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In February 1945, with the end of war in sight, the Big Three of world leaders, Franklin D. Roosevelt (U.S.A.), Winston Churchill (Britain) and Joseph Stalin (U.S.S.R.), met at the Yalta Conference to settle some major post-WWII decisions. Despite initial hopes that international peace would be achieved, the conference, and it’s follow up later that year at Potsdam, signified the start of a new era of distrust and deception that would continue for almost 50 years. In diplomatic terms, a Hot War is actual warfare, all talks have failed and the armies are fighting. A Warm War is where talks are still going on and there is a chance of a peaceful outcome but military operations are being fully mobilised and war plans are being put into operation ready for the command to fight. The Cold War is a term frequently used to describe the relationship between America and the Soviet Union from 1945 to 1989. Neither side ever fought the other - the consequences with nuclear arms would have been too appalling - but they did ‘fight’ for their beliefs using client states who fought on their behalf. During the Cold War, suspicion and fears of each country towards the other led to increased tensions that almost, during The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, escalated into a hot war. Both the United States and the Soviet Union emerged as “Superpowers” in the post-war world. At the Yalta Conference it was determined that one of the major causes of the war had been the failures of the League of Nations. Lacking both the support from the U.S.A. and an army to implement its policies, the League was impotent It was determined that a United Nations (UN) would be formed with the USA as a permanent member as well as a peacekeeping force that could be raised, when required, to implement its decisions. Representatives of 50 nations met in San Francisco in April 1945 to adopt the Charter of the United Nations. This statement of principles outlined that members would try to settle their differences peacefully, promote justice and cooperation in solving international disputes and try to stop wars from starting and take required measured to stop those that did start. In addition to the General Assembly of all member states and a Security Council of 5 permanent and 6 non-permanent members, the Charter provided for an 18-member Economic and Social Council, an International Court of Justice, a Trusteeship Council to oversee certain colonial territories, and a Secretariat under a Secretary General. The UN also decided that Germany would be divided up into 4 occupied zones. The U.S.A., U.S.S.R., France and Great Britain would be responsible for controlling each zone until each was ready to unite into one new country. Other countries were divided as well i.e.) Korea was divided on the 38th parallel with the Soviets controlling the north and the Americans controlling the south. Truman described the UN as “a victory against war itself.” Permanent members were the US, Soviet Union, Great Britain, France and China. Question 1: What motivated the Big Three to divide Germany and Berlin into 4 occupied zones? What problems ariseTruman from this arrangement? When Roosevelt died in April might 1945, Harry became the 33rd President of the United States. Truman had been appalled by the pre-war allied policy of Appeasement and was determined to stand up to any Soviet intimidation. At the Potsdam Conference Truman learned of the successful atomic tests in New Mexico and informed Stalin that the US had a new weapon of extraordinary force (Cayton et al., 870). Stalin (who already knew of the bomb) only nodded and said that he hoped it would be put to good use. His calm response masked his anxiety over the American advantage. It would be four more years before the Soviet Union succeeded in creating a nuclear weapon. In 1946, Stalin called on all Communists to spread their system through the Cominform agency, an organization that would coordinate the actions of Communists parties around the world. It was Winston Churchill, recently defeated for re-election as the British prime minister, who first described Stalin’s actions as an “iron curtain” that had “descended across the Continent” (Fulton, Missouri, March 5, 1946). He implored the Americans to prevent the enclosure of more nations behind this “iron curtain” of Communist power and subjugation. In February 1947, the British, suffering from the economic effects of the war, requested American assistance to defend Greece and Turkey. Stalin wanted to control the Dardanelles, a strait in Turkey that would provide access for the Soviets to reach the Mediterranean Sea, and Communists in Greece were uprising against their government. In March, Truman promised that the United States would “support free peoples who are resisting subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.” This policy became known as the Truman Doctrine and it signalled the end of America’s isolationist tendencies. Truman was responding to fears of the spread of communism and his promise meant that the United States was prepared to intervene, throughout the world, to protect democracies against communism. This policy is also referred to as Containment; the “patient but vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies” (Kennan, 1947). The United States feared that the poverty, unemployment, and dislocation of the post-war period would reinforce the appeal of communist parties to voters. Congress approved a program designed to rehabilitate the economies of western and southern European countries in order to create stable conditions in which democratic institutions could survive. The US Secretary of State, George Marshall, was sent to Europe to assess its post-war economic condition and he concluded that 17million dollars was needed to loan to Europe to help it rebuild and stabilize. Initially, Congress was against the European Recovery Plan (ERP – later called The Marshall Plan) however their concern escalated when the Soviet influence spread to Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and East Germany. Between the years 1948-1951 the United States would allocate $13billion in grants and loans to Western Europe. The Soviet Union was offered aid but it refused and forbade its satellite nations to accept financial assistance from the United States. Question 2: What is the message of the cartoon? Use details of the cartoon and your knowledge to answer. Question 3: Identify three ways the United States would benefit from the success of the Marshall Plan. Question 4: Why would Stalin refuse assistance to the plan and prevent his satellite nations from accepting it? In March 1948, the Western Allies (US, France and Britain) merged their occupied zones in Germany to create the new nation, the Federal Republic of Germany or West Germany. The western part of Berlin, which lay in the Soviet zone of Germany, became a part of West Germany. The Soviets responded in 1949 by forming of the German Democratic Republic or East Germany, a Communist state, When hundreds of thousands of Eastern Europeans fled Communist ruled nations to first East Berlin, then West Berlin and finally countries such as the US, Canada or Western Europe, Stalin reacted by cutting electrical power to West Berlin and blockading Allied access and shipments (Cayton et al., 878). The Berlin blockade lasted 320 days. Truman wanted to avoid a military confrontation but knew that the west couldn’t give West Berlin to Stalin. The Berlin Airlift became the solution. During this time Great Britain and the United States supplied up to 13,000 tons of food, fuel, and other items daily to West Berlin in an airlift codenamed "Operation Vittles." A total of 200,000 flights were made and a total of 1.5 million tons in supplies were delivered (Thinkquest 2008). The blockade ended on May 12, 1949 when the Soviet Union gave in to Western plans. As tensions increased during these early years of the Cold War, roughly half the world was on the side of the US and the other half was on the side of the USSR. The countries on the US’s side formed an alliance in 1949 called the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and by 1955 the countries on the USSR’s side had formed their own “friendship” pact of mutual cooperation and assistance called the Warsaw Pact. While the US was attempting to prevent the spread of the Soviet sphere of influence internationally, they were also taking action to curb internal support for Communism. Truman developed a federal loyalty program in 1947 to investigate several million government employees and their ideological beliefs. Of the many interviewed, there were a few hundred who were actually removed from their posts due to the escalating climate of suspicion. As will be discussed in class, Congress established the HUAC (House of Un-American Activities Committee, 1938-1975 – eventually called the House Committee on Internal Security) to prevent any Communist infiltration within government agencies and the Hollywood movie industry. As a result of the HUAC’s actions many Hollywood actors were blacklisted for their apparent connections to communism or expression of anti-government sentiments. The film industry, which had previously made some efforts tackle social issues such as anti-Semitism and racism, now became solely focused on pure entertainment. This period of time in American History has been called the “Red Scare” and was launched by Senator Joe McCarthy. It dominated US politics from 1948 - 1953 and helped to pressure President Truman into the Korean War, a costly and ultimately stalemated conflict. Given the combination of China falling into the hands of the Communist dictator Mao Zedong, the Soviet creation of their own atomic bomb (both in 1949) and the interrogation and perceived communist threat to everyday Americans, the level of panic becomes understandable. In 1953, the “scare” reached a climax when Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, American citizens who were members of the Communist Party, were convicted of espionage and executed. McCarthyism: During the late 1940s-1950s, the paranoid hunt for infiltrators and a period of anti-communist hysteria that was notoriously difficult on writers and entertainers, many of whom were labelled communist sympathizers and were unable to continue working. Some were jailed, some had their passports taken away, other were put on well publicised trails. i.e. Charlie Chaplin, Arthur Miller, Leonard Berstein, Lena Horne (PBS) Question 5: Explain the historical significance of the city of Berlin to both Soviets and Americans in the early Cold War years. Question 6: Were the US governments actions during the 1940s-50s towards Communists at home justified? Question 7: What is the message of the cartoon? Use details of the cartoon and your knowledge to answer.