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What was Truman's containment policy?
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All Flashcards in Topic 11.9
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11.9.112 cards
What was Truman's containment policy?
A US strategy to stop the spread of communism without a full war — using aid, alliances, and pressure rather than invading communist countries directly.
What was the Truman Doctrine (1947)?
Truman's pledge that the US would support any country resisting communism, first applied to Greece and Turkey — the opening statement of containment.
What was McCarthyism?
A wave of accusations (1950-54) led by Senator Joseph McCarthy that communists had infiltrated the US government, ruining careers on little evidence and creating a climate of fear.
What was Eisenhower's 'New Look' policy?
A Cold War strategy relying on nuclear weapons (massive retaliation) and covert CIA action instead of expensive conventional armies — cheaper and lower-risk for the US.
Why did the CIA overthrow Guatemala's government in 1954?
President Jacobo Arbenz's land reform threatened the US-owned United Fruit Company; the CIA branded him a communist risk and backed a coup (Operation PBSUCCESS).
Who led the Cuban Revolution and when did it succeed?
Fidel Castro (with Che Guevara), overthrowing US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista on 1 January 1959.
Why were Latin American governments and the US alarmed by the Cuban Revolution?
Castro's land reforms and nationalization of US businesses, followed by his alliance with the USSR, suggested revolution could spread and threaten US interests region-wide.
What was the Bay of Pigs invasion (April 1961)?
A CIA-trained force of Cuban exiles landed in Cuba to overthrow Castro; it failed within three days, embarrassing President Kennedy and pushing Castro closer to the USSR.
What triggered the Cuban Missile Crisis (October 1962)?
US U-2 spy planes discovered Soviet nuclear missile sites being built in Cuba, able to strike most of the USA within minutes.
How was the Cuban Missile Crisis resolved?
Kennedy ordered a naval blockade ('quarantine'); after tense negotiations, Khrushchev agreed to remove the missiles in exchange for a US non-invasion pledge and secret removal of US missiles from Turkey.
What was the diplomatic impact of the Cuban Revolution on Latin America?
Cuba was expelled from the Organization of American States (OAS) in 1962; the US launched the Alliance for Progress aid program to prevent other revolutions, while some governments quietly admired Cuba's defiance of the US.
Compare Truman's and Eisenhower's approaches to communism in Latin America.
Truman focused mainly on Europe and Asia with less direct Latin American action; Eisenhower's New Look leaned heavily on CIA covert operations (like Guatemala 1954) as a cheaper alternative to open military force.
11.9.212 cards
What was the Alliance for Progress?
Kennedy's 1961 plan to give Latin America $20 billion in aid over 10 years, tied to reforms in land, tax, health and education, to prevent communist revolutions.
Why did the Alliance for Progress largely fail?
Local elites who controlled land and taxes blocked reforms; aid often propped up military governments instead; Congress cut funding once Vietnam took priority.
Why did Johnson send Marines to the Dominican Republic in 1965?
To stop a feared leftist government (linked to Juan Bosch) returning to power after Trujillo's assassination, out of fear of 'another Cuba'.
How many US troops did Johnson send to the Dominican Republic?
Over 20,000 US Marines, in April 1965.
How did Vietnam affect Johnson's Latin America policy?
War spending drained funds and attention from the Alliance for Progress and his domestic Great Society programme, weakening both.
Compare regional reactions to Vietnam.
Anti-communist military governments (e.g. Brazil) often supported the US; Cuba, students and the left across Latin America opposed it as imperialism.
What was Operation Condor?
A 1970s secret alliance between South American military regimes (Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and others) to share intelligence and hunt down leftist opponents across borders, with US support.
What role did the School of the Americas play?
It trained thousands of Latin American military officers, many of whom later led repressive regimes involved in Operation Condor.
What did Nixon do in Chile?
Ordered the CIA to destabilise the economy and undermine elected socialist President Allende, helping create conditions for Pinochet's 1973 coup.
What was the Panama Canal Treaty (1977)?
Carter's agreement to hand control of the Panama Canal to Panama by 1999, reflecting his human-rights-focused foreign policy.
What did Reagan do regarding Nicaragua?
Funded and armed the Contra rebels fighting the leftist Sandinista government throughout the 1980s, leading to the Iran-Contra scandal.
State one argument for and one against: was US policy 1961-88 driven by fear or genuine concern?
For genuine concern: Alliance for Progress and Panama Canal Treaty. For fear-driven: Dominican Republic intervention, Chile, Condor, and the Contras.
11.9.312 cards
What was the Gouzenko affair (1945)?
A Soviet embassy clerk in Ottawa defected with proof of a Soviet spy ring in Canada, launching Canadian domestic anti-Communism.
What is NORAD and when was it created?
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, created 1958, a joint US-Canada air defence system watching for Soviet attack.
How did Lester Pearson shape Canada's Cold War image?
He designed the UN peacekeeping force during the 1956 Suez Crisis, giving Canada a reputation as a peacemaking middle power.
Give one example of Canada cooperating with the USA in the Cold War.
Founding NATO member (1949) and full partner in NORAD (1958), sharing joint radar lines across the Arctic.
Give one example of tension between Canada and the USA in the Cold War.
Diefenbaker delayed raising Canada's military alert during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, angering Washington.
What was the Rio Pact and the OAS?
The Rio Pact (1947) was a mutual-defence treaty; the OAS (1948) was a body promoting regional cooperation and anti-Communism across the Americas.
Who was Salvador Allende?
Chile's president from 1970, the world's first freely elected Marxist head of state, who nationalised US-owned industries.
What happened on 11 September 1973 in Chile?
General Pinochet led a military coup that overthrew Allende, who died in the attack; Pinochet then ruled as dictator until 1990.
How did the USA help undermine Allende's government?
The CIA funded opposition groups and strikes, and the US applied economic pressure to destabilise Chile's economy before the 1973 coup.
What was Operation Condor?
A secret US-backed alliance of South American dictatorships (from 1975) that hunted down left-wing exiles across borders.
Compare Canada's and Chile's Cold War experiences.
Canada balanced alliance loyalty with independent choices (Vietnam refusal, Missile Crisis delay); Chile's democracy was violently overthrown due to Cold War pressures.
How did Chile's relationship with the USSR change after 1973?
Ties collapsed almost entirely under Pinochet, who realigned Chile firmly with the US-led anti-Communist bloc.
Topic 11.9 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The Americas during the Cold War (1945–1991)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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