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Chapter 26: The Cold War

Chapter 26: The Cold War. Sec. 1: Origins of the Cold War. Allies Clash. U.S. Wanted to. Soviet Union wanted to. Encourage democracy in other countries to prevent the rise of totalitarian governments Gain access to raw materials & markets

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Chapter 26: The Cold War

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  1. Chapter 26: The Cold War Sec. 1: Origins of the Cold War

  2. Allies Clash U.S. Wanted to Soviet Union wanted to • Encourage democracy in other countries to prevent the rise of totalitarian governments • Gain access to raw materials & markets • Rebuild European governments to ensure stability & a market for trade • Reunite Germany & make them more secure & less bitter • Encourage communism in other countries • Transfer the industrial equipment of Eastern Europe to the Soviet Union to rebuild its economy • Control Eastern Europe as a balance to the U.S. in Western Europe • Keep Germany divided & weak

  3. Tension Mount • Stalin goes back on his word: DOES NOT ALLOW FREE ELECTIONS in Eastern Europe • Truman establishes a policy of containment • An effort to block the Soviet’s attempts at spreading communism • Create alliances with weaker countries • Churchill gives a speech saying, “an iron curtain has descended across the continent.” • Stalin declares Churchill’s words, ‘a call to war”

  4. Truman Doctrine • The U.S. should support free people throughout the world who were resisting takeovers by “armed minorities” or “outside pressures” • Bottom line: it would keep the Soviet influence & communism from spreading around the world • Sent $400 million to Turkey & Greece – who did not adopt democracy but instead installed an oppressive right wing military regime

  5. Marshall Plan • Provide aid to all European nations that needed it • Any nation receiving aid had to remove trade barriers & cooperate economically with one another • Why: U.S. needed strong stabilized governments in Europe to resist communism & to increase the U.S.’s wealth through trade

  6. The Berlin Airlift • Soviet Union cut off all highway, water & rail traffic into West Berlin. No supplies could get through • People of West Berlin were running out of food, fuel • Soviets hoped the U.S. would give up West Berlin to them • Instead U.S. & Britain started to fly in supplies around the clock for 327 days • Soviets lifted the Berlin Blockade

  7. NATO • North Atlantic Treaty Organization: (U.S., Canada, France, Britain, Italy, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Portugal) • Western European nations form a military alliance to counter Soviet aggression • All members agreed: an attack on one is an attack on all of us • 1st time U.S. had entered an alliance with other nations • The Cold War had ended U.S. isolationism

  8. Civil War in China • China separated into two: Nationalist China in the South and Communist China in the North • U.S. supports Nationalist China • The two governments come together to fight Japan during WWII • When Japan is defeated, a civil war breaks out between the two • In China, popular support was for Communistic China • Communist China takes over (Mao Zedong) • Truman is blamed for losing China

  9. Korean War • 38th parallel separates North & South Korea • North Korea is a Communist government (sponsored by Soviet Union) • South Korea is a Republic sponsored by the U.S. • Each government wanted the sole right to rule all of Korea • North Korea troops invade South Korea on June 25, 1950

  10. Korean War cont • U.S. sends in supplies and orders naval & air support • UN troops (90% Americans) were commanded by General MacArthur • Troops push back North Korea & MacArthur decides to cross the 38th parallel into North Korea • Communist China gets involved – does not want U.S. by the Korean-Manchuria border • Both sides are in a stale mate

  11. Korean War cont • General Douglas MacArthur is fired by President Truman • MacArthur wanted a full scale war with China, Truman did not • American upset about their war hero MacArthur – they have a parade in New York for him • U.S. & Soviets agree to a cease fire at the 38th parallel • A year was spent on negotiations of prisoners • In July of 1953 an armistice was signed • 54,000 lives lost, war cost $22 billion • Truman out, Eisenhower in as president

  12. Communists are Everywhere • Hollywood actors, writers, directors accused of being communists • If you didn’t cooperate you were blacklisted from Hollywood • Spy cases of Alger Hiss & the Rosenbergs stun the nation (Rosenbergs get death penalty) • Senator Joseph McCarthy’s “witch hunts”: he accuses government officials of being communists • McCarthy’s downfall was accusing army vets from WWII of being commies

  13. Race to the Top • Soviets explode their first atomic bomb in 1949 • U.S. must do better than the A-bomb • Truman authorizes the development of the hydrogen bomb or the H-Bomb & test it in 1952 • Soviets test their own in 1953 • Brinkmanship: U.S. would go to the brink and use all of its force including nuclear weapons too “keep the peace” • Americans started to make bomb shelters for protection against the Soviets launching a nuke

  14. The American Dream in the 1950s • White collar jobs • Suburban lifestyle; single family home outside of the city, good schools, safe environment & nice neighbors • Conforming and fitting in: don’t stand out in the workplace or in society. Loss of individuality • Baby Boomers (1946-1964): the largest generation in the nation’s history

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