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Cold War U.S. History Chapter 18 United States vs. Soviet Union • United States: • Democracy • Private citizens control economic activity • People elect government official with political parties – offers a CHOICE • Soviet Union: • State-controlled property and economic activity • Totalitarian – NO CHOICE • Upset over no 2nd Front, secret atomic bomb United Nations • • • • 50 nations Promote peace San Francisco meeting Competition between the U.S. and Soviet Union Potsdam Conference • July 1945 – U.S., GB, S.U. • Final war-time conference • Clear Stalin NOT allowing free elections in Poland like he promised at Yalta • Showed U.S./S.U. at big odds • So.. – Truman fought against large reparations from Germany Satellite Nations • Page 605 • Countries dominated by the Soviet Union – communist governments established Containment ** • Taking measures to prevent communism from spreading to other countries – “containing” it where it exists • George Kennan “Iron Curtain” • Winston Churchill • Refers to the division between democratic Western Europe and Communist Eastern Europe The Cold War • Conflict between the U.S. and the S.U. that does not take place on a battlefield • 1945 – 1991 (when S.U. breaks up) Truman Doctrine • Greece and Turkey – civil wars – communists vs. pro-western governments. Fall of either opens up Western Europe and Asia to Soviet influence • Truman Doctrine - $400 million in aid to Greece and Turkey. – Why? U.S. must support free people everywhere from outside pressure Marshall Plan • Western Europe torn up! • Sec. of State George Marshall – give aid to European nations that need it • 16 nations - $13 billion over 4 years • Promoted democracy • Our industries/banks profited German reunification • 4 zones – GR, FR, US combine their areas – Democratic • Western Berlin – cut off by S.U. • Berlin Airlift – 327 days – U.S. airlifts food, supplies • Increased our prestige • Protected flights with threat of bomb! • Germany – Western part – The Federal Republic of Germany. Eastern part – German Democratic Republic NATO • • • • • North Atlantic Treaty Organization 12 nations Defensive military alliance **1st peacetime alliance for the U.S. **end of isolationism China • National government led by Chiang Kai-shek, supported by the U.S. • Sent $3 billion to help fight communist take over. He had no public support though. • Mao Zedong – Communist leader – won people’s support, defeated Kai-shek, est. the People’s Republic of China Korea • 38th parallel – North – Soviet, South – American controlled • KNOW MAP PAGE 613 • General Douglas MacArthur – commander of troops – Wanted to invade China, Truman rejected idea, MacArthur spoke out against Truman, fired The Cold War at Home Executive Order 9835 • Called for loyalty boards for government employees. • 91 organizations labeled “subversive” – watched members • 3.2 million investigated, not allowed to see evidence against them HUAC • House Un-American Activities Committee – investigated communism in the movie industry • “Hollywood 10” – 10 screen writers, producers, directors – associated with communism McCarran Act • Against the law to establish a totalitarian government in the U.S. • Required Communist organizations to register with the government Alger Hiss • Accused of being a Soviet spy • Guilty, prison Rosenberg’s • Sept. 1949 – Soviets exploded an atomic bomb. How so fast??? • Jan. 1950 – Truman orders creation of hydrogen bomb – finished in ‘52. Soviets do the same 9 months later • Ethel and Julius Rosenberg – accused of leaking atomic secrets to the Soviets • Guilty, put to death in electric chair McCarthyism • Joseph McCarthy – Rep Senator – accused government employees of being members of Communist party (205 names) • Later charged the Army of being filled with communists – put on trial – TV – Lost a lot of support • McCarthyism – public charges of disloyalty in the government without evidence Dwight D. Eisenhower • 1952 election • 1956 election John Foster Dulles • Secretary of State • “Massive Retaliation” – use ALL force to stop communism • “Brinkmanship” – going to the brink of war with S.U. to keep peace – relies on nuclear weapons • Fear of nuclear war comes home – air raid procedures, fall-out shelters CIA • Central Intelligence Agency – spies, information. • Secret operations to weaken/overthrow unfriendly governments • PAGE 623 - 624 Warsaw Pact • 1953 – Stalin dies • Nikita Khrushchev took over – “Peaceful Coexistence” • Warsaw Pact – S.U. and 7 Eastern European countries “Spirit of Geneva” • Meeting between Eisenhower/Khrushchev. Wanted “open skies” – does not get, but does get an agreement to stop nuclear testing Eisenhower Doctrine • U.S. would defend any Middle Eastern nation against any Communist nation • Hungarian Revolt – Hungary revolted against S.U., denounced Warsaw Pact. Soviet tanks rolled in, 30,000 killed. 200,000 fled. – U.S. did nothing, UN did nothing – it was a satellite nation The Space Race • Sputnik – artificial satellite launched by Soviets • Increase in education – science and math • CIA – making secret flights over Soviet territory taking photos • May 1, 1960 – U-2 plane shot down, evidence of spying shown to world – We agree to stop spying • Caused the ‘60s to begin with tension!!! Kennedy and the Cold War Chapter 20 1960 Election • Republican – Richard Nixon • Democrat – John F. Kennedy • Things that cost Republicans – Sputnik, long range missiles, U-2 spy plane, Cuba and Soviet Union • TV and Civil Rights turned the election: – TV – 4 debates where JFK looked more “polished” than Nixon – Civil Rights – MLK arrested in Atlanta. Eisenhower did nothing, Kennedy got him out of jail • Kennedy wins by small margin – just over 100,000 popular votes A New Military Policy • Flexible Response – less reliance on nuclear weapons, increase spending on conventional arms and mobile military • Created the Green Berets Cuba • 1959 – Fidel Castro came to power • Nationalized American-owned businesses/property • Eisenhower cut off trade • Castro turned to Soviet Union • Est. a communist Totalitarian government • Eisenhower – train anticommunist Cuban exiles to retake Cuba Bay of Pigs • April 17, 1961 – 1,300 to 1,500 Cubans exiles trained by the CIA landed at Bay of Pigs • Nothing went as planned, trapped by Cubans backed with Soviet tanks • Forced to surrender • Made us look BAD Cuban Missile Crisis • Oct. 1962 – spy photos show Soviet missile bases in Cuba, some with missiles ready to launch • Page 675 • Oct. 22 – “any attack from Cuba would trigger an allout attack on the Soviet Union” • For 6 days – Soviet ships heading toward Cuba, naval blockade around Cuba, 100,000 troops sent to Florida • “Eyeball to eyeball” • S.U. backed down • Khrushchev – removed missiles from Cuba • Kennedy – will not attack Cuba, removed missiles from Turkey • Both sides criticized • Hot line established • Nuclear Test Ban Treaty – end testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere Berlin Wall • • • • • U.S. troops still in Berlin People still escaping from east to west Khru – ordered us to leave, JFK – no. August 1961 – Berlin wall built Symbol of the Cold War The Vietnam War Years U.S. History Chapter 22 Moving Toward Conflict • French controlled Vietnam until WWII • Ho Chi Minh – leader of Vietnamese Communist Party • Japan took over Vietnam • Ho Chi Minh returned and helped from the Vietminh – determined to gain independence • Japanese left after WWII, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam an independent nation • French send troops, gain control of Southern half • 1950 – U.S. sends nearly $15 million in economic aid to France • Domino Theory – Eisenhower – if one nation falls to communism they all will fall (just like dominos) • French surrendered May 1954 • Geneva Accords – temporarily divided Vietnam along the 17th parallel – Communist north, nationalists south. Election to unify the country would be held in 1956 The United States Steps In • Ho Chi Minh – North Vietnam • Ngo Dinh Diem – South Vietnam – strong anticommunist • Diem refused to take part in the elections • Vietcong – Communist opposition group in the South – began attacking Diem’s government Kennedy and Vietnam • Increased financial aid to Diem • Sent military advisors to train South Vietnamese troops (16,000 by 1963) • Diem becoming unpopular • Corruption • Moved villagers from their homes • Attacked Buddhism • Diem had to go • Nov. 1, 1963 – U.S. supported military coup overthrew Diem, Diem killed. Johnson Expands the Conflict • Unstable leadership in South Vietnam • Aug. 2, 1964 – U.S. destroyer fired on by North Vietnamese • Johnson called for bombing strikes on N.V. • Tonkin Gulf Resolution – granted Johnson broad military powers in Vietnam • Operation Rolling Thunder – sustained bombing of North Vietnam • Troops began arriving U.S. Involvement and Escalation • More and more troops sent – containing communism. By end of 1965 – 180,000 troops, 1967 – 500,000 • Vietcong – hit and run tactics, attacked in cities and countryside • Tunnel system • Land mines, traps, heat, leeches • U.S. – wear down the Vietcong (receiving supplies from China and S.U.). Vietcong remained defiant • U.S. needed to get support of South Vietnamese. • Napalm (set fire to jungle) and Agent Orange (toxic chemical) – often injured civilians and destroyed villages • Search-and-destroy missions • Low troop morale Early War at Home • Great Society suffered, tax increase • “living room war” • Young Americans resisting draft Roots of Opposition • New Left – growing youth movement • SDS – Students for a Democratic Society – more power to the people, individual freedom • College campuses – “teach ins” • Why oppose? Vietnam was a CIVIL war, no need for us to be there, South Vietnamese leaders no better than Communist leaders, and morally unjust • Central Park demonstration – half a million protesters – “Burn cards, not people,” and “Hell no, we wont go.” • Oct. 1967 – march in Washington • Doves – believed the U.S. should withdraw • Hawks – do whatever to win the war 1968 • Tet Offensive – Tet – our New Year’s Eve. Villagers were celebrating. That night, Vietcong launched an attack on 100 towns in South Vietnam and the U.S. embassy in Saigon. Continued for a month until stopped by U.S. • Vietcong lost 32,000 soldiers • Greatly upset the American public – open criticism • • • • Robert Kennedy assassinated MLK assassinated – riots College campus riots/demonstrations (200) Riots/demonstrations during Democratic Convention Richard Nixon • Wins 1968 election • 1969 – Nixon announced troop withdrawals • Vietnamization – called for gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops, let South Vietnam take more control – Henry Kissinger – Security Advisor Trouble Continues … • My Lai – massacre of innocent civilians in South Vietnam by troops • Cambodia – U.S. invaded Cambodia to clear it of Vietcong and North Vietnamese • Kent State – National Guard fired on demonstrators, killed 4 • Jackson State – same, 2 killed America’s Longest War Ends • March 1972 – heaviest bombing of North Vietnam • Dec. ’72 – “Christmas bombings” – 100,000 bombs/11 days • Mar. ’73 – last American troops left Vietnam • North still attacked South • April ’75 – South surrendered to North