Cold War and Globalization
The Cold War, and the U.S. And Asia and Globalization
What was meant by the Cold War? Before defining the cold war, authors Bentley and Ziegler go into great depth to lay the foundation for the origins of the Cold War. More than sixty million people perished during WWII (965), including twenty million Soviets, fifteen million Chinese, six million Poles, four million Germans, two million Japanese, three hundred thousand Americans and four hundred thousand English. The Holocaust, meantime, resulted in the slaughter of nearly six million Jews of European ancestry.
At the end of WWII, approximately eight million Germans fled their native land to apparently avoid the torture they believed they would receive at the hands of the marauding Soviets, who "pillaged and raped with abandon in Berlin" (966). On top of those eight million people who were displaced, there were an estimated twelve million prisoners of war of both German and Soviet extraction "making their way home," and in addition were the "survivors of work and death camps and three million refugees from the Balkan lands." Where would these people wind up? And whose side would they be on, as the new boundaries would play out?
To lay the groundwork for the post-war boundaries that would be drawn, it is important to know that Hitler believed he would win the war because he couldn't imagine an alliance of America, England, and the communist Soviet Union. But war and politics make "strange bedfellows," as the saying goes, and Hitler was in error.
Meantime, during the last days of the war, it was clear that Stalin wanted to conquer much of Eastern Europe for his own empire-building scheme, and he did just that. And even though the Yalta conference in February 1945 was a place to keep the glue in place that cemented the allies against the Nazis, Stalin had his way, and there was no way he would be turned away from his passion to install communism in the territories his armies had conquered.
To begin with, the Soviets took the eastern parts of Germany, and the U.S., Britain and France occupied the western sections of Germany. Right there were post-war tensions set up ready to be played out. And when U.S. President Harry Truman issued his "Truman Doctrine" on the 12th of March, 1947, the beginnings of the Cold War were seen very clearly. Truman (967) described what American wanted for the territories it was in control of in Europe as: "...based upon the will of the majority...distinguished by free institutions, representative government, free elections, guarantees of individual liberty, freedom of speech and religion, and freedom from political oppression."
The "second way of life" Truman described was based on "the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the majority." That minority will "relies upon terror and repression, a controlled press and radio, fixed elections, and the suppression of personal freedoms." So, even though the Soviets worked hand-in-hand with America to crush Hitler, now it was a whole new ballgame in Europe. America sent "vast sums of money to Greece and Turkey," and the world was "polarized into two armed camps," those supported by the U.S. And those under control of the communist Soviet Union.
America also sent $13 billion to "reconstruct western Europe" under the Marshall Plan in 1948. In 1949, the U.S. established NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), which in effect, was the military coalition to attempt to stem Soviet aggression in Europe. To offset that alliance, the Soviets established the "Warsaw Pact" - which included a military group of seven communist Eastern European nations - and the cold war was on.
The word "cold" is used (968) as a definition to indicate that there were no bullets fired for the most part; rather, the cold war was "characterized by ideological and propaganda campaigns," particularly when the Soviets joined the atomic power club (1949) hitherto the exclusive domain of the U.S. (The Cold War did heat up considerably in the period 1950-1953, during the Korean Conflict between the U.S. And communists.)
What would be the reasons for the Soviet Union the U.S. To believe that the other one started the cold war? Once peace was established in Europe and Asia, the "one-time partners [America and the Soviets] increasingly sacrificed cooperation for their own national interests" (975). This is historically logical that they would do that, because the authors point out that it is a long-standing tradition for warring nations to take control of the territories they have conquered. And so, dividing up the "spoils" as it were, after defeating the Nazis, was a natural occurrence for both sides, and after all, "At the heart of the cold war lay an ideological...
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