What factors contributed to the Cold War?

With Japan’s surrender in August 1945, Americans besieged the government to bring their loved ones home. They looked forward to the end of international crises and the dismantling of the large military establishment. Postwar realities quickly shattered these hopes. The wartime alliance of the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union crumbled, giving birth to a Cold War. The United States began to develop the means for containing the spread of Soviet power around the globe, including a military buildup and an enormous aid program for Europe, known as the Marshall Plan.

> CHRONOLOGY

1945
  • Roosevelt dies; Truman becomes president.

1946
  • George F. Kennan drafts containment policy.

  • United States grants independence to Philippines.

1947
  • National Security Act passes.

  • Truman announces Truman Doctrine.

  • United States sends aid to Greece and Turkey.

1948
  • Marshall Plan approved.

  • United States recognizes Israel.

1948–1949
  • Berlin crisis precipitates airlift drops.

1949
  • Communists take over China.

  • North Atlantic Treaty Organization formed.

  • Soviet Union explodes atomic bomb.

  • Truman approves hydrogen bomb.