Baltimore Polytechnic Institute April 11, 2011 U.S. History Mr. Green.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 26 Section 1 The U.S. and the U.S.S.R were allies but Different political systems (see the next two slides). Stalin signed the Non-Aggression.
Advertisements

Origins of the Cold War U.S. vs. Soviet Union We may be likened to two scorpions in a bottle, each capable of killing the other, but only at the risk of.
Chapter 18 Section 1 Origins of the Cold War.
List 5 words that come to mind when you think of the Cold War…
Cold War #6: Money Talks 1.The Cold War was the conflict between these 2 nations. 2.This organization is designed to keep world peace. 3.This is the nickname.
Objectives Trace the reasons that the wartime alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union unraveled. Explain how President Truman responded.
 Attended by Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin. 1. Creation of the United Nations. 2. Stalin agrees to enter the Pacific war after the defeat of Germany.
3/25 Focus: Important Terms: Do Now:
US History II Chapter 26 Cold War Conflicts Section 1 Origins of the Cold War.
How did both, capitalist and communist, coexist after World War 2? 1.The World After World War 2 -Yalta Conference -United Nations -Growing resistance.
Cold War: Superpowers Face Off Yalta Conference February 1945 meeting of Churchill, Roosevelt & Stalin February 1945 meeting of Churchill, Roosevelt.
Good Morning! Bell-Ringer – Define the words on the top of page 965. United Nations iron curtain containment Truman Doctrine Marshall Plan Cold War NATO.
26.1- Origins of the Cold War
Chapter 18: Cold War Conflicts
THE BEGINNINGS OF THE COLD WAR
Cold War Chapter 18 section 1.
Ms. Meeks Exeter High School
Chapter 26 The Cold War.
The Cold War Setting The Scene FDR thought he could “personally handle Stalin”. Churchill had a better understanding, “Germany is finished. The.
The Cold War Begins Ch.19, Section 1. Setting the Scene… Setting the Scene Allied Cooperation was Temporary Stalin is hostile to capitalism and the U.S.
The Cold War Begins Section 1 Trace the reasons that the wartime alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union unraveled. Explain how President.
American History Chapter 19: The Cold War I. Origins of the Cold War.
The Origins of the Cold War
Origins of the Cold War Ch 18 Sec 1. I. Former Allies Clash A. United Nations A. United Nations 1. Objective was to keep world peace. 1. Objective was.
Yalta Conference New United Nations peacekeeping organization Divided Germany Free elections in several Eastern European nations Potsdam Conference Met.
The Cold War Begins. Allies Become Enemies 1. Post-war Problems – During WWII the Soviet Union and the US worked together – When the war ends old hostilities.
With Germany in Between. Allies Become Enemies  There was always tension between capitalists Americans and the communists Soviets during WWII.  This.
The Cold War: The Beginnings. Potsdam Conference Meeting of the Big 3 Stalin took back free elections in Poland and banned democratic parties Soviet Army.
Ch  After WWII-SU controlled most of E. Europe  Stalin wanted Germany weak and divided and control over E. Europe  US and GB wanted united Germany.
Origins of the Cold War How did former allies become enemies after WWII?
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute Honors World History Mr. Green.
Chapter 18 Section 1 Pages
Origins of the Cold War. FDR & the United Nations April 12, 1945 – FDR dies and Harry Truman becomes president of the United States June 26, 1945 – Representatives.
Democracy vs. Communism
Graphic Organizer World Affairs Soviet ViewsAmerican Views.
Chapter 12: The Cold War Section 1- The Cold War Begins
Containment, the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan
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.
18.1 Origins of the Cold War. Former Allies clash  Soviet system of communism  State controlled all property and economic activity  Capitalistic American.
Chapter Differences… United States: Democracy Capitalist economy Leaders elected by voting Competing political parties USSR: Communism Government.
Chapter 26, Section 1. United States vs. Soviet Union United StatesSoviet Union.
The Cold War. The United Nations Following the war, the international community founded the peace keeping organization that was intended to provide a.
American History Chapter 25-1 The Iron Curtain Falls on Europe.
The Cold War. What is a “Cold War?” Ideological conflict between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics during the second half.
Origins of the Cold War BIG IDEAS  MAIN IDEA: The U.S. and the Soviet Union emerged from WWII as two “superpowers” with vastly different political.
THE COLD WAR BEGINS. United States Democracy ● ● The era of confrontation and competition between the U.S. and the Soviet Union when the threat of nuclear.
Chapter 26 Cold War Conflicts Section 1 Origins of the Cold War
Section 1: The Cold War Begins
The Cold War Chapter 26.
Early Cold War Communism vs. Capitalism Who are they?
Two Superpowers Face Off
Chapter 18 section 1 Origins of the Cold War.
Cold War Chapter 18 section 1.
Warm Up – November 28 Test Review.
The Cold War Origins ( ) History Notes 13-1.
Origins of the Cold War 18.1 Notes.
Cold War: World War 3??? US History Objectives:
Soviets Tighten their Grip on Eastern Europe
Ch 18 Sect 1 Origins of the Cold War.
Origins of the Cold War Chapter 18, Section 1.
Aim: Explain How Soviet Domination of Eastern Europe Developed
Vocabulary/Identification
4/6/15 CO: Describe the aftermath of World War Two and the causes of the Cold War.
Beginning of the Cold War Part 2
The Cold War 1945 – 1980’s (ish).
Objectives Trace the reasons that the wartime alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union unraveled. Explain how President Truman responded.
The Roots of the Cold War
Intro to the Cold War.
THE COLD WAR BEGINS.
Presentation transcript:

Baltimore Polytechnic Institute April 11, 2011 U.S. History Mr. Green

The students will explain the breakdown of relations between the United States and the Soviet Union after WWII by identifying U.S. actions made in response to Soviet actions Announcement: Chapter 18/19 Test May 13 Drill: Review the timeline on pages and answer the following: 1. Which occurred first-the Hollywood Ten hearings or the Army-McCarthy hearings? 2. Who was the American president when the Soviets launched Sputnik?

Former Allies Clash Soviet communism state controls all property and economic activity U.S. Capitalist private citizens controlled almost all property and economic activity U.S. kept A-bomb development a secret U.S. waited to open a 2 nd front Potsdam Conference Stalin agreed to free elections in Poland which never happened

Truman did not want to give in to Stalin Stalin wanted to strip Germany of everything U.S. had no damage to the home front Soviets tighten their grip on Eastern Europe Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Poland become satellite nations of U.S.S.R. U.S. established a policy of containment George F. Kennan wrote a policy of containment to block the Soviets’ attempts to spread communism Churchill proclaimed an “iron curtain has descended across the continent”

The Truman Doctrine Truman asked Congress on March 12, 1947 for $400 million dollars to aid Greece and Turkey against a communist takeover U.S. would support free peoples throughout the world who were resisting takeover Marshall Plan U.S. aid to rebuild Europe and prevent communist takeovers Countries that joined had to remove trade barriers and cooperate economically with one another

Berlin Airlift Soviets cut off transportation into West Berlin from May 1948-May 1949 U.S. provided food via air drops to West Berliners U.S. won and Germany divided into 2 East and West Germany NATO Created to prevent an attack from the U.S.S.R. U.S. joined in April 1949-an attack on one is an attack on all 1 st time U.S. entered a military alliance during peacetime

Complete the Guided Reading sheet and submit prior to the end of class.

Should the United States join NATO? Explain your position with evidence from the text.

1. Read Chapter 18 Section 1