An Outline of
Events
Ideological
differences.
An uneasy alliance: U.S. - Soviet
Relations during World War II.
- The end of Lend Lease.
- Yalta and Potsdam
Conferences.
- Failure of the United States to
open up a second front in Europe.
- The dropping of the atomic
bomb
The United States follows a policy
of containment.
- Soviet development of the
Comintern.
- The Truman Doctrine is
articulated.
- The Marshall Plan begins.
- NATO is created.
The Cold War becomes
hot
- Warsaw Pact is created
- The Soviet Union develops the
atomic bomb.
- Eisenhower develops the
Eisenhower Doctrine
- Sputnik is launched
- A U-2 incident.
- The Berlin Blockade and
Airlift.
- The U.S. wages war in
Korea.
Teetering on the brink
- The United States fears a "domino
effect" in Southeast Asia.
- Communists in Cuba
- The Bay of Pigs invasion
- The Cuban Missile Crisis
- Peaceful coexistence
- The Vietnam War escalates
A New Direction is
taken.
- The US pulls out of
Vietnam
- Detente
- SALT I
The end of the Cold War
- The US escalates the arms
race.
- Gorbachev brings a policy of
Glasnost.
- The Berlin Wall comes
down.
Essay
Ideological
differences
In 1917 Lenin leads a revolution in
Russia. The world watches as the new Communist government takes
power. For most of the Soviet Union's early history she remains a
weak neighbor to the other European powers. The nation must rebuild.
The Communists plan is to remove the concept of private ownership of
property. Their philosophy, Marxism, states that eventually the
entire world would turn to Communism. Americans look on with fear.
Would this be us? Would Communism come to the United States and
destroy our way of life? As more and more immigrants come to America
fears are heightened. American fears of Communism and its elimination
of private wealth and ownership continue through the depression and
World War II.
An uneasy alliance: U.S. -
Soviet Relations during World War II.
As the World War II rages on Soviet
casualties mount. The Soviet strategy has been one called "scorched
earth," which meant that as they retreated from the Nazi's they would
burn everything so that the Nazi's would gain nothing but a wrecked
nation. Now as the Red Army stems the tide at Stalingrad the Soviets
begin to push the Germans back. It is a typical cold Russian winter,
millions are dying and Stalin can only wonder when the United States
will commit its forces to attack Germany in mass and take some of the
heat off the Red Army. Two years go by before America truly opens up
a second front by invading in July of 1944 in Normandy, France.
During this time a number if things happen:
1) The US ends the
Lend
Lease program that was
providing needed supplies to the Soviet people.
2) Roosevelt and Churchill agree at
the Yalta Conference
to allow a Communist
government in Poland. Stalin promises to allow "free and unfettered"
elections in Eastern Europe
3) At the Potsdam Conference Stalin reneges on his promise to have free
elections in Eastern Europe. The west is informed that Eastern Europe
will be turned into Satellite states, creating a buffer zone, against future attack toward the
USSR.
In August of 1945 the United States
drops the atomic bomb on Japan. The Soviets knew nothing of this
weapon.
The United States follows a
policy of containment
The Soviet Union emerged from World
War II a very different nation than when she entered it. The Soviet
Union now was the second strongest nation in the world and controlled
all of Eastern Europe. This type of power and control prompted
Winston Churchill to declare that "an iron curtain had descended upon Europe. Stalin was a
powerful dictator who had eliminated his opposition. This was the
kind of mentality and drive that faced the United States. Stalin was
committed to the Marxist philosophy that stated that eventually the
entire world would turn to Communism. To achieve that goal Stalin
created the Comintern, a government organization designed to help
Communist revolutions around the world. As far as America was
concerned this is clearly a grave threat to our way of life. The
United States response to the Comintern was the policy known as
containment. Simply put, containment meant that the
spread of communism had to be contained, held where it was. Over the
years the policy of containment would take many forms. The first was
called the Truman
Doctrine (1947) named
after the President at that time. The Truman Doctrine said that
America would give vast financial aid any nations in danger of
falling to Communism. In 1947 the United States gave $400 million to Greece and
Turkey to fend off Communist revolutions. Then, later in 1947, the United States
announced the Marshall
Plan. Under the Marshall
Plan Congress approved spending $12 billion dollars to rebuild
Europe. Stalin, who could not afford to offer this type of aid to
nations he controlled saw this as threat even though any nation could
apply for Marshall Plan funds. The Eastern European nations never
took Marshall Plan monies.
In 1949, with the Cold War becoming a
more clearly defined diplomatic conflict the United States formed
the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO).
Eleven nations joined NATO which was stated that "an armed attack
against one shall be considered an armed attack against all." Clearly
the purpose of the NATO was to deter the Soviet Union from
aggression.
The Cold War becomes
hot.
After the United States began to
actively pursue its policy of containment, Stalin began to move more
aggressively. In response to the creation of NATO the Soviet Union
organized the Warsaw
Pact, a military
alliance of Eastern European nations. Later in 1949 Stalin decided to
test American resolve. Overnight a wall appeared that surrounded West
Berlin. Stalin had decided that the capitalist influence had to be
eliminated. The blockade
of Berlin was an act of
war but Truman responded creatively. Instead of seeking a military
solution he announced to the world that the United States would not
abandon Berlin. The United States began the Berlin Airlift and dropped supplies in by parachute on a
daily basis. Stalin would be unable to starve out the Berliners.
Eventually the blockade ended. That same year (1949)
the Soviet Union tested
its first atomic bomb.
In 1952 the United States announced it had a Hydrogen Bomb, many time
more powerful. A year later the Soviets detonated their first H-bomb.
Now there were two nuclear powers in direct competition and the world
would never be the same.
In response to the presence of Soviet
atomic weapons the new American President, Dwight Eisenhower,
announced his policy on nuclear weapons. This policy known as the
"Eisenhower
Doctrine," called for
massive
retaliation to any
aggressive act by the Soviet Union. What was massive retaliation? It
clearly meant that the United States was willing to use nuclear
weapons if the Soviets used force in Europe. Luckily that never
happened.
The United States proved its
willingness to use force to contain the spread of Communism during
the Korean War which lasted for 1950 to 1953. In the Korean war the
US backed the South Koreans against the North Korean who were
supported by the Communist Chinese government.
Ever since 1945 the US had been
secure that it held an edge in technology. That illusion was
shattered in 1957 when the Soviets launched the first satellite known
as Sputnik. Perhaps now the Soviets would be able to spy
on the US or launch long range missiles with nuclear warheads? The
space
race had begun!
By the late 1950's Stalin had died
and a new Premier, Nikita Khrushchev, was the leader of the Soviet
Union. Khrushchev did not rule as strongly as Stalin did but he was
still a dictator. In 1960 a U.S. spy plan, the U-2, was shot
down over the Soviet
Union. This incident further increased tensions.
When the new American President, John
F. Kennedy, moved into the White House in 1961 he was immediately
tested by Khrushchev. Overnight a concrete and barbed wire wall rose
to surround West Berlin. Khrushchev was embarrassed that West Berlin
was so much wealthier than East Berlin. Heras determined to stop East
Berliners from defecting. Kennedy took a strong stance announcing
that he would never give in to Soviet pressure to give back Berlin.
"Ich bin ein Berliner!"
(I am a Berliner) he
announced to the German people and the German people roared in
approval. But the Berlin
Wall still stood, a
symbol of the Cold War.
Teetering on the
brink
The 1960's saw a further increase in
tensions. In 1960 the United States sent 15 advisors to help prevent
a Communist takeover of South Vietnam. Twelve years, four Presidents
(Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon), 45,000 dead Americans and a
total deployment of 500,000 men later we pulled out of Vietnam having
failed to achieve our goals. The Vietnam War represented a fear on the part of the United
States that if one nation fell to Communism then other would soon
fall. This was known as the domino effect. The Vietnam war caused many problems at
home. Our society was deeply divided over the conflict, so much so
that President Johnson did not even run for reelection.
In 1959 Cuba, an island only 90 miles
away from United States fell to Communism. The revolutionary leader
Fidel Castro overthrew dictator Fulgenico Battista and installed a
Communist government. What could the United States do to eliminate
this threat? President Eisenhower supported a CIA plan to train Cuban
exiles and send them to Cuba to invade and start a rebellion. The
plan was set in motion by Eisenhower but never executed. When Kennedy
took office he went along with the plan and the US sent in the
renegade Cubans. The incident became known as the
Bay of Pigs
Invasion. The invasion
was an embarrassing failure. The "soldiers" were easily defeated and
the US looked rather foolish.
In October 1962 US spy planes took
pictures of Soviet missiles in Cuba. The crisis known as the
Cuban missile
crisis pushed the world
to the brink of nuclear war. President Kennedy ordered US ships to
intercept Soviet ships that might be carrying nuclear weapons.
Kennedy demanded the ships turn around and that the missiles be
removed from Cuba. American ships steamed toward the Soviet ships as
the world held its breath. Who would back down? Children in schools
practiced air raid drills, dark curtains were drawn across windows to
darken the cities and make them less of a target. Kennedy and
Khrushchev were playing the largest game of chicken in history. At
the last moment it was Khrushchev who blinked and pulled back his
ships. Today Kennedy is commended for winning the game known as
brinkmanship.
This embarrassing failure led
Khrushchev to begin a new policy known as peaceful coexistence. He claimed that the US and Soviet Union
could live together in peace. Khrushchev's policy did not last long
as his support in the Politburo ended and he was removed from power.
A New Direction is
taken.
By the 1970's the Vietnam war had
seen the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the ruin of Lyndon B.
Johnson's idealistic presidency and the election of Richard M. Nixon.
Nixon, a staunch anti communist and promised to remove America from
our involvement in Vietnam. In 1972 the last US troops left. America
had failed to achieve her objectives in the conflict.
The Nixon and the new Soviet Premier
Leonid Brezhnev were bitter rivals yet they both realized that a
nuclear war would destroy both nations. The stakes were just too high
to play this poker game. Both nation entered into a period known as
detente, and a cooling off period. During detente the Strategic Arms
Limitation Treaty (SALT I) was negotiated. Both nations agreed to
limit their numbers of nuclear weapons and the US also sold $750
million in grain to the Soviets.
The end of the Cold
War
Detente lasted with peace coming in
varying levels through much of the 1970's. Brezhnev gave way to
Chernenko, and then Chernenko died giving way to Andropov. When
Andropov also died suddenly the Politburo turned to a young upstart,
Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachev was not the hardliner the others had
been. He had strange ideas... ideas that would change the world.
Meanwhile, the President of the United States in 1981 was Ronald
Reagan. Reagan was a conservative who termed the Soviet Union "the
evil empire." He promised America that we would be stronger than the
Soviets. He promised America a new "star wars" defense system capable of knocking enemy
missiles out of the sky. A new arms race ensued. Both the Soviets and
the Americans tried to develop bigger, better weapons.
In the Soviet Union things were
changing. The government was offering more and more freedoms to its
people. Gorbachev's Perestroika program meant more freedom for the people.
His Glasnost program meant more openness toward the
outside world. The soviet government spent so much money trying to
keep up with American military spending that they were unable to
provide some of the basic consumer goods their people needed. The
Soviets people now feeling more freedom than ever began to see the
riches of the west for the first time. There was great unrest in the
nation. Summit meetings were held between Gorbachev and Reagan. Peace
was around the corner. When Gorbachev was faced with a coup by the
hard liners it was a man named Boris Yeltsin, the President of the
Russian Republic, that ended the mini revolution. Open elections were
held for the first time and a new leader was chosen, Boris Yeltsin.
The Soviet Union was broken up and the republics were set free. In
1989 the Berlin wall came down. President George Bush succeeded
Reagan and held meetings with Yeltsin. The United States needed to
define its new relationship with the Soviet Union. The Cold War was
over.
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