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1. The Cold War When did it truly start and was it inevitable?
2. Truman takes over FDR—Brain hemorrhage
First President in a long time-no college degree
Became confident & cocky politician
Cabinet—Missouri Gang-friends from senator days
Stick to wrong decision to proved decisiveness
3. Yalta: Broken Promises Big Three, Feb. 1945
Stalin pledged to allow representative governments in Poland, Bulgaria, & Romania
Broken promises
Stalin agreed to attack Japan 3 months after fall of Germany
USSR granted control of Manchurian Railroads
4. Trouble's In The Air—Can you feel it? Two New Super Powers U.S.
Democratic
Capitalist economy
Free enterprise & privatization
Wanted nations to have economic and political freedom U.S.S.R
Socialist (Communists)
Government controlled business
Wanted a protective sphere around western Russia (attacked twice before)
5. Postwar World Some of FDR’s open world structures were established
Bretton Woods-meeting in New Hampshire
1944, Western Allies Established International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Encourage world trade by regulating currency exchange rates
United Nations– Charter in April 1945
Formed Security Council-five permanent powers (China, USSR, Brit., France, and USA) w/ veto powers
Senate approved-89 to 2
6. United Nations actions Established new Jewish state Israel
UNESCO-Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization)
WHO (World Health Organization
Bernard Baruch—1946
Wanted a veto free agency to investigate all nuclear facilities and weapons—USSR, “No Way!”
7. What to do with Germany? Nuremberg Trials (1945-46)
Severely punished 22 top culprits of Holocaust
America knew Germany’s economic health was necessary for a European recovery but Russia wanted reparations
SIGN OF COLD WAR
Four occupational zones
9. Problems early on
Early on—spring 1945
Eastern Europe (Poland & Romania (Violated Yalta (free elections)—compliant gov’t)
“I cannot avoid a feeling of resentment toward your informers…for such vile misrepresentation.” –FDR to Stalin
10. Clashing Personalities
11. Iron Curtain Speech Stalin…explained how Capitalism and Communism is on an collision course and Capitalism will be torn apart. (1946)
12. Containment
14. What resulted from the policy of containment? Truman Doctrine
Marshall Plan
NATO & NSC-68
15. Truman Doctrine (1947) Eastern Mediterranean
Turkey
USSR pressure for Dardanelles –Bosporus- (Black Sea & Mediterranean)
Greece
Civil War—English aided conservative Monarchy vs. Communism
*Police the Globe and intensify the Cold War
16. Reaction to USSR Demands U.S. Congress passed Greek-Turkish aid bill, by 1950 ($659)
Contain the maniacs…..hurry…there’s economic troubles in Europe and the communist party membership is growing……Don’t let it happen!
17. Economic Containment Beliefs:
Poor economies leads to political instability
Italy & France large communist parties
Solution:
Marshall Plan (1948)
George Marshall
Money would permit “emergence of political and social conditions in which free institution can exist”
17 billion in 4years to 16 nations
Helped for European Community (EC)
Congress resisted at first (already $2 billion from UNRRA UN Relief and Rehabilitation Administration)
But Soviet sponsored coup in Czechoslovakia encouraged them to approve it.
19. U.S. Rearms 1947-National Security Act
Created Department of Defense
Pentagon & Secretary of Defense
Created Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Spying/fact finding
1948—National Broadcast-Voice of America & resurrected draft (Selective Service System)
Increased individuals going into college (draft dodge)
20. Cold War Problems 1946—U.S. and Great Britain joined forces in Germany
Gave responsibilities to Germans
By the summer of 1948 the Soviet Union believed that its postwar foreign policy was threatened--when the West indicated that it would reintegrate Germany into the Western community, Stalin blockaded the land and sea routes into Berlin (which was divided between East & West). The U.S. responded with an airlift. The blockade was lifted in May, 1949.
Berlin Blockade 1948
No access to W. Berlin
No food/supplies
U.S. Airlift-year long
22. Once economic Programs are secure…..There is a need for Military Containment North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1949)
NATO
12 Nations, attack 1/attack all (Greece & Turkey joined in 1952, W. Germ 1955, Spain 1982)
Integrated defense force for western Europe
*U.S. 1st Military Treaty ties w/ Europe since Revolution
24. The Cold War Intensifies…. Problems in 1949—
LOST CHINA—Led to Second Red Scare in US
USSR has Atomic Bombs
Problems in Korea 1950—
Solution-
NSC-68
Conflict is unavoidable
No Negotiations
Increase Defense Spending (13billion to 50billion)
CIA—Need Information (National Security Act 1947)
80% budget went to covert actions
26. The Cold War intensifiesIt’s time to Test the Policy of Containment Korea
Arms Race
1952-U.S. has Hydrogen Bombs
USSR follows suit 1953
27. THE COLD WAR WILL CONTINUE TO ANOTHER DAY…………..
29. Read Truman’s concerns with Mac on page 85
30. How it all started and the end to racist egotism Kim Il Sung's heavily armed and well-trained North Korean army crossed the 38th parallel
In 3 days Seoul had fallen
By the end of July, the North Koreans had pushed the U.N. forces to the southeast corner of the peninsula, where they dug in around the port of Pusan.
31. From Defensive to Offensive Despite concerns of others—MacArthur’s Ichon Attach was successful
Amphibious invasion of the port, near Seoul
Able to recapture Seoul and cut supply lines
Permission to move north of parallel
Time to take it all-to the Yalu
Wake Island Meeting on October 15,
Truman and MacArthur discussed the situation
MacArthur assured the president that "We are no longer fearful of their intervention,...if the Chinese tried to get down to Pyongyang there would be the greatest slaughter."
By October the Chinese Army had already snuck into Korea by the Yalu River
MacArthur assured the president that we’ll "get the boys home by Christmas."
Major miscalculation
32. The Opponents Read description of Chinese troops pg 101-102
33. New War Back to a Stalemate of Death "all-out offensive" to the Yalu After the Chinese attached MacArthur said "We face an entirely new war."
November 25.
Roughly 180,000 Chinese troops successfully attacked and destroyed Walker’s troops in the west
While 120,000 others practically destroyed the X Corps near the Chosin Reservoir.
Weather was terrible—wind-chill factor 20-30 below, men had to urinate on their rifles to thaw them out
Troops were pushed back and Seoul changed hands to N. Korea
the U.N. retreat ended about 70 miles below Seoul.
34. MVP: Mathew Bunker Ridgway“a twelfth-century knight with a twentieth-century brain.”--WestPoint contemporary Russell Reeder Old Iron Tits
Visited every front-line unit with grenade pinned to on shoulder strap—thought he had two strapped on but the other was a medical kit (111)
Figured out morale was low and poorly fed/clothed and too dependent on wheels
Read last paragraph 111-112
35. Stalemate "meat grinder" –How soldiers described their
Slow movement North starting after the first of the year
U.N. re-recaptured Seoul –last time it switched hands 3/15, and had patrols crossing the
MacArthur continued to push for all out war, continued to be insubordinate
“There is no substitute for victory” (114)
Underestimated the Chinese, didn’t educate himself on Korean Tactics, & held Press releases that tipped off the Chinese for future attacks
Read page 113-114 (last paragraph-first paragraph)
Truman removed MacArthur from his position April 11.
36. It still wasn’t over Stalemate
Lasted for two more years
~ 2million more died
Armistice on July 27, 1953.
Despite the Cease Fire and armistice—38th parallel with a demilitarized zone accepted by Secretary of State Dean Acheson
Fighting continued
Truce not until July 1953—with IKE threat of atomic bomb
Cost U.S. > 33,000 deaths & 103,000 wounded & missing
South Korea lost-1million
North Korea & China-1.5million
37. Results of Korean War & Belief Stalin instigated it: Truman increased # of forces in NATO
By 1952, 3x number in 1950 (> # in Korea)
Increased his assistance to French Indochina
Military Assistance Advisory Group
Start of deepening involvement in Vietnam
ALL OF WHICH INTENSIFIED THE COLD WAR
38. The Cold War Continued… IKE-Present
39. Eisenhower Elected in 1952
40. IKE’S Sectary of State—John Foster Dulles
Presbyterian
Hated atheist communists
Crusade to promote democracy
****Wanted more than Containment****
41. Eisenhower’s Doctrine Relied on CIA
U.S. marines –Beirut, Lebanon July-Oct 1958
Stability & new gov’t
Fear of bankruptcy, due to attempt to create superior war power…WE need a “NEW LOOK”
“Massive Retaliation” (1954)
Stop Red tide but reduced military spending
HOW?
Now we have Hydrogen bombs “BALANCE OF TERROR”
Rely on nuclear weapons in limited war situation
Reduce expenditures on conventional forces
“Go to the brink” of war
“brinkmanship”—fears of nuclear disaster”
Strategic Air Command (SAC)
Air fleet & super bombers
“MORE BANG FOR YOUR BUCK!”
42. On the Brink of War
43. Uses of Brinkmanship Korea-1953, halt further aggression w/ threat of atomic weapons
Indochina-1954
U.S. aircraft carriers, South China Sea
Deter Red China from attacking French Indochina and/or provide weapons
45. Arms Race Sept 1949—Truman announced to the public that the Soviets had exploded an atomic device
“Ever since atomic energy was first released by man, the eventual development of this new force by other nations was to be expected. This probability has always been taken into account by us”
Problem—we believed the threat of the bomb prevented the Soviets from advancing
Typical reaction to postwar—disarmament
troops 12 million to 1.5million
budge 90.9billion to 10.3 by 1947
“bring the boys back home”
Truman wanted a trained reserve—all males 18-21 for 1 year and in the reserve
Congress wasn’t interested
Need for hydrogen bomb
46. Fear of Russians having the ability “total power in the hands of total evil [which] will equal total destruction”
-–by Senator Brien McMahon (Democrat on the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, 36)
Oppenheimer didn’t support he super “Hiroshima was a blunder and Nagasaki a crime.”
It was hard to find scientist to work on the bomb but they found Lewis Strauss
Show Atomic Café & Duck and Cover
47. H Bomb, the super bomb, or the Super 1 million tons of TNT, all WWII only 3 million tons of TNT
Atomic (fission)
H bomb (fusion)— 500 atomic bombs to 1 H bomb
“an immense gulf between the atomic and hydrogen bomb. The atomic bomb, with all its terrors, did not carry use outside the scope of human control or manageable events in thought or action in peace or war. --Churchill
48. Is the Pot cooling OFF…? Geneva Summit Conference 1955
IKE & Khrushchev discussed disarmament & reunification of Germany—No agreement
Open skies—NO WAY
1958—voluntarily suspended (both) atmospheric test of atomic weapons
1955-Germany added to NATO
HOW DID THE USSR REACT?
WARSAW PACT
1956 Khrushchev-denounces Stalin’s Actions
But Hungarian Revolt—1956
Suez Crisis
***False cooling off, Poor Foreign Policy = failure of Massive Retaliation.
52. IKE’s Domino Theory 1954- if Indochina fell, rest of Asia would
Wanted British help, no, so IKE resisted
French lost
Geneva Accords-1954
Neutralize Laos, Cambodia, and divided Vietnam at 17th parallel
French in South until elections in 1956 (reunification)
Manila Defense Accord
Dulles led meeting—SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization)
Not like NATO, no common defense, act according to “constitutional practices”
Pactomania”—critics, U.S. contracted to defend 43 countries
Leader in South—Ngo Dinh Diem
CIA trained troops
No changes, unhappy, refused to join elections for reunification
Guerrilla forces Viet Cong
53. More Turmoil Space Race
U-2 Incident
Plan for Cuba
57. JFK Watch The remarkable 20th Century 1960’s election of JFK & Cuba-Berlin Wall
58. JFK & Bay of Pigs CIA already in the process of preparing 1500 anti-Castro Cubans for an invasion
Poorly planned, executed
In 2 days, >1000 captured
NYT– US. “Looked like fools to our friends, rascals to our enemies & incompetent to the rest”
Had to apologize and pay for the prisoner’s release
59. Vienna Conference (Austria) JFK & Khrushchev
Tense situation
Berlin situation, threats
Reactions
JFK—called army reserves & National Guard
Khrushchev—Created BERLIN WALL
**SYMBOL OF THE COLD WAR**
60. Cuban Missile Crisis (OCTOBER CRISIS) 1962, 90 miles off the coast of Florida
Surveillance planes see missile sites under construction
Executive Committee of the National Security Council (ECNS)
Debate over what to do
Blockade- ~QUARANTINE~
Brink of War
Withdrawal for pledge from US, not to invade Cuba, secretly remove missiles in Turkey
61. Results of the Cuban Missile Crisis Relaxation in Fears
Sell surplus wheat to USSR
“Hotline” direct access Moscow to WA
1963- stop arms testing in atmosphere
“A journey of 1,000 miles begins with one step”—JFK quoted Confucious
70. Vietnam—to be discussed more with Mr. Cheap next week HOMEWORK
What was occurring domestically during the 1950’s in response to the Cold War?
Compare and contrast the Red Scares (create a table)
Read pp. 40-48 in The Fifties (Halberstam’s)
Who was the spy in question?
What did he do?
How did it impact the Cold War Battle
72. Vietnam Vietnam-French Colony
Ho Chi Minh, tried to convince Wilson to help Vietnamese against French (No, interested in Europe so he turned to communists)
Viet Mihn controlled North (Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Hanoi-capital)
1946 French recognized north as “free state” w/in French Colony
Short peace-First Indochina War
Ho Chi Minh-assisted by China & USSR
After Korean war U.S. money increased dramatically
1953 U.S. paying 2/3 cost
March 1954-French trapped by Viet Mihn, (Vietnamese League for Independence-Nationalists) guerilla forces at Dienbienphu
French requested U.S. air strikes
74. Vietnam during JFK’s Presidency Diem refused to may social & economic reforms
Buddhists-burning
1963 Diem killed
75. Johnson & Vietnam 1964-Gulf of Tonkin Incident—American destroyers “attached” no evidence
1964—Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
“all means necessary”
Ho Chi Mihn Trail through Laos provides supplies to Viet Cong in South
1965-U.S. air strikes & land troops arrive
“Rolling thunder”
Little effect on supply (Ho Chi Mihn Trail)
1965 184,000 troops, by 1966 385,000 troops
Problem—political war, president controlled
“They canted even bomb an outhouse w/o my approval” --Johnson
Ho Chi Minh, “ You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours, but even at those odds, you will lose and I will win.”
Turning Point
1968—Tet Offensive (first day of Vietnamese New Year)
North called Holiday truce, but surprise attacks
Lost—numbers wise but psychological victory for north
Critics, Time, Newsweek, Walter Cronkite, war wasn’t winnable
Popularity declined to 35%
“I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination fo my party for another term as your president.”
Quest for victory in Vietnam over
76. Nixon Nixon elected
“His assistant for national security affairs—Henry Kissinger, “peace with honor”
“Vietnamize” the conflict
Provide equipment and training
By 1973—only 50,000 American troops
1969—Nixon secret bombing of Cambodia
Operation Menu, 14 months
100,000 tons (4x that on Japan WWII)
1969 My Lai Incident
Army Lieutenant William Cally
Ordered murder of 200 civilians in Village 1968
Cambodia Incursion (1970)
1971—Pentagon Papers
New York Times, former official, Ellsberg
Said Congress/public didn’t know the whole story over Gulf of Tonkin
Elections 1972—
Peace in Paris, Kissinger stated one week before election, “Peace is at hand”
Talks broke down, “Christmas bombings”—B-52 raids at Hanoi
“jugular diplomacy”
1973—Cease fire, left several 1000s missing in action
Few months fighting resumed
1975—full invasion, South asked for help
U.S. said, “No”