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Chapter 28 THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR

Chapter 28 THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR. America Past and Present. The Cold War Begins: Issues Dividing US & USSR. Control of Postwar Europe Fundamental disagreement Economic Aid Soviet economy devastated Nuclear Disarmament Overshadowed all else. p.810. The Division of Europe.

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Chapter 28 THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR

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  1. Chapter 28THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR America Past and Present

  2. The Cold War Begins:Issues Dividing US & USSR • Control of Postwar Europe • Fundamental disagreement • Economic Aid • Soviet economy devastated • Nuclear Disarmament • Overshadowed all else p.810

  3. The Division of Europe • 1945 ~ Russians occupied eastern Europe, American troops occupied western Europe ~ Germany was the key • Soviet Union sought eastern European buffer • US demanded national self-determination through free elections throughout Europe • Stalin converted eastern Europe into a system of satellite nations • Lowered the “Iron Curtain” from the Baltic to the Adriatic ~ Churchill’s term • One by one, communist regimes replaced coalition govts in Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria p.810-811

  4. Europe after World War II p.811

  5. Germany 1945 NIB

  6. Withholding Economic Aid • Soviets devastated by World War II • 15 to 20M lives lost • 30k factories destroyed • 40k mi of railroad track destroyed • Wartime ambassador, Averell Harriman, “Economic aid is one of our most effective weapons” • 1945 ~ United States halted Lend-Lease shipments to the Soviets • Soviets moved factories from captured territories p.811-812

  7. The Atomic Dilemma • 1943 ~ Nuclear race between US & USSR • 1946 ~ Bernard Baruch Plan • Rapid reduction of US military force • Baruch Plan presented to the UN favored US atomic monopoly • Would have preserved the status quo • Soviet Union • Larger conventional army than US • Ambassador Andrei Gromyko presented plan to abolish atomic weapons • Favored the Soviets • No agreements = Cold War p.812-813

  8. Containment • 1947 ~ George C. Marshall appointed Secretary of State • Appointed talented subordinates • Undersecretary Dean Acheson • Experienced Wash lawyer • Wanted to see US take over as supreme arbiter of world affairs • George Kennan headed newly created Policy Planning Staff • Soviet expert • Fluent in Russian • They set the course for containment p.813

  9. The Truman Doctrine • 1947 ~ Truman sought funds to keep Greece, Turkey in Western sphere of influence • Truman Doctrine ~ “Support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or outside pressure” • Doctrine an informal declaration of cold war against the Soviet Union p.813-814

  10. The Marshall Plan • If US could not solve Western Europe’s economic problems, it was feared that it would drift into the communist orbit • 1947 ~ George Marshall proposed aid for rebuilding European industries • A massive infusion of American capital to finance the economic recovery of Europe (Soviets included) • USSR refused aid ~ Didn’t want to lose control of Eastern Europe • 1948 ~ Marshall Plan adopted by Congress • Plan fostered western European prosperity p.814-815

  11. Marshall Plan to Aid Europe, 1948–1952 Massive infusion of US capital p.815

  12. Marshall Plan to Aid Europe, 1948–1952 Massive infusion of US capital p.815

  13. Marshall Plan to Aid Europe, 1948–1952 Massive infusion of US capital p.815

  14. The Western Military Alliance • 1949 ~ North Atlantic Treaty Organization • Military alliance included US, Canada, most of western Europe • US troops stationed in Europe • Represented a departure from traditional American isolationism • NATO intensified USSR's fear of the West p.815-816

  15. The Berlin Blockade • June 1948 ~ The main Soviet response to the US containment strategy was the blockade of Berlin • Cut off all rail & highway traffic • Truman ordered airlift to supply the city • 10k troops & 2M civilians in Berlin • Soviets could have shot down cargo planes • Sent 60 atomic capable B-29s in England • 1949 ~ Russians end blockade • Tremendous US political victory p.816-817

  16. The Cold War Expands • 1947 ~ US vs. Soviet arms race accelerated • The Superpowers sought to expand their influence in the Far East p.817

  17. The Military Dimension • 1947 ~ National Security Act • Department of Defense established • Army – Navy – Air Force (new) • Central Intelligence Agency coordinated intelligence-gathering • National Security Council advised president • Defense budget devoted to air power • 1949 ~ First Russian atomic bomb exploded, US began hydrogen bomb development (1000x) p.817-818

  18. The Cold War in Asia • 1945 ~ US consolidates hold on Japan, & former Japanese possessions in Pacific • 1949 ~ Victory of Mao Tse-tung’s Communists over Chaing Kai-shek’s Nationals brings China into Soviet orbit • Truman refused recognition of Communist China & began building up Japan p.818-819

  19. The Korean War • June 1950 ~ Communist North Korean forces, following Kim il-Sung (backed by China backed by the Soviets), invaded US-influenced South Korea • Truman made South Korea’s defense a UN effort & sent in US troops • US routed Korean forces in South • Attempt to unify Korea drew in China • With help from China, US pushed back to South & war became a stalemate • Most significant result ~ Massive American rearmament • US Army expanded to 3.5M Kim Jong-il p.819-821

  20. The Korean War, 1950–1953 • Most significant result ~ Massive American rearmament p.820

  21. The Cold War at Home • Truman tried to carry on the New Deal reform tradition he had inherited from FDR, but American people more concerned about events abroad • Fears of Communist subversion • Republicans used anticommunism to revive their party p.824

  22. Truman's Troubles • Prices rose quickly following WWII when Congress ended wartime controls • Workers lost pay due to loss of overtime • Labor unrest swept the country culminating in critical strikes • Truman asked Congress for power to draft striking railway workers into the Army • Businesses raised wages, but passed the cost on to consumers • 1946 ~ Republicans won majority in both houses of Congress • “To err is Truman” & “Had enough?” p.824

  23. Truman Vindicated • 1948 election ~ Truman thought unelectable • Northern liberals supported Henry Wallace’s Progressive candidacy • Southern Democrats supported “Dixiecrat” Strom Thurmond (anti-civil rights, racist) • Republican Thomas Dewey was overconfident & ran bland campaign, failed to challenge Truman on Cold War because of the Berlin Crisis • Roosevelt coalition reelected Truman on domestic issues p.824-825

  24. 100 p.825

  25. The Loyalty Issue • Growing paranoia over communist spies • Canadians uncovered Soviet spy ring in 1946 • US House Un-American Activities Committee held hearings regarding agents in the Depts of Agriculture & Treasury • Truman was compelled to take action & initiated a loyalty program • Required security checks; 1000s of govt workers lost their jobs on suspicion • Most famous disclosure in US govt came when Whittaker Chambers (a repentant communist) accused Alger Hiss, a former State Dept official, of having been a Soviet spy during the 1930s p.825-826

  26. The Loyalty Issue • Chambers led investigators to a hollowed-out pumpkin on his Maryland farm in which were found microfilms of govt documents • Chambers claimed Hiss had passed them to him in the late 1930s • Statute of limitations had passed, so Hiss escaped treason charges, but was convicted of perjury in 1950 & sentenced to a 5 yr prison sentence ’53-’56 p.825-826

  27. Klaus Fuchs Julius & Ethel Rosenberg • Soviets tested their first atomic bomb in Sep 1949 • Soviet espionage was very real • In early 1950, Klaus Fuchs (fled Germany in the ’30s), a British scientist who had worked on the Manhattan Project admitted passing A-bomb information to the Soviets • Sentenced to 14 yrs • 1951 ~ Jury found Julius & Ethel Rosenberg guilty of passing atomic secrets to the Soviets • Electrocuted in 1953 p.827

  28. McCarthyism in Action • 1950s ~ Senator Joseph McCarthy launched a 4½ yr anticommunist campaign ~ the Red Scare • Accused 100s of govt officials of being communists • Kept up a continuous onslaught, truth was lost among the latest blasts • He failed to unearth a single confirmed communist in govt • He exploited the press/media w/ great skill • His accusations contributed heavily to the Republican victory in 1952 p.826-828

  29. The Republicans in Power • 1952 ~ Eisenhower captures White House for Republican Party • July 1953 ~ Stalemate accepted in Korea • Eisenhower dealt passively with McCarthy • Refused to directly attack him • “I refuse to get into a p***ing contest with a skunk” • 1954 ~ Attack on Army discredited McCarthy who is then censured • Career ruined • “Have you no decency, sir?” p.828-830

  30. The Election of 1952 Had promised to bring the Korean War to an early & honorable end p.829

  31. Eisenhower Wages the Cold War • Eisenhower prefers to work behind-the scenes • Eisenhower wanted to relax tensions with Soviets • Concerned about defense budget (went >$50B under Truman) • Cut back Army & Navy & relied on Air Forcenuclear striking power, brought budget <$40B • Eisenhower’s “new look” policy relied on massive retaliation to deter Soviet attacks p.830-831

  32. Entanglement in Indochina • Since 1950, US had been providing military & economic aid to the French in their war w/ communist guerrillas led by Ho Chi Minh • French were surrounded at Dien Bien Phu • Ike did not provide assistance, French defeated • Viet Nam divided between North & South at an international convention in Geneva • Ho would control the North & the French the South • US gradually took over from the French & established a puppet govt • Concerned about spread of communism, but didn’t want to fight them in the jungle p.831-832

  33. Containing China • Believing the communist govt in Peking posed a serious threat, Ike took a strong stance against against China • The object was to drive a wedge between China & the USSR • Chinese threaten to invade Formosa, an island group off their coast where Chaing Kai-shek’s Nationalists had settled • US spted these “Nationalists,” & China backed down when Soviets would not help p.832

  34. Turmoil in the Middle East • 1956 ~ Egyptian leader Gamal Nasser seized the Suez Canal • Problem: Owned by English & French citizens • France & England invaded Egypt • Ike was opposed, wanted a diplomatic soln • Soviets announced they would spt Egypt • Ike’s most serious foreign policy crisis • Gained Middle East trust by pressuring English & French withdrawal • 1958 ~ Lebanon asked for US help to maintain order ~ Another “Cold War” arena • Political problems between Christians & Muslims • Peace maintained p.832-833

  35. Covert Actions • Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) used to achieve covert objectives • Iran ~ CIA restored the Shah to power • American oil companies rewarded w/ lucrative concessions • A country on Soviet border • Guatemala ~ CIA ousts leftist govt • Eastern Europe ~ Refused to help 1953 East German protesters or 1956 Hungarian freedom fighters • Ike used a mixture of techniques (diplomacy, threats, covert). He seemed to believe that the ends justify the means p.833

  36. Waging Peace • Nuclear test ban treaty • US & USSR agreed to suspend nuclear testing in the atmosphere • Ike wanted “Open skies” ~ Nikita Khrushchev (followed Stalin) did not agree • October 1957 ~ Russians launched Sputnik • May 1960,U-2 Crisis ~ Soviets shot down spy plane ~ Peace talks cancelled “We will bury you” p.833-835

  37. The Continuing Cold War • Jan 1961 ~ Eisenhower warned against growing military-industrial complex • Post-war era marked by Cold War rather than peace & tranquility p.835

  38. Chapter 28THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR America Past and Present End

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