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Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business...

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Chapter 29 The American Century
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Page 1: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Chapter 29

The American Century

Page 2: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Postwar Economy

• US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal policy

• Reconversion to peacetime economy

• Economic boom due to pent-up demand and forced wartime savings

• GI Bill of Rights – education and business

Page 3: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Postwar Economy

• Taxes cut and price controls removed - Inflation and labor unrest led to Republican control of Congress

• Taft-Hartley Act – passed over Truman veto – outlawed the closed shop and allowed presidential injunctions to prevent strikes that endangered national interests

• Act hampered unionizing of new industries but not existing unions

Page 4: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Containment Policy

• Stalin continued to expand Soviet domination in Europe and Asia

• US demobilized (6.5 million to 1.5 million) but Russia maintained huge army

• Foreign officers warned against Russian aggression

• The Sources of Soviet Conduct by George Kennan called for West to contain USSR

Page 5: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Atom Bomb

• Truman saw bomb as counterweight to Soviet power

• Many scientists against use of bomb (Oppenheimer) – Truman doubted people would permit its use again

• Proposed deal whereby UN would monitor nations to ensure no bombs made – US would destroy stockpile

• USSR refused

Page 6: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Greece

• Communist guerrillas waged war against Greek monarchy

• Britain warned US they would cut off aid to Greece

• Truman asked Congress for $400 million in aid for Greece and Turkey to fight communism

• Using aid to fight communism = Truman Doctrine

Page 7: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Marshall Plan

• 1947 Sec. State George C. Marshall proposed US financed reconstruction of Europe – would even allow $ to Soviet Union and satellites

• Europeans set up committee calling for $22.4 billion

• Stalin afraid $ would draw satellites into US orbit – would not participate

Page 8: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Marshall Plan

• By 1951 Europe booming• Europe now divided into

communist east and democratic west

• West announced plans to create a new democratic West Germany

• Russia responded with Berlin blockade

• US and West responded with Berlin Airlift

Page 9: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.
Page 10: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Japan and China

• US occupied Japan and did not allow USSR a role in China

• General MacArthur - military governor of Japan – helped create stable, prosperous state

• US attempted to broker agreement between Nationalists under Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong

• 1947 - Civil war erupted in China

Page 11: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Election of 1948

• Truman’s popularity low

• Republican nominee Governor Dewey

• Southern Democrats left party over civil rights plank

• Formed “Dixiecrat” party and nominated Strom Thurmond

• Liberals organized a new progressive party and nominated former VP Wallace

Page 12: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Election of 1948

• Truman launched an aggressive whistle-stop campaign

• Truman warned Republicans would do away with New Deal gains

• Success of Berlin Airlift also strengthened Truman

• Progressive party fell into hands of communist sympathizers driving away many liberals

Page 13: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Election of 1948

• Dewey’s campaign was smug and lackluster – expected to win without effort

• Truman won the election and attempted to enact a Fair Deal – little of which was passed

Page 14: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.
Page 15: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Containing Communism

• North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) formed to counter Soviet threat to Europe

• 1949 – USSR detonated an atomic weapon – caused US to expand its arsenal

• 1950 – US begins development of hydrogen bomb (USSR already developing)

Page 16: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Containing Communism

• By 1949 mainland China in communist hands

• Chiang Kai-shek and Nationalists fled to Formosa (Taiwan)

• Containment relied on money but not men on the ground – Truman began to reduce number of troops

Page 17: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Containing Communism

• NSC – 68Submitted by Secretary of State Dean

AchesonCalled for enormous increase in military

spending (350% increase)Create an arms race that the USSR could not

hope to win due to inferior systemTruman not warm to idea but changed mind

due to war in Korea

Page 18: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• Japanese disarmed in Korea by USSR in the north and the US in the south

• Both left the peninsula but USSR left a well-armed army whereas the one left by the US was small and ill-trained

• US policy makers determined that military involvement in Asia was impractical – US defense perimeter to be based on Japan and Philippines

Page 19: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• Korea excluded from perimeter in speech by Sec State Acheson in 1950

• North Korea responded with an attack on South Korea

• Truman resolved to stop the S.O.B.’s

• US planes and ground troops were sent to help without a declaration of war

• Truman accepted NSC-68

Page 20: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• US secured UN Security Council approval for defense of South Korea (USSR?)

• General MacArthur placed in command

• 16 nations supplied troops though US forces comprised about 90% of the force

• Pusan Perimeter• Inchon Invasion

Page 21: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• North Korea retreated to well above 38th parallel

• Some advised Truman to stop at parallel – not to entice USSR or China to widen war

• MacArthur sought full occupation of North Korea

• Truman authorized the stop line at the Yalu River

Page 22: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• Chinese “volunteers” began to turn up in hauls of POWs

• MacArthur assured Truman China would not dare intervene

• China entered war with over 250,000 troops

• UN forces pushed back to 38th parallel• MacArthur urged the use of atomic

weapons and naval blockade of China

Page 23: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

The Korean War

• Truman – afraid of starting WWIII- fired MacArthur

• Korean War became unpopular due to mounting casualties and costs

• Truce negotiations began in 1951 but war would drag on until 1953

Page 24: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.
Page 25: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Communists at Home

• Korean War illustrated growing US decline in ability to influence world affairs

• Fear of communist espionage in US increased

• Truman set up Loyalty Review Board to check on government employees – about 2,700 workers fired over 10 year period

Page 26: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Communists at Home

• Whittaker Chambers (Time) versus Alger Hiss (former state department official)

• Case fed fears of communist underground

• Klaus Fuchs – British scientist• Harry Gold – associate of

Fuchs• Julius and Ethel Rosenberg

Page 27: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

McCarthyism

• 1950 – Joseph McCarthy (Wisconsin) claimed he had list of 205 communists in the State Department

• No evidence to back up his claims

• Backed by public opinion (Red Scare) McCarthy attacked several public figures including George Marshall

• The “Big Lie” – enormity of charges and status of targets must mean there was truth

Page 28: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

1952 Election

• Truman low in polls again due to Korean War, firing of MacArthur, and charges made by McCarthy

• Republicans nominated Eisenhower• Eisenhower promised to go to Korea• “I Like Ike”• Democrats nominated Governor Adlai

Stevenson

Page 29: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

1952 Election

• Stevenson tagged as an “egghead”

• Eisenhower attempted to emulate Washington and remain above partisan politics

• Fiscal conservative

Page 30: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Eisenhower-Dulles Foreign Policy

• Dulles argued against containment using military forces – believed nuclear arsenal sufficient

• Beliefs tested on Korea – nukes sent to Asia along with vague warnings of “tougher measures”

• Weeks later armistice in Korea signed

• China unaware?

Page 31: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Eisenhower-Dulles Foreign Policy

• 1954 - Communist China shelled two islands manned by Nationalist Chinese troops

• Chiang Kai-shek appealed to US for help

• 1955 – Eisenhower announced that US willing to use nuclear weapons to defend the islands

• China backed down

Page 32: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

McCarthy Self-Destructs

• McCarthy continued attacks on the State Department

• Overreached when he began attacks on the army

• Televised Army-McCarthy hearings brought about his downfall

• His combativeness and disregard for human values became apparent and he lost public favor

• McCarthy was censured by the Senate and became inconsequential – died of cirrhosis of liver 1957

Page 33: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Post-Korean Asian Policy

• Trouble erupted in French Indochina in 1953

• Communists supplied Viet Minh with arms

• Truman countered with supplies to French – Eisenhower continued policy

• 1954 – Battle of Dien Bien Phu• UN divided Vietnam at 17th

parallel – two Vietnams created

Page 34: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Post-Korean Asian Policy

• Democratic Republic of Vietnam – North - (communist) under Ho Chi Minh

• Republic of Vietnam – South – under Bao Dai

• Elections scheduled for 1956• Bao Dai overthrown by Ngo

Dinh Diem• US supported Diem• Establishment of Southeast

Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)

Page 35: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Israel and the Middle East

• Jewish immigration into Palestine

• Zionism

• 1947 – UN partition of Palestine

• 1948 – Establishment of Israel

• Eisenhower – policy of moderation

• 1952 – Egyptian revolution deposes King Farouk – Gamal Abdel Nasser takes control

Page 36: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.
Page 37: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Israel and the Middle East

• US prepared to give Egypt $ for Aswan Dam but no arms

• Egypt leaned towards USSR

• Eisenhower revoked offer – Nasser nationalized Suez Canal

• British and French forces attacked Egypt (Israel also attacked)

Page 38: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Israel and the Middle East

• US calls for ceasefire in UN – vetoed by Britain and France

• USSR (Khrushchev) threatened to send troops and fire missiles against Britain and France

• British, French, and Israeli troops withdrew• Eisenhower issued the Eisenhower Doctrine –

US prepared to use force against any communist aggression (restatement of containment policy)

Page 39: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Eisenhower and Khrushchev

• Eisenhower won reelection in 1956

• Cold War continued • Khrushchev came to power in

USSR upon death of Stalin• De-Stalinized Russia• Crude, temper tantrums,

bellicose • US advantages evaporated with

launch of Sputnik

Page 40: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Eisenhower and Khrushchev

• US bomber advantage obsolete – Russian ICBMs new threat

• Khrushchev boasted USSR could destroy US

• The “Missile Gap”• Threat of nuclear war

caused more accommodation between US and USSR

• Mutual visits – Nixon’s kitchen debate / Disneyland

Page 41: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Eisenhower and Khrushchev

• A planned conference between US and USSR halted due to U-2 incident

• Eisenhower accepted responsibility

• Khrushchev turning out nuclear missiles like “sausages from an automatic machine”

Page 42: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Latin America Aroused

• 1947 – Organization of American States (OAS) established (US had no veto power)

• Latin American radicals protested US support for dictators and lack of financial aid for poor

• 1954 – US supported invasion of Guatemala by Honduras due to Soviet influence

Page 43: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Latin America Aroused

• 1958 – Nixon’s motorcade attacked in Goodwill Tour of Latin America – forced to abandon trip

• 1959 – Cuban Revolution• Castro nationalized American

businesses and negotiated trade agreement with USSR

• Eisenhower broke off diplomatic relations with Cuba

Page 44: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Civil Rights

• Ideological competition with communism caused many to question current attitudes of racial equality

• American racism hurt America’s cause in Asia and Africa

• Coincided with crackdown on communists in America

• 1950 Internal Security Act (McCarran Act)

Page 45: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Civil Rights

• Oppenheimer lost security clearance

• Military desegregated• Desegregation of colleges

began in 1938 under Supreme Court rulings

• 1954 – Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka – Thurgood Marshall argued against “separate but equal”

• The court ruled all schools must desegregate “with all deliberate speed”

Page 46: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Civil Rights

• Few schools complied – where they did riots erupted

• Eisenhower did little to enforce the ruling

• 1957 – Little Rock – Governor Faubus called out National Guard to prevent blacks from attending white school

• Eisenhower called in army troops and nationalized the National Guard to allow black students to attend

Page 47: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Civil Rights

• Southern resistance only strengthened black and sympathetic white resolve

• Civil Rights Act of 1957 – allowed attorney general to obtain injunctions to stop officials from interfering with Black voters

• Law also established Civil Rights Commission

• Enforcement of the law was spotty

Page 48: Chapter 29 The American Century. Postwar Economy US government convinced sharp swings in business cycles could be manipulated through monetary and fiscal.

Election of 1960

• Kennedy versus Nixon• Issue of Catholicism• Both were cold warriors –

JFK even admitted he liked McCarthy

• Television debates – power of the media

• Kennedy’s victory in popular vote was razor thin


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