Cold War (1947-1953) and its origins |
This article is part of
the Cold War
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| 1947-1953 |
| 1953-1962 |
| 1962-1991 |
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Tsarist Russia and the West
Some scholars have traced the origins of the East-West conflict well before the Bolshevik Revolution. World System theorists have argued that Russia was late to be absorbed by the
capitalist world-system, and only in its periphery or semi-periphery upon the Bolshevik Revolution, leaving it ripe for a radical break with capitalism. Some scholars even argue
that East and West are fundamentally different civilizations. Among scholars in the latter camp, many have argued that Eastern
Orthodox Slavs are heir to the Byzantine tradition. Others point out aspects of the Slavic cultural heritage, Asiatic influence, and a fundamentally different political culture shaped by rule
of the Tsar.
Others have argued that geographical causes would lead to intractable conflict. They see the states of the North Atlantic and
East Asia as being fundamentally maritime powers base on trade and openness. While the states of Central Eurasia, most notably
Russia were land based powers based on large armies and centralized control.
Imperial rivalry between Britain and Tsarist Russia would foreshadow the East-West tensions of the Cold War. Throughout the nineteenth century, improving
Russia's maritime access was a perennial aim of the Tsars' foreign policy; impeding it was a perennial obsession of Britain's.
Despite Russia's vast size, most of its ten thousand miles of seacoast was frozen over most of the year or controlled by other
powers, particularly in the Baltic and Black Seas. The British were determined since the Crimean War
in the 1850s to slow Russian expansion at the expense of Ottoman Turkey, the "sick man of
Europe". After the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869, the prospects of a seizing a portion of the Ottoman seacoast on the Mediterranean, whereby it could threaten the strategic waterway, were all the more mortifying to
the British. The close proximity of the Tsar's territorially expanding empire in Central Asia to India also terrified South Asia's British imperial overlords, triggering a series of quixotic British adventures in
Afghanistan. Fears over Russia, however, subsided following Russia's stunning
defeat in the Russo-Japanese War in 1905. Some historians have noted that the British long exaggerated the strength of the relatively backward sprawling
empire, which in hindsight was probably concerned with trade and securing its frontiers, not threatening Western interests. Some
historians have even noted the parallels to the post-World War II period,
when, again, the West exaggerated Russian "expansionism" in Eastern Europe, which, like the territorial growth of imperial
Russia, was probably motivated by securing vulnerable frontiers.
Strategic rivalry between the United States and Russia, both huge, sprawling nations, goes back to the 1890s when, after a century of friendship, Americans and Russians became rivals over the development of
Manchuria. Tsarist Russia, unable to compete industrially, sought to close off
and colonize parts of East Asia, while Americans demanded open competition for markets.
Many believe the Cold War was an inevitable conflict between the two continent sized states, each with huge reserves of
manpower and natural resources who were destined to compete for world preeminence.
The Bolshevik Revolution
In 1917 the rivalry gained an intensely ideological side. The United States did not even
establish relations with the Soviet government until 1933. The western allies never forgot
that the Soviet government negotiated a separate peace with Germany in the First World War in 1918, leaving the
Western Allies to fight the Central Powers alone. Lasting Russian
mistrust stemmed from the landing of western troops in Soviet Russia in 1918, which became
involved, directly and indirectly, in assisting the anti-Bolshevik Whites in the civil war. This helped solidify lasting suspicions among Soviet leadership of the capitalist world.
The west did see the Soviet system as a threat. In Europe, and to a lesser degree in the United States, there were strong
socialist and communist movements that threatened the status quo. The atheistic
nature of Soviet communism also concerned many. Up until the mid-1930s both Britain and the United States believed the Soviet
Union to be a much greater threat than Germany and focused most of their intelligence
efforts against it.
The Wartime alliance
When Hitler attacked the Soviet Union the Soviets and the Western Allies quickly put their past tensions behind them and
cooperated. Most notably, the United States shipped vast quantities of material to the Soviets, keeping their war effort alive.
But the wartime alliance between the Anglo-Americans and the Soviet Union
was an aberration from the normal tenor of Soviet-US relations and Soviet-British relations. Even during the warmest days of the
alliance, tensions existed below the surface.
On one hand, before the war the Soviets had stunned the world by signing the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with Nazi Germany and then
participated in the dividing up of Eastern Europe. On the other, the Soviets were annoyed at having to the bear the brunt of the
war, despite calls for the Allies to open a second front in Europe, which did not occur until June 1944. In the meantime, the
Russians suffered horrendous casualties, with as many as perhaps twenty million dead.
Throughout the war the two sides did not trust each other. The United States and Britain did not tell Stalin about
breakthroughs such as the decoding of the Enigma machine. They also did
not tell the Soviets about the work on an atomic bomb. Stalin, however,
gained knowledge of these U.S programs through elaborate Soviet spy rings that had continued to operate during the wartime
alliance.
The breakdown of postwar peace
When the war ended in Europe on May 8, 1945,
Soviet and Western (US, British, and French) troops were located in particular places, essentially, along a line in the center of
Europe. Aside from a few minor adjustments, this would be the "Iron
Curtain" of the Cold War. In hindsight, Yalta signified the
agreement of both sides that they could stay there and that neither side would use force to push the other out. This tacit accord
applied to Asia as well, as evinced by US occupation of Japan and the division of
Korea. Politically, therefore, Yalta was an agreement on the postwar status quo in which
Soviet Union hegemony reigned over about one third and the United States over two thirds.
There were fundamental contrasts between the visions of the United
States and the Soviet Union, between capitalism and communism. Those contrasts had been simplified
and refined in national ideologies to represent two ways of life, each vindicated in 1945
by previous disasters. Conflicting models of autarky versus exports, of state planning against private enterprise, were to vie
for the allegiance of the developing and developed world in the postwar years. Even so, however, the Cold War was not obviously
inevitable in 1945.
Despite the wherewithal of the United States to advance a different vision of postwar Europe, Stalin viewed the reemergence of Germany and Japan as Russia's chief threats, not the United States. Stalin assumed that the capitalist camp would soon
resume its internal rivalry over colonies and trade and not pose a threat to the USSR. Economic advisers such as Eugen Varga reinforced this view,
predicting a postwar crisis of overproduction in capitalist countries which would culminate by 1947-1948 in another great depression.
Trends in federal expenditure in the United States reinforced Stalin's expectations. By this time, business had been
reinforced by government expenditures as a consequence of depression and the war. Between 1929 and 1933 unemployment
soared from 3 percent of the workforce to 25 percent, while manufacturing output collapsed by one-third. Franklin Roosevelt's New
Deal programs tried to stimulate demand and provide work and relief for the impoverished through increased government
spending, backed up later by the British economist John Maynard
Keynes. In 1929 the proportion was only 3 percent. Between 1933 and 1939, federal expenditure tripled, and Roosevelt's critics charged that
he was turning America into a socialist state. But the cost of the New Deal pales in comparison to World War II. In the first peacetime year of 1946, federal
spending still amounted to $62 billion, or 30% of GDP! In short, federal expenditures went from 3% of GDP in 1929 to about a
third in 1945. War spending financially cured the depression, pulling unemployment down
from 14 percent in 1940 to less than 2 percent in 1943 as the labor force grew by ten million. The war economy was
not so much a triumph of free enterprise as the result of the government bankrolling business.
What would be the result of massive postwar demilitarization? Stalin predicted
overproduction and depression. Given the trend in federal expenditure, his predictions were not absurd. Stalin thus assumed that
the Americans would need to offer him economic aid, needing to find any outlet for massive capital investments just to
maintain the wartime industrial production that brought the US out of the Great Depression. Thus, the prospects of an Anglo-American front against him seemed slim from Stalin's
standpoint. However, there would be no postwar crisis of overproduction. And, as Stalin anticipated, this was averted by
maintaining roughly the same levels of government spending. It was just maintained in a vastly different way.
But the whole role of government was not set in stone and was in question once again. Although America's military-industrial
complex was born in World War II, it could have been scaled back. Pressures
to "get back to normal" and were intense. Congress wanted a return to low, balanced budgets, and families clamored to see the
soldiers sent back home. The Truman administration worried first
about a postwar slump, then about the inflationary consequences of pent-up consumer demand. The GI Bill of Rights, adopted in 1944, was one answer:
subsidizing veterans to complete their education rather than flood the job market and probably boost the unemployment figures.
Moreover, on July 20, 1948 President Harry S. Truman issued the first peacetime military draft in the United States amid
increasing tensions with the Soviet Union.
Thus, a conversion to the prewar economy would be extremely difficult, and in the end it did not happen. In the end, the
postwar government would look a lot like the wartime government, with the military establishment, along with military-security
dominant. The postwar capitalist slump predicted by Stalin would not be averted by domestic management, supplemented perhaps by a
greater role in promoting international trade and monetary relations. In fact, President Roosevelt in 1941 hoped that after the war, the world's
largest building, the huge, mile-circumference Pentagon complex in northern
Virginia, would be converted into a storage facility. It was not; the
military-industrial complex dominated postwar life, largely the result of the Cold War.
Two visions of the world
The United States hoped to shape the postwar world by opening up the world's markets to capitalist trade - a rebuilt
capitalist Europe that could again serve as a hub in world affairs. The Atlantic Charter was publicized regarding this with principles such as "people have right to choose own
government" - this was given about as much credence by the West as by the East however. Franklin Roosevelt had never forgotten the excitement with which he had greeted the principles of
Wilsonian idealism
during World War I, and he saw his mission in the 1940s as bringing lasting
peace and genuine democracy to the world. According to this view, it was important to not to repeat the punitive measures of the
Treaty of Versailles that had produced hardship and
resentment in pre-war Germany.
But this vision was equally a vision of national self-interest. World War
II resulted in enormous destruction of infrastructure and populations throughout Eurasia, from the Atlantic to the Pacific
oceans, with almost no country left unscathed. The only major industrial power in the world to emerge intact—and even
greatly strengthened from an economic perspective—was the United States, which moved swiftly to consolidate its position.
As the world's greatest industrial power, and as one of the few world powers unravaged by the war, the United States stood to
gain more than any other country from opening the entire world to unfettered trade. The United States would have a global market
for its exports, and it would have unrestricted access to vital raw materials. Determined to avoid another economic catastrophe
like that of the 1930s, Roosevelt saw the creation of the postwar order as a way to ensure continuing US prosperity.
Truman could advance these principles with an economic powerhouse that produced 50 percent of the world's industrial goods and
military power that rested on a monopoly of the new atom bomb. These aims were at the center of what the Soviet Union strove to
avoid as the breakdown of the wartime alliance went forward. It also required new international agencies: the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund, which were created to ensure an open, capitalist, international economy. The Soviet Union opted not
to take part.
The fate of postwar Europe
The withdrawal of the United States to advance a different vision of the postwar world conflicted with Soviet interests, which
motivated their determination to shape postwar Europe. The Soviet Union had, since 1924, placed higher priority on its own
security and socialist development than on Trotsky's vision of world revolution.
Accordingly, Stalin had been willing before the war to engage non-communist governments that recognized Soviet control of the
former Tsarist empire and offered assurances of non-aggression. Germany's betrayal of its non-aggression promise convinced Stalin that
he could no longer rely on non-communist governments.
After the war, Stalin sought to secure the Soviet Union's western border by installing subservient communist-dominated regimes
in bordering countries such as Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria. This decision was a response to a 150-year
history of repeated Western assaults on Russia, including World War I and
Napoleon's 1812 invasion. Stalin considered it essential to destroy Germany's
capacity for another war, which conflicted with the US desire to rebuild Germany as the economic center of a stable Europe.
Winston Churchill accused Stalin of cordoning off a new Russian
empire with an "Iron Curtain." The dispute over Germany escalated after
Truman refused to give the Soviet Union reparations from West Germany's industrial plants; Stalin responded by splitting off the
Soviet sector of Germany as a Communist state.
Russia's historic lack of direct, year-round maritime access, a perennial concern of Russian foreign policy well before the
Bolshevik Revolution, was also a focus for Russia where
interests diverged between East and West. Stalin pressed the Turks for improved access out of the Black Sea through Turkey's Dardanelles Strait, which
would allow Soviet passage from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Churchill had earlier recognized Stalin's claims, but now the British and Americans forced
the Soviet Union to pull back.
There were other signs of caution on Stalin's part. The Soviet Union eventually withdrew from Northern Iran, at Anglo-American behest; Stalin did observe his 1944 agreement with
Churchill and did not aid the communists in the struggle against a weak and authoritarian government in Greece that was supported
by Britain; in Finland he accepted a friendly, noncommunist government; and Russian troops were withdrawn from Czechoslovakia by the end of 1945.
Containment
The Truman Doctrine
Main article: Truman Doctrine
The immediate post-1945 period may have been the historical high point for the
popularity of Communist ideology. Communist parties won large shares of the vote free elections in countries such as Belgium, France, Italy, Czechoslovakia, and Finland and won significant popular support in Asia - in Vietnam,
India, and Japan - and throughout Latin America.
In addition they won large support in China, Greece, and Iran, where free elections remained absent or constrained but
where Communist parties enjoyed widespread appeal.
Britain and the United States were concerned that a political victory by communists in any of these countries could lead to a
Soviet takeover similar to those in Eastern Europe. While the Soviet Union acquiesced to Anglo-American efforts to impede Soviet
access to the Mediterranean (a perennial focus of British foreign policy since the Crimean War in the 1850s), the Americans heating up their anti-Communist campaign.
These fears were first tested in Greece, where the post-war government had been unable to rebuild a heavily sabotaged economy
or restore civil order. Britain, determined to deny the Soviet Union access to the Mediterranean, provided financial assistance
to the Greek government. The United States followed after Truman articulated the Truman Doctrine in 1947.
After Truman's speech before Congress, the United States sustained a massive anticommunist ideological offensive. The United
States aimed to interfere in the internal affairs and sovereignty of other countries or impose its will upon others under the
guise of "freedom", "democracy" and "human rights". In retrospect, this initiative appears largely successful: Washington
brandished its role as the leader of the "free world" at least as effectively as the Soviet Union brandished its position as the
leader of the "progressive" and "anti-imperialist" camp.
Thus, Anglo-American aims to prop up the Greek autocracy became, in public discourse, a struggle to protect free states
against Soviet-imposed totalitarianism. This would be articulated in the Truman Doctrine Speech of March 1947, which argued that the United States would have to spend $400 million to efforts to "contain" communism.
Another case, the Italian elections of 1948, set a precedent for US propaganda and
financial intervention in foreign politics to prevent gains by pro-communist groups. American foreign policy was guided by State
Department officer George Kennan's argument that the Soviets had to be
contained using "unalterable counterforce at every point," until the breakdown of Soviet power occurred.
The Marshall Plan
Main article: Marshall Plan
After placing these concerns before the public, the United States launched massive economic reconstruction efforts, first in
Western Europe and then in Japan (as well as in South Korea and Taiwan). The Marshall Plan
began to pump $12 billion into Western Europe. The program was presented as a financial tradeoff; by rebuilding these states
quickly, the U.S. could end their long-term dependence on aid and restore them as trade partners. Germany, Europe's most
industrialized and resource-rich country, was particularly important in this effort. Furthermore, the reconstruction programs
helped create clientelistic obligations on the part of the nations receiving US aid; this sense of obligation fostered
willingness to enter into military alliances and, even more important, political alliances.
The Berlin Blockade
Main article: Berlin Blockade
Stalin responded by blocking access to Berlin, which was deep within the Soviet zone
although subject to four power control. The Soviets cut off all rail and road routes to West Berlin. No trucks or trains were
allowed entry into the city during the Berlin Blockade. Truman embarked on a highly visible move that would humiliate the Soviets
internationally: flying supplies in over the blockade during 1948-1949. Military confrontation loomed while Truman flew supplies
through East Germany into West Berlin during the 1948-1949 blockade. This costly aerial supplying of West Berlin became known as the Berlin Airlift.
NATO
Truman joined eleven other nations in 1949 to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO), America's first "entangling" European alliance in 170 years. Stalin retaliated against these steps by integrating the
economies of Eastern Europe in his version of the Marshall Plan,
exploding the first Soviet atomic device in 1949, signing an alliance with People's Republic of China in February 1950, and forming the Warsaw Pact, Eastern Europe's counterpart to NATO.
NSC-68
Main article: NSC-68
U.S. officials quickly moved to escalate and expand "containment." In a secret 1950
document, NSC-68, they proposed to strengthen their alliance systems, quadruple defense spending, and embark on an elaborate
propaganda campaign to convince the U.S. public to fight this costly cold war. Truman ordered the development of a hydrogen bomb; and in early 1950 came the first U.S. effort to opposing communist
forces in Vietnam, plans to form a West German army, and proposals for a peace treaty with Japan that would guarantee long-term
U.S. military bases.
The Korean War
For details see the main article Korean War.
In early 1950 came the first U.S. commitment to form a peace treaty with Japan that
would guarantee long-term U.S. military bases. Some observers (including George Kennan) believed that the Japanese treaty led Stalin to
approve a plan to invade U.S.-supported South Korea on June 25, 1950. Fearing that a united communist Korea
could neutralize U.S. power in Japan, Truman committed U.S. forces and obtained help from the United Nations to drive back the North Koreans, to Stalin's surprise. In a historic diplomatic
blunder, the Soviets boycotted the UN Security Council, and
thus its power to veto Truman's action in the UN, because the UN would not admit the People's Republic of China.
However, Truman would offset this with his own monumental, historic error: allowing his forces to go to the Chinese-Korean
border. Communist China responded with massive attack in November 1950 that decimated U.S.-led forces as well as their own. Fighting stabilized along the
thirty-eight parallel, which had separated the Koreas, but Truman now
faced a hostile China, a Sino-Soviet partnership, and a bloated defense budget that quadrupled in eighteen months.
continued...
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