Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Cold War Develops
1945 - 1953
- The Post-War
Legacy
- Defeat of Nazi Germany creates a power vacuum in
Europe into which the USA and USSR are drawn
- Eurocentric dominance of global affairs
vanished overnight
- 'If I had a second chance, I would rather be born an
American.' - Winston Churchill
- European economy
shattered and desperate for
reconstruction and aid
- Rising suspicion and distrust between the
former wartime allies
- Allied delay in opening a 'Second
Front' in Europe irks Stalin
- Churchill's' 'Iron Curtain' speech in Missouri 1946
addresses the new superpower balance
- 1945 Yalta and Potsdam
conferences
- Initial disagreements over Poland at Yalta and agreement
for the division of Germany, Berlin and Austria
- Disagreement over Soviet presence in Eastern Europe at Potsdam 1945
- American Post-War
Attitudes
- Emerges from the War as the
worlds' dominant economy
- 'We have emerged from this war the most powerful nation in
the world - the most powerful nation, perhaps, in all history.'
- Harry Truman
- Viewed an open international economic system as
indispensable to future world order
- Marshall Aid plan designed to flood Western Europe
with economic aid at the expense of openness to US
investment and trade
- Military-industrial complex has
benefited from wartime
production stimulus
- American security
concerns
- Attack on Pearl Harbour persuades US security planners of
need for a comprehensive international defence system
- A view that no one power should ever again
control the European/Eurasian continent
- Commitment to maintaining supremacy of the atomic bomb
- Ideological
Commitments
- Nationwide belief in the idea of
American/capitalist justice and order
- Truman replaces
Roosevelt
- Influenced by George Kennan's 'Long
Telegram' citing the USSR as an insecure and
expansionist world force
- The 'Truman Doctrine' adopts an 'Iron Fist' approach to the
advancement of the communist world
- Soviet Post-War
Attitudes
- Soviet secuirty
concerns
- Immediate aim to block the
'Polish Corridor'
- Historical invasion route into Russia - Napoleon/WW1/WW2
- Stalin's obsession with security difficult for the US to
truly understand and was perceived as evidence of
communist expansionism
- Aimed to create a network of buffer states across the European
border by using incumbent Red Army forces to establish
pro-Soviet governments
- Ideological
Commitments
- Marxist-Leninism ideology pronounced eventual
triumph of communism over capitalism inevitable
- 'Our ideology stands for offensive operations when
possible, and if not, we wait.' - V.M. Molotov
- Ideology imparted to Soviet citizens a belief in
the justice of communism versus exploitative
Western capitalism
- Economy devastated by Nazi invasion, sought to
secure reparations from East German territory
- Events in
Europe
- Berlin Blockade 1948-1949
- Growing prosperity of West Berlin financed by
Marshall Aid in stark contrast to East Berlin
- Attempts by the West to introduce new currency into West
Berlin angers Stalin, who blocks all transport links into the city
- Berlin airlift successfully supplied West Berlin for
nearly a year, and in May 1949 Stalin conceded
defeat and lifted the blockade
- NATO established by the West to coordinate response to future Soviet aggression
- US Government issues the Marshall Plan to help the
European economy and strengthen Western
governments against communism
- Financial aid only sent to nations willing to
open up their markets to US trade
- Eastern European nations under Soviet
influence did not receive aid
- Stalin launches the COMECON plan in 1949 to
coordinate the economies of communist nations
- 1948 communist coup d'etat in Czechoslovakia
provides evidence of communist expansion
- Cold War
Spreads to Asia
- Mao Zedong triumphs over Chiang Kai Shek and declares a
coomunist People's Republic of China in 1949
- Viewed in America as surefire evidence of communist expansion
- Kim Jong Il invades
South Korea in 1950
- Truman issues NSC-68, outlining the new US policy of 'Roll
Back' - a basis for a more aggressive US foreign policy
- Committed to 'Roll Back' American led UN forces
land at Inchon and push back North Korean forces
to the Chinese border
- Chinese forces cross the Yalu river and push the UN forces
back, until a stalemate is achieved at the 38th parallel
- Communist China secures a degree of world standing after it's military
operations in Korea, and grows ever closer to Stalin and Moscow
- USSR detonates first
atomic bomb in 1949
- US detonates hydrogen
bomb in 1952