Реферат: When Did The Cold War Begin Essay
Название: When Did The Cold War Begin Essay Раздел: Топики по английскому языку Тип: реферат |
When Did The Cold War Begin? Essay, Research Paper `I would define the Cold War, as a war without battles. ?Although all the other components of war i.e. armies, weapons, propaganda, events etc and two opposing ?sides (the West vs the East) were there, there were no battlefields.? No Generals led their armies to war and no direct conflict ever took place.? However it is difficult to identify a starting point because there was no single action that could be pinpointed as the event that started the Cold War. ?The conflicting ideologies between the sides went back as far as 1917 when Russia had its revolution and because one side was communist and the other believed in democracy, arguments between the leaders could be traced back to that time and possibly, in some cases, even before that.? Russia?s claim to some land areas and desire to expand her borders went back to the days of the Tsars. ?Due to the Second World War both sides had built up substantial arms and had big armies equipped and ready for action. ?In spite of the fact that the Allies had Russia fighting with them during the Second World War this was only after Hitler invaded Russia in 1941 ? until then they had fighting together and Stalin needed rather than wanted Allied help.? Their alliance was based on a mutual desire to beat Hitler rather than being a ?friendly? one. ??????????? The Yalta and Potsdam conferences partly fit this definition as a starting point because the Allied leaders and Stalin met and had conferences where there were some disagreements and some differences became clear. ?However I do not believe Yalta could be seen to be the start of the Cold War because they met to ally themselves and defeat Hitler. ?Promises made to Stalin for pro-Russian governments to be set up in some countries after the war were made to ensure Russia remained on their side and were not meant to be seen as an excuse to take over Poland etc and make them communist. Their primary concern was the defeat of Hitler and most features of the Cold War were not evident at this time. ?On the other hand big differences in policy became very much apparent at Potsdam. ?In particular the agreement at Yalta that Stalin could set up pro-Soviet governments in Eastern Europe after the war became a major source of concern to President Truman who did not trust Stalin to keep to the original wording of the agreement.? He was also unhappy about future Russian intentions and worried that Russia would not withdraw from countries they occupied as promised. ?Stalin in his turn did not trust the West who had kept the atomic bomb a secret from him and he wanted huge compensation from Germany to help rebuild Russia. ?Truman did not want to repeat the mistakes made at the end of World War One and resisted.? He was fearful that crippling the German economy as Stalin wanted would lead to German Nationalism and the rise of the Fascists once more. ?However, some features were missing at this stage. For example, the propaganda, which played such a huge part in the Cold War, was virtually non-existent in mid 1945. ?Stalin was still ?Uncle Joe? to millions and the truth about Stalin?s communism and its effect on the Russian people was still not fully known. ?The backing of other countries armies in wars such as in Korea, was also not a part of the superpower?s foreign policy at Potsdam and the working through other groups of countries against the opponent only came fully into being later.? ??????????? Other events also fit the definition to some extent. ?For example the Truman doctrine was an open statement by America that they would help countries threatened by Communism to stay democratic. ?In addition his Marshall Aid plan which put $17 billion in a ?pot? to help Europe rebuild her economy was rejected by Stalin who believed it to be anti ? Communist and that it might weaken his hold on Eastern Europe.? Truman?s policies were openly opposed to Russia and communism. ?Open ideological battles became very apparent after Potsdam and the Berlin blockade only served to heighten the tension between the East and West. ?Stalin was forced to back down when he realised that without open war he could not win.? It was obvious to him that the West would not give up the part of Berlin that they controlled.? The fact that they put all their efforts into relieving the people living there with food and supplies being dropped every three minutes showed him that even though he had blockaded Berlin they were unwilling to let him just walk in and take over the whole city. ?This was a major victory for the West and meant that until the end of the Cold War Russia only ever had part of Berlin and the West had a ?foothold? in Russian controlled territory. ?The formation of NATO in 1949 as a Western alliance and the Warsaw Pact of 1955 were also very important events in the Cold War.? The major countries in Europe who had not been neutral during the war were effectively divided into two camps.? The NATO countries being backed by the USA on the one side and the Warsaw Pact by Russia.? The two ?Super Powers? had divided Europe by the end of the 1950s and this would, in time, spread to virtually the rest of the world. ? ??????????? However, all of the elements seem to be in place by the time of Korea in 1950 (with the exception of the Warsaw Pact). ?By then Germany had divided in two and the democratic Republic of Germany had been created in September 1949. ?The previous month Russia had exploded their first Atomic bomb giving them an equal threat to the West. ?Neither side wanted or could risk a nuclear war. ?The division of Europe by the so-called ?Iron Curtain? was well established and the Communists had a firm hold on power in the Eastern countries.? Propaganda campaigns were under way with each side trying to undermine the other. ?The policy of placing spies in embassies in each other?s countries took on greater importance as each side tried to find out the capabilities of the other and whether there was a risk of all out conflict.? Each side was suspicious of the other and knowing that they both held nuclear weapons made them fearful of a war.? ??????????? Therefore I conclude that the Cold War was definitely under way by the end of the Potsdam Conference. ?However, it is much harder to say exactly when it began because no shots were fired, no battles and no single event that could be pinpointed as the absolute beginning. The Truman doctrine specifically wanted to contain the spread of Communism and could be taken as an openly hostile act by Russia. ?The first overtly threatening action was the blockade of Berlin but there were already growing tensions before. The formation of NATO to safeguard Western Europe was too late to be the beginning of the Cold War but it was a significant act.? From a historian?s point of view it may be simper to take Potsdam as the start because it was there that Truman and Stalin became suspicious of one another and their motives and each realised that Europe would, in all probability, end up divided. ?With Stalin controlling Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Hungary, Poland and East Germany while the rest, excluding Albania which was Communist but not directly under Russian control, remained as democracies. |