| The Origins of the Cold War
West Berlin residents await supplies from 1948 Airlift
I. Opposing Perspectives
A. Alliance of Britain and U.S. with Soviet Union
was pragmatic: need to defeat Germany
1. Lack of trust of
Stalin. Neither Churchill nor FDR told Stalin about the atomic bomb
2. Many Allied leaders
hoped USSR could be persuaded to join a new, stronger League of Nations
organization
B. Communist leaders feared capitalist nations
1.Expected for European
and then world domination by communism.
2. Hoped for collapse of
capitalist economies and societies
II. United Nations Formed
A. U.S., Britain, China, and Russia met in 1944 to
discuss plans for new organization to replace League of Nations
B. In April 1945, San Francisco Conference formed
U.N.
1. Security Council (11
members) with veto power and permanent seats for five major powers (U.S.,
France, Britain, China, and USSR).
2. Secretariat, headed by
Secretary-General, to handle day-to-day affairs
3. General Assembly with
delegates from each nation. Three votes to USSR as result of Yalta Conference
promise
4. International Court of
Justice to deal with legal disputes between members
III. Problems with USSR
A. Free elections promised in Poland by Stalin
following the war
1. Communist government
formed with no elections
2. Border nations
pressured into establishing communist governments
B. Churchill responded with "Iron Curtain"
speech in March 1946, declaring that USSR's intentions were to control Eastern
European and expand power throughout the world
C. American diplomat George Kennan proposed a
"containment" policy to prevent spread of communist ideology.
D. Truman Doctrine--Truman asked for major economic
aid to Greece and Turkey to oppose communism
E. Marshall Plan--Western Europeans nations provided
$12 billion to rebuild economies and resist Soviet pressures
IV. European Crises
A. Berlin Blockade and Airlift
1. Partition of Germany
among Allies had resulted in Berlin being a divided city within the Soviet
sector.
2. In June 1948, Soviets
blockaded West Berlin and halted all traffic into the city.
3. Allies (U.S., France,
and England) responded by airlifting massive amounts of food, coal, and other
supplies to keep West Berlin open.
4. Soviets backed down
and allowed traffic to resume
B. Formation of NATO--Twelve nations (10 European
nations plus Canada and the U.S.) joined in April 1949 in an attempt to
establish collective security and resist Warsaw Pact nations expansion
V. Second Red Scare
A. Loyalty checks of government workers begun in
1947 because of fear of communist infiltration
B. House Un-American Activities Committee held numerous
public hearings and ruined reputations of blacklisted individuals, including
many from TV, radio, and the movies.
C. Alger Hiss, former State Dept. diplomat, accused of
disloyalty by Whittaker Chambers, a confessed Soviet spy.
1. Hiss sued Chambers for
libel, but was convicted of perjury in 1950
2. Democrats, many of
whom supported Hiss, were seen as soft on communism
D. Sen. Joseph McCarthy began to speak out against communist
influence in the government with a speech in February 1950 in which he contended
that the State Dept. was riddled with communists
E. McCarran Internal Security Act (1950) required communist
and "communist-front" organizations to register with the Justice Dept.
1. Membership lists and
financial statements were required
2. President was given
broad powers to detain potential enemies
3. Truman vetoed the bill
as "a long step toward totalitarianism" but it was passed over his
veto.
F. Ethel and Julius Rosenberg arrested, tried, and
executed in 1951 for providing atomic secrets
Please cite this source when appropriate:
Feldmeth, Greg D. "U.S. History Resources"
http://home.earthlink.net/~gfeldmeth/USHistory.html (31 March 1998).
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