Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Please sit in a group of 3 or 4 Today you will be serving your nation as State Department Annalists A.K.A. “Spies” 1 The Cold War (1946-1990) Guiding Question: “What are the challenges of confrontation?” 2 Standards • USH.6.1 Understand the domino theory and its relationship to the principle of containment. Identify key events and individuals as well as their connections to post World War II tensions. • USH.6.2 Summarize and assess the various actions which characterized the early struggle for civil rights (1945-1960). • USH.6.3 Describe the constitutional significance and lasting societal effects of the United States Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case. • USH.6.4 Summarize key economic and social changes in post-WW II American life. 3 Main Vocabulary and Key Concepts • • • • • • • • • • • Communism & US Response Iron Curtain Satellite Nations Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Berlin Airlift, NATO Kennan Telegram & Containment Domino Theory Truman’s Limited War v Eisenhower’s Brinkmanship Korean War Age of Prosperity/Conformity & Suburbia Baby Boomers McCarthyism & 2nd Red Scare-Key figures & Implications • • • • • • • • • Subversion, HUAC, Rosenbergs, Censure Duck n Cover, Bomb Shelters Sputnik & Space Race Generation Gap/Rock n Roll Election of 1960/Kennedy/impact of television Kennedy’s Response to Foreign Crisis Bay of Pigs Cuban Missile Crisis Berlin Wall 4 Origins of the Cold War Learning Targets: 1. I can describe the domino theory and its relationship to the principle of containment. 2. I can identify key events and individuals as well as their connections to post World War II tensions. 5 Post War “Clean Up” • United Nations created • 50 nation General Assembly • 11 member Security Council • 6 rotating members • 5 permanent members (Britain, France, China, Soviet Union, U.S.) • Goal: to preserve international peace & security • International Military Tribunal • (U.S., Britain, France, Soviet Union) • Tried war criminals • Nuremberg Trials (153 Nazis) • Tokyo (25 Japanese) 6 Yalta Conference (February 1945) • FDR, Churchill & Stalin meet in Yalta • Discuss Poland’s post war government (Comm./Non-Comm. Coalition Gov.) • Issue “Declaration of Liberated Europe” • Affirmed the “right of all people to choose the form of government under which they wished to live” • Germany divided into 4 Zones (U.S., Britain, France, Soviet Union) • German Capital: Berlin divided into 4 zones (U.S., Britain, France, Soviet Union) • German reparations discussed 7 U.S./Soviet Tensions Begin to Rise • Soviets concentrate on securing borders creating friendly communist governments and “Satellite Nations” • Poland's coalition government is unbalanced (too communist) • U.S. concentrates on post war economic growth in Europe want to avoid another depression • Truman replaces FDR – Truman is very anti-communist • “We [the U.S.] must stand up to the Russians.” • Truman demands free elections in Poland 8 Potsdam Conference (July 1945) • Truman and Stalin (go toe to toe) • • • • • • • Stalin wants reparations ($$$$$) Truman wants economic reconstruction ($$$$$$$) U.S. and Britain control Germany’s Industry Soviets Control Germans Agricultural Regions Truman Bullies Stalin with Atomic Bomb Stalin Accepts Truman’s Reparations Plan (but not graciously) Soviets refuse to uphold “Declaration of Liberated Europe” 9 The IRON CURTAIN descends • Soviet Military Threat in Eastern Europe leads to rise of Satellite Nations • Poland Romania • Bulgaria • Hungary • Czechoslovakia 10 Truman Doctrine = Containing Communism – Response to exasperation… • The “Long Telegram” from diplomat George Keenan (Feb. 22, 1946) • Attempts to explain why the Soviets will not cooperate with the West. • “Russian sense of insecurity and fear of the west” rooted in the teachings of Lenin and Stalin. • Soviet belief in long term struggle against Capitalism all or nothing • Stop soviet expansion, avoid direct conflict, and in time the Soviet Union will fall apart policy of Containment • Iran Crisis • Greece & Turkey • CONTAINMENT 11 Iran, Greece & Turkey – Middle Eastern Cold War Battleground • Iran Crisis (March 1946) • Soviets refuse to withdraw after WWII and demand access to oil • U.S. faces tem down with the Battleship Missouri (eastern Med.) and political pressure • Greece & Turkey (August 1946) • Stalin Demands joint control of Dardanelles with Turkey • Communist forces threaten Greece • Battle Ship Mighty “Mo” and Carrier FDR Deployed • American Involvement here leads to sets stage for actions as “world cop” • CONTAINMENT 12 Marshal Plan (Supports the Truman Doctrine) • George Marshall – U.S. Secretary of State • Marshal Plan = European Recovery Plan (June 1947) • Rejected by Soviets (they develop their own plan) • Pumps $$$$$ and supplies into Western Europe • Weakens appeal of Communism • A plan to fight “hunger, poverty, desperation, & chaos” • NOT communism 13 Group Document Analysis • The Sources Of Soviet Conduct • George Keenan (1947) • Russia Desk Activity 14 The Russia Desk (Analyzing & Drawing Conclusions) • Department of State (State Department) • Telegram Received – February 22, 1946 • From: George Keenan (U.S. Embassy in Moscow) • To: George Marshall (U.S. Secretary of State) • RE: Soviet Union’s (Russia’s) Post War Outlook 15 Task • Working as a group divide, read, annotate & discuss your assigned section of the “Long” Telegram (20:00) • Summarize your findings on your organizer in the appropriate section USING BULLET POINTS • Once you agree on the important points place points on the master (Class Organizer) • Present Findings • We will draw our final conclusions as a class 16 The Cold War Continues Day 2 17 What was the role of ideology in 20th Century conflict? • US IDEOLOGY: • - rights of the individual • - right to choose government • - individuals oversee the economy • - democracy & capitalism • - Capitalism- expansionist/new markets- aggressive • -Manifest Destiny & Social Darwinism • SOVIET IDEOLOGY: • - individuals are subordinate to the goals of the state • - for common welfare, the state determines the form of government • - state governs economic life • - communism • - Marxism- overthrow capitalism- aggressor 18 Truman Doctrine • Recall that U.S. and U.S.S.R. clashed over Greece and Turkey • (March 12, 1947) Truman requests $400 Million from Congress to fight Communist aggression in Greece and Turkey • His Speech outlines what becomes known as the Truman Doctrine: • The goal of the U.S. is to aid “free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.” • The Marshall Plan puts the Truman Doctrine into effect in Europe. 19 Marshal v. Zhadanov Comparison & Contrast Activity 20 The Marshall Plan • Marshall Plan Video - 49-126 Mins Forgotten Hero • George Marshall- Forgotten Hero • Answer the Following Questions in your Notes: • What was Marshall’s role after the war? What did the President ask him to do? • What did Truman say must be the “policy of the United States”? • How was Stalin different after the war? • What did European countries need after the war? What other challenges did they have? • What was Marshall’s view on European recovery in his speech at Harvard University? 21 Impact of the Marshall Plan on the Cold War • The Soviets responded to the Marshall Plan & the Truman Doctrine with the Zhdanov Doctrine, unveiled in October of 1947. • The Zhdanov Doctrine claimed that the United States was seeking global domination through American imperialism, as well as the collapse of democracy. • The Zhdanov Doctrine was a Soviet cultural doctrine developed by Central Committee secretary Andrei Zhdanov in 1946. • The main principle of the Zhdanov doctrine was often summarized by the phrase "The only conflict that is possible in Soviet culture is the conflict between good and best". • Zhdanovism soon became a Soviet cultural policy; failed to comply with the government's wishes risked persecution. 22 Marshal v. Zhadanov (C & C Activity) • Assignment: 1. Read the Marshall Plan, as illustrated in George Marshall’s full speech at Harvard University. 2. Then Read the Soviet response and the Zhadanov Doctrine 3. Create a detailed double bubble that shows how both sides differ but what ideals and goals they have that are similar 4. Based on the documents: Write a reflection to attach to your DBWho do you think was more responsible for the Cold War beginning; the US or the Soviets? • Was the Marshall Plan a cause of the Cold War? 23 Berlin Airlift & NATO Self Guided Study (Please be familiar with the following.) 24 Berlin Airlift • A four-power provisional government, called the Allied Control Council, was installed in Berlin. This union of governments was to control and rebuild the city of Berlin. • Currency, German Unification, Soviet War reparations, and mere ideology were among the many differences the Allies & Soviets had. 25 Berlin Airlift (2) • There would be no compromise. As a result, Stalin wanted them out of Berlin. • On April 9, 1948, Stalin ordered all American Military personnel maintaining communications equipment out of the Eastern Zone (Soviet controlled Berlin). • Trains were halted on June 1 and June 10. • On June 21, the Soviets halted a US Military Supply Train and refused it passage to Berlin. On the 22nd, they placed armed guards aboard, attached a Soviet engine and hauled it back to Western Germany. • In a final move to push the Americans, British, and French out, on June 24, 1948, all land and water access to West Berlin was cut off by the Soviets. 26 Berlin Airlift (3) • There were to be no more supplies from the West from Marshall Plan. • What was going to happen? • Where were the necessary supplies going to come from for the Occupation Forces? • For that matter, where were the supplies for the 2,008,943 Berliners going to come from? • It was a grave situation. • The Soviet felt the only option for the Allies was to leave Germanypurpose of the blockade 27 Berlin Airlift (4) • The Allies were certainly not going to stand for this. • Diplomacy failed, Ground invasions were planned, and World War 3 was on the brink of existence. • US Military Commander Lucius Clay had developed a plan by which an armed convoy through Soviet Controlled Germany would break the blockade. • This action would certainly create a war. • The Airlift is chosen instead 28 Berlin Airlift- June 1948- May 1949 • Berlin airlift, 1948–49, supply of vital necessities (2 Million + tons of supplies) to West Berlin by air transport primarily under U.S. auspices. • It was initiated in response to a land and water blockade of the city that had been instituted by the Soviet Union in the hope that the Allies would be forced to abandon West Berlin. • UsedC-54’s to carry freight; Used B-29 bombers on ground as intimidation (nukes?) • Soviets cause trouble: • the Soviets offered free food to anyone who crossed into East Berlin and registered their ration cards there, but West Berliners overwhelmingly rejected Soviet offers of food. • Throughout the airlift, Soviet and German communists subjected the West Berliners to sustained psychological warfare. In radio broadcasts, they relentlessly proclaimed that all Berlin came under Soviet authority and predicted the imminent abandonment of the city by the Western occupying powers. The Soviets also harassed members of the democratically elected officials- use of secret police • Soviet buzz planes/played chicken, shoot, balloons, parachute jumps and search lights in pilots faces: Again, B29’s on the ground keep the Soviets from shooting planes down- not sure of atomic bomb- Fear • Attempted Communism Putsch in Berlin; Pro Communist met by 500,000 Berliners; British helped stop Soviet military police • Winter 1948-49: Use German volunteers, former Luftwaffe mechanics due to lack of manpower • Candy Bomber "Operation Little Vittles"- “The Chocolate Uncle”: morale booster for children 29 End of the Blockade • The Soviet blockade of Berlin was lifted at one minute after midnight on 12 May 1949. • A British convoy immediately drove through to Berlin, and the first train from West Germany reached Berlin at 5:32 A.M. Later that day an enormous crowd celebrated the end of the blockade. • On May 23, the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) was formally established. • On October 7, the German Democratic Republic, a Communist state, was proclaimed in East Germany. • Cold War tensions over Berlin remained high, culminating in the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961. • NOTE: The Soviets always had an advantage in conventional military forces, but were preoccupied with rebuilding. The U.S. had a stronger navy and air force, and had nuclear weapons. Neither side wanted a war. • FAST FORWARD: • With the reduced Soviet power in the late 1980s, the Communist Party in East Germany began to lose its grip on power. • Tens of thousands of East Germans began to flee the nation, and by late 1989 the Berlin Wall started to come down. • Shortly thereafter, talks between East and West German officials, joined by officials from the United States, Great Britain, France, and the USSR, began to discuss reunification, which was achieved on October 3, 1990. Helmut Kohl became the first chancellor of the reunified Germany. • Although this action came more than a year before the dissolution of the Soviet Union, for many observers the reunification of Germany effectively marked the end of the Cold War. 30 Creation of NATO • 1949: July – NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) ratified • Members agree to come to the aid of any member who is attacked. • Basic Points: • • • • Political and Military Alliance Collective Defense Transatlantic Link As of 2010: collective defense, crisis-management and cooperative security • NATO Site (Please Review) • http://www.nato.int/natowelcome/ • How is the mission of NATO still employed today? 31