Chapter 25 – The US and the Cold War (1945-1963)
Vocabulary –
- iron curtain-barrier of secrecy and censorship that keeps a
country isolated from the rest of the world
- satellite nation-nation that is dominated politically and
economically by a more powerful nation
- containment-policy of trying to prevent the spread of Soviet
influence beyond where it already existed
- airlift-emergency shipment of supplies sent via airplane
- veto-to reject; like a President and a law
- closed shop-workplace in which only union members can be
hired
- productivity-rate at which workers produce goods
- standard of living-index based on goods, services, and leisure time
people have
- baby boom-large increase of the birthrate form the late 1940s
through the early 1960s
- rock-and-roll-style of music derived from rhythm and blues and
country music
- Elvis Presley-popular singer and teen idol known for his hip
shaking and gyrating; Elvis the Pelvis
- inner city-center of an older city
- stalemate-deadlock; situation in which neither side wins
- demilitarized zone-(DMZ) area where military forces are prohibited
- Joseph McCarthy-Wisconsin senator, whose career was focused on
“exposing Communists”
- censure-to officially condemn
- superpower-nation with the military, political, and economic
strength to influence events worldwide
- arms race-contest in which nations compete to build more and
more powerful weapons
- stockpile-to collect
- John F. Kennedy-35th US President, proposed programs to build
friendships between America and other nations
- suburb-residential area on the outskirts of the city
- beatnik-1950s person who criticized American culture for
conformity and devotion to business
- migrant worker-person who moved from one region to another in
search of work
- bilingual-in two languages
- Truman Doctrine-President Truman’s policy of giving US aid to
nations threatened by Communist expansion
- Marshall Plan-American plan to help European nations rebuild
their economies after WWII
- Berlin Airlift-American and British relief effort to airlift supplies
to West Berliners from 1948-1949
- Berlin Wall-wall built by the communist East German
government in 1961 to seal off East Berlin from
West Berlin
- North Atlantic Treaty Org.-(NATO) alliance formed in 1949 by the US and
Western European nations to fight Soviet aggression
- Warsaw Pact-military alliance, established in 1955, of the Soviet
Union and other communist states in Europe
- United Nations-world organization established in 1945 to provide
peaceful resolutions to international conflicts
- 38th Parallel-dividing line between South and North Korea
- perjury-to lie under oath
- exile-person who has been forced to leave his or her
own country
- Bay of Pigs Invasion-failed invasion of Cuba in 1961, when a force of
1200 Cuban exiles, backed by the US, landed at
the Bay of Pigs
- Cuban Missile Crisis-major Cold War confrontation in 1962
- Alliance for Progress-economic aid program developed by President
Kennedy for Latin America
- Peace Corps-government organization that sends American
volunteers to developing nations to teach or give
technical advice
- Organization of American States-(OAS) international organization that promotes
peace and economic progress in the Americas
- National Aeronautics and
Space Administration-(NASA) government agency that directs the
American Space Program
Chapter 25 – The US and The Cold War Era (1945 – 1963 )
Section 1 – Roots of the Cold War
Obj: to explain how the Cold War began; to describe how the US responded to Soviet expansion; to analyze how the crisis over Berlin led to the new Cold War alliances, and, the events during 1949 that increased Cold War tensions
- US and Britain distrusted the Soviet Union
- US and Britain disliked the communist rejection of religion and private property
- Also angered at Soviet efforts to overthrow non-communist governments
- Soviets distrusted Western powers
- Feared US power and that it may try to rebuilt Germany to challenge them.
- Stalin promised to hold free election after WWII, reneged on his promise
- 1948 – Communists controlled the government of every Eastern European country, except for Yugoslavia, all became satellite nations of Soviet Union.
- Churchill warned against Soviet expansion – from Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, the “iron curtain” cut off Soviet-run Eastern Europe from the democratic governments of the West.
- President Harry S. Truman determined to keep Soviet influence contained within already existing boundaries.
- His Cold War policy was known as containment.
- March 1947 – Truman Doctrine – program encouraging nations to resist communist expansion. US gave military and economic aid in return.
- June 1947 – Marshall Plan – Secretary of State, George Marshall– program provided aid to Western European countries to help rebuild after WWII.
- 1948 – After WWII, American, British, French and Soviet troops divided Germany into four zones, each occupying a zone.
- Berlin, Germany’s largest city, was also divided among four Allies, even though it lay inside Soviet zone.
- US, Britain and France wanted to unite their zones
- Stalin opposed the plan, using blockade to cut off West Berlin from rest of the world.
- Berlin Airlift – President Truman approved plan for US and Britain provide food, fuel and other supplies to West Berlin every day for a year via planes.
- May 1949 – Stalin lifted blockade conceding that West would not abandon West Berlin.
- US, Great Britain and France merged their zones, became West Germany
- Germany and Berlin remained divided throughout the 1950s.
- The Soviet zone became known as East Germany
- 1961 – East German government built a huge concrete wall topped with barbed wire which sealed off East Berlin from West Berlin, sealing the division of Germany.
- New alliances –
- 1949 – the West -NATO – North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- 1955 - the East – Warsaw Pact
- October 1945 – 51 nations ratified the United Nations Charter
- Under this charter, member nations agreed to bring disputes before the body for peaceful settlements.
- Although the UN succeeded in helping in many forums, preserving peace has proven to be more difficult.
- Some nations have rejected the UN resolutions
- 1949 – a Year of Shocks
- September – US learns they are not the only country with nuclear weapons
- Communist forces led by Mao Zedong, gained power in China
- October – Mao set up the People’s Republic of China.
- The fear of the spread of communism had Americans worried.
Chapter 25 – The US and the Cold War (1945-1963)
Section 2 – A Time of Prosperity
Obj: to identify the problems Americans experienced as they shifted from war to peace; the factors that contributed to the economic and baby booms of thee 1950s; and, to explain how American lifestyles changed in the 1950s
- US experienced a boom like no other in its history
- Population grew, economy prospered and Americans enjoyed the highest standard of living any people had ever known.
- The GI Bill of Rights was passed by Congress to help returning veterans.
- Inflation a problem – during the war the government controlled wages and prices, after the war the controls ended and the price of goods rose.
- Workers demanded higher wages to pay for the price increases.
- When employers refused, labor unions called strikes.
- 1948 – Republican Truman won a surprise victory over Democrat, governor of NY, Thomas Dewey in the presidential election.
- Extending liberal policies of FDR, Truman proposed a reform called the Fair Deal.
- Congress rejected most of Truman’s reforms, but did pass higher minimum wage, expanded Social Security benefits and loans for buying low-cost houses
- 1952 – Truman chose not to run for reelection.
- 1952 Presidential runners were Democrat Adlai Stevenson and Republican Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
- Eisenhower, known as “Ike”, beat Stevenson and promised to end conflict in Korea and lead Americans through the Cold War.
- Ike’s “middle of the road” approach earned him a second Presidential term in 1956.
- After WWII, many people put off having families, after the war a “baby boom” had occurred. The population from the 1940s to the 1950s jumped from 19 million to 29 million.
- The economic boom was another addition to postwar US.
- Economy expanded rapidly with federal projects increasing factory production, the government spending more money to build new roads, houses and schools.
- New technology added to the economic boom by promoting a steady rise in productivity.
- Americans had more leisure time.
- The Economic boom raised Americans standard of living.
- People were saving less and spending more, people were buying homes in the suburbs.
- During the 1950s, suburbs grew 40 times faster than cities
- As millions flocked to suburbs, central cities began a slow decline.
- Suburbs and shopping centers drained cities of businesses and taxes.
- Americans also flocked to the Sun Belt.
- Cars also became more important to daily life in the 1950s, and by 1960 nine out of ten families living in the suburbs owned a car.
- Few people bought foreign cars and American automobile companies profited greatly
- The Federal-Aid Highway Act was passed by Congress, calling for a network of high-speed roads linking the nation.
- Motels, fast-food and traveling for business and pleasure emerged.
- Television was in at least 9 out of 10 households by 1960.
- TV brought news, entertainment, sports and commercials, which encouraged spending and buying into peoples’ homes.
- 1950s TV made people want to look and act the same as everyone else.
- Mid 1950s a new type of music appeared – Rock and Roll.
- Teenagers had their “own” music.
- Not all Americans were happy in the 1950s about the emphasis on getting and spending.
- A small group of writers and artists criticized what they saw as a growing materialism of American society and its lack of individuality. These people were known as “Beatniks”.
- Most Americans paid little attention to these signs of discontent. Soon, however, a growing outcry could not be ignored.
Chapter 25 – The US and the Cold War Era (1945-1963)
Section 3 – The Korean War Period
Obj: to explain why the US became involved in the conflict in Korea; to summarize how the fighting in Korea ended; and, the results of the hunt for communists at home.
- Korea – a peninsula in East Asia
- Russia and China border it to the north and west
- Japan lies across the Sea of Japan to the east
- These powerful neighbors often competed to control Korea
- 1910-1945 – Japan ruled Korea as a colony
- After WWII, US and Soviet Union agreed to a temporary division of Korea at the 38th parallel of latitude. Both agreeing that Korea would soon be reunited.
- Cold War deepened – Korea remained divided
- US supported non-communist South Korea
- Soviet Union supported communist North Korea.
- No agreement on when or how to reunite Korea.
- June 1950 – North Korean troops swept across 38th parallel into South Korea
- Within days, North Korean forces occupied Seoul, capital of South Korea.
- Gen. Douglas MacArthur called upon to take action against North Korea
- US and 16 other nations joined (80% of troops were American)
- MacArthur launched daring counterattack after Soviet tanks pushed southward and soon occupied almost all of South Korea.
- Had US forces land behind North Korean lines in Inchon.
- North Koreans caught by surprise were forced back across the 38th parallel
- China warned they would not “sit back” if US invaded North Korea
- China entered the war
- March 1951 – war turned into bloody deadlock
- MacArthur wanted to attack China
- Truman feared attack might lead to a world war
- MacArthur, frustrated, complained publicly, Truman fired him
- 1952 – Dwight D. Eisenhower, popular WWII General, elected President
- He pledged to personally go to Korea and work to get resume peace talks.
- July 1953 – after bloodshed, both sides eager for a cease-fire, signed an armistice to end the fighting
- Redrew the border between North and South Korea near the 38th parallel, where it had been before the war.
- Along the border, it also set up a DMZ (demilitarized zone), but on either side of the DMZ were heavily armed troops, and they remain there today.
- Korean War changed nothing, Korea remained divided.
- Korean War increased worries about communism at home.
- Between 1946 and 1950 – several people in the US, Canada and Britain were arrested as Soviet spied.
- Ethel and Julius Rosenberg sentenced to death for passing atomic secrets to the Soviets.
- They were both executed in 1953.
- Alger Hiss and other high government officials were proven to be passing secrets to the Soviet Union.
- 1950 – Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, made a shocking announcement, he claimed to have a list of 205 State Department employees who were Communist party members, but was never able to prove his claims
- 1954 – The Senate held televised hearings to investigate a new McCarthy charge, insisting that there were Communists in the US Army.
- Going too far, in December 1954, Senate passed a resolution to censure him.
- He lost much of his support and died three years later, and the Communist scare was mostly over.
Chapter 25 – The US and the Cold War Era (1945-1963)
Section 4 – Global Concerns in the Cold War
Obj: to understand why the Cold War spread to Africa and Asia; to explain why Cuba became a crisis spot during the Cold War; to explain why the US intervened in Latin America during the Cold War; and, to describe how the Cold War led to an arms race
- Stalin dies in 1953
- Nikita Khrushchev took over
- The Cold War had become global
- US and Soviet Union now competed for allied and influence among the members of the United Nations
- Africa and Asian colonies had demanded and won independence, through military and economic aid of Communists who often joined to fight with them against foreign control.
- West still tried to prevent Soviets from expanding their influence
- 1946 – the US withdrew from the Philippines, who still struggles to preserve a democratic government. Many ups and downs over the years.
- 30 African nations gained freedom from European rule.
- US and Soviets sought allies from these 30 or so nations
- As a result, local conflicts within African nations now international crises because they were either supported by the US or the Soviet Union
- Cold war intensified in the civil war in Angola
- US backed Somalia, Soviets backed Ethiopia.
- 1947 – India won independence from Britain and subcontinent was divided into two nations – India and Pakistan
- US and Soviets tried to win the support of these two nations
- Pakistan became ally to US
- India accepted both and remained neutral in the Cold War
- Indochina was French-ruled, it included present-day Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. The wars lasted 30 years and eventually drew the US in later on.
- 1960s – US and Soviet Union emerged at superpowers.
- 1959 – Fidel Castro led a revolution that set up a communist state in Cuba
- Government took over private companies, including many owned by American businesses.
- Thousands of Cubans exiled to the US, especially upper and middle class
- Soviet Union began supplying Cuba with large amounts of aid.
- Ties between Soviets and Castro worried American officials.
- Cuba lies just 90 miles from Florida
- 1961 – President John F. Kennedy approved plan for Cuban exiles to overthrow Castro.
- 1200 Cuban exiles landed on the Bay of Pigs on Cuba’s south coast and were overtaken by Castro’s forces.
- The Bay of Pigs Invasion strengthened Castro in Cuba and embarrassed the US.
- After Bay of Pigs Invasion, Soviets gave Cuba more weapons.
- October 1962 – President Kennedy learned that Soviets were secretly building missile bases on the island.
- Kennedy announced that American warships would stop any Soviet ships carrying missiles.
- Kennedy’s strong hand led the Soviets to compromise.
- Khrushchev agreed to remove Soviet missiles from Cuba
- US promised not to invade the island.
- Cuban Missile Crisis had shaken both American and Soviet officials.
- Cold War led the US to resume an active role of intervention in Latin America, again trying to contain communism.
- The social and economic status of Latin America may have led them to believe that communism was a solution to their problems.
- American leaders believed reform was needed.
- American aid would help lead Latin American nations to a more democratic influence and lessen the communist influence
- 1961 – Kennedy created the Alliance for Progress program.
- Kennedy also set up the Peace Corps and the Organization of American States.
- To battle communism, the US also gave military aid to train and arm Latin American military forces.
- Between 1950 and 1990, US intervened in Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, Panama and Grenada.
- During the 1970s and 1980s, civil wars rages in several Central American countries.
- Rebels in El Salvador and Guatemala fought to overthrow government
- US backed government because they were strongly anti-communist.
- Thousands of refugees fled to the US
- Nicaragua – the Sandinistas overthrew longtime dictator in 1979 and set up socialist government
- President Reagan, afraid Nicaragua would become another Cuba, aided a group opposed to the Sandinistas, known as the Contras.
- 1990 – Nicaragua held elections voting in new leaders
- By 1950s US and Soviets had developed large stocks of nuclear bombs and missiles
- 1957 – Soviet Union launches “Sputnik” the world’s first artificial satellite
- Americans stunned, but soon launched its own satellites
- Superpowers raced to send larger satellites farther into space.
- US set up National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
- 1970 – the two superpowers had stockpiles of weapons large enough to destroy each other many times over.