Transcript Chapter 38
Chapter 38
Origins of the Cold War
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• The United States and Soviet Union had different views
after World War II of what Europe should look like. Security
concerns dictated the Soviet view, Stalin wanted a buffer
zone of friendly communist states to protect his country, so
he made Eastern Europe a Soviet sphere of influence. The
United States wanted the Eastern European nations to
determine their own forms of government. Truman
believed that given free choice , these countries would pick
Democracy. The Yalta Conference Was the conference in
1945 between Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt in which they
agreed to collaborate in reforming Europe after the war.
Potsdam Conference was where Truman, Stalin and Atlee
finalized the plan for the division of Berlin into four zones. It
was at this conference where Truman hinted at the U. S
possession of an Atomic Bomb. This meant that a postwar
Europe would be a political battleground.
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In early 1946 Stalin gave a speech declaring that peace was
impossible as long as capitalism existed. In response, American
diplomat George Keenan encouraged the U. S. State Department to
pursue a policy to Contain Soviet expansion of Communism.
Stalin’s refusal to allow free elections in Eastern Europe and to
withdraw troops from Northern Iran in March 1946 increased U. S.
concerns. The Truman Doctrine declared that the policy of the
United States should be to support free peoples who are resisting
conquest by armed minorities or outside pressures. Truman was
hoping to stop the spread of Communism by sending aid and
military equipment to countries fighting off Communism. In an
effort to contain the Soviet Union the UN Atomic Energy
Commission was created as a part of the United Nations. It was
established in hopes of regulating and controlling the development
of Nuclear weapons throughout the world.
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• It was important for the United States to help rebuild
Europe after World War II and the competing plans were
the Marshal Plan and Molotov Plan. The Marshall Plan
was the United States Plan for European recovery which
offered aid for countries to rebuild their economies all the
while buying American goods. In 1948, Congress approved
17 billion in Marshall Plan aid for Europe, to be spent
between 1948 and 1952, giving an enormous boost to
economic growth and prosperity. Is Eastern Europe, no
nation took part in the Marshall Plan. Suspicious of U. S.
motives , the soviets created the Molotov Plan for Eastern
Europe The Soviet Molotov Plan was an answer the
Marshall Plan and it was set up to rebuild eastern Europe.
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The political geography of Europe change
after World War II. Winston Churchill warned
that the Soviet Union was cutting Eastern
Europe off from the rest of Europe. The term
Iron Curtain came to symbolize the political
barrier between Eastern and Western Europe.
Stalin was setting up Soviet-controlled
communist governments in Poland, Romania,
Bulgaria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia.
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The Cold War a new kind of War because it
was a conflict between two super powers
competing over different visions for the world.
It never led to armed conflict directly between
super powers. It was a war of words that used
propaganda, diplomacy, economic and military
aid and espionage as weapons.