Lecture 12: The Cold War
We live today in what is often called a post-Cold War
world. This is markedly different from the situation of the previous
generation, when bi-polar diplomacy was the framework for international
relations and international communism served as an external enemy defining
American ideology by contrast. This lecture helps us understand the world of
the generation of Americans immediately previous to today's by relating the
origins of the Cold War with the Soviet Union
during the Truman years and carrying the story through the Eisenhower and
Kennedy years.
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Introduction
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The alliance between the U.S.
and the Soviet Union, so important to the prosecution of the war against Germany,
deteriorated after the war into rivalry and conflict between international
communism and the western democracies.
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Truman and the Cold War
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President Truman sought to rally and mobilize
the American response to Communist expansionism. The Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, and NATO were key elements
of his effort. The conflict and
rivalry of this time defined the nature of the Cold War.
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Asia and Korea
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The so-called “loss of China”
to communism stood in counterpoint to apparent American success at
containing communism in Europe. Acting in concert with the United
Nations, the U.S. sought
to enforce containment in Korea—with
limited success, in a limited war.
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Cold War Blues
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The realities of the Cold War produced disgruntlement
among Americans, who went through a Second Red Scare. The Eisenhower administration promised a
more vigorous response to Communist expansionism. At home, the Cold War was an influence on
American hopes, habits, and fears.
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Cold War in the 1960s
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The Kennedy administration, too, promised to energize
the crusade against Communism. What
ensued instead was a series of crises—Bay of Pigs,
the Cuban missile crisis, the Berlin Wall.
By the mid-1960s, as the U.S.
began to be seriously involved with the war in Indochina,
there was no end to the Cold War in sight.
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Assignments
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Tocqueville
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Chapter 15, “Future Prospects of the United States.” This chapter contains one of Tocqueville's
most-cited pieces of prophecy, one worth considering in connection with the
Soviet-American rivalry of the Cold War.
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Why does
Tocqueville predict the United
States is to become a great nation?
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How does it
compare in character with Russia?
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WWW
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I have no idea who operates this site, but check out Missiles Away and see
where the missile fields of North
Dakota are. (And ask me about the Minuteman Monument in Lamoure.)
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What did President Kennedy say at the Berlin Wall? And President Reagan?
Find out at this American
Originals page courtesy of the National Archives.
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Film Review
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Dr. Strangelove – amazing dark
comedy of the Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation
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Thirteen Days – 2000 film
based on Robert Kennedy’s book recounting the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962
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Good Night, and Good Luck – through
a focus on Edward R. Murrow, the journalist, the film treats the Second Red
Scare and the red-baiting of Senator Joseph McCarthy
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Book Review
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Gaddis, The Cold War: A New
History
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Frankel, High Noon in the Cold War
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HIST 104DCE Home Page
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