Title: The Cold War 1945-1991 (an overview)
1The Cold War 1945-1991(an overview)
- 1) Beginnings of the Cold War (Europe)
- 2) The First Cold War 1948-1953
- 3) The Thaw 1953-1957
- 4) The Second Cold War 1958-1962
- 5) The Period of Détente 1963-1979
- 6) The Third Cold War the Collapse of
Communism 1979-1991
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3Library Assignment
4Traditionalist Interpretations
- Traditionalists interpret events as the US
responding defensively to aggressive Soviet moves - Cold War an inevitable response to Stalins
paranoia - Herbert Feiss (50s) R.C. Raack (95) place
blame for the Cold War on Stalin - Ex. Stalin ignored promises given _at_ Yalta to
support democratically elected governments ? put
stooges in power
5Revisionist Historians
- Revisionist someone who revises the traditional
or orthodox interpretation of events and
contradicts it (60s 70s) - Argued that the US ( to a lesser extent UK)
pursued policies that caused the Cold War - William Appleman Williams ? claimed the US wanted
to force the USSR to join the global economy
open its frontiers to US imports and political
ideas in order to undermine Stalins regime
6Historians and the Cold War
- Louis Halle likened the Cold War to placing a
scorpion and a tarantula together in a bottle - Called the centrist view emphasizes
fundamental differences rather than stressing
that the Cold War was one sides fault
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9Germany, June 1945- April 1947
- Zones of occupation West Soviet agreement
(reparations raw materials) - Winter 1945-46 British US bring in food to
prevent starvation USSR plunders - Soviets insist on 10 billion in reparations
- Byrnes (US) ? reparations can only be paid by a
German trade surplus - Only UK accepts joining zones ? Bizonia created
hoped that gradually the French Russian zones
would knit into it - Breakdown Soviets try to destroy Bizonia,
cooperation breaks down
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11Increased Tensions
- Truman grows more distrustful of Stalin when he
refuses to allow free elections in Poland (breach
of Yalta promise) - Stalin wanted Eastern Europe ? buffer zone
against any future German blitzkrieg - Satellite states (puppet governments)
12The Red Army in Bucharest 1944
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14Stalins Election Speech (Feb. 9, 1946)
- Not a true election explains the Partys
position aims for the future - announced that communism capitalism were
incompatible and another war was inevitable - USSR focuses more on producing weapons than
consumer goods - US Britain interpret the speech as a virtual
declaration of war
15George Keenans Long Telegram
- Concerned about the Soviet threat ? US State
Department asked for an analysis of Soviet policy - February 22, 1946
- 1) Russians were determined to destroy the
American way of life will do all they can to
oppose the US - 2) the USSR was the greatest threat the US had
ever faced - 3) The Soviets can be beaten
16George Keenans Long Telegram (contd)
- 4) The Soviets must be stopped
- 5) This can be done without going to war
- 6) The way to do it is by educating the public
against Communism, and by making people wealthy,
happy, and free - a long-term, patient but firm, and vigilant
containment of Russian expansionist tendencies - Policy developed into a more aggressive,
militaristic one
17George Kennan
18The Iron Curtain
- March 5, 1946 Churchill _at_ Fulton, Missouri
- Iron Curtain speech
- Warning against Soviet expansion consolidation
of Eastern European territory - Many felt Churchill was exaggerating the Soviet
menace
19- A shadow has fallen upon the scenes so lately
lighted by the Allied victory 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 All
these famous cities and the populations around
them lie in the Soviet sphere and al are subject
to Soviet influence and a very high and
increasing measure of control from Moscow. -
Winston Churchill - Stalin said Churchills words were a call to war
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23Europe Divides into 2 Blocs (East and West) The
Iron Curtain
24March 5, 1946 Churchill _at_ Fulton, Missouri
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26Events in Persia
- March 2, 1946 deadline for Anglo-Soviet
withdrawal from Iran - Britain begins w/drawing USSR breaks the
agreement to withdraw wants oil concessions - Uses Red Army to aid a rebel movement
- Gains concessions (withdraws by May 1946)
- Iran revokes concessions after Soviet republics
were overthrown
27Truman Administration Adopts the containment
policy
- Stalins hard-line policies in Germany, Eastern
Europe, and the Middle East a psychological Pearl
Harbor - Truman privately in 1946, Im tired of babying
the Soviets. - Adopt Kennans analysis as a policy guide
- Containment an effort to block the Soviets
attempts to spread their influence by creating
alliances and supporting weaker countries
28James F. Byrnes
- September 6, 1946
- Speech in Germany ? repudiates the Morgenthau
Plan (proposal to partition de-industrialize
post-war Germany) - Warns the Soviets that the US intended to
maintain a military presence in Europe
indefinitely - The nub of our program was to win the German
people it was a battle between us and Russia
over minds
29James Byrnes
30The Truman Doctrine
- 12 March 1947 Truman ? Congress Greece Turkey
need aid - Communist victory in the Eastern Mediterranean
could mean Soviet domination of the Middle East - Truman declared that the US should support free
peoples throughout the world who were resisting
takeovers by armed minorities or outside
pressures ? - The Truman Doctrine
31The Truman Doctrine (contd)
- 400 million approved
- Ended policy of post-war cutbacks
- Suggested new level of confrontation with the
Soviets - Truman built a national consensus that fighting
communism was the purpose of containment
32Significance of the Truman Doctrine
- One of the declarations of Cold War
- Point at which the Truman administration
Congress made public the decision that Communism
was a great threat
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34Postwar Europe
- Economic chaos ? high unemployment, active black
markets, thefts - Millions in refugee camps
- 1946-1947 winter bitterest in centuries
below-zero temperatures record snow - Damaged crops froze rivers which prevented water
transport (creates fuel shortages) food
rationing in UK
35Hamburg (post-war)
36The Marshall Plan (June 1947)
- US Secretary of State George Marshall proposed
that the US provide aid to all European nations
that needed it - Move directed, not against any country or
doctrine but against hunger, desperation, and
chaos. - Recipients had to remove trade barriers and
cooperate economically with each other
37Other Goals of the Marshall Plan
- 1) It could act as a barrier to Soviet expansion
- 2) Pull Eastern Europe out of the Soviet bloc
- 3) Integrate Germany and contain it
38Marshall Plan Approved
- Many resist giving away billions of dollars
- February 25, 1948 communist coup in
Czechoslovakia (backed by Moscow) - Coup convinced Congress of the need strong,
stable governments in Europe to resist communism - 12 billion over 4 years to 16 countries
39George Marshall
40The Marshall Plan
41Marshall Plan Poster
42Significance of the Marshall Plan
- Great success economically politically
- Nutrition improved and industry grew
- 1952 Western Europe was flourishing
- The threat of communist parties taking over was
ended - USSR sees plan as a lure to Eastern Europe to be
like us