Chapter 12 Section 1: Development of the Cold War
- Confrontation of the Superpowers
- Rivalry in Europe
- After the fall of Germany, the Soviet Union was not willing to give up Eastern Europe in order to protect themselves from future aggression from the west.
- Britain and US wanted Eastern Europe to freely determine their own governments.
- USSR opposed this since these freely elected government would be anti-Soviet.
- Soviet Troops stayed in these areas to make sure this wouldn’t happen.
- In Greece (1946), a civil war broke out between the Communist People’s Liberation Army and anticommunist forces supported by Britain.
- Because Britain had to rebuild their own nation so they withdrew aid from Greece
- The Truman Doctrine
- Alarmed with British withdrawal from Greece allowing Communist to expand into eastern Mediterranean, in 1947, Truman asked congress for 400 million dollars and presented the Truman Doctrine.
- The US would provide money to countries threatened by Communist expansion.
- If Soviets were not stopped, then the US would stop the spread throughout the world.
- Dean Acheson, Secretary of State, supported this ideology arguing that Iran and all of the east would be next after Greece.
- The Marshall Plan
- Following the Truman doctrine was the European Recovery Program proposed by General George D Marshall referred to as the Marshall Plan.
- Rebuild Europe with more than $13 billion in aid for recovery.
- It was believed that Communist aggression was only successful in nations with economic problems so this program would stop the communist.
- This plan was made to shut out the Soviet union and its Eastern European satellite states which were completely dependent on the Soviet Union.
- These states refused to participate and Soviets saw the plan as a attempt to buy the support of countries.
- Soviets responded by founding the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON) to help the Eastern European states.
- This would fail because the USSR could not provide the necessary financial aid.
- 1947 George Kennan argued for a policy of containment to keep communism within its existing boundaries and prevent further Soviet aggressive moves.
- This became the official American Policy.
- The Division of Germany
- Germany was divided into four zones following world war 2: The US, Britain, France, and USSR controlled each zone.
- Berlin was also divided the same way except it was surrounded by the Soviet zone
- By 1948, Britain, US and France made plans to unify their sections of Germany (Berlin also) and create a West German government.
- In response to this move, Soviets blockaded West Berlin of all supplies including food and essential supplies.
- Soviets planned to starve the 2.5 million people in these three zones.
- To avoid World War III, allies formed a solution referred to as the Berlin Airlift.
- American and British airplanes flew all supplies into Berlin for 10 months until the blockade was lifted.
- 200,000 flights resulted in 2.3 millions tons were delivered
- Soviets, wanted to avoid a war, lifted the blockade in May of 1949.
- In September 1949, the Allies merged their zones creating the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) with its capital of Bonn.
- Soviets responded by created the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) with east Berlin as its capital.
- Spread of the Cold War
- Change of Views
- The Chinese Communist in 1949 took over China and the Soviet union signed a alliance with China after testing their first atomic bomb in 1949.
- This started the arms race in which both nations built up their armies and weapons with increasing destructive capabilities.
- Both sides believed that if one attacked with nuclear weapons, the other had enough time to respond with nuclear weapons.
- Neither side could risk using their massive supplies of weapons.
- New Military Alliances
- To maintain security, new military alliances were created in Europe.
- The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 1949- Belgium, Luxembourg, France, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Italy, Denmark, Norway, Portugal, Iceland, US, and Canada.
- Each promised to promote mutual help if another is attacked.
- Later West Germany, Turkey, and Greece will join.
- Warsaw Pact (1955) – Soviet Union, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania
- In Korea, the North Koreans (allied with Soviets) invaded South Korea confirming American fears of the spread of Communism.
- US would now extend its military alliances around the world and not just in Europe.
- To maintain security, new military alliances were created in Asia
- The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) – US, Great Britain, France, Pakistan, Thailand, the Philippines, Australia, and New Zealand.
- Stop Communism in Asia
- Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) – Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Great Britain, and US.
- Stop Soviets expanding South.
- By mid 1950s, the US was allied militarily with 42 states around the world.
- The Arms Race
- 1950s both USSR and US tested their first Hydrogen bomb and then crated intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) capable of sending bombs anywhere.
- Policy of the deterrence would then be followed by both nations
- Huge arsenals of nuclear weapons prevented war
- This confirmed the idea of mutual assured destruction (MAD)
- In 1957, Soviets launched Sputnik I, the first human made space satellite to orbit the earth.
- This launched the fear that now Soviets could launch missiles from space.
- A Wall in Berlin
- After Stalin, Nikita Khrushchev was the leader of the Soviet Union in 1955.
- Western Berlin was seen as a island of prosperity while eastern Berlin/Germany was poor and poverty stricken.
- Eastern Berliners began escaping and fleeing through west Berlin.
- To combat this flow of refugees, Khrushchev (August 1961) built a wall separating West Berlin from East Berlin.
- This became a massive barrier guarded by barbed wire, floodlights, machine-gun towers, mine fields, and dog patrols.
- This became the symbol of the division between the two superpowers.
- Cuban Missile Crisis
- During Presidency John F Kennedy, the Cold War reached its highest level of confrontation.
- 1959 Fidel Castro overthrew the Cuban government led by Fulgencio Batista and set up a Soviet-supported totalitarian regime in Cuba.
- Kennedy approved a secret plan to invade Cuba by Cuban exiles who would then overthrow Castro.
- The invasion was unsuccessful and the exiles were killed or captured at the landing at the Bay of Pigs.
- In response to the Bay of Pigs invasion, Soviets sent arms and military advisors to Cuba and by 1962 Khrushchev began to place nuclear missiles in Cuba.
- In October 1962, Kennedy, knowing that Khrushchev sent ships carrying missiles to Cuba, blockaded Cuba and prevented the ship from reaching Cuba.
- Khrushchev agreed to turn back the fleet as long as Kennedy does not order another invasion.
- Kennedy agreed and the ship returned to USSR.
- This then created a communication system between Moscow and Washington in 1963 so that they could communicate quickly in times of crisis.
- Vietnam and the Domino Theory
- Stopping Communism
- President Lyndon B Johnson increased the number of troops in Vietnam in order to keep the Communist regime of North Vietnam form gaining control of South Vietnam.
- US followed a policy called the domino theory in which other countries in Asia will also fall to communism if Vietnam is taken.
- Despite have more equipped men and stronger firepower, the US failed to defeat the North Vietnamese and President Johnson continued to send troops.
- This continued war created a antiwar movement in the US in which mostly college students resisted the draft.
- American televisions brought the images of war to the public created more supporters of the antiwar movement.
- Richard Nixon won the next election and pledged to stop the war.
- 1973 Nixon reached an agreement with North Vietnam and American withdrew within 2 years of the agreement.