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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper promoting the argument that FDR was ‘duped' by Stalin at the Yalta conference in 1945. Some background included on Stalin along with references to specific incidents showing how he manipulated the president in addition to other prominent figures. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Fdryalta.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
on this one meeting alone. An analysis of Stalins character, antics, and treatment of the Western Allies as a whole needs to be considered in order to fully realize that
Roosevelt was, indeed, mislead by the Soviet leader. Exhausting night-time film shows were a permanent feature of Stalins diplomatic protocol. The leader preferred to show Westerners films glorifying himself, and
often put on the 1938 propaganda film If War Came Tomorrow. The strategy worked. Roosevelt had a tendency to turn a blind eye to all of the ugliness of Soviet
brutality which left him seeing the Soviet system in Russia as not being very different from his own New Deal. Even with all its bad points, he saw it as
constitutionally pledged to its people to provide for their welfare, jobs, and medical care in the same manners as his New Deal. (Nisbet, 1989). There was the promise of building
a classless society in Russia which FDR saw as progressive and forward-looking. However, was this truly the way things were under Stalin? Evidence of Stalins propagandist manipulation would suggest
the contrary. For example, Stalin also created the illusion that he was always ready to help and would do everything which depended on him personally. It is common knowledge
that Stalin never traveled to the war zones. Throughout the war he only came close to the front line on one occasion. This occurred in August 1943 near Rzhev. Nevertheless,
he did, in fact, justify his refusals to meet Roosevelt and Churchill by his absences were because he was at the front. I have to visit the troops on some
or other sector of our front more often than usual. On one occasion the leader referred to the opinion of `all my colleagues, who considered his journey impossible. (Kudryashov, 1995).
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