Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR CH 26 SEC 1. U.S. VS. SOVIETS Private control Democratic Elections Competing political parties State controlled all economic activity.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR CH 26 SEC 1. U.S. VS. SOVIETS Private control Democratic Elections Competing political parties State controlled all economic activity."— Presentation transcript:

1 ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR CH 26 SEC 1

2 U.S. VS. SOVIETS Private control Democratic Elections Competing political parties State controlled all economic activity Totalitarian gov’t No opposing parties

3 UNITED NATIONS April 25, 1945 representatives of 50 nations met in San Francisco to establish UN. Charter signed on June 26, 1945.

4 POTSDAM Big Three: U.S., Great Britain, and the Soviet Union met at Potsdam near Berlin in July ’45. At previous conference (Yalta), Stalin agreed to allow voting by secret ballot with multi-party system in Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe. Stalin did not keep his promise.

5 I didn’t get the mustache memo! BTW, did they get these chairs at IKEA, I love that place!

6 Oh, so you hold secrets about bomb! I thought we were Allies Harry!!!

7

8 WHY WAS THE FIGHT TO CONTAIN COMMUNISM SO IMPORTANT?

9 NEW WORLD ORDER Create a world of nations with self- determination. Grow economically. Ensure stability in Europe. Reunite Germany, to be more productive.

10 SOVIET POST-WAR Estimated 20 million deaths, half of whom were civilians. Communist governments established in Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Poland. Became known as satellite nations.

11 CONTAINMENT Feb. ’46, George F. Kennan, American diplomat in Moscow proposed containment policy. Prevent any extension of communist rule.

12 “IRON CURTAIN” Taken from a speech given by Winston Churchill in the U.S.. Represented the division of Europe between the East and West.

13

14 COLD WAR: Conflict between the U.S. and Soviet Union in which neither nation directly confronted the other on the battlefield. Dominated global affairs from ’45 until breakup of Soviet Union in ’91.

15 TRUMAN DOCTRINE “…it must be the policy of the United States to support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.”

16 GREECE AND TURKEY Between 1947 and 1950, U.S. sent $400 million in economic and military aid to prevent communist takeover.

17 MARSHALL PLAN In June ’47, Secretary of State George Marshall proposed U.S. provide aid to all European nations that needed it. 16 countries would receive $13 billion in aid over next four years.

18 DIVISION OF GERMANY After WWII, Germany divided into four zones occupied by U.S., Great Britain, and France in the West and Soviet Union in the East. ’48, U.S., Britain and France combined their three zones into one nation.

19

20 STALIN CLOSES OFF BERLIN In June ’48, Stalin closed all highway and rail routes into West Berlin, no food or fuel could reach that part of the city. 2.1 million residents had no food.

21

22 ~Berlin Airlift

23 BLOCKADE LIFTED For 327 days, planes took off and landed every few minutes. 277,000 flights, 2.3 million tons of supplies. What other effect did the airlift have internationally? May 1949, Soviet Union lifted blockade.

24 WESTERN GERMANY FORMED May ’49, western part of Germany officially became a new nation: Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany, including West Berlin) Soviet Union created German Democratic Republic (East Germany, including East Berlin).

25 NATO FORMED Ten Western European nations, including Belgium, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, and Portugal joined U.S. and Canada on April 4, 1949. Defensive military alliance called North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

26

27

28


Download ppt "ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR CH 26 SEC 1. U.S. VS. SOVIETS Private control Democratic Elections Competing political parties State controlled all economic activity."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google