The big idea: The Cold War was not only fought in summits and missile silos. It reshaped everyday life — jobs, fears, art, and freedom — inside the countries that lived through it.
This micro compares that impact on two very different countries: the USA, a rich superpower fighting the Cold War from the outside, and Vietnam, a country the Cold War tore apart from within.
Exam questions on this bullet ask you to look past summits and treaties, and explain how the Cold War changed ordinary life — economically, socially and culturally — inside named countries.
The exam rule you must not break: The syllabus requires two countries each from a different IB region. The four regions are: the Americas, Europe, Africa and the Middle East, and Asia and Oceania.
A country pairing only works if your two countries sit in two different boxes on that list.
A common mistake: Cuba is NOT a safe partner for the USA: Students often pair the USA with Cuba because both were central to the Cold War. This fails the region rule — the USA and Cuba are both in the Americas.
Cuba is a perfectly valid example on its own. It simply cannot be your second country if the USA is your first. You would need to pair Cuba with a country from Europe, Africa/Middle East, or Asia/Oceania instead.
- The Americas — includes the USA, Cuba, Nicaragua, Chile, Guatemala
- Europe — includes Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany, Poland
- Africa and the Middle East — includes Egypt, Angola, Congo, Iran
- Asia and Oceania — includes Vietnam, Korea, China, Afghanistan
This micro pairs the USA (the Americas) with Vietnam (Asia and Oceania) — two genuinely different regions, giving real contrast: a rich superpower fighting the Cold War abroad, against a poor country fought over and devastated at home.
Say it in your opening line: Name both countries and both regions in your first sentence: "This essay examines the USA (the Americas) and Vietnam (Asia and Oceania)..." That one line proves to the examiner you have met the region requirement before you write another word.
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Economic impact: paying for a permanent war footing
Fighting — and constantly threatening to fight — the Cold War for over four decades needed a permanent, enormous war machine that had never existed in US peacetime before.
The military-industrial complex: President Eisenhower himself warned about this in 1961, coining the term military-industrial complex.
Defence spending stayed permanently high. The nuclear arms race with the USSR and the space race to reach the Moon first both consumed vast government budgets, year after year.
- Permanent military spending — billions were spent on weapons and forces every year of the Cold War, not just during active wars.
- A new arms industry — firms such as Lockheed and Boeing depended on government contracts, creating jobs but also political pressure to keep spending high.
- The space race — after the 1957 shock of Sputnik, the US government created NASA (1958) and poured money into science, culminating in the 1969 Moon landing.
Social impact: McCarthyism and the Red Scare
Cold War fear reached into American homes long before any missile was fired. The anxiety that communists were secretly working inside the USA itself was called the Red Scare.
McCarthyism (1950–54)
Senator Joseph McCarthy claimed he held lists of secret communists working inside the US government. Hundreds of officials, actors and teachers were accused, and many lost their jobs even without proof.
The blacklist and HUAC
The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) questioned Hollywood figures about communist links. Those who refused to name others were often blacklisted, unable to find work for years.
McCarthy's fall (1954)
Televised Senate hearings showed McCarthy bullying witnesses with no real evidence. Public opinion turned against him and the Senate condemned him, ending his power — but the culture of suspicion lingered.
Why McCarthyism counts as Cold War impact: McCarthyism shows the Cold War changing American society from within: neighbours suspected neighbours, and holding the wrong political opinion could cost someone their career, even with no evidence of any crime.
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Cultural impact in the USA: the anti-war counterculture
By the late 1960s, growing US involvement in the Vietnam War produced a wave of protest that reshaped American culture itself.
- Protest music — artists such as Bob Dylan and Creedence Clearwater Revival wrote songs against the war and the draft, turning music into political protest.
- Mass protest — huge marches, including hundreds of thousands in Washington D.C. in 1969, showed a generation openly rejecting government policy.
- The 1968 turning point — the shock of the Tet Offensive convinced many ordinary Americans the war was unwinnable, deepening the counterculture movement.
Culture as protest: Anti-war culture was not confined to concerts. Films, campus sit-ins and even clothing became ways for young Americans to publicly reject Cold War policy — a cultural shift the earlier, more united mood of the 1950s had not seen.
Vietnam: a country devastated by war
If the Cold War strained the USA from a distance, it devastated Vietnam directly. Vietnam was split at the 17th parallel in 1954 into a communist North and a US-backed South, and became one of the Cold War's bloodiest proxy battlegrounds.
Economic impact on Vietnam
- Years of American bombing, including the huge Operation Rolling Thunder campaign, destroyed roads, bridges, farmland and factories
- Toxic defoliants such as Agent Orange poisoned farmland for a generation
- After 1975, the victorious communist government imposed a Soviet-style command economy, nationalising industry and collectivising farms
Social impact on Vietnam
- Conscription pulled millions of young men into fighting on both sides of the war
- An estimated 2–3 million Vietnamese civilians and soldiers died between 1955 and 1975
- Millions were displaced from their homes, and hundreds of thousands fled by boat after 1975 as boat people
Why Vietnam's impact was so much deeper: Unlike the USA, Vietnam was not fighting a Cold War from a safe distance — the war was fought on Vietnamese soil, against Vietnamese people. This is exactly the contrast the exam rewards: a superpower strained versus a nation shattered.