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Truman Doctrine And The Soviet War

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Bound by a common enemy, the US viewed Russia as a comrade during World War 2. It became popular for American propaganda to stress Russia’s similarity to America. Both were anti-imperialist and had a revolutionary past. However, the emphasis on sameness proved a temporary facade, a reaction to Soviet war efforts rather than a re-reprisal. At the end of the war, the American government (and its people by extension), no longer allies, returned to it’s original position of distrust of communism and the USSR government. Once more, Americans began looking at the Soviet Union with fear disguised as disdain. Soviet-American tensions rose by the end of World War 2. To Americans, Stalin became a new Hitler-demagogic, dictatorial, demanding personal loyalty and conniving to rule other peoples.
In this atmosphere, Truman’s doctrine was established. It became the United States policy to "support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures” in March 1947. With the Truman Doctrine, President Harry S. Truman established that the United States would provide political, military and economic assistance to all democratic nations under threat from external or internal authoritarian forces. The Truman Doctrine effectively reoriented U.S. foreign policy, away from its usual stance of withdrawal from regional conflicts not directly involving the United States, to one of possible intervention in far away conflicts. The Truman

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