c4.1(2) the cold war 1945 – 1991 state of high tension between u.s. / u.s.s.r. (russia)

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C4.1(2) The Cold War •1945 – 1991 •State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

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Page 1: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

The Cold War• 1945 – 1991• State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

Page 2: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)
Page 3: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

•Origins• After WWII• USSR and U.S. two main powers• Capitalism / Democracy v. Communism

Page 4: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

•Capitalism• Private property• Private ownership• Personal freedom is widespread

•Communism• Gov’t own property• No private ownership• Personal freedom is severely limited

Page 5: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

•Conflict in the Cold War•Korean War (1950-1953)

Page 6: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

• Suez Crisis (1956)

Page 7: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

• The Vietnam War (1954 – 1973)

Page 8: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

•Cold War Foreign Policy• “détente” • An easing of strained relations

• “containment”• The Truman Doctrine (1947)• U.S. would aid all countries threatened by Communism • military• economic• political

• The Eisenhower Doctrine (1957)• Truman Doctrine + countries could ask for assistance

Page 9: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

Cold War Ends•Mikhail Gorbachev• Soviet Union leader (1985 – 1991)• “glasnost”• restructuring

• “perestroika”• openness

Page 10: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

• Soviet Satellite Countries• Begin to demand political and economic change • Some threaten independence

Page 11: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

•Ronald Reagan • U.S. President (1981 – 1989)• His theory: Soviet Union was a paper tiger (fake, weak)• Increased size and strength of military • Dare Soviets to keep up

• “Star Wars”• Military race goes to space

Page 12: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

• Soviet Union economy strained to breaking point•Berlin Wall comes down (1989)• Satellite countries declare independence

Page 13: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

C4.1(2)

•Post-Cold War World• Communism recedes as viable option • country v country conflict decreases• threats from terrorism / dictators increases• Are we safer?

Page 14: C4.1(2) The Cold War 1945 – 1991 State of high tension between U.S. / U.S.S.R. (Russia)

SUMMARY QUESTIONS

1. What positives do you see with Capitalism? What negatives do you see?

2. What positives do you see with Communism? What negatives do you see?

3. Why do you think the Soviet Union disliked the Eisenhower and Truman Doctrines?

4. Explain why both Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev are considered two reasons the Cold War ended

5. The chances of war between the U.S. and Russia are small today. But there are other dangers for the U.S. in the post-Cold War world. What are some of those dangers?