The Origins of the Cold War

831 Words2 Pages

The Origins of the Cold War

The Cold War period from 1945 to 1985 was a result of distrust and

misunderstanding between the USSR and the United States of America.

This distrust never actually resulted any fighting between the two

superpowers but they came very close to fighting on several occasions.

The Cold War was a result of many different events and factors

including the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the Potsdam Conference of

1945, the differences between communism and capitalism, the 'Iron

curtain' speech and Marshall Aid. Through looking at these we are able

to comprehend the main reasons behind the development of the Cold War.

It can be said that the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 which marked the

emergence of Communism as a state power is a logical staring point for

the Cold War. It was in the November of 1917 that the Bolsheviks

seized control of the Russian capital Petrograd, and their regime was

quickly accepted in many other parts of the country. This led to

Russia becoming the first communist state which means that they were

viewed as threat to all other countries who were not communist. Russia

believed in the communist ideology while the Western powers believed

in capitalist ideology. The United States of America had a free

economy where there was freedom of religion, freedom of association

and freedom of protest while the command economy of Russia was

atheist, everyone was socialist and industry, land and media were

controlled. America was paranoid that communism would spread to their

own country and Russia wanted to establish soviet satellite states as

a protective measure as Russia had been devastated by the events of...

... middle of paper ...

...lin Airlift might have made the Cold War worse as West Berlin

and East Berlin could never be close to brought together now and it

was also the first time that the USA and the USSR came close to

fighting.

To conclude the origins of the Cold War stem from as far back as the

Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 right up to as far as the Berlin Blockade

of 1949. Ultimately it was America's paranoia of communism spreading

to her own country and Russia's attitude of 'never again', never again

would they be invaded by Germany as they had been devastated by both

World Wars.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

[1]Winston Churchill, The Cold War and After by J F Aylet, page 5

[2]Thompson and Smith, The Cold War by Hugh Higgins page37

[3]Joseph Stalin, The Cold War by Hugh Higgins page 37

More about The Origins of the Cold War

Open Document