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The Cold
           War
              1945-1991

  Kaelyn See, Samuel Leyva,
Melissa Orellana, Luigi Gatuslao
Beginning Tensions
Atlantic Charter: The Big Three created 8 common
  principles in hope for a better future for the world.
               Two Separate Visions
1. Americans favored removal of the military alliances and the
   construction of relationships between nations based on
   diplomatic means.
     Great Britain                           Russia
                            VS.
2.
     uneasy about the                        wanted land to
     implications of the self-               secure protection for
     determination ideal for its             future aggression
     own enormous empire
Wartime Diplomacy
•   Soviet Union demanded a 2nd
    front in Western Europe; U.S.
    and Britain refused
•   Teheran Conference with the Big
    Three
     o Stalin agreed to enter the
        war in the Pacific when the
        battles in Europe end
     o Roosevelt promised a 2nd
        front
•   Conflict over Poland
     o Roosevelt and Churchill
           Pro-Annexation of
             Poland by Soviet Union,
             but against changing it
             to a communist
             government
Yalta Conference
•   Peace conference in February 1945
•   Soviet Union enters war, Roosevelt
    compensates by returning some of
    their lost land
•   The United Nations
     o   General Assembly
             Every member would be
              represented
     o   Security Council
             Permanent
              representatives of 5
              major powers with power
              to veto
             Temporary delegates
              from other nations
•   Division of Germany and Berlin
    between the United States, Britain,
    France, and the Soviet Union
•   "Lublin" Poles vs. "London" Poles
The Failure at Potsdam                         (July 17-August 2,
1945)

 • Truman upset with Soviet violations of the Yalta accords.
 • Truman expanding democracy in Poland = recognizing the Warsaw
   government
 •   Potsdam Conference (Truman, Churchill and Stalin)
     discussed border conflicts regarding communist ideals
 •   Stalin confirmed his adjustments of the Polish-German
     border (divisions remained in Germany)
GERMANY STILL DIVIDED!
  WESTERN ZONES                RUSSIAN ZONES
     -anti-communist             -communist
 -friendly with the U.S.         -Pro-Soviet
The China Problem
    Chiang Kai-Shek                      Mao Zedong
    -Anti-communist                               -communist


•
    -unwilling to ally with U.S.
    -Weak/unpopular
                                   VS.      -Stronger/popular



•    The United States continued to support Chiang’s anti-
     communist government
•    Since there are many conflicts within China, the U.S.
     restored their trust in Japan as an ally.
•    The U.S. lifted all restrictions on industrial
     development and encouraged rapid economic growth
     in Japan.
The Containment Doctrine
•   New containment American policy =        THE
    SOVIETS!!!
       Stalin spreading      Truman’s doctrine of
       communism             increasing the arms
       throughout the        forces of Greece and
       Mediterranean         Turkey
•   Doctrine Ideals taken from George F. Kennan
     - Proper way of dealing with Soviets is "a long term, patient but
     firm and vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies."

•   Soviet pressure on Turkey was relieved and the Greek
    governments defeated their communist efforts.
Marshall Plan
• Gave Europe money to
    prevent the spread of
    Soviet Communism.
•   Conflicting views
    changed after coup in
    Czechoslovakia.
•   Communist strength
    declined and
    opportunities for
    American trade revived.
Mobilization at Home
•   The Atomic Energy Commission of
    1946 oversaw all nuclear research.
•   The National Security Act of 1947
    expanded the President's powers to
    pursue the nation's international goals.
•   The Department of Defense oversaw
    all branches of the armed services.
•   A National Security Council would
    oversee foreign and military policy.
•   A Central Intelligence Agency would
    be responsible for collecting
    information through open and covert
    methods.
The Road to NATOBIG POWER
 Parts of U.S                      AGAINST
Germany & England                  SOVIETS!!!
  Berlin: France
  Truman supplied
 Western Germany          Stalin imposed blockade
   with food, fuel,       around Eastern Germany
 etc. for 10 months                 (June 24, 1948)

                      NATO
                      - April 4, 1949
                                         (North Atlantic Treaty
                                         Organization)
Stalin lifted         - 12 Nations signed
blockade              - Communist
                      - attack on one nation = attack to all
Reevaluating Cold War Policy
•    Americans scares of Soviet bomb testing
•    The fall of the Chiang Kai-shek’s government +
     America’s unwillingness to revitalize connections with
     Japan = end of the American occupation in Asia by
•    1952.
•   The National Security Council (1950)- U.S.
    not depend on other nations to take the
    initiative in resisting communism.
•   The NSC-68
     o strive to stop communism anywhere it occurred
     o called for a major expansion of military power
     o an increase of defense budget
Limited Mobilization
•    Truman set up the Office of Defense Mobilization to
     fight inflation by holding down prices and discouraging
     high union wage demands. (FAILED)
    Cause                                     Effect
    1951- Truman seized the railroads after   Workers ultimately got what they
    railroad workers walked off on the job    demanded

    1952- Truman seized steel mills after     The Supreme Court ruled that the
    wide steel strike                         President had exceeded his authority

•    Truman was forced to relent.
•    When the war went into a stalemate, it infuriated
     Americans because it left 140,000 Americans dead.
POSTWAR
                                 Servicemen’s
•   NO general
                            Readjustment Act of 1944
                               (GI Bill of Rights):
    economic collapse        provided economic and
                            educational assistance to
    because the end of        veterans, increasing
    the war came so          spending even further.

    early... YAY! But
•   that wasn't the end of
    increased consumer demand soon
    it.
    compensated.
•   serious inflation for more than two years (14
    to 15 percent annually)
The Fair Deal
After Japan surrendered, Truman submitted the “Fair Deal”
  which consisted of a twenty-one-point domestic program,
  calling for:
•   expansion of Social Security benefits
•   raising of the legal minimum wage from 40 to 65 cents an hour
•   a program to ensure full employment through aggressive use of federal spending
    and investment
•   a permanent Fair Employment Practices Act
•   public housing and slum clearance
•   long-range environmental and public works planning
•   government promotion of scientific research
Fair Deal                     New Deal
• created by Harry S.    •   created by Franklin
         Truman                  D. Roosevelt
 • designed to keep      •    designed to take
    US growing after          the US out of the
         the war             Great Depression.
   • improved civil
    rights legislation
                             •  more New Deal
                               legislations than
  • created federal                Fair Deal
   housing programs               Legislation
The "Eat Less" Response
       •   Inflation rapidly increased, and
           Republican conservatives DIDN'T
           help.
       •   Robert Taft, most influential
           conservationist advised consumers
           to "eat less."
       •   Taft-Hartley Act: most importantly,
           made illegal the "closed shop"
            o damaged weak unions
            o made difficult the organizing of
                workers who had never been
                union members at all (esp.
                women, minorities and South)
"We have got to break with the corrupting
   idea that we can legislate prosperity,
 legislate equality, legislate opportunity."
Election of 1948




  Democratic Party                                                  States' Rights Party
                         Republican Party      Progressive Party
  Harry S. Truman                                                     (Dixiecrat Party)
                        Thomas E. Dewey        Henry A. Wallace
Popular Vote: 49.5%                                                  Strom Thurmond
                       Popular Vote: 45.07%   Popular Vote: 2.37%
 Electoral Vote: 303                                                Popular Vote: 2.41%
                        Electoral Vote: 189    Electoral Vote: 0
                                                                     Electoral Vote: 39
A Fair Deal Revived?
Social Security system: increased benefits
   by 75 percent and extended to 10
   million people


National Housing Act: authorized 810,000
   units of low-income housing,
   accompanied by long-term rent
   subsidiaries


Minimum wage: increased to 75 cents

Shelley v. Kraemer (1948): the Supreme Court
   ruled that courts could not be used to enforce
   private “covenants” meant to bar blacks from
   residential neighborhoods.
The Nuclear Age
• The Americans feared the nuclear weapons
  which was demonstrated in:
  o   Film
       film noir - a kind of filmmaking that had
         originated in France and had been named for
         the dark lighting that was characteristic of the
         genre
       Example: Twilight Zone
  o   Everyday Life
       Air Raid drills
       Fallout Shelters
The Divided Peninsula
South Korea North Korea
•   anti-communist (democratic)    •   communist
•   didn't want to unite Korea     •   wanted to unite Korea
•   wasn't directly supported by   •   supported by Soviet Union
    the U.S.
•   Divided along the 38th parallel
•   The U.S. got the UN to support South Korea and
    General Douglas MacArthur
•   American attack at Inchon sent North Koreans out
    of S. K. lands.
•   Truman gave permission to push communist
    passed the 38th parallel
From Invasion to Stalemate
•   UN defeated North Korean pressures in their capital, Pyongyang
•   8 divisions of the Chinese army supported the North Koreans and
    captured the South Korean capital, Seoul.
•   UN gained their land + pushed N.K. north of the 38th = War fell into a
    stalemate
•   General MacArthur
     o won public support of attacking China
     o relieved of his command
     o American public outraged = resentment towards Truman
•   The stalemate of the Korean war continued; however, negotiations
    between the opposing sides began in Panmunjom in July 1951 and the
    war dragged on until 1953.
HUAC and Alger Hiss
•   HUAC held widely publicized
    investigations to prove that there was
    communist subversion.
•   Turned to movie industry, arguing that
    communists had infiltrated Hollywood.
•   "The Hollywood ten" refused to answer
    questions about their political beliefs.

                               •   Alger Hiss passed classified state
                                   documents to the Soviet Union.
                               •   Hiss sued Whittaker Chambers for
                                   slander.
                               •   Hiss was convicted of perjury and
                                   served several years in prison.
McCarthyism
McCarthy Propaganda
The Federal Loyalty Program and
the Rosenberg Case
•   McCarran Internal Security
    Act (1950): requires all
    communist organizations to
    register with the government.
•   Julius & Ethel Rosenberg
    proved American conspiracy.
•   Klaus Fuchs testified to
    conspiracy.
•   David Greenglass admitted to
    channelling secret information
    to the Soviet Union.
•   The Rosenbergs were
    convicted.
The Republican Revival
      Democrat                                                         Republican
 Adlai E. Stevenson                                             Dwight D. Eisenhower

  44% Popular Vote                                                  55% Popular Vote
  89 Electoral Votes                                               442 Electoral Votes




                       * Truman withdraws from running for president
                       * Eisenhower's running mate was Richard Nixon
Pretty much the Cold War...

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Cold war2

  • 1. The Cold War 1945-1991 Kaelyn See, Samuel Leyva, Melissa Orellana, Luigi Gatuslao
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  • 4. Beginning Tensions Atlantic Charter: The Big Three created 8 common principles in hope for a better future for the world. Two Separate Visions 1. Americans favored removal of the military alliances and the construction of relationships between nations based on diplomatic means. Great Britain Russia VS. 2. uneasy about the wanted land to implications of the self- secure protection for determination ideal for its future aggression own enormous empire
  • 5. Wartime Diplomacy • Soviet Union demanded a 2nd front in Western Europe; U.S. and Britain refused • Teheran Conference with the Big Three o Stalin agreed to enter the war in the Pacific when the battles in Europe end o Roosevelt promised a 2nd front • Conflict over Poland o Roosevelt and Churchill  Pro-Annexation of Poland by Soviet Union, but against changing it to a communist government
  • 6. Yalta Conference • Peace conference in February 1945 • Soviet Union enters war, Roosevelt compensates by returning some of their lost land • The United Nations o General Assembly  Every member would be represented o Security Council  Permanent representatives of 5 major powers with power to veto  Temporary delegates from other nations • Division of Germany and Berlin between the United States, Britain, France, and the Soviet Union • "Lublin" Poles vs. "London" Poles
  • 7. The Failure at Potsdam (July 17-August 2, 1945) • Truman upset with Soviet violations of the Yalta accords. • Truman expanding democracy in Poland = recognizing the Warsaw government • Potsdam Conference (Truman, Churchill and Stalin) discussed border conflicts regarding communist ideals • Stalin confirmed his adjustments of the Polish-German border (divisions remained in Germany) GERMANY STILL DIVIDED! WESTERN ZONES RUSSIAN ZONES -anti-communist -communist -friendly with the U.S. -Pro-Soviet
  • 8. The China Problem Chiang Kai-Shek Mao Zedong -Anti-communist -communist • -unwilling to ally with U.S. -Weak/unpopular VS. -Stronger/popular • The United States continued to support Chiang’s anti- communist government • Since there are many conflicts within China, the U.S. restored their trust in Japan as an ally. • The U.S. lifted all restrictions on industrial development and encouraged rapid economic growth in Japan.
  • 9. The Containment Doctrine • New containment American policy = THE SOVIETS!!! Stalin spreading Truman’s doctrine of communism increasing the arms throughout the forces of Greece and Mediterranean Turkey • Doctrine Ideals taken from George F. Kennan - Proper way of dealing with Soviets is "a long term, patient but firm and vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies." • Soviet pressure on Turkey was relieved and the Greek governments defeated their communist efforts.
  • 10. Marshall Plan • Gave Europe money to prevent the spread of Soviet Communism. • Conflicting views changed after coup in Czechoslovakia. • Communist strength declined and opportunities for American trade revived.
  • 11. Mobilization at Home • The Atomic Energy Commission of 1946 oversaw all nuclear research. • The National Security Act of 1947 expanded the President's powers to pursue the nation's international goals. • The Department of Defense oversaw all branches of the armed services. • A National Security Council would oversee foreign and military policy. • A Central Intelligence Agency would be responsible for collecting information through open and covert methods.
  • 12. The Road to NATOBIG POWER Parts of U.S AGAINST Germany & England SOVIETS!!! Berlin: France Truman supplied Western Germany Stalin imposed blockade with food, fuel, around Eastern Germany etc. for 10 months (June 24, 1948) NATO - April 4, 1949 (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) Stalin lifted - 12 Nations signed blockade - Communist - attack on one nation = attack to all
  • 13. Reevaluating Cold War Policy • Americans scares of Soviet bomb testing • The fall of the Chiang Kai-shek’s government + America’s unwillingness to revitalize connections with Japan = end of the American occupation in Asia by • 1952. • The National Security Council (1950)- U.S. not depend on other nations to take the initiative in resisting communism. • The NSC-68 o strive to stop communism anywhere it occurred o called for a major expansion of military power o an increase of defense budget
  • 14. Limited Mobilization • Truman set up the Office of Defense Mobilization to fight inflation by holding down prices and discouraging high union wage demands. (FAILED) Cause Effect 1951- Truman seized the railroads after Workers ultimately got what they railroad workers walked off on the job demanded 1952- Truman seized steel mills after The Supreme Court ruled that the wide steel strike President had exceeded his authority • Truman was forced to relent. • When the war went into a stalemate, it infuriated Americans because it left 140,000 Americans dead.
  • 15. POSTWAR Servicemen’s • NO general Readjustment Act of 1944 (GI Bill of Rights): economic collapse provided economic and educational assistance to because the end of veterans, increasing the war came so spending even further. early... YAY! But • that wasn't the end of increased consumer demand soon it. compensated. • serious inflation for more than two years (14 to 15 percent annually)
  • 16. The Fair Deal After Japan surrendered, Truman submitted the “Fair Deal” which consisted of a twenty-one-point domestic program, calling for: • expansion of Social Security benefits • raising of the legal minimum wage from 40 to 65 cents an hour • a program to ensure full employment through aggressive use of federal spending and investment • a permanent Fair Employment Practices Act • public housing and slum clearance • long-range environmental and public works planning • government promotion of scientific research
  • 17. Fair Deal New Deal • created by Harry S. • created by Franklin Truman D. Roosevelt • designed to keep • designed to take US growing after the US out of the the war Great Depression. • improved civil rights legislation • more New Deal legislations than • created federal Fair Deal housing programs Legislation
  • 18. The "Eat Less" Response • Inflation rapidly increased, and Republican conservatives DIDN'T help. • Robert Taft, most influential conservationist advised consumers to "eat less." • Taft-Hartley Act: most importantly, made illegal the "closed shop" o damaged weak unions o made difficult the organizing of workers who had never been union members at all (esp. women, minorities and South) "We have got to break with the corrupting idea that we can legislate prosperity, legislate equality, legislate opportunity."
  • 19. Election of 1948 Democratic Party States' Rights Party Republican Party Progressive Party Harry S. Truman (Dixiecrat Party) Thomas E. Dewey Henry A. Wallace Popular Vote: 49.5% Strom Thurmond Popular Vote: 45.07% Popular Vote: 2.37% Electoral Vote: 303 Popular Vote: 2.41% Electoral Vote: 189 Electoral Vote: 0 Electoral Vote: 39
  • 20. A Fair Deal Revived? Social Security system: increased benefits by 75 percent and extended to 10 million people National Housing Act: authorized 810,000 units of low-income housing, accompanied by long-term rent subsidiaries Minimum wage: increased to 75 cents Shelley v. Kraemer (1948): the Supreme Court ruled that courts could not be used to enforce private “covenants” meant to bar blacks from residential neighborhoods.
  • 21. The Nuclear Age • The Americans feared the nuclear weapons which was demonstrated in: o Film  film noir - a kind of filmmaking that had originated in France and had been named for the dark lighting that was characteristic of the genre  Example: Twilight Zone o Everyday Life  Air Raid drills  Fallout Shelters
  • 22.
  • 23. The Divided Peninsula South Korea North Korea • anti-communist (democratic) • communist • didn't want to unite Korea • wanted to unite Korea • wasn't directly supported by • supported by Soviet Union the U.S. • Divided along the 38th parallel • The U.S. got the UN to support South Korea and General Douglas MacArthur • American attack at Inchon sent North Koreans out of S. K. lands. • Truman gave permission to push communist passed the 38th parallel
  • 24. From Invasion to Stalemate • UN defeated North Korean pressures in their capital, Pyongyang • 8 divisions of the Chinese army supported the North Koreans and captured the South Korean capital, Seoul. • UN gained their land + pushed N.K. north of the 38th = War fell into a stalemate • General MacArthur o won public support of attacking China o relieved of his command o American public outraged = resentment towards Truman • The stalemate of the Korean war continued; however, negotiations between the opposing sides began in Panmunjom in July 1951 and the war dragged on until 1953.
  • 25. HUAC and Alger Hiss • HUAC held widely publicized investigations to prove that there was communist subversion. • Turned to movie industry, arguing that communists had infiltrated Hollywood. • "The Hollywood ten" refused to answer questions about their political beliefs. • Alger Hiss passed classified state documents to the Soviet Union. • Hiss sued Whittaker Chambers for slander. • Hiss was convicted of perjury and served several years in prison.
  • 28. The Federal Loyalty Program and the Rosenberg Case • McCarran Internal Security Act (1950): requires all communist organizations to register with the government. • Julius & Ethel Rosenberg proved American conspiracy. • Klaus Fuchs testified to conspiracy. • David Greenglass admitted to channelling secret information to the Soviet Union. • The Rosenbergs were convicted.
  • 29. The Republican Revival Democrat Republican Adlai E. Stevenson Dwight D. Eisenhower 44% Popular Vote 55% Popular Vote 89 Electoral Votes 442 Electoral Votes * Truman withdraws from running for president * Eisenhower's running mate was Richard Nixon
  • 30. Pretty much the Cold War...