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Chapter 28 THE ONSET OF THE COLD WAR 1946, After the War, to 1961 and Kennedy America Past and Present Eighth Edition Divine Breen Fredrickson Williams Gross Brand (With edits by Ed Darrell) Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman The Cold War Begins: Issues Dividing U.S., U.S.S.R. • • • Control of postwar Europe Economic aid Nuclear disarmament The Division of Europe • • • • 1945: Russians occupied eastern Europe, American troops occupied western Europe Soviet Union sought eastern European buffer U.S. demanded national selfdetermination through free elections throughout Europe Stalin converted eastern Europe into a system of satellite nations Europe after World War II Withholding Economic Aid • • • • Russia devastated by World War II Some Americans sought to influence Russia with Lend-Lease economic aid 1945: United States halted Lend-Lease without Russian settlement Leverage lost in shaping Soviet policy The Atomic Dilemma • • 1943: Nuclear race between U.S. and U.S.S.R. 1946: Baruch Plan (Bernard Baruch) – – • Rapid reduction of U.S. military force Gradual reduction favored U.S. atomic monopoly Soviet Union (Andrei Gromyko) – – Larger conventional army than U.S. Immediate abolition of atomic weapons Containment • • • 1947: George C. Marshall appointed Secretary of State Dean Acheson: England's former role as arbiter of world affairs George Kennan: Called for “containment of Russia’s expansive tendencies” 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 The Marshall Plan • • • • 1947: George Marshall proposed aid for rebuilding European industries Russia refused aid 1948: Marshall Plan adopted by Congress Plan fostered western European prosperity Marshall Plan to Aid Europe, 1948–1952 The Western Military Alliance • 1949: North Atlantic Treaty Organization – – • Military alliance included U.S., Canada, most of western Europe U.S. troops stationed in Europe NATO intensified Russia's fear of the West The Berlin Blockade • • • • June, 1948: Russians blockade of Berlin Truman ordered airlift to supply the city (“The Berlin Airlift”) 1949: Russians end blockade U.S. political victory dramatized division between USSR and US, East and West, Communists and Capitalists The Cold War Expands • • 1947: U.S.-Russian arms race accelerated Conflict expanded to Asia The Military Dimension • 1947: National Security Act – – – • • Department of Defense unified armed forces Central Intelligence Agency coordinated intelligence-gathering National Security Council advised president Defense budget devoted to air power 1949: First Russian atomic bomb exploded, U.S. began hydrogen bomb development The Cold War in Asia • • • 1945: U.S. consolidates hold on Japan, former Japanese possessions in Pacific 1949: Victory of Mao Tse-tung brings China into Soviet orbit (Mao Zedong) Truman refused recognition of Communist China, began building up Japan The Korean War • • June 25, 1950: Communist North Korean forces invaded U.S.influenced South Korea Truman made South Korea’s defense a U.N. effort, sent in U.S. troops – – – • U.S. routed Korean forces in South Attempt to unify Korea drew in China U.S. pushed back to South, war a stalemate Result: Massive American rearmament The Korean War, 1950–1953 The Cold War at Home • • • New Deal economic policies undermined Fears of Communist subversion (how many “Red Scares” is this?) Republicans used anticommunism to revive their party (Nixon in California) Truman's Troubles • Obstacles to Truman’s Fair Deal reforms – – – • Apathetic public Inflation Labor unrest 1946: Republicans won Congress Truman Vindicated • Taft-Hartley Act outlawed certain union tactics – • Truman vetoed, Republicans overrode his veto 1948 election: Truman thought unelectable – – – – Northern liberals supported Henry Wallace’s Progressive candidacy Southern Democrats supported “Dixiecrat” Strom Thurmond Republican Thomas Dewey overconfident and ran bland campaign, failed to challenge Truman on Cold War because of the Berlin Crisis Roosevelt coalition reelected Truman on domestic issues Truman Vindicated • Thomas Dewey predicted to win . . . The Loyalty Issue (Red Scare) • • • • House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated Communist subversion in government Truman responded with loyalty program Alger Hiss case Democrats blamed for – – ”Losing" China to Communism Russia's development of a hydrogen bomb McCarthyism in Action • • • 1950: Senator Joseph McCarthy launched anticommunist campaign Innocent overwhelmed by accusations Attacks on privileged bureaucrats – – Supported by Midwest Republicans Attracted Irish, Italian, Polish workers to Republicans Sen. Joseph McCarthy “exposing” the communist leanings of Harry Truman – the commission of Adm. Louis Denfield for a second term as Chief of Naval Operations McCarthyism in Action • Sec. of State George Marshall (Marshall Plan) • McCarthy accused Marshall of conspiring against America • Why? Marshall plan helped people who might be socialists, and proposed to help communists Cartoon by Herb Block (“Herblock”) of the Washington Post The Republicans in Power • • • • 1952: Eisenhower captures White House for Republican Party July 27, 1953: stalemate accepted in Korea Eisenhower dealt passively with McCarthy 1954: Attack on Army discredited McCarthy who is then censured The Election of 1952 Eisenhower Wages the Cold War • • Eisenhower prefers to work behind-the scenes Eisenhower wanted to relax tensions with Soviets – – • Debt imposed by defense spending Possibility of atomic warfare Eisenhower “new look” policy relied on massive retaliation to deter Soviet attacks Entanglement in Indochina • • • • Eisenhower refused military aid for French retention of colonial Indochina (Vietnam) Victory of Communist Ho Chi Minh prompted intervention to prevent election Vietnam divided, election postponed South Vietnam under U.S. puppet regime Containing China • • • • Tough line against China Drove wedge between China, Russia Strategy ultimately worked Effects not immediately apparent Turmoil in the Middle East • • • • 1956: Nasser nationalized Suez Canal France, England invaded Egypt Eisenhower won Middle East trust by pressuring English, French withdrawal 1958: Lebanon invited U.S. troops to maintain order Covert Actions (Spies!) • • • • Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) used to achieve covert objectives Iran: CIA restored the Shah to power Guatemala: CIA ousted leftist government Eastern Europe: Refused to help East Germans or Hungarians (Hungarian Uprising, 1956) Waging Peace • Nuclear test ban treaty – • • U.S. and U.S.S.R. agreed to suspend nuclear testing in the atmosphere October, 1957: Russians launched Sputnik May, 1960: U-2 incident cancelled plans for summit on new Berlin Crisis The Continuing Cold War • • January, 1961: Eisenhower warned against growing military-industrial complex Post-war era marked by Cold War rather than peace and tranquility Cold War • The Cold War was a conflict – Between East and West – Between Communism and Capitalism – Between the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. – Fought in proxy wars – Fought with economic aid and politics, and sometimes, diplomacy – Not peace, after World War II – The longest “war” of the 20th century, 1946 to the end of 1991 Cold War “incidents” • • • • • • • • Berlin Airlift, 1948 Korean War, 1948-53 Vietnam, 1954-1975 Hungarian Uprising, 1956 Sputnik launch, October 1957 Cuban Revolution, 1959 Bay of Pigs, April 17, 1961 U-2 Incident, 1961 Cold War “incidents” • Berlin Wall, August 1961 • Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962 • Khruschev at the United Nations – “Kitchen Debate” with Nixon earlier • • • • • Czech “Prague Spring” 1968 Soviet/Afghan War, 1980-1988 Poland uprisings in 1980s Fall of Berlin Wall, 1988 Fall of Soviet Union, 1991 The end ONSET OF THE COLD WAR 1946 TO 1961