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Conflicting beliefs lead to a “Cold War”

Test your knowledge of the Cold War by matching the country with its capital city. Pretest questions cover the causes and events of the Cold War, including the division of East and West Berlin, the arms race, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Learn about the roots of the conflict, Soviet expansion, and the battle to stop communism. Explore the Berlin Wall and the effects it had on Berlin and its residents. Discover the historical significance of the Berlin Airlift and the Truman Doctrine.

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Conflicting beliefs lead to a “Cold War”

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  1. Conflicting beliefs lead to a “Cold War” Can You? Match the country with the capital city found below. , Poland Warsaw Berlin Prague Vienna Budapest Belgrade Bucharest Sofia , Germany , Czechoslovakia , Austria , Hungary , Yugoslavia , Romania , Bulgaria

  2. Pretest • The Cold War was fought between • U.S. & Canada c. Soviet Union & U.S. • Canada & Iceland d. U.S. and West Berlin • What did the Soviets build to divide East & West Berlin? • Berlin Curtain c. Iron Curtain • Berlin Wall d. an iron wall • The countries that belonged to NATO wanted to • keep people from leaving East Berlin. • keep the Soviets from forcing other nations to be communists. • keep people from leaving West Berlin. • keep the U.S. from forcing other nations to become democratic.

  3. What caused the arms race? • Both the Soviet Union and the U.S. wanted to have a stronger military. • The Soviet Union hid missiles in Cuba. • The Allies formed the United Nations. • The Soviets helped China become a communist nation. • Who helped North Korea in the Korean War? • UN c. the Soviet Union and China • U.S. d. U.S. & South Korea • What started the Cuban Missile Crisis? • The Soviet Union learned that the U.S. was putting missiles in Cuba. • The U.S. learned that the Soviet Union was putting missiles in Cuba. • The Soviet Union helped Fidel Castro make Cuba a communist nation. • The U.S. discovered the China was putting missiles in Cuba.

  4. The Cold War: Roots of the Conflict • At the end of WWII, the Allied armies freed all the nations in western Europe that had been conquered by Germany. • They agreed to help the countries recover from the war. • The Allies helped them form new governments and gave them money to rebuild their cities. • Then, the Allies left Europe.

  5. Soviet Expansion Things were different in eastern Europe. Soviet troops stayed in countries like Poland, Romania, Hungary, and the eastern ½ of Germany. They set up communist governments.

  6. Communism System where the government owns the factories and natural resources and controls the production of goods; people are not free Communist flag

  7. A “Cold War” • There was distrust between America and the Soviet Union. • The 2 countries had different beliefs and political systems. • These feelings grew into a state of tension called the “Cold War” because it never involved fighting, or a “hot” war. • The Cold War divided the world into 2 camps – those who supported a free society and those who supported communism Cold War: Period of tension between the Soviet Union & USA that never resulted in actual fighting

  8. People living in countries controlled by the Soviet Union couldn’t leave. Armed guards watched over the borders. • In a 1946 speech, British PM Churchill warned that an iron curtain had fallen across Europe Iron Curtain: an imaginary dividing line between eastern & western Europe.

  9. Peep under the Iron curtain March 6, 1946

  10. The Battle to stop Communism • The U.S. wanted to stop the spread of communism. One of their 1st challenges was in Germany. • When Germany was divided after WWII, the city of Berlin was divided, too. The Soviet Union controlled the eastern half of the city, and the Allies controlled the western half. • The Allied-controlled part of Germany became an independent nation in 1949.

  11. Focus on Berlin • After World War II, Germany was divided into four zones, occupied by French, British, American, and Soviet troops. Occupation zones after 1945. Berlin is the multinational area within the Soviet zone.

  12. Truman Doctrine • Statement of President Truman that promised military and economic support to nations threatened by communism Truman Doctrine: Truman’s policy to contain the spread of communism

  13. Soviet blockade: East Berlin West Berlin East Germany West Germany · In June of 1948, the French, British and American zones were joined into the nation of West Germany after the Soviets refused to end their occupation of Germany.

  14. The Soviet Union did not like West Germany becoming an independent nation. • They wanted to control all of Germany and get the Allies out of West Berlin. • In 1948, they decided to block all supplies from getting into West Berlin by railroad, train, or waterway. That meant no food, or fuel for heat in the cold winter. They thought that would drive the Allies out of the city.

  15. Berlin Wall: Built to separate Berlin into 2 sides: communist & non-communist. Soviet blockade Eventual site of the Berlin Wall

  16. The Berlin Wall

  17. Results of the Berlin Wall: • Berlin was divided. • Free access ended between East and West. • Many families split and could not reunite. • Many attempted to escape to the West between 1945 and 1989 • 239 people were shot trying to cross the Berlin Wall

  18. Berlin Airlift: U.S. and Allied planes delivered supplies to West Berlin every day for 321 days. • Planes landed all day and night. At times, over 5,000 tons of supplies arrived daily. The US was determined to stop communism.

  19. Germany remains divided: · In May of 1949, Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union ended the blockade. · The Soviet zone of Germany, including East Berlin, became known as the nation of East Germany.

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