The Cold War under Eisenhower. New Leaders Truman vs. Eisenhower (New Look)  “Containment” – George Kennan  Marshall Plan  Truman Doctrine  Berlin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Eisenhower Years The Global Cold War.
Advertisements

Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Two Nations Live on the Edge
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Impacts of the Cold War on National Security. 2 Brinkmanship Defined as willingness to push nation to the “brink” of nuclear war to keep peace. Policy.
Chapter 18: Cold War Conflicts Section 4: Two Nations Live on the Edge.
The Cold War Key Events and Policies. Key U.S. Policies ► Containment ► Collective Security ► Deterrence (MAD) ► Foreign Aid ► Defense build up, race.
Chapter 26 – Section 4: Two Nations Live on the Edge
John Dulles Secretary of State Critical of Truman “New look” foreign policy Challenge USSR and China Liberate captive Eastern European nations Encourage.
UNITED STATES TRIES TO CONTAIN SOVIETS Chapter 17 Section 1 Part 2.
1945 – 1991 The Cold War. Difference in Ideologies CapitalismCommunism Property Ownership Social Objectives Economic Objective Political System.
COLD WAR CONFLICTS TWO NATIONS LIVE ON THE EDGE. REVIEW US and Soviet Union become suspicious of each other Germany is split into democratic West and.
COLD WAR TIMELINE OF EVENTS
Do Now4/29/15 Get out your Vietnam Station Notes that you took Thursday and Friday of last week. Also – get your timeline from the front of the room.
The Politics of the Eisenhower Era APUSH Essential Question: In what way was Dwight Eisenhower's foreign policy different than that of Harry Truman?
Postwar America. American History Chapter 26-1 The Eisenhower Era.
The Continuing Cold War “I have here in my hand a list of 205 (people) who were known to the secretary of state as being members of the Communist Party.
Two Nations Live on the Edge. Brinksmanship Rules US Policy After the Soviet Union exploded their first atomic bomb, the nuclear arms race began Truman.
 Unit 9.6.  Idea from League of Nations and Atlantic Charter  Begins in 1945  General Assembly  Security Council – 15 nations o Permanent members.
11 the USSR exploded its first atomic bomb in Cold War tensions increased in the USSR when the US exploded its first hydrogen bomb in It was.
18.4 Two Nations Live on the Edge By: Sasha/Ira Hudson and Riley Hewitt.
The Cold War Cold War Defined First used in 1947 Political, economic and propaganda war between US and Soviet Union Fought through surrogates.
Eisenhower & The Cold War Foreign Policy,
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.
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies Election  Ready for a change in leadership  Soviet Union tested an atomic bomb  China fell to communism 
Two Nations Live on the Edge. Nuclear Arms Race Heats Up Soviets explode an atomic bomb U.S. wants something more powerful – the hydrogen bomb –Atomic.
EQ: What events led to tension between the U.S. and Soviet Union during the 1950’s?
The Cold War Begins Section 1: Origins of the Cold War A Clash of Interests Soviet Security Concerns American Economic Concerns The Yalta Conference.
Two Nations Live on the Edge Chapter 18, Section 4 Notes.
Two Nations Live on the Edge Chapter Brinkmanship Rules US Policy Race for the hydrogen bomb Arms race The policy of brinkmanship – Eisenhower Secretary.
Cold War Policy Cold War Policy
Cold War under Eisenhower G w.youtube.com/watc h?v=DkvfcA lujZ0 w.youtube.com/watc h?v=DkvfcA lujZ0 G w.youtube.com/watc.
Chapter 17 Section 1 Section 1 The Cold War The Cold War.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute April 14, 2011 U.S. History Mr. Green.
Chapter 18 Section 4 Two Nations live on the Edge We did Containment in Europe.
How would you define Arms Race? (in your own words)
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies Chapter 15, Section 4.
The Cold War Around the World. Nuclear Age ► hydrogen bomb (H-bomb): the fusion of hydrogen atoms created a nuclear weapon 150x more powerful than the.
Eisenhower and the Cold War Brinksmanship John Foster Dulles – Eisenhower’s Sec. of State Brinksmanship- the US could prevent the spread of.
Ch 16.1 the Eisenhower era. ELECTION OF 1952 – TRUMAN DOESN’T RUN.
25.3 The Cold War Expands. Race for the H-Bomb Hydrogen Bomb - thermonuclear device possibly 1,000x stronger than atomic bomb Soviets test A-bomb in 1949.
Two Nations Live on the Edge Two Nations Live on the Edge.
The Cold War [ ]: An Ideological Struggle Soviet & Eastern Bloc Nations [“Iron Curtain”] US & the Western Democracies GOAL  spread world- wide.
26-4: Two Nations live on the Edge. 1. The USSR exploded its first atomic bomb in 1949 – An arms race begins How did the U.S. react and why? The U.S.
Bellringer  Complete a point of view analysis of:
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies
Unit 6 Section 9 The Cold War Heats Up
Nations on Edge The Cold War Chapter 26.
Two nations on the edge The Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union intensifies.
EARLY COLD WAR Major Events 1940s – 1950s.
Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies Pgs. 554 – 559
President Dwight D. Eisenhower & the Cold War
The Cold War Abroad US Foreign Policy:
AIM: What is brinkmanship?
#17 Ch 18 S 4 Details: Notes & Read Ch 18 S 4 _____________.
EARLY COLD WAR Major Events 1940s – 1950s.
Living on the Edge: 1950s Brinksmanship
WARM UP Answer the following questions:
Eisenhower’s Cold War Policies
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Lesson 3 The Cold War Intensifies
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
The Cold War Expands.
Vocabulary/Identification
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
Eisenhower’s Foreign Policy.
The Cold War: Two Nations Live on the Edge
Presentation transcript:

The Cold War under Eisenhower

New Leaders

Truman vs. Eisenhower (New Look)  “Containment” – George Kennan  Marshall Plan  Truman Doctrine  Berlin Airlift  NATO  NSC – 68  Korean War  “Brinksmanship” – John Foster Dulles  Massive retaliation  HUGE LIMITS  “On the brink” of nuclear war  Mutual Security Agreements  Domino Theory  CIA – spies  Eisenhower Doctrine Identify some glaring flaws with Dulles’ policies

 Asks USA for help  Ike says NO  USSR will stop at nothing for Eastern Europe  Uses CIA Hungarian Uprising People of Hungry have revolted and overthrown Communist Gov. Ask USA for help. What should Ike do? What do you think he did?

Identify US involvement in these regions

Involvement in the Third World – Iran and Guatemala  Iran – OIL  Mohammed Mossadegh – makes oil private (Soviet Friendly)  Cuts off USA  US supports Mohammed Reza Shah Rahlavi  Shah of Iran returns to power – friendly with the West  WHAT ARE THE FUTURE EFFECTS OF THIS ON THE USA?  Guatemala – Land  Gov. gives lands to peasants = communism  CIA trains army  Army leader becomes dictator

Geneva Summit  Temporarily divide Vietnam  Ike continues supporting South Vietnam  SEATO (South Eastern Atlantic Treaty Organization) – symbolic

Suez Crisis  Adbel Nasser is neutral  Dulles doesn’t like it  seizes Suez Canal  France and GB ally with Israel – USA NO  Eisenhower Doctrine  Protect middle east

The Space Race: Sputnik 1 – 0 USSR

First man in Space: 2 – 0 USSR

U-2 Spy Incident (1960)  Camp David – Khrushchev and Ike meet  CIA makes secret flights over USSR, U-2 planes (after they said no)  Bad secret  USSR knows  Francis Gary Powers is shot down by USSR  USSR is angered  Ike lies and doesn’t apologize  Tensions are at an all time high

Impact of Eisenhower: Did the policies of Eisenhower make you feel safer?  Narrow Minded (No Morality)  Escalated Arms Race  Escalated Tension Neutral Not safe Safe