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The Cold War

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Title: The Cold War


1
The Cold War
  • The Beginning
  • 1945 1950
  • There are now two great nations in the world,
    which starting from different points, seem to be
    advancing toward the same goal the Russians and
    the Anglo-Americans. . . . Each seems called by
    some secret design of Providence one day to hold
    in its hands the destinies of half the world.
  • Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America
    (1835)

2
Roots of the Cold War
  • Munich Conference
  • Summer 1938 Tensions between Germany and Great
    Britain, Czechoslovakia, and France escalated as
    Adolph Hitler insisted the Sudetenland be
    transferred from Czechoslovakian to German
    control.
  • Representatives from France, Britain, Germany and
    Italy meet at Munich in September to discuss
    Hitlers demands.
  • Edouard Daladier
  • (France)
  • Neville Chamberlain
  • (Britain)
  • Adolph Hitler
  • (Germany)
  • Benito Mussolini
  • (Italy)
  • Chamberlain informed Czechoslovakia England and
    France were unwilling to go to war over the issue
    of the Sudetenland but also informed Hitler that
    German occupation was unacceptable.

3
Roots of the Cold War

  • Hitler realized both Britain and France were
    unwilling to go to war or form an alliance with
    the USSR because of the totalitarian system they
    hated more than they hated Hitlers fascist
    government.
  • Mussolini recommended that Hitler hold a four
    power conference including Britain, France,
    Germany and Italy but excluding Czechoslovakia
    and the USSR. This would increase the likelihood
    of an agreement AND undermine the solidarity that
    was beginning to develop against Germany.
  • Frantic to evade hostilities, and eager to escape
    an alliance with the USSR Chamberlain and
    Daladier agreed to German control of the
    Sudetenland.Hitler in turn pledged not to make
    any further territorialdemands in Europe.
  • Eduard Benes, the Czechoslovakian head of state,
    protested theagreement but was informed by
    Chamberlain that Britain wasunwilling to go to
    war over the Sudetenland.

4
Roots of the Cold War
  • APPEASEMENT
  • Chamberlain returned to England proclaiming
    peace in our time.
  • Many, including Winston Churchill and Anthony
    Eden attacked the agreement claiming Chamberlain
    and therefore the British government had acted
    dishonorably and had lost the respect of the
    Czechoslovakians and their military which was one
    of the best in Europe at the time.
  • When Germany seized Czechoslovakia in March
    1939Hitler broke the Munich Agreement and
    Chamberlain finally understood Hitler could not
    be trusted and his (Chamberlains) appeasement
    policy had been waste of time.
  • Throughout the Cold War US and British
    politicians and policy makers continually pointed
    back to the Munich Agreement as an example of
    what NOT TO DO in their relations with the USSR.
  • The led to several policies including the Truman
    and Eisenhower Doctrines.

5
War Conferences
  • Atlantic August 1941 Britain and the US
  • Moscow September/October 1941 Britain, the US
    and the USSR
  • Arcadia Dec. 1941 Jan. 1942 Britain and the
    US
  • Casablanca January 1943 Britain, the US and
    France
  • Cairo November 1943 Britain, the US and China
  • Bretton Wood July, 1944 44 Nations
  • Dumbarton Oaks August 1944 39 United Nations
  • 2nd Quebec September 1944 Britain and the US
  • 4th Moscow October 1944 Britain, the US and the
    USSR
  • Malta January/February 1945 Britain and the US
  • Yalta February 1945 Britain, the US and the
    USSR
  • United Nations April June 1945 50 Nations
  • Conference on International Organization
  • Potsdam July/August 1945 Britain, the US and
    the USSR

6
The World - 1945
7
Roosevelts Three Part Plan
  • Economic Liberalization
  • Collective Security
  • Political Self-determination
  • International Monetary Fund Bretton Woods
    Conference
  • World Bank Bretton Woods Conference
  • United Nations United Nations Conference
  • Together these organizations would lessen the
    probability of future depressions by
  • lowering tariff barriers
  • stabilizing currencies
  • coordinating government planning with the
    workings of markets
  • provide the means to
  • contain future aggressors
  • if necessary defeat future aggressors.
  • The International Monetary Fund, the World Bank
    and the United Nations provided for economic
    liberalization and collective security political
    self-determination would have to wait until after
    the defeat of Nazi Germany.

8
The Yalta Conference
  • 4 to 11 February 1945
  • GB Winston Churchill
  • US Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • USSR Joseph Stalin
  • Key Issues
  • Dividing Germany
  • The formation of the United Nations
  • German war reparations
  • The entry of Soviet forces into the Far-Eastern
    front (Japan)
  • The final, and most difficult issue, the future
    of Poland
  • Declaration of Liberated Europe
  • Establish conditions of internal peace
  • Carry out measures for the relief of distressed
    peoples
  • Form internal governmental authorities broadly
    representative of all democratic elements in the
    population and pledged to the earliest possible
    establishment through free elections of
    governments responsive to the will of the people.
  • Facilitate where necessary the holding of such
    elections.

9
The Potsdam Conference
  • "The Governments of the United Kingdom, the
    United States and the U. S. S. R. consider it
    necessary to begin without delay the essential
    preparatory work upon the peace settlements in
    Europe.
  • THE PRINCIPLES TO GOVERN THE TREATMENT OF GERMANY
    IN THE INITIAL CONTROL PERIOD
  • POLITICAL PRINCIPLES
  • ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES
  • REPARATIONS FROM GERMANY
  • DISPOSAL OF THE GERMAN NAVY AND MERCHANT MARINE
  • WAR CRIMINALS
  • POLAND

10
The Iron Curtain
  • Winston Churchill March 1946
  • Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri
  • The United States stands at this time at the
    pinnacle of world power. It is a solemn moment
    for the American democracy. For with this primacy
    in power is also joined an awe-inspiring
    accountability to the future. As you look around
    you, you must feel not only the sense of duty
    done, but also you must feel anxiety lest you
    fall below the level of achievement. Opportunity
    is here now, clear and shining, for both our
    countries. To reject it or ignore it or fritter
    it away will bring upon us all the long
    reproaches of the aftertime.
  • 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. Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Budapest,
    Belgrade, Bucharest and Sofia all these famous
    cities and the populations around them lie in
    what I must call the Soviet sphere, and all are
    subject, in one form or another, not only to
    Soviet influence but to a very high and in some
    cases increasing measure of control from Moscow.

11
The Transformation
  • War aims translated into a wartime alliance
    between what would become known as the western
    democracies and the Soviet block because both, in
    Nazi Germany, faced a common enemy.
  • As the war drew to a close the future enemies
    came into conflict over the nature of the post
    war world.
  • US Vision
  • Self-determination
  • Territorial Integrity
  • Free Trade
  • Traditional Western Freedoms
  • USSR Vision
  • Secure borders
  • Control over those nations closest to Russia
  • Refashion Eastern Europe in its own image

12
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • GERMANY
  • POLAND
  • GREECE, ROMANIA AND OCCUPIED EASTERN EUROPE
  • ATOMIC ENERGY
  • ECONOMIC RECONSTRUCTION

13
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • GERMANY
  • Should Germany be de-industrialized?
  • Should Germany be permanently divided among the
    allies?
  • How much must Germany pay in war reparations?

14
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • POLAND
  • USSR
  • Poland had been used on three occasions by
    European powers to invade Russia once by France
    and twice by Germany.
  • A Polish government subservient or at the very
    least friendly to the Soviets was an overriding
    aim of Soviet leadership especially Stalin.
  • Western Allies
  • The very reason for the war was the right of
    Poland concerning the matter of
    self-determination.
  • The right of Poland to democratically elect its
    own government was a basic test of the principle
    of the Atlantic Charter.

15
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • EASTERN EUROPE, GREECE and ROMANIA
  • USSR
  • The Soviet Union, fearing for its security,
    strongly desired to control its neighbors.
  • Western Allies
  • Envisioned a postwar world of capitalists
    democracies.
  • The US specifically had dreams of a US-led
    coalition.
  • When England could not live up to commitments
    made to Greece, President Truman challenged the
    US the Congress, and the people, that,
  • We shall not realize our objectives, however,
    unless we are willing to help free peoples to
    maintain their free institutions and their
    national integrity against aggressive movements
    that seek to impose upon them totalitarian
    regimes.

16
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • ATOMIC ENERGY
  • USSR
  • The US monopoly over atomic weapons represented
    an American effort to intimidate the Soviet
    Union.
  • Western Allies
  • The US refused to relinquish control of its
    nuclear secrets.
  • Soviets would be able to share in nuclear
    weaponry only if they agreed to a comprehensive
    system of control and inspection by a United
    Nations agency.

17
The Atom Bomb
Hiroshima
Nagasaki
"Seldom if ever has a war ended leaving the
victors with such a sense of uncertainty and
fear, with such a realization that the future is
obscure and that survival is not assured."
18
Critical Issues of the Transformation
  • ECONOMIC RECONSTRUCTION
  • Who should receive rehabilitation loans?
  • Who should finance rehabilitation loans?
  • What should be the terms and limitations of
    rehabilitation loans?
  • Capitalism vs. Socialism

19
The Marshall Plan
  • The most serious threat to western interests in
    Europe was not Soviet military intervention but
    the risk that hunger, poverty and despair might
    cause Europeans to elect communists to office.
  • Elected communists would then obey the desires,
    wishes and directions of Moscow.
  • American economic assistance would produce
    immediate psychological benefits and later
    material benefits.
  • The Soviet Union would not accept such aid.
  • The Soviet Union would not allow its satellites
    to accept aid straining the relationship between
    the USSR and the satellites.
  • Once this occurred the US could sieze both the
    geopolitical and the moral initiative in the
    emerging Cold War.

20
The Berlin Blockade
  • Stalin responded to the Marshall Plan by
    tightening the Soviet Grip wherever he could.
  • Stalin announced the formation of Cominform in
    September, 1947 Cominform was a post-war version
    of the prewar Comintern whose task had been to
    enforce socialist orthodoxy within the
    international communist movement.
  • Stalin approved a plan by Czechoslovakian
    communists to seize power in that country which
    remained the only Eastern European state with a
    democratic government with the coup the
    prospects of any independence within Stalins
    sphere of influence disappeared.
  • Stalin found Tito of Yugoslavia who had come to
    power in his own right to be outside the realm
    of Soviet power and by June, 1948, following
    several attempts to subject Tito to Cominform
    Tito broke with Moscow.
  • Tito began to receive aid from the US.
  • Dean Atcheson that while Tito might be a true
    son-of-a-bitch he was our son-of-a-bitch.
  • During all this, Stalin began the blockade of
    Berlin.

21
The Marshall Plan
22
Containment
  • Containment was a strategy used by the United
    States during the early years of the Cold War.
  • The basic policy of containment was to prevent
    the supposed domino effect.
  • According to the so called domino effect nations,
    especially eastern European nations, were moving
    politically towards Soviet Union-based communism,
    rather than European-American-based capitalism.
  • The idea was to contain the spread of
    communism.
  • George F. Kennan maintained the principal
    objective of the United States was to stop the
    spread of communism to contain communism with
    the borders in which it already existed.
  • Containment, along with the Marshall Plan became
    integral policies of the overall Truman Doctrine.

23
NSC-68
  • When Truman signed National Security Council
    Report 68 in April 1950 containment became the
    paramount aim of the overall US national security
    policy.
  • NSC-68 shaped US government actions in the Cold
    War becoming a blueprint well into the 1970s.
  • The document described the US and the USSR two
    powers existing in a polarized world.
  • The USSR wished to impose its absolute authority
    over the rest of the world.
  • The US was the center of power in the free world
  • NSC-68 called for significant peacetime military
    spending, in which the US possessed superior
    overall power.
  • The report strongly encouraged and later formed
    the basis for the US military buildup that
    occurred during the Cold War.

24
Communism in 1940 to 1954
25
Characteristics of the Cold War
  • High degree of tension between the United States
    and the Union of Soviet Socialists Republic
    (USSR)
  • Costly and dangerous arms race
  • Polarization of domestic and international
    politics
  • Division of the world into economic spheres
  • Competition and conflict in the third world

26
The Cold War
  • The Cold War shaped the foreign policies of the
    United States and the Soviet Union and deeply
    affected their societies and their political,
    economic, and military institutions.
  • By providing a justification for the projection
    of US power and influence all over the world, the
    Cold War facilitated the assumption and assertion
    of global leadership by the United Sates.
  • By providing Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin and
    his successors with an external enemy to justify
    their repressive internal regime, the Cold War
    helped legitimate an unrepresentative government
    and maintain the grip of the Communist Party on
    the Soviet Union.
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