Title: Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
1Chapter 26
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3Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
4Causes of the Cold War
- Soviet domination of Eastern Europe
- Stalin had promised FDR that he would allow free
elections in the parts of Eastern Europe occupied
by the Soviet army once WWII ended - Hoping to prevent a future invasion of the Soviet
Union from the west and to balance US influence
in Western Europe, the Soviets prevented free
elections and banned democratic parties.
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6Causes of the Cold War
- Communist victory in China
- Containment failed as Mao Zedongs communists
defeated Chiang Kai-sheks nationalists. - Republicans and Democrats alike criticized
President Truman for offering only limited aid to
the nationalists. They said he was soft on
communism. - In the following decades, American politicians
had to be very tough on the communists or suffer
politically.
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11Causes of the Cold War
- Mutual suspicion between the US and Soviet Union
- Each side feared a nuclear first-strike from the
other - In a war between superpowers, whichever side had
the most allies would have the upper hand, so the
US and the Soviet Union competed for influence
throughout the world.
12Immediate Effects of the Cold War
- Truman Doctrine
- Established the policy of containment
- First used in Greece and Turkey, both in danger
of falling to a communist takeover - US spent 400 million in aid in Greece and
Turkey, greatly reducing the threat of a
communist takeover - Served as the basis for the Marshall Plan
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16Immediate Effects of the Cold War
- The Marshall Plan
- Countries that are struggling economically are
more likely to support communist elements - 1947 Secretary of State George Marshall proposed
US send massive economic aid to help rebuild
Europe - US spent 13 billion over 4 years and the
Communist party lost much of its appeal to voters
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18Immediate Effects of the Cold War
- East-West tensions over Berlin
- After WWII, Germany divided into 4 occupation
zones among the Allies - Berlin, in the heart of Soviet-controlled East
Germany, was itself divided into East Berlin
(Soviet) and West Berlin (US) - When France, UK, and US consolidated their zones
into one (West Germany), Stalin responded by
cutting off all routes into West Berlin - US and UK responded with the successful Berlin
Airlift the sustain the people of West Berlin - Berlin would remain a focal point of the Cold War
for decades
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25Immediate Effects of the Cold War
- Establishment of NATO and Warsaw Pact
- The Berlin crisis led to increasing fear in
Western Europe of Soviet aggression - This led to the formation of NATO in 1949
- US entered a military alliance during peacetime
for the first time in history - Ended any hope for a return to US isolationism
- Warsaw Pact organized in 1955 in response to West
Germanys admission into NATO
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28Immediate Effects of the Cold War
- McCarthyism
- Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-Wisconsin) sought to
capitalize on the anti-communist hysteria for
political gain - In order to draw publicity to himself and get
reelected, he claimed that communists were taking
over the government - McCarthy made one unfounded accusation after
another without providing any evidence - Few would stand up to him for fear of being
labeled a communist themselves - Americans finally saw McCarthy for who he was
during the Army-McCarthy hearings in 1954
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39Long-Term Effects of the Cold War
- Arms race between superpowers
- Race for the H-bomb
- Threat of massive retaliation (brinkmanship)
- Air raid drills and fallout shelters
- Space race
- Soviets launch first man-made satellite (Sputnik)
- Soviets launch first intercontinental ballistic
missile (ICBM) - Soviets send first man into space (Yuri Gagarin)
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45Long-Term Effects of the Cold War
- Superpower rivalry for world power
- Korean War
- US uses CIA to weaken or overthrow governments
unfriendly to the US - Iran CIA installs the Shah in 1953
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vpfzrHY1Lywo
- Guatemala CIA trained an army to overthrow
communist-leaning government - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vv1IO_Q6BC-Mfeature
related
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58The Suez Canal Crisis
59- In 1956, an incident brought the Middle East to
the attention of the world. - Egypt, upset with Israel (established in 1948)
and the West for their lack of support for a new
dam on the Nile, seized the Suez Canal, which was
located in Egypt, but owned by Britain and France.
60- Israel fought back, joined by Great Britain and
France. - The U.S. condemned Egypt and stated that it would
not tolerate such attacks. At the same time,
however, the U.S. government was urging England
and France to withdraw from Soviet-backed Egypt
to avoid a larger conflict.
61- Direct confrontation with the Soviet Union was
avoided when the UN imposed a cease-fire. The
canal reopened in April of 1957 under Egyptian
management.
62- In January 1957, Eisenhower issued the Eisenhower
Doctrine, which said that the U.S. would defend
the Middle East against attack by any Communist
country. - Congress gave the president authority to use
American forces, at his discretion, against armed
aggression in the Middle East by any nation
controlled by international communism.
63European Revolts
64- Even though Secretary of State Dulles spoke of
liberating the people of Eastern Europe,
Eisenhower did nothing when there were efforts at
revolts in East Germany, Poland, and Hungary
during the 1950s.
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66- The Soviet Union was determined to hold onto
their satellite nations. - Soviet tanks rolled into each of these countries
and crushed the rebellions with ease.
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69The U-2 Incident
70- In May 1960, the Soviets shot down an American
U-2 spy plane, which was taking photographs
over Soviet territory. - President Eisenhower at first said that the plane
was not on a spy mission but had been a weather
plane that had been blown off course.
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72- When the Soviets showed the world the plane and
its pilot, Gary Powers, Eisenhower was forced to
admit the truth. - Khrushchev tried to use the incident for Soviet
propaganda purposes and paint the United States
as evil.
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74http//www.history.com/topics/1950s/videos1950s
75http//www.history.com/topics/1950s/videoscold-wa
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76http//www.history.com/topics/1950s/videosjackie-
robinson-changes-the-face-of-america
77http//www.history.com/topics/1950s/videoscastro-
and-the-cuban-revolution
78Berlin Airlift
79NATO
80The Marshall Plan
81Civil War in China
82The Korean War
83The New Red Scare
84McCarthyism
85Eisenhower and the Cold War
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87Cold War Around the World
88Yalta
89- In Feb. 1945, FDR had met with Churchill and
Stalin at the Soviet city of Yalta on the Black
Sea. - At this Yalta Conference, the 3 leaders made a
number of important decisions about the future. - They agreed to move ahead in creating a new
international peacekeeping body, the United
Nations (UN), based on the principles of the
Atlantic Charter.
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91- In exchange for Japans Kuril and Sakhalin
Islands, Stalin promised to enter the war against
Japan after the surrender of Germany. - He also promised free elections in Poland and
in other Soviet-occupied Eastern European
countries.
92United Nations
93- In April 1945, delegates from 50 nations met in
San Francisco to draw up the Charter of the
United Nations.
94- Additional members could be admitted by a
two-thirds vote of the General Assembly, which
included delegates from all member nations and
was to meet annually in regular session to
approve the budget, receive annual reports from
U.N. agencies, and choose members of the Security
Council and other bodies.
95- The Security Council, the other major charter
agency, would remain in permanent session and
would have primary responsibility for the
maintenance of international peace and security.
96- Its eleven members included six elected for
two-year terms and five permanent members the
United States, Russia, Britain, France, and
China. - The Security Council might investigate any
dispute, recommend settlement or reference to the
International Court, and take other measures
including a resort to military force.
97- The United States Senate ratified the U.N.
charter by a vote of 89 to 2 after only six weeks
of discussion. - The permanent home of the United Nations is in
New York City. - The current U.N. Secretary General is Kofi Annan.
98Potsdam
99- After FDRs death, Harry Truman met with
Churchill and Stalin at Potsdam, a suburb of
Berlin, in June 1945. - There the decision was made to divide Germany
into four zones of occupation (U.S., Britain,
France, and the Soviet Union).
100- Berlin, in the Soviet zone, was also divided into
four zones. - They also agreed to disarm Germany and to destroy
the Nazi Party.
101Nuremberg Trials
102- Six months after the Germans surrendered, an
international military tribunal convened in
Nuremberg, Germany, to bring civil and military
leaders of the Nazi regime to trial as war
criminals. - Judges and attorneys from the four nations
occupying Germany participated in the first of a
series of trials.
103- The crimes the defendants were charged with
included planning a war of aggression, using
slave labor, and exterminating the Jews. - Twelve of the accused were sentenced to death,
seven received prison terms, and three were
acquitted.
104- Trials of thousands of lesser figures were
conducted in each of the four occupation zones. - Many Nazi leaders managed to blend into the
general population and escape at the end of the
war. Many concealed their identities and fled to
Latin America. Some were eventually discovered
and brought to trial.
105Occupation of Japan
106- As supreme commander for the Allied powers,
General Douglas MacArthur ruled Japan after its
surrender. - The primary goals of the occupation were to
demilitarize and democratize Japan. - During the occupation, Emperor Hirohito remained
in the imperial palace, but only as a figurehead.
107- A new constitution set up a democratic system of
government, which extended voting rights to women
and established separation of church and state. - The constitution abolished the Japanese army and
navy and prohibited Japan from ever again
becoming a military power. - The occupation ended in 1952.
108Tokyo Trials
109- Early in 1946, the International Military
Tribunal for the Far East, consisting of
representatives from eleven Allied nations,
convened in Tokyo to try twenty-five Japanese
civil and military leaders for planning an
aggressive war and committing crimes against
humanity.
110- Seven of the defendants, including former prime
minister Hideki Tojo, were hanged the others
received prison sentences. - In addition, numerous Japanese army and navy
officers were brought to trial for violating the
rules of war. Of those accused, approximately
6,000 were found guilty.
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113- After the Potsdam meeting in the summer of 1945,
Stalin continued to oppress most of Eastern
Europe, forcing loyalty to the Soviet Union
through phony trials and executions. - The Soviet Union felt justified in staying in
Eastern Europe because they had suffered more
than 20 million deaths and extensive damage
during WWII and felt vulnerable to attack.
114- The Soviet Union needed friendly neighbors
Communist countries that they could control. - Stalin installed or propped up Communist
governments in Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, Romania, and Poland. These countries
became known as satellite nations, countries
dependent upon and dominated by the Soviet Union.
115- On Feb. 9, 1946, Stalin added to growing tension
with an important speech in which he declared
that capitalism was a danger to world peace.
Capitalism and communism, he said, would
eventually clash. - Because of that danger, Stalin would protect
Soviet security by stopping trade with the West
and develop modern weaponry no matter how high
the cost.
116- The United States interpreted this speech as
virtually a declaration of war. - Truman did not trust Stalin and was concerned
about the danger of Soviet expansion and the
spread of communism.
117- The European economy had been destroyed by the
war and Truman was worried that the Communists
might take over the governments of western
Europe. - Communist countries of eastern Europe kept their
citizens from free contact with western ideas.
They established restrictions on visitors,
newspapers, magazines, books, and movies.
118- Speaking in Fulton, Missouri, at a time when this
barrier was first appearing, Winston Churchill
said that an iron curtain had fallen across
Europe. He encouraged English-speaking people
should join forces against the Soviet threat. - In the future, the West, led by the US, would
resist any Soviet attempts to expand its
influence in the world.
119- The cold war had begun.
- The cold war would involve the United States and
the Soviet Union in a constant struggle to gain
power in the world by persuading other countries
to accept their ideologies, either by propaganda
or by force. - During the cold war, there was no direct war
between the superpowers.
120- President Truman officially adopted the concept
of containment, the effort to restrict communism
to its current borders. - He told the American people that the U.S. would
go to the aid of nations threatened by outside
aggression.
121- U.S. policy was that the U.S. would have to stand
up to the Soviet challenge at that time or
eventually be forced to surrender in World War
III. - Trumans vision of how containment would work
became known as the Truman Doctrine.
122- The Truman Doctrine was first applied to Greece
and Turkey. Beginning in 1947, the United States
sent over 650 million worth of help over a three
year period.
123- Secretary of State George Marshall developed a
plan to help the countries of Europe reestablish
their economies which had been destroyed by the
war. - He proposed all European countries, including the
Soviet Union and her satellites, make plans to
rebuild their cities, factories, homes, etc.
124- The United States offered to pay for this
rebuilding, but the Communist countries of
eastern Europe refused to participate in the
Marshall Plan. - Western Europe gladly said yes.
- The US Congress was ready to reject the plan when
in February 1948, the Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia, with the help of Soviet tanks,
took over that countrys government.
125- Congress quickly approved 5.3 billion as the
first installment of the Marshall Plan. - The economies of western European countries were
able to recover and Communist parties began
losing their appeal.
126- The Soviets did not appreciate the Marshall Plan.
They also did not like the fact that the other
three zones of Germany had joined together in
1948 to form a West German Republic. - As a result the Soviets closed off all highway,
water, and rail traffic into the western zones of
Berlin (which was in the Soviet zone of Germany)
to the other countries in spite of agreements at
Yalta.
127- No supplies could get in, so the city faced
starvation. - Stalin believed this threat would force the
Western nations either to give up the idea of a
reunified Germany or to surrender control of
Berlin. - In an attempt to break the blockade, American and
British officials started the Berlin Airlift to
fly food and supplies into West Berlin.
128- For 327 days, planes took off and landed every
few minutes, around the clock. At its peak, more
than 8,000 tons of supplies were flown into
Berlin every day. - Finally, after 11 months, the Soviets abandoned
the blockade, and the airlift ended.
129- By the fall of 1949, the Federal Republic of
Germany, commonly called West Germany, had been
established, with its capital in Bonn. - The Soviet Union turned its zone into the German
Democratic Republic, commonly called East
Germany, with its capital in East Berlin.
130- The Berlin blockade increased Western European
fear of Soviet aggression. - In response, ten Western European nations joined
with the U.S. and Canada on April 4, 1949, to
form a defensive military alliance called the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
131- All members countries promised that an attack on
one would be regarded as an attack on all which
they would resist with armed force if necessary. - Soon after the formation of NATO, the Soviet
Union and its satellites signed the Warsaw Pact.
It pledged mutual defense as NATO members had.
132- WWII had interrupted a civil war in China, as the
two groups of Chinese who had been fighting each
other joined forces to fight the Japanese. - Mao Zedong led the Communist forces in the
northern part of China. - The Chinese Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-shek
fought the Japanese in the south.
133- After the Japanese were defeated in 1945, the
Communists and Nationalists went back to fighting
each other for control of China. - The U.S. backed the Nationalists because they
were anti-Communist. - But Chiang often acted like a dictator. His
government was wasteful, ineffective, and corrupt.
134- Chiang overtaxed the Chinese people even during
times of famine. - He did not have the support of the people.
- Mao won the support of the Chinese peasants (over
90 of Chinese were farmers). - He distributed land to them and reduced rents. He
had an experienced army with high morale.
135- President Truman refused to send American troops
to help the Nationalists fight communism, but he
did send aid. - Even so, in 1949, Chiang and his forces had to
flee to Formosa (Taiwan), an island off the coast
of China.
136- China was now communist. Containment in China had
failed. - American conservatives said that the U.S. had
lost China because not enough had been done to
help the Chinese Nationalists. - Trumans followers said that the Communist
success was because Chiang could not win the
support of the Chinese people.
137- Conservatives claimed that the United States
government was filled with Communist agents. - American fear of communism began to reach new
heights.
138- Korea, a former Japanese colony, had been divided
at the end of WWII into two parts at the 38th
Parallel. - The Soviets supported North Korea, while
Americans supported South Korea. - It was the hope of the UN that one day the two
nations would be united after free elections were
held.
139- But Stalin would not allow elections in North
Korea. - In June 1950, the North Korean Army invaded South
Korea. - American leaders felt that Stalin had instructed
the invasion. They must act instead of appease.
140- The U.S. went to the UN, which condemned North
Korea for aggression. - The U.S. asked its member to furnish such
assistance to the Republic of South Korea as may
be necessary to repel the armed attack. - The Soviet Union was absent from this meeting of
the Security Council.
141- Troops from 16 nations most of them American
were sent to South Korea. - They were under the command of General Douglas
MacArthur. - The following is a brief chronology of the Korean
War
1421) The North Invades
- The North Koreans had driven deep into South
Korea, capturing Seoul, the capital of South
Korea. - After a month of bitter combat, the North Koreans
had forced UN and South Korean troops into a
small defensive zone around Pusan, in the
southeastern corner of the peninsula.
1432) MacArthurs Counterattack
- In September 1950, MacArthur launched a
counterattack behind enemy lines at the port of
Inchon. - Other troops moved north from the Pusan
Perimeter. - About half of the North Korean troops
surrendered. The rest crossed the 38th Parallel
into North Korea.
1443) Invading the North
- In October 1950, MacArthur and the UN forces go
on the offensive and cross the 38th Parallel in
and effort to unite Korea. - China warned the UN forces against the invasion
of the North and of coming too close to the
Chinese border.
1454) Chinese Intervention
- A quarter of a million Chinese soldiers entered
the war on the side of the North Koreans. - The UN forces were driven back into South Korea.
- Seoul was recaptured by the Communists.
1465) Truman Fires MacArthur
- Many Americans were calling for an attack on
China. - MacArthur wanted to bomb supply bases in China.
He also suggested using troops from Taiwan. - Truman did not want to widen the war. He wanted
to hold the line at the 38th Parallel.
147- MacArthur could not accept Trumans reluctance to
fight. He even publicly criticized Truman. - Truman finally removed MacArthur as commander.
- MacArthur returned to the U.S. to a heros
welcome and gave a speech before Congress in
which he said, Old soldiers never die, they just
fade away.
1485) Stalemate
- Peace talks began in July 1951, but dragged on
for months without success. - In 1952, the first Republican president in 20
years (Dwight D. Eisenhower) was elected. - The troops in Korea were at the 38th Parallel.
149- Eisenhower went to Korea for an inspection of the
troops. - An armistice was signed in July 1953 at
Panmunjon, South Korea, fixing the dividing line
once again at the 38th Parallel. - Communism had been contained without a world war
and without the use of atomic weapons.
150- The United States, now fearful of Communist
aggression in Asia, joined SEATO, the Southeast
Asia Treaty Organization. - This was a defensive alliance that promised help
to any member that was under communist attack.
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153- Many Americans felt threatened by the rise of
Communist governments in Europe and Asia. - Some even felt that Communists could threaten the
U.S. government from within.
154- Several factors contributed to this growing
suspicion. - At the height of WWII, about 80,000 Americans
claimed membership in the Communist Party some
feared that these Communists first loyalty was
to the Soviet Union. - These fears increased when people found out about
spies selling U.S. government secrets to the
Soviets.
155- Republicans accused the Truman administration of
being soft on communism. - In response to this pressure, Truman set up a
Loyalty Review Board. - The Board investigated over 3 million people who
worked for the federal government.
156- About 200 government employees were fired.
Another 2,900 resigned because they did not want
to be investigated or felt that the investigation
violated their constitutional rights. - The accused were not allowed to see the evidence
against them or face their accusers.
157- In 1947, Congress set up the House Committee on
Un-American Activities (HUAC). Its purpose was to
look for Communists both inside and outside the
government. - HUAC concentrated on the movie industry because
of suspected Communist influences in Hollywood.
158- Many people were brought before HUAC. Some agreed
that there had been Communist infiltration of the
movie industry. - They informed on others to save themselves.
159- Ten people called before HUAC refused to testify.
They said that the hearings were
unconstitutional. - The Hollywood Ten, as they were called, were sent
to prison for their refusal.
160- In response to the HUAC hearings, Hollywood
executives created a list of some 500 people they
thought were Communist-influenced. - They refused to hire the people on this
blacklist. Many peoples careers were ruined as a
result.
161- In 1950, Congress passed the McCarren Act. It
outlawed the planning of any action that might
lead to a totalitarian dictatorship in the U.S. - Fear of communism reached new heights in America
in 1948 following the conviction of former State
Department official Alger Hiss.
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163- Hiss was convicted of lying about documents that
indicated that Hiss had handed over secret
documents to communist agents. - A young conservative Republican congressman named
Richard Nixon gained fame for pursuing charges
against Hiss.
164- In 1950 Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were convicted
of providing secret information about the atomic
bomb which had enabled the Soviets to explode the
bomb in 1949. - The Rosenbergs were executed in 1953.
165- In 1950, Republican Senator Joseph R. McCarthy of
Wisconsin decided to use the threat of Communism
at home as the basic issue in his next reelection
campaign. - In a speech he said that he had a list of 205
people who were known as being members of the
Communist Party and who, nevertheless, are still
working and shaping policy of the State
Department.
166- No one ever saw the list and McCarthy refused to
name anyone for quite awhile. - In the next few months the number dropped from
205 to 57, and then up to 81. - McCarthy charged that the Democratic Party was
guilty of 20 years of treason for allowing
Communist infiltration of our government.
167- McCarthys technique became known as McCarthyism.
When challenged on his facts, he would respond
by making another accusation. - However, he was always careful to do his
name-calling only in the Senate, where he had
legal immunity that protected him from being sued
for slander.
168- The Republicans did little to stop McCarthys
attacks because they believed they would win the
1952 presidential election if the public saw them
as purging the nation of Communist influences. - Those that did challenge McCarthy were accused of
being Communists themselves, so few voiced their
objections.
169- Finally, in 1954, McCarthy made accusations
against the U.S. Army, which resulted in a
nationally televised Senate investigation
(Army-McCarthy hearings). - McCarthy was upset at the army for not giving a
young friend of his special privileges. - During the proceedings, McCarthy bullied war
heroes and lost public support.
170- Most senators agreed that McCarthy had gone too
far. The Senate condemned him for improper
conduct that tended to bring the Senate into
disrepute. - Three years later, McCarthy died a broken man,
suffering from the effects of alcoholism.
171- There was a lot of support for Communist witch
hunts in the early 1950s. - Many were forced to take loyalty oaths in order
to get jobs. States passed laws making it a crime
to speak of overthrowing the government. People
became afraid to speak their views. Fear of
communism made many Americans willing to give up
their constitutional rights.
172- Americans fear of nuclear war heightened as the
Soviet Union and the U.S. raced to develop more
powerful nuclear weapons. - In 1950, American scientists began to work on a
hydrogen bomb, or H-bomb, which they said would
be 1,000 times more powerful than the atomic
bombs dropped on Japan.
173- The first H-bomb test in 1952 completely
vaporized a small island in the Pacific. - Nine months later, the Soviet Union tested its
own H-bomb. - J. Robert Oppenheimer, one of the creators of the
atomic bomb, was opposed to the development of
the H-bomb.
174- The Eisenhower administration viewed nuclear arms
and technology as central to the governments
priority of ending Communist expansion. - Secretary of State John Foster Dulles called for
the liberation of all nations that had fallen
under Soviet control since 1945. - This policy was referred to as rollback.
175- To fulfill this aim, the U.S. would have to
confront Communist aggression and not back down
even if that meant going all the way to the brink
(edge) of war. - This policy was referred to as brinkmanship.
- The ability to get to the verge of war without
getting into war is the necessary art. John
Foster Dulles
176- This policy of brinksmanship (going to the edge
of war) rested on the threat of massive
retaliation, including the use of nuclear
weapons. - The arms race began in earnest when the Soviet
Union answered this development by also producing
huge quantities of nuclear bombs.
177- As a result, many Americans became convinced that
Soviet weapons were aimed directly at their
cities. - Students practiced air-raid procedures, and some
families built underground fallout shelters in
their back yards. - Fear of nuclear war became a constant in American
life for 30 years.
178- The U.S. was in competition with the Soviet Union
all over the world. - President Eisenhower began to rely on the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA). The CIA used spies to
get information abroad. It also carried out
covert actions, or secret operations, to weaken
or overthrow governments unfriendly to the U.S.
179- One CIA action involved Iran. In 1951, the CIA
convinced the Shah, or monarch, of Iran to get
rid of a prime minister who was not friendly to
the West. - In 1954, the CIA took action in Guatemala.
Eisenhower believed Guatemala was friendly to the
Communists. The CIA trained an army that
overthrew Guatemalas government.
180- Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin died in 1953 and
was eventually replaced by Nikita Khrushchev. - In time, Khrushchev would denounce Stalin for the
atrocities he committed against Soviet citizens
and others. - There was hope that the American relationship
with the Soviet Union under Khrushchev would be
better that it had been under Stalin.
181- The United States and the Soviet Union also
competed in the skies. - At first, the U.S. was sure it was ahead of in
military technology. - But in 1957, the Soviets developed an ICBM, or
intercontinental ballistic missile. This was a
rocket that could travel much farther than
American rockets and could carry nuclear weapons.
182- On October 4, 1957, the Soviets shocked the world
by launching Sputnik I, the first artificial
satellite to orbit the earth. - Americans knew it took a very powerful missile to
launch this satellite a missile that could
reach the United States.
183- It was obvious that the U.S. was behind in the
arms race. - This made Americans feel inferior to the Soviets
in science and technology. - Americans responded by making changes in
education. New courses in science and mathematics
were added to the high school and college
curriculum.
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