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1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 1: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 2: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Background:

After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers.

Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events.

Page 3: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Former Allies Clash

Political differences USA Democracy USSR communists had

all the power Economic difference

USA Capitalism USSR Communism

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Page 4: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Former Allies Clash

During world War II Stalin mad about the delay in opening western front

Secrecy about the A-bomb

US was mad at USSR about his alliance with Hitler

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Page 5: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

United Nations

April 25, 1945 nations met in San Fransisco to establish this new peacekeeping body which was intended to promote peace

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Page 6: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Truman Becomes President

Many American doubted his ability to serve as president, Nut what important qualities did he possess that would help him?

Honesty, self-confidence, willingness to make tough decisions

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Page 7: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Potsdam ConferenceJuly 1945

Final wartime conference

Big Three England = Attlee USA = Truman USSR = Stalin

Stalin promised to allow free elections in Eastern Europe

Page 8: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Satellite Nations…

Stalin never allowed truly free elections.

Instead, communist governments were installed in many Eastern European nations.

Main Purpose? Protect USSR from

invasion from the West

Page 9: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Containment Policy

George Kennan, career Foreign Service Officer

Formulated the policy of “containment”: US would not get rid of

communism, but would not allow it to spread.

US would “contain” communism where is already existed.

Page 10: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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The Iron Curtain

Winston Churchill coined this term.

Famous speech on March 5, 1946 at Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri.

Page 11: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Cold War in Europe

Cold war- a conflict between the US and USSR in which neither side directly confronts the other on the battlefield (1945-1991)

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Page 12: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

The Truman Doctrine

US policy (1947) aimed at stopping the spread of communism by helping nations with military and/or economic support

Where was this first used?

Greece and Turkey

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Page 13: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

The Marshall Plan

Secretary of State George Marshall proposed that the US provide aid to all European nations who needed it.

Why was it necessary? Europe was in economic

chaos, if US did not help communists influence would grow

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Page 14: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

The Marshall Plan

16 nations received 13 billion dollars in aid and by 1952 Western Europe was flourishing and Communist appeal was fading.

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Page 15: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Superpowers Struggle over Germany

At the end of WW II Germany divided into 4 zones (occupied) by the US, France and England – West

USSR - East

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Page 16: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 17: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

Superpowers Struggle over Germany

1948 US, France, England decide to unify their zones into one nation, but what was the problem with Berlin?

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Page 18: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Churchill’s Warning…

Churchill felt that behind the Iron Curtain, the USSR was planning to attack and conquer Western Europe.

Page 19: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Division of Germany

The Allies decided to divide Germany into 4 zones after the war.

Also, the capital of Berlin was divided into 4 sectors. SEE next 2 slides

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Page 21: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 22: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Problem with Berlin?

Berlin was in the Soviet Sector.

Stalin was not happy with a “small piece” of democracy in Eastern Europe. What did he do?

Page 23: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Berlin Blockade June 1948, Stalin attempts to starve West

Berliners into submission. All rail and street access was blocked.

Page 24: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Berlin Airlift The 2.1 million

residents had food for 5 weeks

American and British planes flew food and supplies into Berlin for 327 days.

Stalin lifted the Blockade by May 1949.

Page 25: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 26: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Operation “Little Vittles”

During the Berlin Airlift a group of pilots decided to help boost the spirits of the German children.

They organized a mission to drop candy to the children using parachutes made of handkerchiefs.

Page 27: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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North Atlantic Treaty Organization

NATO was established by a treaty in 1949 This organization established a system of collective

defense whereby its member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party.

Original members were: United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, France,

Denmark, Iceland, Italy, Norway, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg.

Greece (1952), West Germany (1955) join also

Page 28: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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The Warsaw Pact Communist Response to NATO.

Signed on May 1, 1955 in Warsaw, Poland

Military treaty, which bound its signatories to come to the aid of the others, should any one of them be the victim of foreign aggression.

Original Members: Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary, East Germany, Poland,

Rumania, the USSR, and the Czechoslovak Republic.

Page 29: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Page 30: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

30Cold War in Asia

Page 31: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Struggle for China

Mao Zedong wanted China to become a communist state after WW II.

Chang Kai Shek fought to stop the communists but was unsuccessful.

Page 32: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Communist China1949

Page 33: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Taiwan Chiang Kai-shek, retreated

from Mainland China and moved his government from Nanjing to Taipei, Taiwan's largest city.

Taiwan made a claim they were separate from China.

Still a problem area today.

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Cold War in America (1945-1960)

Was there reason to be concerned? YES!

Soviet domination of Eastern Europe

China turned Communist – 1 billion people!

80,000 Americans members of Communist party

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Loyalty Review Board

Set up by President Truman in March 1947.

Purpose? Investigate Federal

government employees and dismiss those disloyal to US

212 dismissed- Felt the investigation was a violation of their constitutional rights

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House on Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)

1947= House of Representatives

Investigate Communist influence in the movie industry

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‘Hollywood Ten’ 10 Hollywood

screenwriters and directors who refused to testify before HUAC.

Charged with contempt of Congress.

Claimed 1st Amendment right of free speech

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Blacklisted Following a meeting of film industry

executives at New York's Waldorf-Astoria hotel, MPAA president Johnston issued a press release on the executives' behalf that is today referred to as the Waldorf Statement.

The statement declared that the ten would be fired or suspended without pay and not reemployed until they were cleared of contempt charges and had sworn that they were not Communists.

The first Hollywood blacklist was now in effect.

Page 39: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Spy Cases Shock the US

During the late 1940s and early 1950s, America was rocked by sensational stories of Americans spying for the Soviet Union.

Page 40: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Alger Hiss Hiss worked for the US

State Department. Accused of being a spy

for the USSR. Found guilty of perjury. Later (1990s) Hiss was

proven to be a spy for the USSR.

Microfilm was typed on Hiss’s typewriter

Nixon pursued charges against Hiss

Page 41: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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The Rosenbergs

American Communists who were found guilty of conspiracy to commit espionage in relation to passing information on the American nuclear bomb to the Soviet Union.

The couple were executed at sundown in the electric chair at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, New York, on June 19, 1953.

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McCarthyism

Senator Joe McCarthy became the most famous anti-Communist activist.

Used the issue to help win re-election in 1950.

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McCarthy’s Tactics

Made one unsupported accusation after another.

He would bully witnesses.

McCarthyism = tactics used to advance your career.

Senators have immunity from slander in the Senate

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McCarthy’s Downfall

In 1954 McCarthy made accusations against the US Army.

Led to televised Senate investigation; and American people did not like McCarthy’s tactics. His popularity dropped greatly.

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Change in Leaders The early 1950s saw a

change in leaders in both the US and USSR.

USA = Dwight Eisenhower wins the election of 1952.

USSR = Nikita Khruschev takes over when Stalin dies in 1953.

Page 46: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Hydrogen Bomb

US exploded the 1st H-bomb on November 1, 1952 in South Pacific. That bomb completely

destroyed one island and left a crater 175 feet deep.

Russians exploded on in August of 1953.

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Page 48: 1. 2 Background: After WW II, the US and USSR emerged as rival superpowers. Each nation was strong enough to greatly influence world events

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Brinkmanship

Defined as willingness to push nation to the “brink” of nuclear war to keep peace.

Policy advocated by John Foster Dulles; Secretary of State.

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Central Intelligence Agency - CIA

Used spies to gather information abroad

Began to carry out covert operations to weaken or overthrow governments unfriendly to the United States.

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Iran One of the CIAs first

covert actions tool place in Iran when Iran’s Prime minister Mohammed Mossadegh nationalized Iran’s oil fields.

CIA worked to remove Mossadegh

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Shah of Iran CIA “Operation Ajax”

caused the downfall of Mossadegh from office.

The Shah, backed by the US, formed a government friendly to the US.

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Suez War -1956

Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal and would not allow ships headed for Israel to pass through – all nations were supposed to have access.

French, English, Israeli force attacked Egypt.

After discussion, canal was opened.

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Hungarian Uprising 1956

The Hungarian people, tired of Soviet domination in their country, rose in revolt and called for a democratic government.

The Soviet response was swift and brutal:

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USSR Crushes Rebellion

Soviet tanks rolled into Hungary and killed 30,000 Hungarians and executed the resistance leader – Imre Nagy.

US and UN did nothing to help.

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Space Race

On October 4, 1957 the Soviet Union successfully launched Sputnik I.

The world's first artificial satellite was about the size of a beach ball.

Orbited the earth in 98 minutes.

Race to control space was on!

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U-2 Incident U-2 was designed to be high altitude

reconnaissance plane. CIA used these to spy on USSR and one was

shot down on May 1, 1960.

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Francis Gary Powers

Recruited by CIA to fly spy missions.

Shot down in U2 over USSR and convicted of espionage.

Exchanged for a KGB colonel the US had captured.

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Conclusion… Moving into the 1960’s, the

Cold War was really starting to heat up with no end in sight.

The Cold War will continue in the 1960s with the world moving closer to an open conflict between the US and USSR.