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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
12 pages in length. The writer cites the Yalta Convention, paranoia, suspicion, foreign policy and imperialism as the primary reasons for the Cold War. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCColdWarBg.rtf
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the first was held in Tehran and the third in Potsdam - was held in the Crimea as a means by which to address at European postwar frontiers (Singer, 1989).
Together with Winston Churchill, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin, myriad other dignitaries stepped forward in February 1945 in an earnest attempt to settle what had turned into
an intolerable situation. Three years and a number of actions later, the Marshall Plan became one of the most important restorative elements aimed toward Eastern Europe to come out
of the Yalta Conference. The issues that led up to Secretary of State Marshall having to take such an unprecedented stand with regard
to Eastern European foreign policy originated in what is labeled the Age of Catastrophe. The period between 1914 and 1945 brought much grief and heartache to the people of
Europe, as it reflected a time of great concern for the safety of both Europeans and their country. Among the adverse activities that occurred during that period include two
world wars, Fascism, Nazism, Stalinist Totalitarianism, and the Depression, all of which contributed to the death of more than sixty million people by means of murder, war and starvation (Kurth,
1995). Disaster after disaster followed one upon another through the middle nineteen forties that had Europe scrambling for cover. World War I
began what was to ultimately come to be known as The Age of Catastrophe. While having started as "an inter-imperialist conflict" (Rosenberg, 1995, p. 139) among capitalist leaders, it
eventually came to be the inciter of "a series of huge blows" (p. 139) that would endanger the very presence of capitalism as it existed in Europe during that period.
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