability to influence world events to
protect their interests
Post WWII Superpowers
US, Soviet Union – Britain for awhile
Different Goals for Europe
Soviets
United States
Eastern Euro countries to
serve as protective buffer
against attacks from West
Spread communism &
workers unite against
wealthy biz owners
Rebuild its ravaged
economy, using East
European industrial
equipment, raw materials
Keep Germany divided &
weak
Protection Goals
New World Order
– Democratic governments
– Self-determination
Rebuild Europe
Access to raw materials
& new markets
Thriving economically
Free/New Markets
Productive Germany
Avoid totalitarianism
Reunify Germany
Economic Goals
Soviets Overrun Eastern Europe
Satellite Nations
– Albania
– Bulgaria
– Czechoslovakia
– Hungary
– Romania
– Yugoslavia
– Poland
Soviets Overrun Eastern Europe
Establish Soviet domination
Totalitarian Communist regimes
– Reneges on Yalta agreements
– No elections in Poland for 2 years
– Albania – Communist leaders
– Bulgaria – Communist leaders
– Czechoslovakia – free elections, but
Communists take over
Soviets Overrun East Europe
Totalitarian Communist regimes
– Hungary – Communists lose election,
take out competition
– Romania – Communist Prime
Minister forced on King
– East Germany – brutal totalitarian
government
– Yugoslavia – Dictator Tito keeps
Soviets out
Iron Curtain Speech
Winston Churchill1946
Fulton, Missouri
Statement clearly
describing existing
situation
“From Stettin in the
Baltic to Trieste in
the Adriatic, an Iron
Curtain has
descended across
the continent."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvax5VUvjWQ
The Iron Curtain
Marshall Plan
On June 5, U.S.
Secretary of State
George Marshall
– proposes a massive aid
program to rebuild Europe
from the ravages of World
War II.
– Designed to “fight hunger,
poverty, desperation and
chaos.”
• Nearly $13 billion in U.S.
aid was sent to Europe
from 1948 to 1952.
– The Soviet Union and
communist Eastern Europe
decline U.S. aid, citing "dollar
enslavement."
• Western Europe
flourishes within 3
years
• Communism loses
appeal
COMECON
Council for Mutual
Economic Assistance
Soviet response to Marshall
plan
Established in 1949
Truman Doctrine
March 12, 1947
Greece and Turkey
in danger of falling
to communist
insurgents
Truman requested Doctrine becomes
economic & military U.S. policy
aid - $400 million “… it must be the
from Congress for
policy of U.S. to
support free peoples
both countries
who are resisting
Successful effort
subjugation …”
Containment Policy
George F. Kennan, American diplomat posted to
USSR during war
July 1947, article in Foreign Affairs journal,
under author “X”
– “...we are going to continue for a long time to
find the Russians difficult to deal with.”
Becomes containment policy
– Prevent any extension of communist rule to
other countries
Berlin Blockade
Blockade of Berlin
began on June 24,
1948
Soviets angry that
France, Britain & U.S.
combined 3 zones
into one nation
Soviets block all
roads, trains into
Berlin-wants to take
over West Berlin
No supplies, food,
medicine
No Christmas
presents!
Dire situation
Berlin Airlift
From June 1948 to
May 1949, U.S. and
British planes airlift
2.3 million tons of
supplies to residents
of West Berlin.
Planes land every few
minutes-327 days
After 277,000
flights, the Soviet
Union lifts the
blockade.
Berlin Blockade & Airlift (1948-49)
Operation Vittles
All of the necessities for the city's 2.5 million
residents -- an estimated 4,500 tons of food, coal
and other materials each day -- had to enter the
city by air.
On its biggest day, the "Easter parade" of April
16, 1949, the airlift sent 1,398 flights into Berlin
-- one every minute.
Before it was all over, more than 278,000 flights
would carry 2.3 million tons of relief supplies.
1949 – Fall of China
20 years Communists fight
Chinese nationalist gov’t of
Chiang Kai-shek
US supports nationalists$$ aid
– Impressed by his resistance
to Japanese attack
Chiang Kai-shek
– Weak leader, inefficient
– Corrupt
– Exploited farmers, shot
civilians for protesting
1949 – Fall of China
In contrast, Communists under Mao Zedong
–
–
–
–
Farming improves
Peasants learn to read
Communists gain tremendous support from peasants
Many join Red Army
1945, most of North China under Communist
control
They cooperate during WWII, but when Japanese
defeated, go back to Civil War
May 1949, Chiang & gov’t flee to Taiwan
Oct 1, Mao proclaims People’s Republic of China
(PRC) – US will not recognize
Two months later, Mao travels to Moscow,
– negotiates the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship,
Alliance and Mutual Assistance.
Mao’s Revolution: 1949
US Reaction – Fear Grows
Americans stunned another country
Communist
Containment failed
Truman administration attacked for not
helping Chiang
– Response: internal forces, not external caused
the overthrow
Conservatives in Congress
– “US gov’t riddled with Communists!”
– Seeds of McCarthyism are planted
– Fear spreads like wildfire
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
1st Peacetime Alliance US had ever joined
United States
Luxemburg
Belgium
Netherlands
Britain
Norway
Canada
Portugal
Denmark
1952: Greece & Turkey
France
1955: West Germany
Iceland
1983: Spain
Italy
Warsaw Pact
Soviet response to NATO
}
U. S. S. R.
}
Albania
}
Bulgaria
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Czechoslovakia
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East
Germany
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Hungary
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Poland
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Rumania
Korean War, 1950-1953
June 25, N. Korean
communist troops cross
the 38th parallel and
invade South Korea
June 27, Truman orders
U.S. forces to assist the
South Koreans
U.N. Security Council
condemns the invasion
and creates a 15-nation
fighting force under
MacArthur’s command
Changing Map of Korea
Korean War, 1950-1953
When troops reach
Yalu River, “victory &
reunification” in sight
Chinese get involved
Sends over 300,000
troops & push UN
troops back to 38th
parallel
Cease fire – armistice
eventually brings war
to close by 1953
Wind up in same place
as when it started
MacArthur vs Truman
McArthur wants full-scale war with China
Use nuclear weapon
Doesn’t agree with “limited war”
General Ridgeway takes over command
McArthur fired by Truman
Addresses Congress – very rare
– “Old soldiers never die, they fade away”
Ticker-tape parade in NYC
Then, he faded away.
The Forgotten War
• “ Failed police action” –
no resolution
• 54,000 deaths
•$67 Billion spent
• Caused rejection of
Democrats in ’52 election
• Eisenhower elected
• Dramatically increased
fear of communism
“Forgotten War” - After WWII, overshadowed
by Vietnam War.
The Suez Crisis: 1956-1957
The Hungarian Uprising: 1956
Imre Nagy, Hungarian
Prime Minister
}
Promised free
elections.
}
This could lead to the
end of communist rule
in Hungary.
Sputnik
On October 4, 1957 the
Soviet Union launches
Sputnik, the first manmade satellite to orbit the
Earth.
In response (1958), the
U.S. creates the National
Aeronautics and Space
Administration, and the
space race is in full gear.
1960 - The U-2
Affair
On May 1, an American highaltitude U-2 spy plane is
shot down on a mission over
the Soviet Union.
After the Soviets announce
the capture of pilot Francis
Gary Powers, the United
States recants earlier
assertions that the plane
was on a weather research
mission.
The U-2 Affair
•Suffering major
embarrassment, Eisenhower
was forced to admit the truth
behind the mission and the U-2
program
•He refused to publicly
apologize to Khrushchev.
•Refusal caused Paris Summit
to collapse when Khrushchev
stormed out of negotiations.
Powers was sentenced to 10 years in prison, including
seven years of hard labor, following an infamous showtrial.
He served less than two years, however, and was released
in 1962 in exchange for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel.
Communist Spies in US
Alger Hiss – found
guilt of perjury – lied
that he didn’t pass
documents to Soviets
– Nixon becomes famous
prosecuting him
Rosenbergs – found
guilty & executed
based on weak
evidence – said they
passed A-bomb info to
Soviets
Julius & Ethel
Rosenberg
McCarthyism
Senator Joseph
McCarthy plays on
fears of Communism
by accusing people of
spying – wants to get
re-elected
No real evidence -- “Witch Hunt”
Lots of publicity at first, but eventually people
figure out he’s lying
Senate condemns his action – “tended to bring
the Senate into disrepute”
Today, when people make unsubstantiated
accusations, it’s called “McCarthyism”