![The Cold War (1945–1960) - Red Hook Central Schools](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/014628995_1-9bf7ee41197f7c1b578666e34176c38d-300x300.png)
The Cold War (1945–1960) - Red Hook Central Schools
... East Germany: To make sure Germany could not threaten his nation again, Stalin established a totalitarian government, naming the state the German Democratic Republic. Finland and Yugoslavia: Both countries maintained their independence from Soviet control - Finland, by signing a treaty of cooperatio ...
... East Germany: To make sure Germany could not threaten his nation again, Stalin established a totalitarian government, naming the state the German Democratic Republic. Finland and Yugoslavia: Both countries maintained their independence from Soviet control - Finland, by signing a treaty of cooperatio ...
The Cold War - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
... economy] “proxy wars” “Limited War” 4. Bi-Polarization of Europe [NATO vs. Warsaw Pact] ...
... economy] “proxy wars” “Limited War” 4. Bi-Polarization of Europe [NATO vs. Warsaw Pact] ...
The Cold War
... US feared poor countries of Europe would come under Soviet control MP offered eco aid to “any country that needed it” to lessen appeal of communism ...
... US feared poor countries of Europe would come under Soviet control MP offered eco aid to “any country that needed it” to lessen appeal of communism ...
Chapter 33, Section 1
... 2. forming alliances & helping weak countries resist Soviets B. The Truman Doctrine 1. foreign aid for Turkey and Greece; $400 million C. The Marshall Plan 1. provide food and goods to help rebuild Western Europe $12.5 billion ...
... 2. forming alliances & helping weak countries resist Soviets B. The Truman Doctrine 1. foreign aid for Turkey and Greece; $400 million C. The Marshall Plan 1. provide food and goods to help rebuild Western Europe $12.5 billion ...
Cold War - Gracie Magyar
... The United States adopted a strategy of “containment” in the beginning of the Cold War •Containment: eastern Europe was firmly in Soviet hands and could not be saved, so the US and the West should focus on containing communism to those countries which already existed, and not let it spread any furt ...
... The United States adopted a strategy of “containment” in the beginning of the Cold War •Containment: eastern Europe was firmly in Soviet hands and could not be saved, so the US and the West should focus on containing communism to those countries which already existed, and not let it spread any furt ...
NAME: DATE:______ Before proceeding, please make a copy of
... ______________ by armed minorities or by outside pressures”. The U.S. would give ________________ to countries to help them fight off communism. For example, the U.S. gave Turkey and Greece $__________ million in aid. Marshall Plan Created by _______________________________ in June of 1947. A large ...
... ______________ by armed minorities or by outside pressures”. The U.S. would give ________________ to countries to help them fight off communism. For example, the U.S. gave Turkey and Greece $__________ million in aid. Marshall Plan Created by _______________________________ in June of 1947. A large ...
18-5 Powerpoint - McCook Public Schools
... – Bluntly stated “Whoever occupies a territory also imposes his own social system. Everyone imposes his own system as far as his armies can reach. It cannot be otherwise.” The U.S. was not consulting the soviet Union about peace terms of Italy or Japan, defeated and occupied by American and British ...
... – Bluntly stated “Whoever occupies a territory also imposes his own social system. Everyone imposes his own system as far as his armies can reach. It cannot be otherwise.” The U.S. was not consulting the soviet Union about peace terms of Italy or Japan, defeated and occupied by American and British ...
Chapter 26: Cold War Conflicts The Cold War
... 2. Dulles proposes brinkmanship policy: a. -willingness to risk nuclear war to prevent spread of communism 3. Nuclear threat unlike any before: millions can die; nation prepares II. The Cold War Spreads Around the World A. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) uses spies to gather information B. Covert ...
... 2. Dulles proposes brinkmanship policy: a. -willingness to risk nuclear war to prevent spread of communism 3. Nuclear threat unlike any before: millions can die; nation prepares II. The Cold War Spreads Around the World A. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) uses spies to gather information B. Covert ...
Chapter 26 The Cold War Section 1
... programs and policies The growth of Nuclear Arsenals was increasing in US and Soviet Union. 1953 US exploded their first thermonuclear device and at the same time the Soviet Union successfully tested a hydrogen device of its own. Between 1954 and 1958 US conducted 19 hydrogen bomb tests at Bik ...
... programs and policies The growth of Nuclear Arsenals was increasing in US and Soviet Union. 1953 US exploded their first thermonuclear device and at the same time the Soviet Union successfully tested a hydrogen device of its own. Between 1954 and 1958 US conducted 19 hydrogen bomb tests at Bik ...
AIR The Cold War Review 2016
... 4. On March 12, 1947, President Truman addressed a joint session of Congress to recommend that the United States provide economic assistance to Greece and Turkey. His reasons were as follows: The seeds of totalitarian regimes are nurtured by misery and want. They spread and grow in the evil soi ...
... 4. On March 12, 1947, President Truman addressed a joint session of Congress to recommend that the United States provide economic assistance to Greece and Turkey. His reasons were as follows: The seeds of totalitarian regimes are nurtured by misery and want. They spread and grow in the evil soi ...
Chapter 20
... Civil War and the Great Leap Forward A. The lack of land redistribution led to a divisoin between the peasant farmers in North China and the urban workers in Central and Southern China. By 1945, China had two governments. The United States supported the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-Shek in ...
... Civil War and the Great Leap Forward A. The lack of land redistribution led to a divisoin between the peasant farmers in North China and the urban workers in Central and Southern China. By 1945, China had two governments. The United States supported the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-Shek in ...
2. The Beginning of the Cold War (1945-1953
... • FDR agreed to give SU certain land in Pacific • Plan for the United Nations • Uncertainty over a free Poland • Stalin wanted to establish a pro-Soviet government while U.S. and Britain wanted a democratic government • Stalin agreed to hold “free and unfettered elections”would not occur for more t ...
... • FDR agreed to give SU certain land in Pacific • Plan for the United Nations • Uncertainty over a free Poland • Stalin wanted to establish a pro-Soviet government while U.S. and Britain wanted a democratic government • Stalin agreed to hold “free and unfettered elections”would not occur for more t ...
HUB DATE 1989
... • In the 1989 elections, the communists lost against the Solidarity candidates. • Jarzuelski couldn’t find a communist who could forge a majority coalition in parliament, so he turned to Solidarity and appointed a noncommunist prime minister. ...
... • In the 1989 elections, the communists lost against the Solidarity candidates. • Jarzuelski couldn’t find a communist who could forge a majority coalition in parliament, so he turned to Solidarity and appointed a noncommunist prime minister. ...
Cold War to Berlin Wall
... United States joined other Western nations to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a military alliance against the Soviets. In response, the Soviet Union formed the Warsaw Pact, a military alliance of the Sovietcontrolled countries.The nations of NATO considered an attack on one country as a ...
... United States joined other Western nations to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a military alliance against the Soviets. In response, the Soviet Union formed the Warsaw Pact, a military alliance of the Sovietcontrolled countries.The nations of NATO considered an attack on one country as a ...
Unit 7: Cold War to the Present
... with a policy of containmentpreventing the spread of communismrather than liberating satellite nations. This policy was based on the belief that the Soviets were interested in conquering other nations, not simply securing their own borders. ...
... with a policy of containmentpreventing the spread of communismrather than liberating satellite nations. This policy was based on the belief that the Soviets were interested in conquering other nations, not simply securing their own borders. ...
Chapter 26 The Cold War Section 1
... states and “an armed attack against one or more of the nations, shall be considered an attack against them all. Canadian Foreign Minister St. Louis St. Laurent Countries include; United States, Canada, Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, and Portug ...
... states and “an armed attack against one or more of the nations, shall be considered an attack against them all. Canadian Foreign Minister St. Louis St. Laurent Countries include; United States, Canada, Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, and Portug ...
The Early Cold War
... Marshall Plan [1948] 1. “European Recovery Program.” 2. Secretary of State, George Marshall 3. The U. S. should provide aid to all European nations that need it. This move is notDomino against any country or doctrine, Theory believe that if left butuncheck againstthat hunger, poverty, desperation, ...
... Marshall Plan [1948] 1. “European Recovery Program.” 2. Secretary of State, George Marshall 3. The U. S. should provide aid to all European nations that need it. This move is notDomino against any country or doctrine, Theory believe that if left butuncheck againstthat hunger, poverty, desperation, ...
The Cold War The Cold War - Origins Conflicting goals and
... Balkans; by May 1945 Soviets in Germany and Eastern Europe ...
... Balkans; by May 1945 Soviets in Germany and Eastern Europe ...
Begin Cold War Note Sheet
... What is the Cold War? •It was an intense rivalry between the ________________ and ______________ – between West and East and between _________________ and _________________ that dominated the years following WWII. Words of Wisdom •Winston Churchill “Germany is finished. The real problem is _________ ...
... What is the Cold War? •It was an intense rivalry between the ________________ and ______________ – between West and East and between _________________ and _________________ that dominated the years following WWII. Words of Wisdom •Winston Churchill “Germany is finished. The real problem is _________ ...
THE END OF WORLD WAR II - Brunswick City Schools / Homepage
... • Conflicting ideologies and mutual distrust soon led to the Cold War. • The rift grew between Stalin and the Western Allied leaders. By 1948, pro-Soviet communist governments were ruling in Eastern Europe. • New conflicts developed outside of Eastern Europe. Stalin was menacing Greece, and Turkey i ...
... • Conflicting ideologies and mutual distrust soon led to the Cold War. • The rift grew between Stalin and the Western Allied leaders. By 1948, pro-Soviet communist governments were ruling in Eastern Europe. • New conflicts developed outside of Eastern Europe. Stalin was menacing Greece, and Turkey i ...
Ch. 36
... 5. Which of the following best describes the implementation of the containment doctrine, as developed by George F. Kennan and advanced by President Truman? (A) The Soviet Union should be gradually forced to surrender its sphere of influence in Eastern Europe through American and Western European ...
... 5. Which of the following best describes the implementation of the containment doctrine, as developed by George F. Kennan and advanced by President Truman? (A) The Soviet Union should be gradually forced to surrender its sphere of influence in Eastern Europe through American and Western European ...
The End of World War II
... According to American diplomat George F. Kennan, what would Stalin and the Soviet Union not risk in attempting to expand Communism? What type of commitment would the policy of Containment require? United States Responds with Marshall Plan What was the Marshall Plan? How did the Marshall Plan provide ...
... According to American diplomat George F. Kennan, what would Stalin and the Soviet Union not risk in attempting to expand Communism? What type of commitment would the policy of Containment require? United States Responds with Marshall Plan What was the Marshall Plan? How did the Marshall Plan provide ...
Origins of the Cold War, Part I
... At Yalta, it was determined that Poland would hold free elections to determine their government In Jan. 1947 in Poland, elections distinguished by massive voter fraud gave the Communists 93% of seats – Deportations to Siberia – Winning candidates from democratic parties were murdered, were arrested, ...
... At Yalta, it was determined that Poland would hold free elections to determine their government In Jan. 1947 in Poland, elections distinguished by massive voter fraud gave the Communists 93% of seats – Deportations to Siberia – Winning candidates from democratic parties were murdered, were arrested, ...
8 review
... *In a democratic country, people have the ultimate power to make decisions through voting. Communist Countries 1. ____________________ 2. ____________________ 3. ____________________ *In a communist country, the government owns all property and controls the economy After World War II Europe was in ...
... *In a democratic country, people have the ultimate power to make decisions through voting. Communist Countries 1. ____________________ 2. ____________________ 3. ____________________ *In a communist country, the government owns all property and controls the economy After World War II Europe was in ...
1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Demise_ministru.jpg?width=300)
The 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état (often simply the Czech coup) (Czech: Únor 1948, Slovak: Február 1948, both meaning ""February 1948"") – in Communist historiography known as ""Victorious February"" (Czech: Vítězný únor, Slovak: Víťazný február) – was an event late that February in which the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, with Soviet backing, assumed undisputed control over the government of Czechoslovakia, marking the onset of four decades of Communist dictatorship in the country.The coup’s significance extended well beyond the country’s boundaries, however, as it was a clear marker along the already well-advanced road to full-fledged Cold War. The shock with which the West greeted the event—which bore distinct echoes of the Munich Agreement—helped spur quick adoption of the Marshall Plan, the creation of a state in West Germany, vigorous measures to keep Communists out of power in France and especially Italy, and steps toward mutual security that would, in little over a year, result in the establishment of NATO and the definitive drawing of the Iron Curtain until the fall of Communism in 1989.