Chapter 18: Cold War Conflicts, 1945-1960
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U.S. History – B Chapter 18 Cold War Conflicts 600-601-Chapter 18 10/21/02 5:39 PM Page 600 Senator Joseph McCarthy, shown here, charged that Communists had infiltrated many areas of American life. 1952 U.S. explodes first hydrogen bomb. 1948 1949 1952 Dwight D. Harry S. 1950 U.S. Truman is United Eisenhower is States joins sends troops elected president. elected to Korea. president. NATO. USA WORLD 1945 1950 1945 United 1946 1948 Berlin 1949 China 1950 Korean Nations is Churchill airlift begins. becomes War begins. established. gives his communist “Iron Curtain” under speech. Mao Zedong. 600 CHAPTER 18 600-601-Chapter 18 10/21/02 5:39 PM Page 601 INTERACTINTERACT WITH HISTORY At the end of World War II, Americans begin to be haunted by a new fear. The Soviets have embraced a tightly controlled political system called communism. Many believe it threatens the American way of life. Throughout the nation, suspected communists are called before a House subcommittee for questioning. Anyone accused of un-American activity faces public humiliation and professional ruin. What do you do when a friend is accused? Examine the issues • Do Americans with communist beliefs pose a threat to the nation? • What can individual citizens do to protect the rights of all people? • Should citizens speak out to preserve the rights of others? RESEARCH LINKS CLASSZONE.COM Visit the Chapter 18 links for more information about Cold War Conflicts. 1953 Julius 1960 Francis Gary Powers’s U-2 spy and Ethel plane is shot down by the Soviets. Rosenberg are 1954 Senator Joseph executed as McCarthy alleges 1960 John F. Kennedy is spies. Communist involve- elected president. ment in U.S. Army. 1955 1960 1954 French 1953 are defeated in 1957 Soviets 1959 Fidel Castro Participants Vietnam. launch Sputnik. comes to power in in Korean War Cuba. agree on cease-fire. Cold War Conflicts 601 602-608-Chapter 18 10/21/02 5:39 PM Page 602 Origins of the Cold War MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW Terms & Names The United States and the After World War II, differences •United Nations (UN) •Marshall Plan Soviet Union emerged from between the United States •satellite nation •Berlin airlift World War II as two and the Soviet Union led to a •containment •North Atlantic “superpowers” with vastly Cold War that lasted almost to •iron curtain Treaty Organization different political and the 21st century. •Cold War (NATO) economic systems. •Truman Doctrine One American's Story Seventy miles south of Berlin, Joseph Polowsky and a patrol of American soldiers were scouting for signs of the Soviet army advancing from the east. As the soldiers neared the Elbe River, they saw lilacs in bloom. Polowsky later said the sight of the flowers filled them with joy. Across the Elbe, the Americans spotted Soviet soldiers, who signaled for them to cross over. When the Americans reached the opposite bank, their joy turned to shock. They saw to their horror that the bank was covered with dead civilians, victims of bombing raids. A PERSONAL VOICE JOSEPH POLOWSKY “ Here we are, tremendously exhilarated, and there’s a sea of dead. [The platoon leader] was much moved. He said, ‘Joe, let’s make a resolution with these Russians here and also the ones on the bank: this would be an important day in the lives of the two countries.’ . It was a solemn moment. There were tears in the eyes of most of us. We embraced. We swore never to forget.” —quoted in The Good War ▼ American and Soviet The Soviet and U.S. soldiers believed that their encounter would serve as a soldiers meet (top) symbol of peace. Unfortunately, such hopes were soon dashed. After World War at the Elbe River in Germany near the end II, the United States and the Soviet Union emerged as rival superpowers, each of World War II. A 1996 strong enough to greatly influence world events. postage stamp (above) commemorates the historic meeting. Former Allies Clash The United States and the Soviet Union had very different ambitions for the future. These differences created a climate of icy tension that plunged the two countries into a bitter rivalry. 602 CHAPTER 18 602-608-Chapter 18 10/21/02 5:39 PM Page 603 Under Soviet communism, Background the state controlled all property KEY PLAYYEERS See communism and economic activity, while in KE S on page R39 and the capitalistic American system, capitalism on page R38 in the private citizens controlled almost Economics all economic activity. In the Handbook. American system, voting by the people elected a president and a congress from competing politi- cal parties; in the Soviet Union, the Communist Party estab- lished a totalitarian government with no opposing parties. The United States was furi- ous that Joseph Stalin—the leader of the Soviet Union—had HARRY S. TRUMAN JOSEPH STALIN 1884–1972 1879–1953 been an ally of Hitler for a time. Harry S. Truman, the son of a As a young revolutionary, Iosif Stalin had supported the Allies Missouri livestock trader and Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili only after Hitler invaded the his wife, did not seem des- took the name Stalin,which Soviet Union in June 1941. In tined for greatness. When he means "man of steel" in some ways, the Americans and graduated from high school in Russian. Soviets became more suspicious 1901, he drifted from job to His father was a failed shoe- job. After WWI, he invested in maker and an alcoholic. His of each other during the war. a men’s clothing store, but mother helped support the Stalin resented the Western the business failed. family as a washerwoman. Allies’ delay in attacking the Discouraged by his busi- Stalin is credited with turn- Germans in Europe. Such an ness failure, Truman sought a ing the Soviet Union into a attack, he thought, would draw career in politics. As a politi- world power but at a terrible part of the German army away cian, his blunt and outspoken cost to its citizens. He ruled style won both loyal friends with terror and brutality and from the Soviet Union. Relations and bitter enemies. As presi- saw “enemies” everywhere, MAIN IDEA worsened after Stalin learned dent, his decisiveness and even among friends and sup- Analyzing that the United States had kept willingness to accept respon- porters. He subdued the pop- Causes its development of the atomic sibility for his decisions (“The ulation with the use of secret A What caused bomb secret. A Buck Stops Here” read a sign police and labor camps, and the tension on his desk) earned him he is believed to have been between the THE UNITED NATIONS In spite respect that has grown over responsible for the murder of Soviet Union and of these problems, hopes for the years. millions of Soviets. the United States world peace were high at the end after the war? of the war. The most visible sym- A. Answer bol of these hopes was the United Nations (UN). On April 25, 1945, the repre- Different political and sentatives of 50 nations met in San Francisco to establish this new peacekeeping economic body. After two months of debate, on June 26, 1945, the delegates signed the systems; Soviet charter establishing the UN. Union had been Ironically, even though the UN was intended to promote peace, it soon became an ally of Germany; Stalin an arena in which the two superpowers competed. Both the United States and the resented Allies’ Soviet Union used the UN as a forum to spread their influence over others. delay in attack- TRUMAN BECOMES PRESIDENT For the United States, the key figure in the ing Germans in Europe. early years of conflict with the Soviets was President Harry S. Truman. On April 12, 1945, Truman had suddenly become president when Franklin Roosevelt died. This former Missouri senator had been picked as Roosevelt’s running mate in 1944. He had served as vice-president for just a few months before Roosevelt’s death. During his term as vice-president, Truman had not been included in top policy decisions. He had not even known that the United States was developing an atomic bomb. Many Americans doubted Truman’s ability to serve as president. But Truman was honest and had a willingness to make tough decisions—qualities that he would need desperately during his presidency. Cold War Conflicts 603 602-608-Chapter 18 10/21/02 5:39 PM Page 604 THE POTSDAM CONFERENCE Truman’s test as a diplomat came in July 1945 when the Big Three—the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union—met at the final wartime conference at Potsdam near Berlin. The countries that partici- pated were the same ones that had been present at Yalta in February 1945. Stalin still represented the Soviet Union. Clement Attlee replaced Churchill as Britain’s representative mid-conference, because Churchill’s party lost a general election. And Harry Truman took Roosevelt’s place. MAIN IDEA At Yalta, Stalin had promised Roosevelt that he would allow free elections— Analyzing that is, a vote by secret ballot in a multiparty system—in Poland and other parts Causes B What did of Eastern Europe that the Soviets occupied at the end of the war. By July 1945, Stalin do to make however, it was clear that Stalin would not keep this promise. The Soviets pre- President Truman vented free elections in Poland and banned democratic parties. B distrust him? B. Answer Stalin would not Tension Mounts allow free elec- tions in Eastern Stalin’s refusal to allow free elections in Poland convinced Truman that U.S.