CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: IRON CURTAIN. Content: Stalin Balshoi speech, the Long telegram, the Fulton speech, historian opinion, suspicions after the speech, different beliefs, aims, resentments, events, Russia's salami tactics, cartoon.
3. STALIN BOLSHOI SPEECH
• In February 1946, Stalin gave a speech for the Russian elections (it is
often called the 'Bolshoi' speech because he made it at the Bolshoi
Theatre in Moscow).
• It contained the normal Communist attacks on capitalism, but included
one sentence in which Stalin claimed: 'world capitalism proceeds through
crisis and the catastrophes of war'.
• American politicians took it as a threat.
4.
5. THE LONG TELEGRAM
• The American State Department asked the American Embassy in Moscow for an
analysis of Soviet policy.
• Their question was answered by George Kennan, an Embassy official who had
lived in Moscow since 1933, and who hated Communism and the Soviet system.
• Kennan's 8,000-word reply - nicknamed 'the Long Telegram' - advised:
• The Russians are determined to destroy the American way of life and will do
everything they could to oppose America.
• This is the greatest threat the US has ever faced.
• The Soviets can be beaten.
• The Soviets must be stopped.
• This can be done without going to war.
• The way to do it is by educating the public against Communism, and by making
people wealthy, happy and free.
6.
7. THE FULTON SPEECH
• On 5 March 1946, on the invitation of President Truman, Winston
Churchill went to Fulton in America and gave a speech.
• He said ‘a shadow’ had fallen on eastern Europe, which was now cut off
from the free world by an Iron Curtain behind that line, he said, the
people of eastern Europe were ‘subject to Soviet influence . . . totalitarian
control [and] police governments’.
8.
9. HISTORIANS OPINION
• One of the most controversial, remembered and formative speeches of
the post-war years.
MP and historian Roy Jenkins, Why Churchill’s Speech was ‘A Shot Which Rang around the World’ (2002).
10.
11. HISTORIANS OPINION
• Mr Churchill has called for a war on the USSR.
Stalin, writing in the Russian newspaper Pravda in March 1946.
12.
13. HISTORIANS OPINION
• The Cold War set in. Churchill had given his famous speech in Fulton
urging the imperialistic forces of the world to fight the Soviet Union.
Our relations with England, France and the USA were ruined.
Khrushchev, writing in 1971. In 1946 he had been a member of the Soviet government.
14.
15. SUSPICIONS AFTER THE SPEECH - DIFFERENT BELIEFS
• The USA and the USSR became suspicious of each other because they
had different beliefs.
• The Soviet Union was a Communist country, ruled by a dictator, who
cared little about human rights.
• The USA was a capitalist democracy which valued freedom.
• The superpowers’ different lifestyles caused suspicion of each others’
motives and actions. This caused friction because the two sides did not
understand each other. They believed that their way of life was better,
and tended to despise the way of life of the other side. They wanted to
prove that their way of life was superior – this again caused them to do
things which caused confrontation. In these ways, different beliefs helped
to create the Cold War.
16. SUSPICIONS AFTER THE SPEECH - DIFFERENT AIMS
• Both the USA and the USSR had very different aims.
• Stalin wanted huge reparations from Germany, and a ‘buffer’ of friendly
states to protect the USSR from being invaded again. He systematically
stripped the Soviet zone in Eastern Germany of wealth and agricultural
and industrial machinery.
• Britain and the USA opposed this because they believed that it was
simply Stalin tightening his grip on Eastern Germany. Britain and the USA
wanted to protect democracy, and help Germany to recover. They were
worried that large areas of eastern Europe were falling under Soviet
control. The western powers action caused hostility in Russia because
Stalin feared that they were setting up a strong Germany which might
again threaten the USSR.
17. SUSPICIONS AFTER THE SPEECH - RESENTMENTS
• Resentment about history made the USA and the USSR suspicious of
each other. The Soviet Union could not forget that in 1918 Britain and
the USA had tried to destroy the Russian Revolution.
• Stalin also thought that they had not given him enough help in the
Second World War.
• At the same time, Britain and the USA could not forget that Stalin had
signed the Nazi-Soviet Pact with Germany in 1939. These long-standing
hatreds from history made both sides suspect each others’ motives and
actions. There may have even been an element of revenge for the past.
In these ways, the past helped to create the Cold War.
18. SUSPICIONS AFTER THE SPEECH - EVENTS
• Finally, because neither side trusted each other, events made them hate
each other more.
• The Yalta Conference (Feb 1945) caused problems because, although on
the surface, the conference seemed successful, behind the scenes,
tension was growing.
• After the conference, Churchill wrote to Roosevelt that ‘The Soviet union
has become a danger to the free world.’ At the Potsdam Conference (Jul
1945) the arguments came out into the open – Russia and America
openly disagreed about the details of how to divide Germany, the size of
reparations Germany ought to pay, and Soviet policy in Poland.
19. RUSSIA’S SALAMI TACTICS
• Also, Russia’s salami tactics (taking over the countries of eastern Europe,
slice by slice 1945–48) caused suspicion because – although Russia
claimed it was simply building a buffer zone between Germany and
Russia – the western powers believed that the Soviets were building an
empire in eastern Europe.
• At Fulton, Churchill said that eastern Europe was cut off from the free
world by ‘an iron curtain’. Behind that line, he said, the people of
eastern Europe were ‘subject to Soviet influence… totalitarian control
[and] police governments’.
• So, although the Russians claimed that Churchill’s Fulton speech caused
the Cold War, the beliefs, aims, history of the two sides, and events
leading up to 1946, had created the conditions which created hostility.
20. • This cartoon from 1946 by
the British cartoonist
Illingworth was published in
the Daily Mail on 6 March
1946 (the day after
Churchill's Fulton speech).
• It shows Churchill having 'a
peep under the Iron
Curtain'.
• ‘Joe’ is Joseph Stalin.
• In fact, the ‘iron curtain’ was
a 2,000-km. line of barbed
wire, look-out posts and
road blocks.