Cold War Dbq

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The clash of ideologies between the Soviet Union and the United States left the Cold War inevitable. Tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States created opposing views for political and economic order. “Tensions between the Unites States and the Soviet Union dated back to the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, which created a communist state (Rosenberg and Rosenberg, pgs.5-6). Prior to the Cold War and WWII the United States wasn’t overly concerned with exporting democracy, part of that was a byproduct and caused by the Cold War. A sense of democracy was the best form of governance in America’s eyes and the best way to reduce conflict between nations. The Soviet Union, within the tenants of Marxism felt that the belief that all nations would become Communist societies after a certain point. Mounting distrust continued when tensions between the Soviets and the Germans …show more content…

Stalin’s goal was to eliminate German threat and wanted support from the Allies to create “a pro-Soviet zone in neighboring Eastern Europe to strengthen the country’s national security” (Rosenberg and Rosenberg, pg. 6). “The atmosphere of cooperation at Yalta became one of deep distrust between the Soviets and Americans” (Rosenberg and Rosenberg, pg. 7). After WWII Truman campaigned his belief of Anti-Communism to the American people. Truman believed that dropping the “iron curtain” and “being on the defensive , reacting to contain the Soviets aggression ( through diplomatic, economic and military dominance) and save freedom (Rosenberg and Rosenberg, pg. 9). The overtly aggressive campaigning for Anti-Communism created The U.S.’s active search for Communism through the CIA. McCarthy also pushed for Anti-Communism ultimately dismissing Marxism as a “pernicious doctrine without any intellectual respectability” (Rosenberg and Rosenberg, pg.

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