THE COLD WAR
(1945–1963)
Postwar
Tension
In many ways, the Cold
War began even before the guns fell silent in Germany and in the Pacific in
1945. Suspicion and mistrust had defined U.S.-Soviet relations for decades and
resurfaced as soon as the alliance against Adolf Hitler was no longer
necessary. Competing ideologies and visions of the postwar world prevented U.S.
president Harry S Truman and
Soviet premier Joseph Stalin from
working together.
Stalin intended to
destroy Germany’s industrial capabilities in order to prevent the country from
remilitarizing and wanted Germany to pay outrageous sums in war reparations.
Moreover, he wanted to erect pro-Soviet governments throughout Eastern Europe
to protect the USSR from any future invasions. Truman, however, wanted exactly
the opposite. He believed that only industrialization and democracy in Germany
and throughout the continent would ensure postwar stability. Unable to
compromise or find common ground, the world’s two remaining superpowers
inevitably clashed.
Truman’s Postwar
Vision
Truman worked
tirelessly to clean up the postwar mess and establish a new international
order. He helped create the World
Bank and theInternational
Monetary Fund (IMF) and
funded the rebuilding of Japan under General Douglas MacArthur. After prosecuting Nazi war criminals at the Nuremberg trials, Truman in 1947 also
outlined the Marshall Plan,
which set aside more than $10 billion for the rebuilding and
reindustrialization of Germany. The Marshall Plan was so successful that
factories in Western Europe were exceeding their prewar production levels
within just a few years.
Stalin’s Postwar
Vision
Although Stalin joined
with the United States in founding the United Nations, he fought Truman on nearly every other issue. He
protested the Marshall Plan as well as the formation of the World Bank and IMF.
In defiance, he followed through on his plan to create a buffer between the
Soviet Union and Germany by setting up pro-Communist governments in Poland and
other Eastern European countries. As a result, the so-called iron curtain soon divided East
from West in Europe. Stalin also tried unsuccessfully to drive French, British,
and American occupation forces from the German city of Berlin by blocking
highway and railway access. Determined not to let the city fall, Truman ordered
the Berlin airlift to
drop food and medical supplies for starving Berliners.
Containment
The Berlin crisis, as
well as the formation of the Eastern
bloc of Soviet-dominated countries in Eastern Europe, caused
foreign policy officials in Washington to believe that the United States needed
to check Soviet influence abroad in order to prevent the further spread of
Communism. In 1947,
Truman incorporated this desire for containment into his Truman Doctrine, which vowed to support free nations fighting
Communism. He and Congress then pledged $400 million to fighting Communist
revolutionaries in Greece and Turkey. In 1949, Truman also convinced the Western European
powers to join the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization(NATO), so that they might mutually defend themselves
against the danger of Soviet invasion. Threatened, the USSR sponsored a similar
treaty of its own in Eastern Europe, called the Warsaw Pact, in 1955.
Truman at Home
In the domestic policy
arena, Truman signed the National
Security Act in 1947 to restructure America’s defenses for
the new Communist threat. The act reorganized the military under the new office
of the secretary of defense and
the new Joint Chiefs of Staff.
It also created the National
Security Council to advise the president on global affairs and the Central Intelligence Agency to
conduct espionage. Truman’s leadership in confronting the Soviet Union and
rebuilding Europe convinced Democrats to nominate him again for the 1948 election.
His Fair Deal domestic
policies and support for civil rights, however, divided the Republican Party
and nearly cost Truman the election.
Red Hunts
Developments in
Eastern Europe, the fall of China to
Communist revolutionaries in 1949, and the Soviet Union’s development of
nuclear weapons terrified Americans, who feared that Communists would try to
infiltrate or attack the United States from within. Congressman Richard M. Nixon and the House Un-American Activities Committee led
the earliest Red hunts for
Communists in the government, which culminated with the prosecution of federal
employee Alger Hiss and
the executions of suspected spies Julius
and Ethel Rosenberg. Truman initially supported these inquiries and even
established a Loyalty Review Board to
assist in the search. He eventually began to express concern, however, that the
Red hunts were quickly devolving into witch hunts.
The Korean War
Cold War tensions
between the United States and the USSR eventually exploded in Korea when Soviet-backed North
Korea invaded South Korea in 1950. Determined not to let Communism spread in
East Asia, Truman quadrupled military spending and ordered General MacArthur to
retake the southern half of the peninsula. MacArthur succeeded and then pushed
the North Koreans almost up to the Chinese border. Threatened, over a million
soldiers from Communist China poured into Korea, forcing MacArthur to retreat
back to the 38th
parallel, which had originally divided North Korea from South Korea.
When MacArthur began
to criticize Truman publicly for his unwillingness to use nuclear weapons in
Korea, Truman was forced to fire his top general for insubordination. United
States forces remained entrenched at the 38th parallel for two more years, at the cost of
more than 50,000 American
lives. Both sides declared a cease-fire only after the new U.S. president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, threatened to
use nuclear weapons in 1953.
Postwar Prosperity
Eisenhower’s election
in 1952 ushered
in an unprecedented era of economic growth and prosperity in the United States.
The average national income doubled during the 1950s and then doubled again the
following decade, primarily due to continued defense spending and to the 1944 Montgomery G.I. Bill, which helped
returning veterans buy homes and go back to school. The postwar “baby boom” contributed to
population growth, while the Great
Migrationof African-Americans to northern cities, “white flight” from the cities to
the suburbs, and the rush to the Sun
Belt altered population demographics. By 1960, most
American families had a car, a television, and a refrigerator and owned their
own home. Popular television sitcoms like Leave
It to Beaver and Ozzie and Harrietglamorized suburbia and
consumerism.
Creeping Socialism
“Ike” Eisenhower had
entered the White House determined to block the creation of new social welfare
programs, which he called“creeping
socialism.” He did
not, however, cut federal funding from existing New Deal programs. In fact, he
expanded Social Securityand
the Federal Housing Administration and
even set aside tens of millions of dollars for the creation of the first interstates under theFederal Highway Act. Still a
conservative, though, Eisenhower refused to endorse the blossoming civil rights movement and signed
the Landrum-Griffin Act,
also known as the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, in the wake of
numerous AFL-CIO labor
union scandals in the mid-1950s.
McCarthyism
First-term Wisconsin
Republican senator Joseph McCarthy,
meanwhile, exploded onto the national political scene in 1950, when he
accused more than 200 federal employees of being Communists. Even though
McCarthy had no proof to support these claims, Americans supported his
endeavors to find more “Soviet agents” hiding in Washington. Thousands of
former New Dealers and Red-hunt critics from all walks of life were wrongfully
persecuted. McCarthy’s influence eventually waned after he humiliated himself
during the nationally televised Army-McCarthy hearings in 1954.
Ike’s New Look
In addition to halting
“creeping socialism” at home, Eisenhower also wanted to “roll back” Communist advances
abroad. Along with Vice President Richard
M. Nixon and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Eisenhower devised a New Look at foreign policy that
emphasized the use of nuclear weapons, rather than conventional weapons and
troops, to contain Communism. Eisenhower threatened the USSR with “massive retaliation,” or nuclear war, against Soviet
aggression or the spread of Communism.
Eisenhower also made
full use of the newly created CIA to
help overthrow unfriendly governments in developing countries. He resolved the Suez crisis peacefully before it
led to war and committed American funds to fighting Ho Chi Minh’s pro-Communist forces in Vietnam after the French defeat
at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. The Soviet launch of the Sputnik satellites in 1957 started
the space race, prompting Eisenhower
to create the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA),
and sign theNational Defense Education
Act. In his farewell address in 1961, he warned Americans of the growing military-industrial complex that
threatened to restrict civil liberties and dominate American foreign policy
making.
Kennedy and the New
Frontier
Facing term limits,
Eisenhower endorsed Vice President Richard
Nixon for the Republican presidential nomination in 1960. Democrats
countered with World War II hero and Massachusetts senator John F. Kennedy. After a close race,
Kennedy defeated Nixon, thanks in large part to the African-American vote and
Kennedy’s polished performance in the first-ever televised presidential debates.
As president, Kennedy
pushed for a package of new social welfare spending programs that he called the New Frontier. Hoping to inspire a new
generation of young Americans, he told them to “ask not what your country can
do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” Republicans and conservative
southern Democrats, however, blocked most New Frontier legislation in Congress.
Flexible Response
Because Eisenhower’s
threat of “massive retaliation” had proved too stringent and binding, Kennedy
and his foreign policy team devised a new doctrine of “flexible response” designed to
give the president more options to fight Communism.
In addition, Kennedy
committed thousands of American troops to South Vietnam to support Ngo Dinh Diem’s corrupt regime but
claimed the troops were merely “military advisors.” In Latin America, Kennedy
took a different approach, funneling millions of dollars into the Alliance for Progress to thwart
Communists by ending poverty. Despite the new doctrine, Kennedy was unable to
prevent Soviet premier Nikita
Khrushchev from constructing the Berlin Wall in1961.
The Cuban Crises
Kennedy’s greatest
Cold War challenge came in Cuba.
Hoping to topple Cuba’s new pro-Communist revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro, Kennedy authorized the
CIA to train and arm a force of more than 1,000 Cuban exiles and sent them to invade Cuba
in the spring of 1961. When this Bay
of Pigs invasion failed embarrassingly, Kennedy authorized several
unsuccessful assassination attempts against Castro. Outraged, Castro turned to
the USSR for economic aid and protection.
Khrushchev capitalized
on the opportunity and placed several nuclear missiles in Cuba. Kennedy
consequently blockaded the island nation, pushing the United States and the
USSR to the brink of nuclear war. Khrushchev ended the terrifying Cuban missile crisiswhen he agreed to
remove the missiles in exchange for an end to the blockade. Kennedy also
removed American missiles from Turkey and agreed to work on reducing Cold War
tensions. Tragically, Kennedy was assassinated in late 1963, just as tensions
were rising in Vietnam—which would prove to be the next, and most costly,
theater of the Cold War.
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