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Chapter 26: The Cold War

Chapter 26: The Cold War. Section 1: Origins of the Cold War. United States v. Soviet Union. Had been Allies against Germany in WWII The enemy of my enemy is my friend America: Capitalist Soviet Union: Communist The two countries did not agree on most things. VS. Leaders.

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Chapter 26: The Cold War

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  1. Chapter 26:The Cold War

  2. Section 1:Origins of the Cold War

  3. United States v. Soviet Union • Had been Allies against Germany in WWII • The enemy of my enemy is my friend • America: Capitalist • Soviet Union: Communist • The two countries did not agree on most things VS.

  4. Leaders • Truman: American President • He went to a conference in Potsdam as the newest member of the Big Three • He was angry when it was clear that Stalin would not keep his end of the deal and allow democracy in the Soviet controlled parts of eastern Europe • Stalin: Communist leader of Soviet Union • Wanted Communism to control all countries in his power; thought capitalism was wrong

  5. Stalin Truman

  6. United Nations • A group of representatives from many countries who worked to keep peace between countries • The U.S. and U.S.S.R. ended up using the UN to promote their ideas to other countries and it made the Cold War worse

  7. UN, 1945

  8. Potsdam Conference • July 1945 • Meeting between major countries involved in WWII • Stalin refused to allow democracy in countries he controlled • Truman knew that there would be trouble between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. • This was the start of the Cold War

  9. Stalin Truman Churchill

  10. Tension Mounts • Satellite nations: countries where Stalin set up communist governments controlled by the S.U. • Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Poland • Stalin said that Communism and Capitalism could not work together and another war was inevitable • Truman suggested containment: stopping the spread of communism to other countries • “Iron Curtain”: the division between communist eastern Europe and capitalist western Europe

  11. Create a new world order: all countries to have self-determination Gain access to raw materials and markets Rebuild stable gov’ts in Europe and new markets for American goods Reunite Germany so it would be more productive Encourage communism in other countries Rebuild eastern European countries hurt during the war Control eastern Europe to balance US power in western Europe Keep Germany divided so it would not get too powerful again US Aims vs. Soviet Aims in Europe

  12. Containment • The name of the US foreign policy during the start of the Cold War • We did not want to let communism spread, we wanted to contain it

  13. Truman Doctrine • The US would give money to Greece and Turkey so they could fight off any attempt at a Communist take-over

  14. Marshall Plan • Sec. Of State Marshall’s plan to give aid to any country whose people were suffering from poverty after the war • 1946-1947: a terrible winter made things even worse for people who were struggling to rebuild after WWII • This made the US look like heroes and communism did not spread in Western Europe

  15. US and USSR fight over Germany

  16. US and USSR fight over Germany • After WWII, Germany was split into zones • In an attempt to take over the American controlled part of Berlin, Stalin closed off all access to the city • Berlin Airlift: 327 days of British and American planes flying over Berlin and dropping supplies to the people stuck in the city (food, fuel, medicine, Christmas presents, etc.) • By May 1949, Soviet Union admitted defeat and lifted the blockade

  17. NATO • North Atlantic Treaty Organization • Belgium, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, United States, and Canada • A military alliance: All these countries agreed that they would defend each other if one was attacked • Greece, Turkey, and West Germany joined in the 1950s

  18. NATO • It had a standing army of 500,000 troops so other countries did not want to attack members of NATO

  19. The Cold War Heats Up Section 2

  20. China Becomes a Communist Country • Chiang Kai-shek:  nationalist leader supported by America ($3 billion) • Mao Zedong: Communist leader who led his side to victory and established a Communist government after the war • The nationalists led by Kai-shek fled to Taiwan; • America and the UN refused to accept the Peoples Republic of China (the communist government)

  21. The Korean War • Japan controlled Korea 1910-1945 • 1945: Japan surrendered North of 38th Parallel to Soviets and South of the 38th to Americans • 1950: N. Korea led a sneak attack on S. Korea • S. Korea asked UN for help; the Soviets boycotted the UN because Taiwan was recognized, not the P.R.C. • Truman sent troops from occupied Japan to Korea

  22. The Korean War • 16 nations sent 520,000 troops to help S. Korea (90% were American) • 590,000 S. Korean troops • Troops were led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur • The Chinese support the N. Koreans • Both sides fought to hold the 38th Parallel • 1951-1953: Peace talks last 2 years, war ends in stalemate • Account: http://books.google.com/books?id=NRt5lgErVJEC&lpg=PA203&ots=fYYO2M8zx4&dq=we%20were%20eyeball%20to%20eyeball...we%20couldn't%20move%20at%20all%20in%20the%20daytime%20without%20getting%20shot%20at&pg=PA203#v=onepage&q&f=true

  23. MacArthur vs. Truman • MacArthur wanted to wage full scale war against China • Truman refused to go along with this idea • MacArthur tried to go around Truman by talking to the media and other politicians • Truman fired MacArthur • MacArthur was a WWII hero and many people backed him – he came home to a hero’s welcome

  24. The Cold War at Home 26-3

  25. Fear of Communist Influence • Loyalty Review Board: a group that investigated gov’t workers and their possible disloyal behavior • House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) – investigated communist activity in the movie industry • Hollywood Ten: movie industry workers who refused to testify because of their civil liberties • Blacklist: list of movie industry workers who were suspected communists who couldn’t get work

  26. Spy Cases • The secret of how to make an Atomic Bomb had been leaked to the Soviets by spies • Alger Hiss: was accused of spying by a convicted spy, no hard evidence, was convicted of perjury and sent to jail • Richard Nixon gained fame from prosecuting this case • Ethel and Julius Rosenberg: were implicated by a scientist of espionage (spying) and were sentenced to death even though they plead the 5th Amendment during their trial

  27. Joseph McCarthy • Senator from Wisconsin • Became famous for accusing suspected communists in the State Dept and eventually the U.S. Army • Because he accused WWII hero’s, people had enough of his tactics and was disgraced

  28. Two Nations Live on the Edge 26-4

  29. Brinkmanship • Our policy of being on the edge of all out war with the Soviets during the beginning of the Cold War • H-Bomb: hydrogen bomb; 67 times stronger than the A-Bomb dropped on Hiroshima • Dwight D. Eisenhower: President from 1953-1960 • John Foster Dulles: Sec. of State under Eisenhower

  30. Cold War Throughout the World • CIA: Central Intelligence Agency; investigated issues for the American government that occurred in other countries • Warsaw Pact: signed in 1953 as a formal alliance between the Soviet Union and eastern European countries • Suez War: 1955; Egypt tried to play the Soviet Union and USA against each other for control over the Suez Canal • Eisenhower Doctrine: the US will defend the Middle East against any attempt at Communist take-over

  31. Cold War / Space Race • Nikita Khrushchev: took over the Soviet Union after Stalin’s death in 1953 • Sputnik: The Soviet launched satellite that orbited the earth • This prompted America to invest heavily in our space program and science \ math in public schools • U-2 Incident: When Francis Gary Powers was shot down over the Soviet Union in his U2 spy plane

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