Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Who was to blame for the Cold War?
- 1.Beginnings
- Rise of The Superpowers
- USA and USSR had
emerged as
"superpowers"due to
military strength
- Damage from WW2
- By 1945, millions were sick,
hungry or homeless.
Disruption meat it was very
difficult to be certain about
death toll. USSR lost millions
as a result of war, therefore
Stalin was determined to
make USSR secure in future.
China also suffered millions
of civilian casualties owing to
its war with Japan.
- Conflicting Ideologies: Communism and Capatalism
- In the war the USSR (communist
superpower) had united with
USA (capatalism superpower) to
defeat facism. However, these
two ideas were very different,
economic systems strongly
opposed to one another.
- Differences
- USA
- Democratic government: President and
Congress were chosen in free elections.
- Capitalist economy: Business and property were privately
owned . Individuals could make profits in business move jobs if
they wished.
- USA world's wealthiest country, but due to
capitalism there were great contrasts in
wealth.
- USA believed in freedom of individual
and in gov. by consent
- 20s and 30s USA followed policy of
"Isolationism", but now faced with Comm. USA
was prepared to help and support people and
countries that wanted to become democracies
with capitalist economies, seen as defence to
people's freedom against a system they did not
want.
- USSR
- Communist
state under
Stalin's
dictatorship
- People could vote in elections for Supreme
Soviet, only votes for members of Communist
Party were allowed, Supreme soviet didn't
really have much power anyway.
- People's lives closely
controlled, rights of
individual seen as less
important than good of
society as a whole.
- Planned economy.
Government OWNED ALL
INDUSTRY and planned
what every factory should
produce.
- Standard of living
USSR< USA.
Unemploymentlow in
USSR, not the extremes
of wealth and poverty
as in USA.
- Attacked many times unlike USA. Stalin
determied not to allow repeat, believed
USSR could only be safe if countries on its
borders were controlled by Communist
governments. IF this didn't happen he flt
the USA would set up hostile countries on
his borders.
- 2. Allied Conferences at Yalta and Potsdam and roles of Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin.
- By 1945 the defeat of Germany was seen as a
certainty. Allied leaders turned to problems pece
would bring, set up conferences to discuss.
- Yalta Conference, February 1945
- Germany had not yet been
defeated
- Allied leaders got along well
despite differences.
- POINTS THAT WERE AGREED
- Germany divided into 4 zones, run by
USA, France, Britain and USSR.
- Berlin to be divided
into 4 zones (Berlin
was i the "Soviet
Zones")
- Countries of
Eastern Europe
allowed to hold
free elections to
decide how they
would be
goverened.
- USSR would join war against
Japan in return for territory in
MAnchruia and Sakhalin Island.
- DISAGREEMENTS
- POland: Stalin wanted to move
Poland's frontier westward into
german territory. Churchill and
Roosevelt were unhappy. With
1000s of Soviet Troops in Poland
there was little alternative but to
agree. Stalin agreed not to support
Communist rebels in Greece to
compensate.
- POTSDAM CONFERENCE July-August 1945
- Conference arraged in Berlin suburb of
Potsdam in July 1945, 2 months after the
war in Europe had ended, 5 months after
Yalta.
- Changes that had taken place since Yalta
- Changing leaders: April 1945 President
Roosevelt died suddenly and was
succeeded by Vice-President Harry
Truman, much more anti-communist,
suspicious of Stalin's intentions.
Clement Attlee also replaced Winston
Churchill as British PM.
- Victory in Europe and Soivet Army: Germany surrendered 8th May
1945, Britain and USA immediately began to reduce forces in
Europe, but Soviets, who occupied much of Eastern Europe, did
not, Stalin ignored British and American protests about the
creation of Communist gov. in Poland, saying that they needed to
protect USSR's borders
- The atom bomb: Truman informed
Stalin about new weapon he was about
to use in Japan, successful testing of a
bomb in July 1945 prompted a new arms
race between USA and USSR
- Continued discussions
and actions taken
- Nazi Party to be banned, leaders tried as
war criminals
- Oder-NEisse line (Two rivers)
was to form part of future
border between Poland and
Germay
- DISAGREEMENTS AND TENSIONS AT
POTSDAM
- Britain and USA denied Stalin naval
basem saw no need but Stalin saw as
evidence that his allies mistrusted
- Stalin wanted to take more reparations
from Germany and Britain and USA
(REPARATIONS = REPAIR OR
COMPENSATION FOR DAMAGE CAUSED BY
THE WAR). USA and Britain did not wish to
cripple Germay, they had seen results of
reparations after WW1. Stalin was
suspicious about why his allies seemed to
want to protect Germany and even help it
recover.
- Stalin had set up Communist gov. in Lublin then the capital of
Poland, Britain preferred non-Commuist Polish Gov. which had
lived in exile in Britain throughout the war. Truman and Attlee
were very suspicious of Stalin's motives in setting up a
Communist gov.
- 3. SOVIET EXPANSION IN EASTERN EUROPE
- The Soviet Army advanced through large
areas of eastern Europe when driving
back the Germans. 1 year after war,
many Soviet troops remained in these
areas, with Communist governments
elected or imposed
- "The Iron Curtain: In a speech in
March 1946, former British PM
Churchill claimed "Iron Curtain"
had descended across Europe
separating democratic West from
Communist states of eastern
Europe.
- Creating satellites: As promised in Yalta, elections
were held in eastern European countries, but evidence
suggests they were rigged allowing USSR-backed
Communist parties to take control. In areas such as
Bulgaria, Albania, Poland, Romania and Hungary any
opponents to Communists had been beaten, murdered
or frightened into submission. By May 1948 all e.
European states had Communist gov. Stalin created
Cominform and Comecon, trading alliance of countries
became known as "satellite states" as governments
and economies were heavily dependent on USSR.
- Cominform 1947: An alliance of Communist
countries maybe as response to Marshall Aid.
AIi was to spread Stalin's Communist ideas,
helped Stalin tighten holdl on Communist
allies, restricted contact with West. Oly
Marshall Tito of Yugoslavia was not prepared
to accept Stalin's leadership and he split with
Moscow. Yugoslavia remained Communist
but was cut off from any type of support from
USSR.
- Comecon 1949: Set up to
co-ordinate the production
and trade of eastern
European countries,
favoured USSR.
- 4. US Policy on eastern Europe
- Greece
- Asked USA for help 1947, under attack from Communists
- Under foreign policy initiative, known as Truman Doctrine , USA provided with arms
and money
- Communists defeated 1949, civil war
- Truman Doctrine 1947
- Truman feared spread of Communism.
- USA provided military and economic aid to Turkey &
Greece
- Marshall Aid 1947
- Truman believed poverty and hardship provided breeding ground for
Communism. Also important for US to have trading partners
- US Secretary of State George
Marshall visited Europe and
came up with European
recovery program.
- Aim was to stop spread of
Communism and to help economies
of Europe to recover ( eventually
provide market for US exports)
- BUT only 16 WESTERN
European countries accepted,
Stalin refused for USSR and
banned eastern European
countries accepting.
- Communist takeover Czechoslovakia 1948
- Only eastern European country that
considered accepting Marshall aid not
fully part of Stalin's "eastern bloc",
Communists not fully in control.
- Spring 48 elections due,
seemed Communists would do
badly, but they organized
protests and marches.
- Non-comm. ministers resigned, Foreign
Minister Jan Masaryk died under suspicious
circumstances. May 48 elections took place
but only Communists could stand and so
they won.
- 5. Berlin Blockade and immediate consequences
- Causes
- Britain and USA wanted to help Germany to recover,
France unsure.
- Germany shattered by war
- Stalin was suspicious about US and British, did not want Germany
to recover.
- 1948 zones merged "Trizonia", with Marshall aid
W. Germany began to recover, E. Germany faced
poverty and hunger
- Stalin thought US and British were building up
W. Germany to attack him, especially when
they introduced "Deutsche Mark" currency.
- The Berlin Blockade
- Effects
- May 49 British French and US zones became Federal Republic of
Germany (West Germany)
- October 49 Soviet-occupied zone in Germany became
German Democratic Republic (GDR)
- June 1948 Soviet troops set up
road and rail blocks to prevent
goods reaching Berlin, hoped Allies
would withdraw.
- Berlin Airlift
- Allied response to blockade, fly in supplies by air
- For next 10 months Allies supplied West Berlin
with everything it needed by air, 1 plane landed
every 3 mins day and night
- NATO
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization 1949 military alliance
contained most of w. European states + US and Canada.
Purpose to defend members from attack.
- Warsaw Pact 1955
- Soviet response the W.
Germany joining NATO, had
not forgotten damage
Germany did to USSR in WW2.