A multi-national organisation established
in 1949 which agreed to a system of
mutual defence between members
The first NATO secretary General famously stated
the goal of NATO was "to keep the Russians out,
the Americans in, and the Germans down."
Cold war
The experssion was coined to describe the
confrontation between the USA and Britain on
one side and the Soviet Union on the other
Never led to a direct military conflict,
there were many close shaves and
indirect confrontations such as korea
It ended in 1990 with the collapse of
communism in Easten Europe and the
disintergration of the Soviet Union
Berlin airlift
On 24 of june 1948, the Soviet
Union clost also road routes to berlin
in breach of post war agreement
The west hit on the idea of using their
superior air power to fly food and supplies
to the two million west berliners
May 1949 Russia lift the blockade,
in total 272,000 sorties were flow
Marshal aid
This was a programme of economic aid
to europe proposed by George Marshall,
the US foreign secretary in 1947.
Eventually $13 Billion was spent. Britain
and France were the two chief beneficiaries.
The aim was to reduce the influence and attraction
of communism, very strong in France, and to enable
western European to buy US products.
Korean war
North Korea attacked South Korea in June 1950. Britain aligned itself
with the US and started a program of rearmament. By 1951 defence
spending had reached 20% of total expenditure or 7.6% of GDP
The outbreak of the Korean war in june 1950 pushed up the cost
of commodity prices world wide, producing a new balance of
payments crisis in britain, parly due to re-armament programme
Attom bomb
Bevin persuaded Attlee and the small
cabinet committee consider the matter that
Britain should become a nuclear power
In Bevins word's, he wanted
an attom bomb "with a bloody
union jack on the top of it"
fellow traveler
Left-wing MP's of Labour were critical of there own party and Conservative
policy of USA Corporation to contain communism, as the USA was the world
champion of capitalism. They still had a sneakly admirationfor the Soviet Union
The Suez Canal
Crises 1956
the Suez Canal
It was run by an international
company, 44% of which was owned
by the British government
¾ of Europe’s oil came
from the region, ½
through the canal
Nasser seize
the Suez Canal
Nasser wanted to build the Aswan Dam which would
provide 8 times as much electricity as the Egyptians
had and increase Egypt’s fertile land by one-third
Argument with Ambassador led to
JF Dulles cancelling America’s
loans which left Nasser furious
Seized canal to charge
countries to use it
Out cry at the
situation
The UN on the 2nd November the
general assembly demanded a
ceasefire on Anglo-french
Working class Labour voters
were in support of giving
Nasser a good hiding
Britain’s response
Then the idea came about for Israel to attack Egypt from one
flank. France and Britain would be a peace keeping force and
demand Israel and Egypt to withdraw 5 miles form the canal
Britain destroyed Egyptian air force; 13,500 British troops and 8,500 French
troops landed at Port Said and began going South towards the Canal – BUT
under pressure from US, Britain agreed a ceasefire and pulled out
USA refuse to
get involved
USA’s policy was to try to get old colonial powers out of the Middle
East in favour of US interests (i.e. 2/3 of known oil reserves in
region). Special deals had been made between Saudis and Iranians
1956: Eisenhower was trying to get
elected on a peace and prosperity ticket
USA controlled Panama Canal – it did not want
international agreements emerging that would
affect their ownership of the Panama Canal
The results
“Suez became four letter shorthand for the moment
when Britain realised her new place in the world.” (Marr).
She was never able to take independent action again
Eden resigned in January to
be replaced by Macmillan
Churchill and
cold war
"last great crusade"
Churchill "last great crusade was to
stop a war, this time a nuclear one
Churchill's worries
Above all, he thought that if the atom
bomb menace existed, Britain had better
be as menacing as she could manage
Churchill's approach to Russia
With Stalin dead in 1953 Churchill
Saw the opportunity to reopen
friendlier relations with Moscow
EEC Failure
Macmillan economic
recovery was hinged on a
successful entry into the EEC
It was hoped that access to the dynamic market
of western Europe with over 150 million
consumers would revitalise Britian industry
De gaulle veto there entry because he feared the "special
relationship", the Having the cake and eating it ( Keeping the
Commonwealth), cheap agriculture and britain dominating the EEC
Britian economic
performance
Britain share of the world trade fell
from 25% in 1950 to 15% 1964
Britain was slipping behind her
competitors and was well on the way
to becoming the "sick man of Europe"
Defence
There was a determined attempt to cut the burden of
defence spending, which was far higher than any
comparable European country - 10% of GDP
There was a increasted relyanse on
Nuclear weapons as a deterrent and
as a prop to great power status