Post World War II Cold War 1945 - 1989. Atlantic Charter – Review Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill agreed to seek no territorial gain from the.

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Presentation transcript:

Post World War II Cold War

Atlantic Charter – Review Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill agreed to seek no territorial gain from the war FDR and Churchill pledged to support the “right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live.” (self-determination) The Charter called for a “permanent system of general security,” such as an organization like the League of Nations (United Nations)

Post WWII United Nations  June 26, 1945  Keep the peace  Gather food & supplies for needy nations  Homes for war victims  Help developing nations with problems of health, farming, and education

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Ideological conflict  Fought with words & ideas Primarily between U.S. and Soviet Union Communism vs. democracy Dominated world politics

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Truman (like FDR) believed in self-determination  U.S. demanded free elections be held throughout Eastern Europe Much was occupied by the Soviet Union Stalin promised to allow free elections, but went back on his word after WWII  He wanted military security for the Soviet Union, and for his country to be the dominant world power

Cold War 1945 – 1989 “A freely elected government in any of the Eastern European countries would be anti-Soviet, and that we cannot allow.” – Josef Stalin By 1948, the government of every Eastern European country was under communist control.

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Winston Churchill  Warned Americans of the Soviet threat in a speech at Westminster College in Fulton, MO, March 1946  An “iron curtain has descended across the continent”, walling off Soviet-dominated nations from the rest of the world

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Truman Doctrine  March 1947  Containment of Soviet Communism

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Marshall Plan  June 1947  Proposed by Secy. of State George Marshall  Provided money to help European nations rebuild after WWII Factories, schools, hospitals, railroads, bridges, farms  Huge success , U.S. loaned >$12 billion to 16 Western European countries

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Germany & Berlin  Divided into 4 parts East Germany – Communist  Soviet Union West Germany – Democracy  Great Britain  France  U.S.

Cold War 1945 – 1989

Western powers decided it was time to reunite Germany in 1948, but Stalin was opposed June 1948, Soviets set up a blockade around Berlin and prevented delivery of Allied supplies Berlin Airlift  Cargo planes delivered tons of food and supplies to 2M people in West Berlin  >200,000 flights from June 1948 – May 1949

Cold War 1945 – 1989 Berlin Airlift

Cold War 1945 – 1989 A divided Germany and Berlin remained a focus of Cold War tensions Between 1949 and 1961, thousands of East Germans fled to West Berlin, then into West Germany Berlin Wall  Built in August 1961  Separated East and West Germany  Stood for 28 years as a symbol of a divided Germany and Europe

Berlin Wall

Westminster College Fulton, MO

Cold War 1945 – 1989 State of Israel  May 14, 1948 an independent nation

Cold War 1945 – 1989 International Organizations  United Nations  NATO ( North Atlantic Treaty Organization ) April 1949 U.S. and other Western nations Military alliance – collective defense against a Soviet attack  Warsaw Pact 1955 Soviet Union and Communist countries

Cold War 1945 – 1989