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Chapter 23
Post-War Economy
 Baby boom throughout the 1950s
 Rapid process of reconverting factories
back to producing consumer goods
 Result: Americans begin to spend more
freely and the economy recovers
Post-War Economy
 GI Bill: Servicemen’s Readjustment Act
 Provided low interest home loans and money for
college education
 Still in use today, extremely important and
provides opportunity for many to get a college
education
 Part of the movement of readjustment back to
peace in America
 Resulted in a housing shortage that mass
produced remedied
 Helped reinforce the typical “middle class
values” that were revered throughout the 1950s
The Cold War: Soviet
Containment
 Post-war period ushers in years of
tension between the US and the Soviet
Union known as the Cold War
 As Stalin tried to expand to Eastern
Europe, Soviet expert George Keenan
outlined a policy of “Soviet Containment”
 Blocking the expansion of communism at all
costs
The Cold War: Soviet
Containment
 Post-War Strategy
 Russians occupy Eastern Europe –
greatly concerned about national security
○ The invasion of Poland by Germany was the
primary reason for occupation
○ Wanted to establish regimes that were friendly
and/or subservient to Russia
○ Russia is frightened of the U.S. utilizing an
atomic bomb and retaining them
 Begins to build their own, starts the arms race
The Cold War: Soviet
Containment
 Post-War Strategy
 US troops occupy Western Europe
○ Did not like Russia’s national security emphasis
through occupation
 They wanted to keep free elections throughout Europe
and promote democracy
○ U.S. already utilized an atomic bomb
 They were stockpiling and beginning to build the
hydrogen bomb to keep up in the arms race
 Civil war in Greece and Turkey provide an
opportunity for the U.S. to try out their policy
of containment
Truman Doctrine
 First application of the containment
doctrine – written in 1947 as a result of the
civil war in Greece and Turkey
 Truman asks Congress to supply funds to
keep Greece and Turkey within the western
sphere of influence
 Used the defense of freedom as reasoning
 Also an informal declaration of Cold War
against the Soviets
 Truman’s rhetoric suggested that the U.S
had assumed a permanent global
responsibility
The Marshall Plan
 U.S. attempted to prevent the spread of
Soviet/Communist influence in western
Europe by economic means
 1947 – Secretary of State George Marshall
proposed an economic aid package to help
Europe rebuild their industries
 Soviets decline this aid because of the
political agenda attached to it (democracy
for all)
 Fosters prosperity in Western Europe that
in turn helped stimulate the American
economy in the post-war period
NATO
 North Atlantic Treaty Organization
 Military alliance between the U.S., Canada,
and most of Western Europe
 Soviets and Communists were left out
 Pledged mutual defense against any future
Soviet attack
 Third and final step in the first large-scale
phase of containment
 U.S. troops began to be stationed in western
Europe in 1949
 Greatly enhanced the Russian fear of Western
expansion
Cold War Expansion
 Russians’ response is to cut off
access to Berlin
 Truman refuses to withdraw American
troops and orders an airlift to supply the
city
 Truman is reelected in 1948, Russia
retreats and ends their blockade in 1949
 This sets the stage for the West/East
Berlin animosity that lasts until the 1980s
Cold War Expansion
 US improves its security after WWII
 National Security Act of 1947 – unified
armed forces, CIA, National Security
Council (advisors to the President)
 U.S. puts their defense budget into the
Air Force
 U.S. seems determined to win the Cold
War at all costs
Cold War Expansion
 Problems in Asia
 Both the U.S. and Soviets have large stakes
in Asia after WWII
 U.S. moves to consolidate its influence over
Japan and the Pacific Islands
 China (between the U.S. and Soviet spheres
of influence) is torn between pro-Western
Chiang Kai-shek and pro-Soviet Mao Tse
Tung (future Chairman of China and
genocidal maniac throughout the 1960s)
Chairman Mao
Chiang Kai-shek
Cold War Expansion
 Problems in Asia
 Mao wins over in China, Chiang Kai-shek
is exiled from China for the rest of his life
 China is clearly within the influence of the
Soviets and Communism
○ Truman is attacked for losing China
○ As a result, he begins to build up U.S.
influence in post-war Japan
The Korean War
 America becomes involved with South
Korea in 1950 as Communist forces
in North Korea begin to invade the
south
 The 38th parallel becomes the dividing
line between the two groups
The Korean War
 General Douglas MacArthur pushed to
take the war into China after the U.S.
gets involved
 Wanted to achieve a total victory and to
demonstrate American military superiority
(much like Patton in WWII)
 Wanted to make future wars less likely
 Truman disagrees, feared Russia and
nuclear holocaust
 MacArthur pushes Truman too far and is
relieved of command in Korea
The Korean War
 U.S. involvement in South Korea
becomes a United Nations effort
 The majority of troops, supplies, and
strategy is supplied by the U.S. though
 The Korean War becomes a
stalemate due largely to guerilla
warfare on both sides
The Korean War
 The war continues into Dwight D.
Eisenhower’s presidency
 Most significant result of the war was
the massive American rearmament
 Americans felt they were now ready to
stop Soviet expansion anywhere in the
world
The Communist Threat
 The Cold War encouraged a culture of
secrecy and dishonesty
 Freedom of speech and dissent comes
under attack again in a new “Red Scare”
after America wins the war for freedom
 Those who could be linked to
communism (no matter how absurd the
link) were considered enemies of
freedom
The Communist Threat
 Essentially turned into another witch
hunt that had the potential to tear the
country apart
 The entire country became gripped in
this phenomena
 As much of a local threat as it was national
 Local anticommunist groups would readily
storm public libraries and destroy “un-
American” books
 The courts did nothing to stop this type of
behavior
The Communist Threat
 Why do we favor fascism over
communism?
 Traces its roots back to the Civil War
 Americans prefer order over anarchy
 We eerily respect the staunch militarism
(conservatism) of the Germans over the
idea of absolute social and economic
revolution
The Communist Threat
 Joseph McCarthy
 Announced in 1950 that he had a list of
205 communists working for the State
Dept.
 Really working for his own fame and
glory; didn’t care who he stepped on to
make sure he was #1
The Communist Threat
 Joseph McCarthy
 Gained a ton of support from Midwestern
Republicans, Irish, Poles, and Italians as
he lambasted privileged bureaucrats
 His demise (and embarrassment) finally
came as he tried to take on the US Army,
claiming that a great percentage of them
were communists in disguise
 The new “Red Scare” takes place
during the election of 1952
CH_23_The Cold War Era

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CH_23_The Cold War Era

  • 2. Post-War Economy  Baby boom throughout the 1950s  Rapid process of reconverting factories back to producing consumer goods  Result: Americans begin to spend more freely and the economy recovers
  • 3. Post-War Economy  GI Bill: Servicemen’s Readjustment Act  Provided low interest home loans and money for college education  Still in use today, extremely important and provides opportunity for many to get a college education  Part of the movement of readjustment back to peace in America  Resulted in a housing shortage that mass produced remedied  Helped reinforce the typical “middle class values” that were revered throughout the 1950s
  • 4. The Cold War: Soviet Containment  Post-war period ushers in years of tension between the US and the Soviet Union known as the Cold War  As Stalin tried to expand to Eastern Europe, Soviet expert George Keenan outlined a policy of “Soviet Containment”  Blocking the expansion of communism at all costs
  • 5. The Cold War: Soviet Containment  Post-War Strategy  Russians occupy Eastern Europe – greatly concerned about national security ○ The invasion of Poland by Germany was the primary reason for occupation ○ Wanted to establish regimes that were friendly and/or subservient to Russia ○ Russia is frightened of the U.S. utilizing an atomic bomb and retaining them  Begins to build their own, starts the arms race
  • 6. The Cold War: Soviet Containment  Post-War Strategy  US troops occupy Western Europe ○ Did not like Russia’s national security emphasis through occupation  They wanted to keep free elections throughout Europe and promote democracy ○ U.S. already utilized an atomic bomb  They were stockpiling and beginning to build the hydrogen bomb to keep up in the arms race  Civil war in Greece and Turkey provide an opportunity for the U.S. to try out their policy of containment
  • 7. Truman Doctrine  First application of the containment doctrine – written in 1947 as a result of the civil war in Greece and Turkey  Truman asks Congress to supply funds to keep Greece and Turkey within the western sphere of influence  Used the defense of freedom as reasoning  Also an informal declaration of Cold War against the Soviets  Truman’s rhetoric suggested that the U.S had assumed a permanent global responsibility
  • 8.
  • 9. The Marshall Plan  U.S. attempted to prevent the spread of Soviet/Communist influence in western Europe by economic means  1947 – Secretary of State George Marshall proposed an economic aid package to help Europe rebuild their industries  Soviets decline this aid because of the political agenda attached to it (democracy for all)  Fosters prosperity in Western Europe that in turn helped stimulate the American economy in the post-war period
  • 10.
  • 11. NATO  North Atlantic Treaty Organization  Military alliance between the U.S., Canada, and most of Western Europe  Soviets and Communists were left out  Pledged mutual defense against any future Soviet attack  Third and final step in the first large-scale phase of containment  U.S. troops began to be stationed in western Europe in 1949  Greatly enhanced the Russian fear of Western expansion
  • 12. Cold War Expansion  Russians’ response is to cut off access to Berlin  Truman refuses to withdraw American troops and orders an airlift to supply the city  Truman is reelected in 1948, Russia retreats and ends their blockade in 1949  This sets the stage for the West/East Berlin animosity that lasts until the 1980s
  • 13.
  • 14. Cold War Expansion  US improves its security after WWII  National Security Act of 1947 – unified armed forces, CIA, National Security Council (advisors to the President)  U.S. puts their defense budget into the Air Force  U.S. seems determined to win the Cold War at all costs
  • 15. Cold War Expansion  Problems in Asia  Both the U.S. and Soviets have large stakes in Asia after WWII  U.S. moves to consolidate its influence over Japan and the Pacific Islands  China (between the U.S. and Soviet spheres of influence) is torn between pro-Western Chiang Kai-shek and pro-Soviet Mao Tse Tung (future Chairman of China and genocidal maniac throughout the 1960s)
  • 18. Cold War Expansion  Problems in Asia  Mao wins over in China, Chiang Kai-shek is exiled from China for the rest of his life  China is clearly within the influence of the Soviets and Communism ○ Truman is attacked for losing China ○ As a result, he begins to build up U.S. influence in post-war Japan
  • 19. The Korean War  America becomes involved with South Korea in 1950 as Communist forces in North Korea begin to invade the south  The 38th parallel becomes the dividing line between the two groups
  • 20.
  • 21. The Korean War  General Douglas MacArthur pushed to take the war into China after the U.S. gets involved  Wanted to achieve a total victory and to demonstrate American military superiority (much like Patton in WWII)  Wanted to make future wars less likely  Truman disagrees, feared Russia and nuclear holocaust  MacArthur pushes Truman too far and is relieved of command in Korea
  • 22. The Korean War  U.S. involvement in South Korea becomes a United Nations effort  The majority of troops, supplies, and strategy is supplied by the U.S. though  The Korean War becomes a stalemate due largely to guerilla warfare on both sides
  • 23. The Korean War  The war continues into Dwight D. Eisenhower’s presidency  Most significant result of the war was the massive American rearmament  Americans felt they were now ready to stop Soviet expansion anywhere in the world
  • 24. The Communist Threat  The Cold War encouraged a culture of secrecy and dishonesty  Freedom of speech and dissent comes under attack again in a new “Red Scare” after America wins the war for freedom  Those who could be linked to communism (no matter how absurd the link) were considered enemies of freedom
  • 25.
  • 26. The Communist Threat  Essentially turned into another witch hunt that had the potential to tear the country apart  The entire country became gripped in this phenomena  As much of a local threat as it was national  Local anticommunist groups would readily storm public libraries and destroy “un- American” books  The courts did nothing to stop this type of behavior
  • 27.
  • 28. The Communist Threat  Why do we favor fascism over communism?  Traces its roots back to the Civil War  Americans prefer order over anarchy  We eerily respect the staunch militarism (conservatism) of the Germans over the idea of absolute social and economic revolution
  • 29. The Communist Threat  Joseph McCarthy  Announced in 1950 that he had a list of 205 communists working for the State Dept.  Really working for his own fame and glory; didn’t care who he stepped on to make sure he was #1
  • 30.
  • 31. The Communist Threat  Joseph McCarthy  Gained a ton of support from Midwestern Republicans, Irish, Poles, and Italians as he lambasted privileged bureaucrats  His demise (and embarrassment) finally came as he tried to take on the US Army, claiming that a great percentage of them were communists in disguise  The new “Red Scare” takes place during the election of 1952