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History 171D The United States and the World Since 1945
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The Early Years of the Cold War
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Textbook versions
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The Early Years of the Cold War
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Situation by fall of 1945: Germany and Japan totally defeated in WWII
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Situation by fall of 1945: Germany and Japan totally defeated in WWII
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Situation by fall of 1945: US sole possessor of atom bomb
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Situation by fall of 1945: Germany under US, British, French, and Soviet occupation
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Situation by fall of 1945: Eastern Europe under Soviet occupation
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Situation by fall of 1945: Joseph Stalin of USSR was starting to renege on pledge made at Yalta Conference (Feb 1945) to allow Eastern Europe to develop democratically
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April 1945— Roosevelt died and was succeeded by Harry Truman
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Summer 1945—United Nations launched in San Franciso
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Disagreement among Germany’s occupiers
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Stalin’s February 1946 speech
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February 1946— George Kennan sent “Long Telegram” to Washington
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Kennan’s message further refined in “X Article” in Foreign Affairs, 1947— “containment doctrine”
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March 1946—Former British prime minister Winston Churchill delivered “Iron Curtain” speech
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What about the Bomb?
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1946—US proposed, and USSR rejected, Baruch Plan Bernard Baruch
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East: Ahmed QavamJoseph Stalin Iran crisis, 1946
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East: Turkish Straits crisis, 1946 USS Missouri
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East: Turkish and Greek crises, 1947 Greek civil war
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East:
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Greek civil war
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Early Cold War crises in Middle and Near East: Truman Doctrine, 1947
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Severe economic crisis in Western Europe, 1946-1947
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1947—Secretary of State George Marshall proposed “Marshall Plan” for recovery of Europe
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1947—Secretary of State George Marshall proposed “Marshall Plan” for recovery of Europe Marshall Plan was rejected by Soviet and Eastern European governments
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1948-1952— Marshall Plan totaled $13.5 billion
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1948— In Italian elections, Palmiro Togliatti (Communist) ran against PM Alcide De Gasperi (Christian Democrat) Togliatti De Gasperi
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Roscoe Hillenkoetter, first CIA director
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1948— In Italian elections, Palmiro Togliatti (Communist) ran against PM Alcide De Gasperi (Christian Democrat) Togliatti De Gasperi
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1948— In Italian elections, Palmiro Togliatti (Communist) ran against PM Alcide De Gasperi (Christian Democrat) Togliatti De Gasperi CIA covertly supported De Gasperi, who won election
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Joseph Stalin
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Spring 1948— Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia Czech Communist Party (KSC) propaganda poster
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Allied Occupation of Germany Berlin crisis, 1948-1949
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... Leading to political division of Germany and Berlin Berlin crisis, 1948-1949
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Summer 1948— Stalin imposed blockade on West Berlin
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Berlin crisis, 1948-1949 Gen. Lucius Clay
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Berlin crisis, 1948-1949 1948-1949—US and Britain airlifted supplies into West Berlin
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Berlin crisis, 1948-1949 May 1949—Stalin lifted blockade
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1949—US, Britain, France, Canada, Italy, and several other Western European nations formed North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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US Occupation of Japan 1945-1947—General Douglas McArthur instituted democratization and land reform on Japan, started to break up industrial monopolies (zaibatsu)
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US Occupation of Japan 1947—McArthur took “reverse course” and ended reform effort; US instead sought to build Japan up as Cold War ally MacArthur and Japanese Emperor Hirohito
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Truman and Marshall
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Shock #1: The “Loss” of China, 1949 Chiang Kai-shek Three shocks of 1949-1950: Mao Tse-tung
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Shock #1: The “Loss” of China, 1949 Three shocks of 1949-1950:
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Secretary of State Dean Acheson
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Shock #2: Soviet detonation of atom bomb Three shocks of 1949-1950:
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Shock #3: Korean War Three shocks of 1949-1950:
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