History of Origins of the Cold War Flashcards

European history

40 cards   |   Total Attempts: 182
  

Cards In This Set

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When it was coined, the term second world referred to
The Soviet Union and its socialist allies.
One reason World War II was more destructive in Europe than the World War I was that
Armies in World War II had fought a war of movement, leveling thousands of square
miles of territory, a development already foreshadowed in part by the use of tanks at
the close of World War I.
Many Jewish concentration camp survivors returned to their countries in Europe to find
that
Anti-Semitism was still strong in popular opinion, and they received very little help in
returning to postwar life.
The demands of total war in the Soviet Union had encouraged independent initiative and
relaxed Communist oversight, a development that Stalin
Ruthlessly reversed through increased repression, increased production goals, and a still
more radical collectivization of agriculture.
In his policies toward the Soviet Union, Truman
Was tougher then Roosevelt, cutting off aid as soon as the war ended.
The Marshall Plan aimed to provide
Food, equipment, and services to war-devastated Europe.
Following the end of World War II, the British and Americans were alarmed when
Communist insurgents threatened the British-installed, right-wing monarchy in Greece.
An exception to the rule in eastern Europe, Communist ruler Tito (Josip Broz, 1892–1980)
established a fairly independent, non-Soviet Communist state in
Yugoslavia.
The United States, Britain, and the Soviet Union agreed to Germany's division into four
occupation zones during a meeting held in
Yalta.
Stalin violated the agreement among the members of the Grand Alliance regarding postwar
Germany when he
Dismantled and sent a significant percentage of the German industrial infrastructure in
the Soviet zone of occupation to the Soviet Union.
When, in 1948, the Soviets blockaded Berlin, situated more than 100 miles inside the Soviet
zone, the United States responded by
Staging Operation Vittles, an ongoing airlift that supplied the residents of Berlin with
food and fuel into the spring of 1949.
The Nuremberg trials against Nazi war criminals, held in the fall of 1945, led to either
execution or long-term prison terms for some
24 senior Nazi officials.
The Allied victors all believed that one of their tasks in occupied Germany was ideological
reorientation, a task that Stalin accomplished through
The confiscation and redistribution of land, particularly the estates of wealthy Germans.
The post–World War II Nuremberg trials concerned war crimes committed by
Nazi leaders.
Following the war, the political party in Europe that reflected a coalition of Communists
and socialists and pursued liberal economic reform and democratic reform was the
Christian Democrats.