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Mr. Schaber - US History - Ch. 26 (Cold War) Class Notes *Section 1 - Origins of the Cold War - “I know you will not mind my being brutally frank when I tell you that I can personally handle Stalin,” President Roosevelt told Winston Churchill during WWII - By 1944, FDR was sure of Stalin’s cooperation - Churchill, though, clearly understood the situation - “Germany is finished...The real problem is Russia. I can’t get the Americans to see it.” Churchill - The wartime cooperation between the US and the Soviet Union was a temporary arrangement - As wartime allies, the Soviets disagreed bitterly with their American and British partners over battle tactics and postwar plans - as the end of the war approached, relations grew increasingly tense - February 1945 - FDR met with Stalin and Churchill at Yalta to work out the future of Germany and Poland - They agreed on the division of Germany into American, British, French, and Soviet occupation zones - (Later, the American, French, British zones were combined to create West Germany, while the Soviet zone became East Germany) - FDR and Churchill rejected Stalin’s demand that Germany pay the Soviet Union $10 billion in war damages - FDR pressed Stalin at Yalta to declare war on Japan - Poland proved the most difficult issue to address at Yalta - the Red Army had occupied that country and supported the Communist-dominated government - Stalin opposed the return of Poland’s prewar government - The meeting stalled until Stalin agreed on elections to let Poles choose their own type of government - Disputes over Poland would continue to strain American-Soviet relations - One item on which the leaders all agreed at Yalta was creation of the United Nations (UN), a new international peacekeeping organization - The League of Nations, founded after WWI, had failed largely because the US refused to join - This time, policy makers got congressional support for the UN, and the US was on board - In April 1945, delegates from 50 nations met in San Francisco and adopted a charter statement for the UN - The charter stated that members would try to settle their differences peacefully - it vowed to try to stop wars from starting and to end those that did break out - All member nations belonged to the UN’s General Assembly - Representatives of 11 countries sat on a Security Council - the US, Soviet Union, Great Britain, France, and China had permanent seats on the council and a veto over proposed policies - FDR never lived to see his dream of the United Nations fulfilled - he died on April 12, 1945 - His unexpected death shocked the nation - no one was more surprised than VP Harry S. Truman, who suddenly found himself President - Few Vice Presidents have been less prepared to become President - while he’d spent 10 years in Congress, Truman had been VP for just 83 days - FDR had never involved him in major foreign policy discussions - Truman at first adopted FDR’s willingness to compromise with the Soviets - but before long, his attitude hardened - Shortly after Truman took office he scolded Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov for the Soviet Union’s failure to allow Polish elections - Molotov was offended by Truman’s bluntness - “I have never been talked to like that in my life,” Molotov protested - Truman responded by saying, “Carry out your agreements and you won’t get talked to like that.” - Tensions over Poland illustrated American and Soviet leaders’ differing views of the world Americans had fought to bring democracy and economic opportunity to the conquered nations of Europe and Asia - The US hoped to see these goals achieved in the postwar world - After losing more than 20 million people during the war and suffering widespread destruction, the Soviet Union was determined to rebuild in ways that would protect its own interests - One way was to establish satellite nations (countries subject to Soviet domination) on the western borders of the Soviet Union - these governments would be friendly to Communist goals - Stalin was all about installing or supporting totalitarian Communist governments in Eastern Europe - The Soviet Union quickly gained control over Eastern European nations freed from the Nazis - The promised elections in Poland did not take place for nearly two years - Poland’s Sovietinstalled government eliminated all political opposition - In Albania, Communist guerilla forces had driven out the Germans by 1944 - Soviet troops rolled into Bulgaria in 1944, and the Communists secured their hold on the country by 1948 - The Czechs tried to hold on to their democratic multiparty political system - by 1948 it was a satellite naton - After Communist candidates lost elections in Hungary in late 1945, Soviet troops remained in that country and demanded Communist control of the police - by 1947, they were there to stay - The Red Army also stayed in Romania - by 1947 it was in Soviet hands too - While the Western Allies wanted a strong, rebuilt Germany at the center of Europe, Stalin was determined that Germany would never threaten his nation again - He established national control of all East German resources and installed a brutal totalitarian government there - In 1949, under the Communist government, the country became known as the German Democratic Republic - Two other countries managed to maintain a degree of independence from the Soviet Union Finland signed a treaty of cooperation with the Soviets in 1948 - In Yugoslavia, Communists gained control in 1945 under the leadership of Josip Broz, better known as Tito - A fiercely independent dictator, Tito refused to take orders from Stalin, who unsuccessfully tried to topple him in 1948 - for the next three decades Tito would pursue his own brand of communism free from Soviet interference - In a February 1946 speech, Stalin predicted the ultimate triumph of communism over capitalism - In the meantime, Stalin called on Communists to spread their system by other means - The month after Stalin’s speech, Winston Churchill responded - in his speech, Churchill called on Americans to help keep Stalin from closing the iron curtain of Communist domination and oppression around any more nations - These two speeches set the tone for the cold war (the competition that developed between the US and the Soviet Union for power and influence in the world) - For nearly 50 years, until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the cold war was characterized by political and economic conflict and military tensions - The rivalry stopped just short of a “hot” war (a direct military engagement) between the two competing nations - However, the US military forces did engage in combat in other nations in efforts to defeat the Soviet-supported uprisings and invasions - In a secret telegram to the State Department in early 1946, George Kennan, a top American diplomat stationed in Moscow, analyzed Soviet behavior and policy - Like Stalin, Kennan saw the Soviet Union’s weaknesses - soon thereafter, he publicized his observations in an anonymous magazine article - From Kennan’s analysis, the policy of containment emerged - the policy recognized the possibility that Eastern Europe was already lost to communism - it called for the US to resist Soviet attempts to form Communist governments elsewhere in the world - Critics saw containment as too moderate an approach to Soviet-American relations - They called for action to push the Communists out of Eastern Europe, Russia, and anywhere else - Kennan, however, argued that the Soviet system “bears within it the seeds of its own decay” and would eventually crumble - thus, although containment remained controversial, it became the cornerstone of America’s cold war foreign policy - Since 1945 the Soviet Union had been making threats against Turkey - in addition, a civil war had broken out in nearby Greece in the closing days of the war - There Communists fought to overthrow the government that had returned to power after the Axis invaders withdrew - Britain announced in 1947 that it could no longer afford to provide aid to Greece and Turkey the British suggested that the US take over responsibility for defending the region - State Department officials developed a plan to provide American aid to Greece and Turkey - “Only two great powers remain in the world...the United States and the Soviet Union.” - In March 1947, in a speech before a joint session of Congress, Truman called on the US to take a leadership role - He gave a statement of principles known as the Truman Doctrine - “I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation (conquest) by armed minorities or by outside pressures. I believe that we must assist free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way.” - President Truman - Responding to Truman’s plea, Congress approved $400 million in aid for Greece and Turkey - In addition, the US soon established military bases in both countries - During the next four decades, the Truman Doctrine and the policy of containment continued to guide US foreign policy - these principles would lead the US into controversial involvements in “hot” and “cold” conflicts around the world *Section 2 - The Cold War Abroad and at Home - WWII had devastated the continent to a degree never seen before - About 21 million people had been made homeless - In Poland, some 20 percent of the population had died - Nearly 1 out of 5 houses in France and Belgium had been damaged or destroyed - across Europe, industries and transportation were in ruins - In France alone, damage equaled three times the nation’s annual income - American policymakers were determined not to repeat the mistakes of the post-WWI era - this time the US would help restore the war-torn nations so that they might create stable democracies and achieve economic recovery - The Truman Doctrine was one of two fundamental shifts in postwar foreign policy intended to fulfill these goals - The other was the Marshall Plan, which called for the nations of Europe to draw up a program for economic recovery from the war - the US would then support the program with financial aid - The plan was unveiled by Secretary of State George C. Marshall in 1947 - The Marshall Plan responded to the concern of American policymakers that Communist parties were growing stronger across Europe and the Soviet Union might intervene to support more of these movements - The plan also reflected the belief that US aid for European economic recovery would create strong democracies and open new markets for American goods - The Soviet Union was invited to participate in the Marshall Plan, but it refused the help and pressured its satellite nations to do so as well - Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov called the Marshall Plan a vicious American scheme for using dollars to “buy its way” into European affairs - Seventeen Western European nations joined the plan - In 1948 Congress approved the Marshall Plan, which was formally known as the European Recovery Program - Over the next 4 years, the US sent some $13 billion in grants and loans to Western Europe - the region’s economies were quickly restored, and the US gained strong trading partners in the region - One of the nations that benefitted from the Marshall Plan was West Germany - by 1948 American, British, and French leaders had become convinced that Stalin was not going to allow the reunification of Germany - Therefore the Western Allies prepared to merge their three occupation zones to create the Federal Republic of Germany, or West Germany - The western part of Berlin, which lay in the Soviet zone, was to become part of West Germany - Capitalist West Berlin and Communist East Berlin became visible symbols of the developing cold war struggle between the Soviet Union and the Western powers - Hundreds of thousands of Eastern Europeans left their homes in Communist-dominated nations, fled to East Berlin, and then crossed into West Berlin - From there they booked passage to freedom in the US, Canada, or Western Europe - Stalin decided to close this escape route by forcing the Western powers to abandon West Berlin - All shipments to the city through East Berlin were also banned - The blockade threatened to create severe shortages of food and other supplies needed by the 2.5 million people in West Berlin - Truman did not want to risk starting a war by using military force to open the transportation routes - nor did he want to give up West Berlin to the Soviets - Instead Truman began the Berlin airlift, moving supplies into West Berlin by plane - During the next 15 months, British and American military aircraft made more than 200,000 flights to deliver food, fuel, and other supplies - At the height of the Berlin airlift, nearly 13,000 tons of goods arrived in West Berlin daily - The Soviets finally gave up the blockade in May 1949, and the airlift ended the following September - By this time the Marshall Plan had helped achieve economic stability in the capitalist nations of Western Europe, including West Germany - Berlin, however, remained a focal point of East-West conflict - In the early post-war period, the international community pinned its hopes on the United Nations - The Soviet Union’s frequent use of its veto power in the Security Council prevented the UN from effectively dealing with a number of postwar problems - Western Europe would have to look beyond the UN in protecting itself from Soviet aggression - In April 1949, Canada and the US joined Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, and Portugal to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) - Member nations agreed that “an armed attack against one or more of them...shall be considered an attack against them all” - This principle of mutual military assistance is called collective security - In 1955, the Soviet Union responded to the formation of NATO - it created the Warsaw Pact (a military alliance with its satellite nations in Eastern Europe) - In 1949 the Soviet Union had successfully tested an atomic bomb - then, just a few weeks later, Communist forces took control of China - New York, Los Angeles, and other American cities now risked the horrible fate of Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Truman’s response to the Soviet atomic threat - he gave approval for development of a hydrogen, or thermonuclear, bomb, which was many times more destructive than the atomic bomb - At about the same time, Truman organized the Federal Civil Defense Administration - the new agency flooded the nation with posters and other information about how to survive a nuclear attack - These included plans for building bomb shelters and instructions for holding air raid drills in schools - As WWII drew to a close, the fighting between the Communists and government forces resumed in China - By 1947 Mao’s forces had occupied much of China’s countryside, and its northern cities had begun to come under their control - In early 1949 China’s capital of Peking (now Beijing) fell to the Communists - A few months later, Mao proclaimed the creation of the People’s Republic of China - The defeated Chiang Kai-shek and his followers withdrew to the island of Taiwan, off the Chinese mainland - There they continued as the Republic of China, claiming to be the legitimate government of the entire Chinese nation - Throughout the Great Depression, tens of thousands of Americans had joined the Communist party, which was a legal organization - Many were desperate people who had developed serious doubts about the American capitalist system - Others were intellectuals who joined and supported the Communists - After WWII however, improved economic times, as well as the increasing distrust of Stalin, caused many people to become disappointed with communism - most American communists quit the party - During the presidencies of Truman and his successor, Dwight D. Eisenhower, concern about the growth of world communism raised fears of a conspiracy to overthrow the government - These fears launched a widespread anti-Communist crusade that violated the civil liberties of many Americans - Government officials launched programs to root out any element of communism that might have infiltrated the US - exposure of a number of wartime spy rings in 1946 increased Americans’ anxiety - A federal employee loyalty program was started in 1947 - Under this program, all new employees hired by the federal government were to be investigated - In addition, the FBI checked its files for evidence of existing government employees who might be engaged in suspicious activities - Those accused of disloyalty were brought before a Loyalty Review Board, where their case was reviewed - While civil rights were supposed to be safeguarded, in fact those accused of disloyalty to their country often had little chance to defend themselves - Rather than being innocent until proven guilty, they found that the accusation alone made it difficult to clear their names - The loyalty program added to a climate of suspicion taking hold in the nation - The House Un-American Activities Committee, referred to as HUAC, had been established in 1938 to investigate disloyalty on the eve of WWII - now it began as a postwar probe of Communist infiltration of government agencies and, more spectacularly, a probe of the Hollywood movie industry - While HUAC carried out its work, Democrat Pat McCarran headed a Senate hunt for Communists in the movie industry, labor unions, the State Department, and the UN - Senator McCarran became convinced that the most disloyal Americans were immigrants from Communist-dominated parts of the world - At his urging, in 1952 Congress passed the McCarran-Walter Act - this law established a quota system for each country, discriminating against potential immigrants from Asia and Southern and Central Europe - President Truman vetoed McCarran’s bill, calling it “one of the most un-American acts I have ever witnessed in my public career” - Congress, however, passed the bill over the President’s veto - Two famous spy cases helped fuel the suspicion that a conspiracy within the United States was aiding the Communists overseas in their military and political successes - Alger Hiss, who had been a high-ranking State Department official before he left government service, was investigated by HUAC - Whittaker Chambers, a former Communist who had become a successful Time magazine editor, accused Hiss of having been a Communist in the 1930s - After two trials, Hiss was convicted of perjury for lying in the slander case - in 1950 he went to prison for 4 years - Not all Americans were convinced he was guilty, and for many years thereafter the Hiss case was hotly debated - Several months after Hiss’s conviction, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, a married couple who held radical views, were accused of passing atomic secrets to the Soviets during WWII - after a highly controversial trial, the Rosenbergs were convicted of espionage and executed in 1953 - The case was another event that inflamed anti-Communist passions and focused attention on a possible internal threat to the nation’s security