World War II Conferences Aftermath VIDEO The Big
World War II Conferences & Aftermath
VIDEO The Big Three • Soviet Union Joseph Stalin U. S. A Great Britain Winston Churchill Franklin D. Roosevelt
The Atlantic Charter • August 14, 1941 • Churchill and Roosevelt met aboard the U. S. S. Augusta in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland • U. S. confirmed support for the allies without joining the war. • Roosevelt and Churchill laid out shared vision for the post war world The Atlantic Charter
• THE ATLANTIC Late in 1941, FDR and Churchill met secretly and CHARTER Vision agreed on a series of goals for the war • Among their goals were collective security, disarmament, selfdetermination, economic cooperation and freedom of the seas • This “Declaration of the United Nations” was signed by 26 nations FDR, left, and Churchill met aboard the battleship U. S. S. Augusta in Newfoundland waters
Tehran Conference • November-December, 1943 • Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin • Met in Iran • Agreed to open a second front in Europe to take pressure off the Soviets
Yalta Conference • • • February, 1945 Big Three Met in Crimea (USSR) Agreed to postwar terms: Germany divided into zones USSR pledge Free Elections for Eastern Europe VIDEO
Death of Roosevelt • April 12, 1945 • New vice president Harry Truman became president. VIDEO
Potsdam Conference • • • July-August, 1945 Truman, Stalin, & Churchill Met in Germany Unconditional surrender of Japan Truman found out about the A-Bomb Stalin announces no free elections in Eastern Europe
Churchill, Truman, and Stalin at the Potsdam Conference
Post War Germany divided into zones. The west was democratic. The east was Communist. The capital of Berlin, in the Soviet zone, was also divided. • West Berlin=democratic; East Berlin=Communist • •
Germany
Berlin
United States Tries to Contain Soviets • The Marshall Plan – Much of Western Europe lay in ruins after World War II – Marshall Plan—U. S. program of assisting Western European countries – Congress approves plan after Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia
Marshall Aid cartoon, 1947
U. S. ESTABLISHES A POLICY OF CONTAINMENT Faced with the Soviet threat, Truman decided it was time to “stop babying the Soviets” In February 1946, George Kennan, an American diplomat in Moscow, proposed a policy of containment Containment meant the U. S. would prevent any further extension of communist rule
CHURCHILL: “IRON CURTAIN” ACROSS EUROPE Churchill, right, in Fulton, Missouri delivering his “iron curtain” speech, 1946 Europe was now divided into two political regions; a mostly democratic Western Europe and a communist Eastern Europe In a 1946 speech, Churchill said, “An iron curtain has descended across the continent” The phrase “iron curtain” came to stand for the division of Europe
Iron Curtain cartoon, 1946
THE TRUMAN DOCTRINE The American policy of “containment” soon expanded into a policy known as the Truman Doctrine” This doctrine, first used in Greece and Turkey in the late 1940 s, vowed to provide aid (money & military supplies) to support “free peoples who are resisting outside pressures” By 1950, the U. S. had given $400 million in aid to Greece and Turkey
BERLIN AIRLIFT – 1948 When the Soviets attempted to block the three Western powers from access to Berlin in 1948, the 2. 1 million residents of West Berlin had only enough food for five weeks, resulting in a dire situation Like the whole of Germany, the city of Berlin was divided into four zones
AMERICA & BRITAIN AIRLIFT SUPPLIES TO WEST BERLIN Candy Bomber Not wanting to invade and start a war with the Soviets, America and Britain started the Berlin airlift to fly supplies into West Berlin For 327 days, planes took off and landed every few minutes, around the clock In 277, 000 flights, they brought in 2. 3 million tons of food, fuel and medicine to the West Berliners
SOVIETS LIFT BLOCKADE Realizing they were beaten and suffering a public relations nightmare, the Soviets lifted their blockade in May, 1949 On Christmas 1948, the plane crews brought gifts to West Berlin
Post War Japan • 1945 -1952, U. S. occupation Occupied Japan • Mac. Arthur takes charge of U. S. occupation of Japan • Starts process of demilitarization—disbanding Japan’s armed forces • Also launches democratization—creating democracy in Japan • Japanese people adopt new constitution in 1947 • Mac. Arthur puts economic reforms in place • Demilitarization
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