Title: ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR, 19171949
1ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR, 1917-1949
2Cold WarHot Topic
- President Trumans advisor Bernard Baruch coined
the phrase Cold War in a congressional hearing
in 1947, but essayist and journalist Walter
Lippmann popularized it with a 1947 series of
articles The Cold War opposing Containment and
the Truman Doctrine - Different PeriodizationsDifferent
Interpretations - 1947-1962 use of term by contemporaries
- 1943-1955 division of Europe
- 1917-1991 U.S.-Soviet antagonism
- 1943-1975 U.S.-Soviet antagonism dominated
world affairs - 1890s-1991 U.S.-Russian antagonism
- John L. Gaddis For all its dangers, atrocities,
costs, distractions, and moral compromises, the
Cold Warlike the American Civil Warwas a
necessary contest that settled fundamental issues
once and for all. We have no reason to miss it.
But given the alternatives, we have little reason
either to regret its having occurred. Gaddis,
The Cold War A New History, xi - Walter LaFeber The Cold War has dominated
American life since 1945. It has cost Americans
8 trillion in defense expenditure, taken the
lives of nearly 100,000 of their young men and
women, ruined the careers of many others during
the McCarthyite witch hunts, led the nation into
the horrors of Southeast Asian conflicts, and in
the 1980s triggered the worst economic depression
in forty years. It has not been the most
satisfying chapter in American diplomatic
history. LaFeber, America, Russia, and the Cold
War, 1
3The Specter of Bolshevism, 1917-1945
- Woodrow Wilsons response to the Russian
Revolution (1917) and V.I. Lenin agent theory
of revolution double meaning of Bolshevik as
communist and foreign agent - U.S. military intervention in 1918-20 Russian
Civil War - World War I as a war that fostered and undermined
democracy - Example 1 1917 Espionage Act (prohibited spying
and interfering with draft and false statements
that might impede military success), Eugene Debs
arrested - Example 2 Red Scare (1919-20) over 5,000
persons arrested in Palmer Raids (hundreds of
immigrant radicals deported, among them Emma
Goldman) - World War II tensions Second Front
- Manhattan Project
- Occupations of Poland, Italy, Germany
- Hiroshima and Nagasaki
4George F. Kennans Long Telegram, 1946
- At bottom of Kremlins neurotic view of world
affairs is traditional and instinctive Russian
sense of insecurity And they learned to seek
security only in patient but deadly struggle for
total destruction of rival power, never in
compacts and compromises with it There is good
reason to suspect that this Government is
actually a conspiracy within a conspiracy and I
for one am reluctant to believe that Stalin
himself receives anything like on objective
picture of the outside world - In summary, we have here a political force
committed fanatically to the belief that with US
there can be no permanent modus vivendi, that it
is desirable and necessary that the internal
harmony of our society be disrupted, our
traditional way of life be destroyed, the
international authority of our state be broken,
if Soviet power is to be secure - Problem of how to cope with this force is
undoubtedly greatest task our diplomacy has ever
faced and probably greatest it will ever have to
face I would like to record my conviction that
problem is within our power to solveand that
without recourse to any general military conflict
- Soviet power, unlike that of Hitlerite Germany,
is neither schematic nor adventuristic. It does
not work by fixed plans. It does not take
unnecessary risks. Impervious to logic of reason,
and it is highly sensitive to logic of force. - Source Telegram, George Kennan to George
Marshall "Long Telegram"
5Winston Churchills Iron Curtain Speech, 1946
- From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste
in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended
across the continent. Behind that line lie all
the capitals of the ancient states of Central and
Eastern Europe Police governments are
prevailing in nearly every case, and so far,
except in Czechoslovakia, there is no true
democracy Except in the British Commonwealth,
and in the United States, where communism is in
its infancy, the Communist parties or fifth
columns constitute a growing challenge and peril
to Christian civilization there is nothing they
Russians admire so much as strength, and there
is nothing for which they have less respect than
for military weakness. For that reason the old
doctrine of a balance of power is unsound. - Map Cold War Division Map 1
- Contextualizations
- British Motive Churchill wanted to prevent U.S.
return to pre-war isolationism - Soviet Response Stalin accused Churchill of
issuing a call to war with the Soviet Union - U.S. Response Wall Street Journal The
countrys response to Mr. Churchills Fulton
speech must be convincing proof that the US wants
no alliance or anything that resembles an
alliance, with any other nation. - African American Protests speech delivered at
segregated Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri
6Nikolai Novikov on U.S. Drive for World
Supremacy, 1946 (Part 1)
- The foreign policy of the United States,
which reflects the imperialistic tendencies of
American monopolistic capital, is characterized
in the postwar period by a striving for world
supremacy the Soviet Union continues to remain
economically independent of the outside world and
is rebuilding its national economy with its own
force At the same time the USSRs international
position is currently stronger than it was in the
prewar period In the Slavic countries that were
liberated by the Red Army or with its
assistancePoland, Czechoslovakia, and
Yugoslaviademocratic regimes have also been
established that maintain relations with the
Soviet Union on the basis of agreements on
friendship and mutual assistance President
Truman, a politically unstable person Obvious
indications of the U.S. effort to establish world
dominance are also to be found in the increase in
military potential in peacetime and in the
establishment of a large number of naval air
bases both in the United States and beyond its
borders ... The establishment of American bases
on the islands that are on the other side of
the Atlantic and Pacific oceans clearly indicates
the offensive nature of strategic concepts of the
commands of the U.S. army and navy American
capital now controls about 42 percent of all
proven oil reserves in the Near East, excluding
Iran The hard-line policy with regard to the
USSR announced by Secretary of State James F.
Byrnes after the rapprochement of the reactionary
Democrats with the Republicans is at present the
main obstacle on the road to cooperation of the
Great Powers.
7Nikolai Novikov on U.S. Drive for World
Supremacy, 1946 (Part 2)
- In Germany, the United States is taking
measures to strengthen reactionary forces for the
purpose of opposing democratic reconstruction.
Furthermore, it displays special insistence on
accompanying this policy with completely
inadequate measures for the demilitarization of
Germany. The American occupation policy does not
have the objective of eliminating the remnants of
German Fascism and rebuilding German political
life on a democratic basis, so that Germany might
cease to exist as an aggressive force. The United
States is not taking measures to eliminate the
monopolistic associations of German
industrialists on which German Fascism depended
in preparing aggression and waging war One
cannot help seeing that such a policy has clearly
outlined anti-Soviet edge and constitutes a
serious danger to the cause of peace preaching
war against the Soviet Union is not a monopoly of
the far-right yellow American press This
anti-Soviet campaign also has been joined by the
reputable and respectable organs of the
conservative press, such as the New York Times
and New York Herald Tribune Careful note should
be taken of the fact that the preparation by the
United States for a future war is being conducted
with the prospect of war against the Soviet
Union, which in the eyes of American imperialists
is the main obstacle in the path of the United
States to world domination. - Source Telegram from N. Novikov, Soviet
Ambassador to the US, to the Soviet Leadership
8Containment Policy
- Truman Doctrine (1947) to defend freedom and
contain communism, Truman requested 400 million
in military aid to Greece and Turkey Sources
Truman Doctrine, March 12, 1947 Truman Doctrine
Activity - Senate leader Arthur Vandenberg advised to scare
hell out of Americans to get a reluctant
Congress to fund containment policy - Marshall Plan (1947) provided 13 billion for
the economic recovery of (Western) Europe Our
policy is directed not against any country or
doctrine, but against hunger, poverty,
desperation, and chaos. Marshall Plan Slogan
Prosperity Makes You Free. Sources Marshall
Plan Marshall Plan Teaching Packet - Berlin Blockade (1948-49) Soviets cut off road
and rail traffic to West Berlin, led to
eleven-month airlift Source The Berlin
Airlift-June 24, 1948 to May 12, 1949 - NATO (1949) The member states of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (U.S., Canada,
western Europe) pledged mutual defense against
any future Soviet attack first long-term
military alliance between U.S. and Europe since
American Revolution Source North Atlantic
Treaty Organisation - Official Homepage
9Walter Lippmann, The Cold War (1947)Part 1
- I believe that the strategical conception
and plan which Mr.X recommends is fundamentally
unsound, and that it cannot be made to work, and
that the attempt to make it work will cause us to
squander our substance and our prestige We must
begin with the disturbing fact that Mr.X's
conclusions depend upon the optimistic prediction
that the Soviet power bears within itself the
seeds of its own decay, and that the sprouting of
these seeds is well advanced Of this
optimistic prediction Mr. X himself says that it
cannot be proved. And it cannot be disproved.
Nevertheless, he concludes that the United States
should construct its policy on the assumption
that the Soviet power is inherently weak and
impermanent I do not find much ground for
reasonable confidence in a policy which can be
successful only if the most optimistic prediction
should prove to be true ... Do we dare to assume,
as we enter the arena and get set to run the
race, that the Soviet Union will break its leg
while the United States grows a pair of wings to
speed it on its way?
10Walter Lippmann, The Cold War (1947)Part 2
- Yet a policy of containment cannot be
operated unless the Department of State can plan
and direct exports and imports. For the policy
demands that American goods be delivered or
withheld at constantly shifting geographical and
political points corresponding to the shifts and
manoeuvres of Soviet policy Mr. X is surely
mistaken if he thinks that a free and
undirected economy like our own can be used by
the diplomatic planners to wage a diplomatic war
against a planned economy at a series of
constantly shifting geographical and political
points. He is proposing to meet the Soviet
challenge on the ground which is most favorable
to the Soviets, and with the very instruments,
procedures, and weapons in which they have a
manifest superiority. I find it hard to
understand how Mr. X could have recommended such
a strategic monstrosity. .. It commits the United
States to confront the Russians with counterforce
"at every point" along the line, instead of at
those points which we have selected because,
there at those points, our kind of sea and air
power can best be exerted the policy of
containment is an attempt to organize an
anti-Soviet alliance composed in the first
instance of peoples that are either on the
shadowy extremity of the Atlantic community, or
are altogether outside it i.e. the factions
of eastern Europe, with the Greeks, the Turks,
the Iranians, the Arabs and Afghans, and with the
Chinese Nationalists Instead of becoming an
unassailable barrier against the Soviet power,
this borderland is a seething stew of civil
strife.
11Walter Lippmann, The Cold War (1947)Part 3
- The failure of our diplomatic campaign in
the borderlands has conjured up the specter of
a Third World War ... The contest between the
Truman Doctrine on the one hand, the Marshall
line and the support of the U.N on the other is
the central drama within the State Department,
within the Administration, within the government
as a whole. The outcome is still undecided ...
The difference is fundamental. The Truman
Doctrine treats those who are supposed to benefit
by it as dependencies of the United States, as
instruments of the American policy for
"containing" Russia. The Marshall speech at
Harvard treats the European governments as
independent powers, whom we must help but cannot
presume to govern, or to use as instruments of an
American policy ... The Marshall Plan is a
graceful way of saving the United States from the
destructive and exhausting entanglements of the
Truman Doctrine ... The Harvard speech calls,
therefore, for a policy of settlement, addressed
to the military evacuation of the continent, not
for a policy of containment which would freeze
the non-European armies in the heart of Europe
... The history of diplomacy is the history of
relations among rival powers, which did not enjoy
political intimacy, and did not respond to
appeals to common purposes ... For a diplomat to
think that rival and unfriendly powers cannot be
brought to a settlement is to forget what
diplomacy is about The communists will continue
to be communists. The Russians will continue to
be Russians. But if the Red Army is in Russia,
and not on the Elbe the power of the Russians
communists and the power of the Russian
imperialists to realise their ambitions will have
been reduced decisively. - Source Walter Lippmann, The Cold War, New
York Herald Tribune (1947), reprinted in Foreign
Affairs (1987) see Lippmann, Cold War
12The National Security State
- National Security State the ideology and
institutions established by the National Security
Act of 1947 (cf. Michael Hogan, A Cross of Iron,
1998) - National Security Act (1947) enlarged
presidential power Defense Department merged War
and Navy Departments and created Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) and National Security
Council - Federal Employee Loyalty Program (1947) examined
three million employees, four hundred were fired
and thousands resigned - In 1951 the Supreme Court upheld the Smith Act
(1940) to advocate or teach the forcible
overthrow of the U.S. government was a crime - HUAC (House Un-American Activities Committee)
probed the motion picture industry in 1947 Walt
Disney, Gary Cooper, and Ronald Reagan testified
that movie industry harbored many communists - Whittaker Chambers, editor of Time magazine,
accused Alger Hiss, a high-ranking State
Department official, of being a Soviet spy in
1950 Hiss was convicted of perjury and sentenced
to five years in prison
13Recommended Readings
- Thomas Borstelmann, The Cold War and the Color
Line American Race Relations in the Global Arena
(2001) - John Lewis Gaddis, The Cold War A New History
(2005) - Lloyd Gardner, Safe for Democracy Anglo-American
Response to Revolution, 1913-1923 (1984) - Michael J. Hogan, A Cross of Iron Harry S.
Truman and the Origins of the National Security
State, 1945-1954 (1998) - Fred Inglis, The Cruel Peace Everyday Life and
the Cold War (1991) - Walter LaFeber, America, Russia, and the Cold
War, 1945-2006 (2006) - Melvyn Leffler, The Preponderance of Power (1992)
- Geir Lundestad, The United States and Western
Europe Since 1945 (2003) - David Reynolds, From World War to Cold War (2006)
- Stephen Whitfield, The Culture of the Cold War
(1991) - William A. Williams, The Tragedy of American
Diplomacy (1959)