History Standard 3 Resource
Origins of the Cold War

   
Benchmark Addressed: History 3 (Interpretation)
Suggested Task 1: Read each paragraph and summarize (paraphrase) each thesis.

Thesis 1

The Cold War was a direct result of aggressive Soviet policies for expansion during the immediate post-war years. Stalin's government violated solemn promises  made in the Yalta Accords, imposed Soviet dominated governments on the unwilling nations of Eastern Europe, and schemed to spread communism throughout the world. American policy, a logical and necessary response, made a firm commitment to oppose Soviet expansion and retain its armed forces in a continual state of preparedness.

From America Faces Russia (1950)
By Thomas Baily


 
Thesis 2

Throughout the twentieth century, the United States' role  in world affairs was influenced by one overriding goal: to maintain an "open door" for American trade in world markets. The Cold War, therefore, was less a response to Russian aggression than an expression of the American belief in the principles of capitalism and the desire to keep the doors of trade open with Eastern Europe and Asia.

From The Tragedy of American Diplomacy (1959)
By William A. Williams


 
Thesis 3

The use of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki caused the Cold War. American decision makers used the bombs on an already defeated Japan, not to win the war, but to impress and intimidate the Soviets. However, atomic diplomacy had just the opposite effect: it convinced the Soviets that Americans had negative intentions towards them.

From Atomic Diplomacy (1965)
By Gar Alperovitz

    Suggested Task 2: List and explain possible reasons for the differences in the interpretations that appear above.

Grades 4-5: relate answers to "the evidence presented or the point of view of the author."

Grade 6-8: relate answers to the historians "choice of questions and use of sources."

Grades 9-12: relate answers to the historians' "choice of questions, use and choice of sources, perspectives, beliefs, and points of view."

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*Adapted from Current, Richard N., et al. (1987). American History: A Survey. Seventh Edition. Alfred A. Knopf. New York

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