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The%20Cold%20War

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Title: The%20Cold%20War


1
The Cold War
  • 1945 -1989

2
Causes
  • At the end of the war the United States and
    Soviet Union were able to work together
  • But Soviets made no attempt to allow free
    elections in Eastern Europe and installed
    pro-Soviet governments
  • At the Potsdam Conference (1945) Truman knew the
    Americans had the Atomic bomb and so he could
    afford to take a hard line against the Soviets

3
  • The Allies agreed to stay united until the German
    military was disarmed and the means of production
    had been destroyed. They also agreed to allow
    Allied nations to seek reparations
  • There were no plans to reunify Germany, thus
    creating the Federalist Republic of Germany and
    the Communist German Democratic Republic
  • As the Soviets focused on developing nuclear
    weapons so the two superpowers joined in an arms
    race
  • The United States perceived Soviets moves as an
    indication of Communist expansionism and a threat
    to American interests
  • Consequently the United States developed a policy
    of containment

4
Containment
  • At the end of the war George Keenan, a counselor
    at the American Embassy in Moscow warned the
    State Department about dangers from the spread of
    Communism
  • In 1947, back in Washington, Keenan wrote an
    article anonymously in Foreign Affairs which he
    advocated the policy of containment he signed
    the article X
  • The fear was that Communism would spread beyond
    Eastern Europe

5
  • Russia was determined to be able to access the
    Mediterranean Sea - necessity for global trade
  • They pressured Turkey to grant the Soviets the
    right to build a naval base on the Bosporus
  • In 1946 a civil war in Greece between the
    Communists and the British-backed government
  • The following year the British told the Americans
    that they could no longer afford to fight the war
  • President Truman decided that the American
    government would help

6
Truman Doctrine
  • In March 1947, Truman requested 400 million in
    economic aid for Greece and Turkey and for the
    power to send American troops to train the
    pro-democracy forces
  • Congress approved of large scale military and
    economic aid for Greece and Turkey to combat
    communism
  • Congress did not want to approve the Bill until a
    Communist coup in Czechoslovakia in 1948 seemed
    to validate American fears
  • The Truman Doctrine committed American resources
    to fighting Communism anywhere in the world

7
  • Post-war Europe was an economic nightmare and
    there were thousands of dislocated people
    wandering around
  • Bridges had been destroyed, roads and canals
    ruined, and factories had to be rebuilt. Plus
    the harvest of 1947 had been a disaster many
    people in Europe desperately needed help
  • Communist Parties were gaining mass appeal in
    France and Italy
  • The United Nations sent some aid but it was not
    enough to correct the problems
  • Secretary of State George C. Marshall called for
    a massive aid program to help the Europeans

8
Marshall Plan
  • The belief was that economically strong countries
    would be less susceptible to communist takeover
  • Money was restricted to purchasing American-made
    goods thus helping the American economy
  • The United States allocated almost 13 billion
    for European development
  • The offer was to all nations including the Soviet
    Union
  • In the summer of 1947 the representative from
    most nations met in London to discuss the offer
    the Soviets attended but were told told by Moscow
    to leave

9
Berlin Blockade
  • The war had devastated the German economy and
    years after the war there was little improvement
  • The city of Berlin was split into zones, each
    controlled by a major power Britain, France,
    United States, and the Soviet Union
  • Gradual the French, British, and American zones
    merged
  • In April 1948 the Soviets started to limit road
    and rail traffic into West Berlin

10
  • Truman responded by organizing the Berlin airlift
    to keep the city supplied
  • West Berlin symbolized capitalist determination
    to resist communism
  • On May 12, 1949 the Soviets lifted their
    unsuccessful blockade

11
NATO
  • In 1949, 12 nations agreed to form the North
    Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)- an attack
    against one member was attack against all
  • Later in the year NATO agreed to the formation of
    Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany)
  • Months later the Soviets created the German
    Democratic Republic (East Germany)
  • The Soviets organized the Council for Mutual
    Economic Assistance in 1949
  • In 1955 the Soviets organized the Warsaw Pact

12
China
  • In 1949 Civil War erupted in China between the
    Nationalists led by Chiang Kai-shek and the
    Communists led by Mao Tse-tung
  • The United States supported and aided the
    Nationalists but the Communists with support of
    the peasants won the war
  • The nationalists fled to Formosa (Taiwan)
  • The American government continued to recognize
    the Nationalist government
  • Fear of further Communist expansion forced the
    United States to recognize the French control of
    Vietnam

13
  • The French-backed regime was led by Emperor Bao
    Dai
  • The United States was soon helping Dai fight Ho
    Chi Minhs guerrillas
  • Also in 1949 the United States found out that the
    Soviets now had an atomic bomb the world would
    never be the same
  • Truman now sought construction of a hydrogen bomb

14
NSC-68
  • The National Security Council issued document
    NSC-68, which called for the rebuilding of the
    military to provide a non-nuclear option
  • Americans had never had a large peace-time army
    but now, because of the fear of Communism, the
    public was willing to listen
  • When the Korean War started it was easy to gain
    congressional approval

15
Korea
  • During the Second World War Soviet troops went
    into North Korea and American troops went into
    South Korea
  • Both sides established new governments
  • The Americans proposed to divide the country at
    the 38th parallel, until the country could be
    reunited
  • The Soviets help the North Koreans plan an
    invasion of the South which would unify the
    country under the Communist flag

16
  • In June 1950 80,000 troops invaded South Korea
  • Truman determined to use the United Nations to
    wage against the North Koreans and he waged war
    without asking Congress for consent
  • The United Nations Security Council North Korea
    to no avail
  • The Soviet delegate, who could have vetoed any
    legislation, was boycotting the Council because
    the United Nations would not allow Communist
    China to take a seat instead of the Nationalists
  • On June 27 the United Nations ordered members to
    assist South Korea

17
  • Truman ordered the American military into action
  • Fourteen member nations sent forces to South
    Korea
  • This was the first war authorized by the
    president and not Congress. It was sanctioned by
    the United Nations and seen by many as a police
    action
  • Truman was sure the invasion of South Korea
    masked a plan by Stalin to invade Western Europe
  • Consequently the number of American troops in
    Europe was greatly increased

18
  • Just when it looked the war might end 260,000
    Chinese volunteers crossed the border from China
  • MacArthurs men were forced to retreat
  • MacArthur asked Congress for atomic bombs and
    criticized the president for not allowing him to
    fight the war
  • As MacArthur asked for an escalation public
    opposition increased as many saw the potential
    for a new World War
  • A massive United Nations counterattack forced
    the Chinese back to the 38th parallel

19
  • When Truman offered to negotiate peace, MacArthur
    threatened the Chinese to make peace or face an
    attack
  • In 1951 Truman replaced the popular MacArthur
    with general Ridgway
  • When MacArthur returned home he was greeted by
    thousands of cheering people
  • In June 1951 the Soviet representative at the
    United Nations proposed a cease fire
  • Talks lasted another two years before the
    fighting finally stopped
  • When it was all over President Eisenhower was in
    the White House and the line separating the two
    nations was almost at the 38th parallel

20
Eisenhower
  • In 1952 the Twenty-second Amendment prohibited a
    president from seeking a third term
  • The Democrats nominated Adlai Stevenson
  • The Republicans nominated Dwight Eisenhower a war
    hero, but more importantly a candidate who
    appealed to Democrats as well as Republicans
  • He slowed the rate of government expansion at the
    same time as he kept many of the programs
    initiated by Roosevelt and Truman

21
  • Eisenhower gave the impression he was above
    political squabbling, but his political weakness
    was his friendship with influential businessmen
  • His domestic program was called dynamic
    conservatism
  • He cut spending and programs including national
    defense
  • He abolished the Reconstruction Finance
    Corporation and end wage and price controls. He
    cut taxes for corporations and the wealthy
  • Once in office he was faced with the deadlock of
    the peace talks in Korea

22
  • Many North Koreans did not want to return home,
    but Chinese negotiators insisted all prisoners be
    returned
  • In May Eisenhower increased aerial bombing of
    North Korea and sent Secretary of State John
    Foster Dulles to China with a discrete threat of
    atomic warfare
  • In July the president announced an end to the
    fighting in Korea

23
Brinkmanship
  • Although Dulles threatened a great deal he
    changed little of the containment philosophy that
    had been espoused by Truman
  • But he did add the strategy of massive
    retaliation more bang for your buck
  • In 1953 members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
    designed a New Look military strategy that
    sanctioned the limited use of nuclear weapons,
    which would allow for a reduction or conventional
    forces

24
  • Dulles utilized the approach of taking the
    country to the brink of war
  • He argued that brinkmanship had ended the Korean
    War
  • The next place brinkmanship would be used would
    be in Indochina
  • In 1954 the United States sent aircraft carriers
    to the South China Sea to intimidate Communist
    China, especially from further involvement in
    Indochina

25
Indochina/Vietnam
  • The French had controlled Indochina since the
    days of nineteenth century
  • During World War II the Japanese had taken over,
    but after the war nationalists forces emerged
    against the French
  • The Viet Minh, led by the Communist Ho Chi Minh
    demanded independence
  • In 1945 Minh proclaimed a democratic Republic of
    Vietnam

26
  • The French fought back and asked for help from
    other countries to stop the spread of Communism
  • By 1953 Americans were paying for much of the war
  • In 1954 the French were badly defeated at Dien
    Bien Phu
  • A new French government decided to pull out and
    leave Indochina to others
  • In July 1954 the Geneva Accords agreed to divide
    the country at the 17th parallel The Viet Minh
    would control the north while the French would
    have the south until 1956 when elections could be
    held

27
  • America and South Vietnam refused to acknowledge
    the Accords causing the Soviets and China to also
    back away
  • Dulles set about organizing the Southeast Asia
    Treaty Organization (SEATO)
  • The new leader of South Vietnam was
    American-backed Ngo Dinh Diem
  • America backed Diem under the assumption that
    there would be a move towards democracy, but
    instead Diem imposed a virtual dictatorship
  • By 1960 the United States was backing a leader
    that was destroying his own country

28
The Middle East
  • In 1958 the Communists threatened to take over
    Lebanon, a pro-western state
  • Eisenhower, under the Eisenhower Doctrine, felt
    compelled to send aid
  • Several thousand American troops landed in
    Lebanon and helped restore order
  • In 1958 Eisenhower invited the Soviet leader
    Nikita Khrushchev to Washington
  • Khrushchev spoke to the United Nations about the
    possibility of complete disarmament, but he did
    not say how it would be done

29
  • Any hope of cooperation disappeared in 1960 at
    the Paris summit
  • Both sides were determined not to relent on the
    question of Berlin
  • Just before the conference an American U-2 spy
    plane was shot down over Russia
  • The president had no choice but to accept
    responsibility but any hope of achieving progress
    at the summit disappeared

30
Cuba
  • American foreign policy in Central and South
    America seemed confusing, especially for some of
    the member nations
  • In 1954 the CIA led a coup to oust the leftist
    dictator from Guatemala. At the same time
    Washington supported other dictators who claimed
    to be fighting Communism
  • The biggest thorn in the side of Washington was
    Cuba
  • In 1959 Fidel Castro overthrew the pro-American
    leader Fulgencio Batista

31
  • Castro denounce American policies as
    imperialistic and criticized the administration
    while confiscating land owned by American
    companies
  • The United States responded by stopping the
    import of sugar from Cuba
  • Castro then turned to Moscow and made Cuba a
    Soviet satellite state
  • Thousands of refugees left Cuba for the United
    States, most moving to Florida
  • In 1960 diplomatic relations between the two
    countries ended

32
  • In 1960 the United States helped form the
    Organization of American States to stop the
    spread of Communism in the Americas
  • Eisenhower created a second version of the
    Marshall Plan, this one intended for Latin
    American nations
  • The plan known as the Alliance for Progress was
    intended to narrow the gap between the rich and
    poor countries
  • The results were never as good as intended and
    many areas turned to other options

33
The Election of 1960
  • Vice President Richard Nixon was the nomination
    for the Republicans
  • He had made a reputation as a tough politician
    who was no afraid to stand up to the Soviets
  • In 1959 he had debated with Khrushchev in the
    kitchen debates in Moscow
  • His running mate was Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of
    Massachusetts
  • The Democrats selected the youthful John F.
    Kennedy from Massachusetts and Lyndon Baines
    Johnson from Texas as his running mate

34
  • In 1961 Kennedy and Khrushchev met in Vienna
  • The experienced Soviet leader felt he could bully
    the inexperienced American president over issue
    concerning Berlin, but Kennedy refused to be
    intimidated
  • In August 1961 the Soviets began construction of
    the Berlin Wall, separating East and West Berlin

35
Foreign Policy
  • As the old colonial powers disappeared more and
    more nations gained their independence. Many of
    these nations were very poor and looked to the
    Soviets or the United States for financial help
  • The United States suddenly realized that although
    the United Nations was trying to maintain order,
    it was the United States that was paying most of
    the cost
  • The Eisenhower had sent a great deal of money to
    Laos to support democracy, but the country
    remained in a state of civil war

36
  • Kennedy considered sending American soldiers to
    Laos, but realized that such a move would greatly
    reduce the American presence in Europe
  • In 1962 a summit at Geneva negotiated a ceasefire
    in Laos, but no one had much confidence it would
    last
  • Kennedy felt trapped by the policy of massive
    retaliation which had been formulated by Dulles
    during the Eisenhower administration
  • Kennedy and his Defense Secretary John McNamara
    created a policy of flexible response

37
  • The strategy would be to send enough troops as
    each situation dictated
  • Kennedy shifted spending to bolster conventional
    forces
  • The downside to flexible response was that it
    was not as intimidating as massive retaliation
    and therefore less effective as a tool of
    diplomacy
  • Kennedy sent advisers to Vietnam to support the
    unpopular Diem, but it was soon obvious Diem
    would have to go
  • In 1963 the administration approved of a coup to
    remove Diem

38
The Bay of Pigs
  • American foreign policy towards Latin America was
    based on the Monroe Doctrine
  • Eisenhower had approved a CIA plan to remove
    Castro by using America-trained Cuban exiles
  • On April 12, 1961 thousands of exiles landed at
    the Bay of Pigs Cuba
  • Unfortunately the Cubans were waiting and the
    invasion was a disaster
  • The invasion pushed Castro closer to his Soviet
    allies

39
The Missile Crisis
  • The Soviets began installing missiles on Cuba,
    which was only 90 miles from Florida
  • Kennedy responded by invoking a naval blockade
    around the island and demanded the missiles be
    removed
  • Both nations refused to back down and for a while
    the world waited in the brink of nuclear war
  • In October Khrushchev agreed to remove the
    missile while Kennedy promised to end the
    blockade and never to invade the island

40
  • The administration also agreed to remove American
    missiles from Turkey which were aimed at the
    Soviet Union
  • The confrontation cost the Soviet leader his job
    as the Kremlin determined never to be forced to
    back down again
  • Kennedy realized the significant of what might
    have happened and asked the Soviets for a nuclear
    test-ban, which was signed in late 1963
  • Kennedy also started to mention the possibility
    of establishing better relations between the two
    countries
  • This would later be known as détente

41
Lyndon Baines Johnson
  • In November 1963 Kennedy was assassinated while
    visiting Dallas. Johnson was sworn in as the new
    president
  • Johnson continued much of Kennedys foreign
    policy
  • In 1965 he sent thousands of troops to the
    Dominican Republic to suppress a possible
    revolution and restore democracy
  • Johnson criticized for his gunboat diplomacy
    and earned a reputation as a gun-slinger from
    Texas

42
Tonkin Gulf Resolution
  • In 1964 the American navy had been involved in
    cohort operations off the coast of North Vietnam
  • Two American destroyers were allegedly fired upon
    by North Vietnamese gunboats the actual events
    are still a mystery
  • Johnson called it an unprovoked attack and asked
    Congress for the authority to use force
  • The Tonkin Gulf Resolution was in effect a blank
    check

43
Vietnam Revisited
  • Johnson inherited a mess in Vietnam. Thousands
    of American troops were in the country but still
    it didnt seem like there were many successes
  • In 1965 the Viet Cong attacked the American base
    at Pleiku. Johnson ordered retaliatory air raids
    against North Vietnam
  • By the middle of the year Operation Rolling
    Thunder was devastating large areas of North
    Vietnam
  • By the end of 1965 over 180,000 troops were in
    Vietnam

44
  • Johnson was advised that an escalation in the war
    would force the North Vietnamese into submission
  • However any increase by the Americans was matched
    by an increase by the North Vietnamese
  • To the annoyance of many, the South Vietnamese
    were simply letting the Americans fight the war
  • The situation was not helped by the fact each new
    South Vietnamese government seemed worse than the
    previous one corruption became the word of the
    day
  • War hawks claimed that if the Americans pulled
    back the Communists would spread across the
    Southeast Asia

45
  • Public opinion was starting to mount against the
    American government as the cost of the war
    escalated and the number of American casualties
    continued to rise
  • Thousands of young men left the United States and
    moved to Canada to avoid the draft
  • In 1966, Johnson announced a pause in the bombing
    aimed at getting the Viet Cong to the peace table
  • In 1967 Johnson ordered the CIA to spy on
    anti-war activists
  • By 1968 it was obvious to all that the war was
    not going well and it was increasingly doubtful
    if the South could win

46
The Election of 1968
  • The Republicans nominated Richard Nixon, a war
    hawk who called for victory in Vietnam
  • The Democrats nominated Hubert Humphrey, a
    senator from Minnesota who had been Johnsons
    Vice President
  • A third party was the American Independent party
    led by George C. Wallace of Alabama
  • Nixon won but without a mandate

47
  • Nixon announced a policy of Vietnamization to
    reduce American involvement in the war
  • The emphasis would now be for the South
    Vietnamese to take over more of the fighting and
    American troops could be withdrawn
  • The Nixon Doctrine established that the United
    States would honor its existing commitments, but
    countries would have to fight their own wars
    without American soldiers
  • In 1969 Nixon appealed to the silent majority
    of Americans to back his policies
  • In 1970, without consulting Congress, Nixon
    ordered Americans troops to invade neutral
    Cambodia

48
  • Despite the fact Nixon kept withdrawing troops
    his invasion of Cambodia cost him a great deal of
    public support
  • By 1971 massive anti-war rallies were being held
    across the country
  • Also in 1971 The New York Times published the
    Pentagon Papers, which revealed the mistakes and
    deceptions of the Kennedy and Johnson
    administrations including the Gulf of Tonkin
    incident

49
Deténte
  • Nixon turned his attention to the tension between
    China and the Soviet Union, believing he could
    play one country against the other and use them
    to help pressure North Vietnam into peace talks
  • The leading peace negotiator was national
    Security Advisor Dr. Henry Kissinger
  • In 1971, Nixon, an overtly anti-communist,
    accepted an invitation to China
  • The following year he went to China
  • In 1973 the president visited Moscow to pressure
    the Soviets who were afraid the United States
    might become friends with China

50
  • Nixons philosophy of détente led to a reduction
    in the arms race and eventually the
    anti-ballistic missile treaty
  • Later these negotiations would lead to the
    Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT)
  • Both of these agreements were ratified in 1972
  • In the 1972 election, Nixon promised to end the
    war and win the peace
  • When the North Vietnamese crossed the
    demilitarized zone in 1972, Nixon responded by
    bombing North Vietnam, including Hanoi
  • Thanks to détente neither the Soviets or the
    Chinese voiced opposition

51
Peace Talks
  • Nixon was able to win a second term by announcing
    he had drastically reduced the number of American
    troops and by claiming peace would soon follow
  • Soon after the election, fighting escalated again
  • Once again Nixon responded by bombing North
    Vietnam trying to force the North Vietnamese back
    to the peace table
  • On January 23, 1973, both sides agreed to a cease
    fire
  • Nixon proclaimed peace with honor

52
Cambodia
  • In July 1973 the country learned that Nixon had
    authorized bombing raids on Cambodia
  • Public and political opposition demanded an end
    to the bombing
  • Weeks later Nixon agreed to stop the bombing and
    to seek congressional approval for any further
    escalation of the war
  • Ironically, the American bombing of Cambodia led
    to installation of the dictator, Pol Pot who
    murdered as many as 2 million people

53
  • In November, Congress passed the War Powers Act
    (1973) over the presidents veto, which required
    the president to report to Congress within
    forty-eight hours of committing American troops
    to a foreign conflict
  • In 1975 the North Vietnamese invaded the South
  • President Ford asked Congress to send more
    weapons but his appeal was rejected
  • The last Americans pulled out in April leaving
    the South Vietnamese to fight their own war
  • Over 50,000 Americans had died in Vietnam and it
    had cost over 100 billion

54
The Thaw
  • President Ford, who replaced Nixon after the
    Watergate embarrassment, continued the policy of
    détente
  • Ford and thirty-four other leaders met in
    Helsinki in 1975 and signed an agreement that
    finally ended the Second World War
  • In the Helsinki Accords the Soviets promised to
    guarantee the exchange of ideas and people
    between the East and West. All nations agreed to
    protect human rights

55
President Reagan
  • Ronald Reagan was elected president on a
    hard-line stand against the Soviets
  • When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, Reagan
    declared the Soviets were aiming for world
    conquest and referred to the Soviet Union as the
    evil empire
  • Reagan believed the Soviets only respected
    strength, so he advocated a drastic increase in
    military strength
  • In 1983 Reagan announced his Strategic Defense
    Initiative (SDI) or Star Wars program

56
  • The relations between the two countries
    deteriorated further in 1981 when the Soviets
    tried to suppress workers unions in Poland
  • One of the big problems in trying to talk with
    the Soviets was the fact the Soviet leaders were
    mostly old. In fact between 1982 and 1985 three
    leaders died
  • In 1983 the Soviets attacked a Korean passenger
    plane, which had been in Soviet airspace.
    Hundreds of civilians were killed
  • By the end of 1983 the arms limitation talks had
    all been stopped

57
  • The Cold War looked like it was going to be
    renewed
  • In 1984 the Soviet bloc boycotted the Olympic
    Games in Los Angeles, because the United States
    had boycotted the 1980 games in Moscow
  • In 1989, in his inauguration address George
    Herbert Walker Bush promised a kinder, gentler
    America

58
The End of the Cold War
  • Almost as soon as Bush took office Communist
    countries all over the world turned to democracy
  • In Poland the Solidarity movement forced the
    Communist government to collapse
  • Soon after the events in Poland, Soviet control
    of Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and
    Romania collapsed
  • In December 1989 the symbol of the Cold War the
    Berlin Wall was torn down by the people of
    Germany ending the Cold War
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