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The Cold War. Origins of the Cold War. THE KEY ISSUE: the future of Eastern Europe Soviets occupied Eastern European states that they freed from Nazi rule After WWll ended, Stalin installed pro-Soviet governments throughout Eastern Europe How do you think the United States felt about this?.
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Origins of the Cold War • THE KEY ISSUE: the future of Eastern Europe • Soviets occupied Eastern European states that they freed from Nazi rule • After WWll ended, Stalin installed pro-Soviet governments throughout Eastern Europe • How do you think the United States felt about this?
Tensions increase… • The United States suspected the Soviet Union of trying to dominate world affairs • The Soviet Union suspected the United States of trying to dominate world affairs
AHH! A COLD WAR! • The Cold War set the United States and Soviet Union against each other • The two nations never met in battle • There was still the threat of deadly conflict
The Berlin Airlift • The Cold War almost turned hot in Germany • Why do you think so? • The Alliesagreed to temporarily divide Germany into four zones controlled by: • Soviet Union, U.S., Great Britain, and France • Western powers wanted to unite their zones into West Germany • Stalin was not happy about this and decided to take action • He feared a united Germany would threaten the Soviet Union
Dividing Berlin/The Berlin Airlift • Germany’s former capital city (Berlin) was in the boundaries of East Germany • The city was divided into four zones so each of the four nations controlled one • 1948- Stalin blocked access to Berlin • During the blockade, Truman ordered food, fuel, and supplies to be airlifted • In nearly one year, 270,000 U.S. and British flights carried supplies in • 1949-Stalin gave up blockade • Germany was divided into East Germany (communist) and West Germany (democratic)
Containment • Definition: policy to stop the spread of communism through military and non-military ways • The Truman Doctrine- promised aid to people fighting to maintain democracy • Marshall Plan- one of Truman’s actions that would prevent communism through the revival of economies in Europe that were damaged during WWII • The plan offered $13 billion in aid and helped western and southern European countries rebuild
The Cold War on the Homefront • How did the fear of communism affect people in the U.S.? • Many people feared it would spread in the U.S. • Americans suspected of communism were put on trial • Alger Hiss: former State Department official was accused of passing military information to the Soviet Union • He was jailed in 1950 for lying under oath
Americans on trial Ethel and Julius Rosenberg: members of the American Communist Party Were accused of passing atomic secrets to the Russians They were executed in 1953 The Cold War on the Homefront
Un-American Activities • Truman ordered 4 million government workers to undergo loyalty checks • They would go before a board that decided whether or not they could remain in their current position • Many were forced to resign • House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) • Targeted people in the movie industry • Blacklisted people: unofficial lists of suspected Communists
McCarthyism • Joseph McCarthy- member of the Republican Party • When he began speaking out and crusading against communism, fellow party members began speaking out against HIM. • In 1950, McCarthy said he had a list of 205 State Department officials who were members of the Communist Party
Senate held nationally televised hearings McCarthy accused the U.S. Army of “coddling Communists” The Senate condemned McCarthy for his actions and eventually he faded from the public eye Army-McCarthy Hearings (1954)
The Cold War Around the World • Like President Truman, President Eisenhower continued the Cold War, but had a more aggressive stand against communism. • Policy known as “brinkmanship” • Going to the brink of war to combat communism
Arms Race • 1945 – The United States developed and dropped the first atomic bombs on Japan • 1949- Americans learned the Soviet Union had produced an atomic bomb • used information stolen by Soviet spies • Arms race- competition between the United States and the Soviet Union to develop weapons with more destructive power • 1952- the U.S. built an H-Bomb • 1955- the Soviets tested their first H-Bomb • Fear from both sides led to the stockpiling of nuclear weapons
Space Race • 1957- the two superpowers began a space race • Soviet Union launched Sputnik • The world’s first space satellite • American scientists were scrambling to catch up • The U.S. Congress set aside billions of dollars for space research
The U-2 Incident • Eisenhower suggested easing the Cold War tensions by face-to-face talks with the Soviet Union • Two weeks before a scheduled meeting with Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev, the Soviets shot down an American U-2 spy plane • Eisenhower denied that the plane was spying, until he learned that the pilot had been captured. • Krushchev demanded an apology, and Eisenhower refused. The talks collapsed.
Cold War and Kennedy • Bay of Pigs Invasion April 1961 • Responding to perceived communist threats, JFK ordered the invasion • An army of Cuban exiles, trained by the U.S. invaded Cuba • They planned to overthrow Fidel Castro, Cuba’s Communist leader • Cuban troops easily crushed the U.S. invasion
Cuban Missile Crisis • October 1962 • Fidel Castro and Nikita Krushchev believed the U.S. was planning another attack on Cuba • The U.S. learned that the Soviets were attempting to land nuclear missiles in Cuba • The missiles could reach U.S. cities within minutes • The Soviets agreed to remove the missiles and the U.S. promised not to invade Cuba
Cold War leads into Vietnam • With the fear and suspicion that came with the Cold War, the U.S. made greater efforts to contain communism in Asia • This was done by sending more money and military advisers into Vietnam
The American Dream • During the 1950s the American population grew by almost 30 million people – the babyboomers!