The cartoon below is called “Truman Checks Stalin.” During/after which Cold War event was this cartoon likely created? What is the cartoonist’s point of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Wednesday 3/14/12 No RAP Get your notes in order for the note check. Please get out a piece of paper –Title it –WWII Test When you are finished please.
Advertisements

Chapter 21, Section 3.  When American planes detected radiation above the Soviet Union, they realized they were no longer the only country with atomic.
Essential Question: How did the arms race & space race escalate the Cold War between the United States & the Soviet Union? Warm Up Question:
The Cold War  Trace the reasons that the wartime alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union unraveled.  Explain how President.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
The Policy of BRINKMANSHIP
What events lead to the US Cold War policy?.  Issues after WW2: decision making between Big 3 bad (distrust) How to fix Germany How to rehabilitate Europe.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Global Cold War through 1960.
Chapter 15 & 16  Introduction to the Cold War  As you read Ch 15-1, do the following: A. The Roots of the Cold War  - For each blue section take Cornell.
Chap 26 – Sections 2 & 4 The Cold War goes HOT. Key Terms / Main Ideas Explain the growing tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union at.
With Germany in Between. Allies Become Enemies  There was always tension between capitalists Americans and the communists Soviets during WWII.  This.
The Cold War Expands Objectives
Explain the purpose of the Bill of Rights. Who favored including the Bill of Rights into the Constitution and why? Describe three amendments from the Bill.
From 1945 to 1991, the USA & USSR used a variety of strategies to win the Cold War.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
Cold War ABC Your name here. A is for: Arms Race The arms race began the moment the United States dropped the atomic bomb on Japan. That day marks the.
Analyzing Cold War Cartoons. How much tension did these Cold War events cause? p. 192 On the brink of war “sizzling hot” Medium hot Simmering on low heat.
Cold War. Yalta Conference Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin meet at a Soviet resort Poland Soviet Union wanted Polish communists to take over.
Milestones and Key Figures in African American History,
11/09 Bellringer 5+ sentences The Berlin Wall was built in 1961 to keep citizens of East Germany from fleeing to the West. What does it say about a country.
Chapter 21, Section 3.  When American planes detected radiation above the Soviet Union, they realized they were no longer the only country with atomic.
20 th Century Conflicts The Cold War, Korea, Vietnam.
The Cold War The Big 3 (Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin) met to determine the make-up of post-WWII Europe at the Yalta Conference in USSR in 1945 USSR.
The Cold War Expands Chapter 12, Section 3. The Arms Race Heightens Tensions ●September 1949: Soviets set off an atomic bomb ●Truman ordered the Atomic.
Jeopardy $100 USSRUSAASIACuba WH Soup $200 $300 $400 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100.
Terms and People satellite state − small country controlled by a more powerful neighbor Cold War − struggle in which the U.S. and Soviet Union became rivals.
Bell work Read page in the textbook “America: Pathways to the Present”  After reading rewrite and answer the following questions: 1.When.
Postwar America ( ) Lesson 3 The Cold War Intensifies.
Cold-War Conflicts And Containment Policy
The Cold War Unit 9.
Global Cold War through 1960
Cold War Under Eisenhower
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
The Cold War Expands.
EISENHOWER ( ) & THE COLD WAR 1.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
SS 30 Cold War - Nuclear Arms Race
Chapter 21, Section 3 The Cold War Expands.
SWBAT: Describe the United States foreign policy at the beginning of the Cold War Do Now: Truman Doctrine.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
Warmup Why did America experience a postwar boom?
Do Now: Read “The Beat Generation” and answer the questions below…
Eisenhower & The Cold War
Chapter 16 The Cold War
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies
Cold War.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
The Cold War.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
Ch 12 Section 3 The Cold War Expands
Lesson 3 The Cold War Intensifies
Early Cold War, Truman, & Eisenhower ( ) 1945—1960
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
From 1945 to 1949, President Truman used containment to successfully stop the spread of communism in Europe Marshall Plan NATO Berlin Airlift Truman Doctrine.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
Global Cold War through 1960
A Race to the Top.
Cold War Definitions.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
Cold War Expands Group Questions.
Cold War Containment.
Watch the following Public Service Announcement from 1951.
Cold War TimeLine Project
The Cold War Expands.
Objectives Describe the causes and results of the arms race between the United States and Soviet Union. Explain how Eisenhower’s response to communism.
Aim: How did the United States and the international community respond to Soviet expansion after World War II? Textbook Assignment: Read pages 822 – 827.
What are the Cold War policies of the 1950s?
Presentation transcript:

The cartoon below is called “Truman Checks Stalin.” During/after which Cold War event was this cartoon likely created? What is the cartoonist’s point of view on the U.S. strategy?

During the early years of the Cold War, the United States’ strategy was containment. Give at least two examples of the containment policy, and explain the cartoonists’ point of view on the policy.

By 1953, the U.S. Cold War strategy began to shift from containment to brinkmanship with Eisenhower’s willingness to take the country to the brink of all-out nuclear war. What event(s) depicted in this cartoon encouraged this policy shift?

Under President Eisenhower, the U.S. promised “massive retaliation” if the Soviet Union were to invade Western Europe. This led to the concept of “mutually assured destruction.” Based on the circumstances in the 1950s and the cartoon below, provide a definition of “mutually assured destruction.”

During/after what event was this political cartoon likely created? Explain the significance of the event and the cartoonists’ point of view on the American response.

In the late 1950s, the Cold War expanded to another dimension. Assuming this cartoon was created in 1957, to what event do you think the cartoon is responding, and what does the cartoon say about the United States’ strategy?

The two men arm-wrestling are Nikita Kruschev and John F. Kennedy. What is the message of this cartoon? During which Cold War event do you think this cartoon was created? Explain your answer!