cold war in the 1950’s

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Do-Now Please use Chapter 26 Section 4 to begin answering the questions on the guided notes worksheet you’ve been provided. Friday, May 15 Friday, May 15 th th Agenda Wrap-up of the Cold War Homework Study for Tuesday’s test… If you want extra credit on your review sheets, you must complete them by Monday. (Make sure you can

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Cold War in the 1950’s. Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes president in 1953 brings in a new Era of the Cold War Secretary of State is John Foster Dulles Harsh, driven anti-communist Disagreed with Truman’s “containment” policy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cold War in the 1950’s

Do-Now Please use Chapter 26 Section 4 to begin

answering the questions on the guided notes worksheet you’ve been provided.

Friday, May 15Friday, May 15thth

Agenda• Wrap-up of the Cold War

HomeworkStudy for Tuesday’s test… If you want extra credit on your review sheets, you must complete them by Monday.(Make sure you can answer the questions on the back of your notes sheets from today)

Page 2: Cold War in the 1950’s
Page 3: Cold War in the 1950’s

Cold War in the 1950’sCold War in the 1950’s

• Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes president in 1953 – brings in a new Era of the Cold War

• Secretary of State is John Foster Dulles– Harsh, driven anti-communist– Disagreed with Truman’s “containment” policy– Wishes instead to push back Communism from where it already exists

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Eisenhower & Dulles

• Eisenhower moderates– Going against Dulles, he will not condone interference in

Polish, East German, and Hungarian uprisings against the Soviets

– Does not want to risk war with the soviets

Page 5: Cold War in the 1950’s

Southeast AsiaSoutheast Asia• July 1953, as promised, Ike brings an end to the

Korean War– Stalin’s death and replacement by more moderate

leadership helps

• US begins to offer aid to support France in its push to regain control of its colony, Vietnam– International conference divides Vietnam like Korea– North becomes Communist– US provides aid to South Vietnam, but stops there… for

now…

Page 6: Cold War in the 1950’s

Middle East

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Middle EastMiddle East• 1930’s – 1940’s, many Jews seek safety in Palestine

due to the Holocaust– Biblical home of Jewish people, now controlled by Brits

• 1947, increased pressure to turn Palestine into a Jewish state– British turn to the UN for a resolution– UN creates two states

• 1 Jewish (Israel)• 1 Arab

• Arabs attack to regain their homeland– UN has to mediate new borders again

Page 8: Cold War in the 1950’s

Middle EastMiddle East

• 1952, a nationalist leader gains control of Iran – US fears this new leader may make the oil-rich state

vulnerable to Soviet control

• US backs Iranian group attempting to overthrow the government – Succeed in re-install a pro-American government to power

Page 9: Cold War in the 1950’s

Middle EastMiddle East

• Suez Crisis (1956)– Egypt’s ruler, Gamal Abdel Nasser, seeks Soviet support

• US and GB cut off their financial aid to Egypt

– Nassar responds by cutting off access to British controlled Suez Canal

• US responds to Soviet’s threat of dire consequences– persuades NATO allies to withdraw from Egypt– Egypt retains control of the Canal

Page 10: Cold War in the 1950’s

Eisenhower DoctrineEisenhower Doctrine

• US takes steps toward deal with future Soviet influence in the Middle East

• Eisenhower Doctrine– Said the US would use force to “safeguard the

independence of any country or group of countries in the Middle East requesting aid against [Communist-inspired] aggression.”

– Later used this to justify sending troops to Lebanon to crush a revolt against pro-American government there

Page 11: Cold War in the 1950’s

Latin America• Support also went to pro-American governments & to

suppress Communism in Latin America… why?– Economics, mainly… American companies had large

investments in at least 10 nations in the region• For example, the US…– sent support to Nicaragua and Honduras to protect/install

leaders who would protect American interests there– helped overthrow the gov’t in Guatemala when its leaders

became sympathetic to radical causes, this CIA takeover restored access to valuable fruit plantations

– Fueled Soviet perceptions that the US escalated the war– Rio Pact & Organization of American States (OAS)

• 1947-48, a regional defense alliance & pledge of cooperation

Page 12: Cold War in the 1950’s

The Arms Race• Expanding the arsenals– Cold war competition for power only increased in intensity

in the 1950’s• Deterrence– policy begun by Truman, aimed to make US (and allied)

military power so strong that no enemy would attack, for fear of retaliation

• Not 1 year after US developed a Hydrogen bomb, the soviets had as well– Tests of this bomb indicated the radiation could cause

severe burns to people over 90miles away– Hydrogen bombs are 750x more powerful than atomic

used in WWII

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The Arms Race

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The Arms Race• Brinkmanship– US began using the fear of nuclear war to achieve

their objectives (esp. the Eisenhower administration)

– 1956, Secretary of State John F. Dulles • said that getting to the brink of war without going over

was a necessary art• “If you are scared to go to the brink, you are lost”

– Reaction:• “I am shocked that the SoS is willing to play Russian

roulette with the life of our nation.”

Page 16: Cold War in the 1950’s

The Arms Race

• US relied primarily on airplanes to transport the H-bombs to their targets– Soviets are working to make their own H-bombs

• Soviets have the Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles– US lags behind on development of missiles

• Then uh-ohhh…– Soviets use one of their rockets to launch Sputnik, the first

artificial satellite to orbit earth– Americans shocked and fearful of the possibilities

Page 17: Cold War in the 1950’s

The U-2 Incident

(Not such a beautiful day)• May 1960, soviets use a guided missile to take down

American spy plane over their territory– The planes were over 15 miles high, thought to be untouchable– This event shattered American confidence– Motivated more Americans that we needed to devote ourselves to the

arms race

• Eisenhower’s “permanent armaments industry of vast proportions”… i.o.w. the preoccupation with building a war industry and military capacity could threaten peace

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“Our arms must be mighty, ready for instant action… we recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications.. [in] government, we must guard against the acquisition of the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”

-Dwight D. Eisenhower, Farewell Address, 1961