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- Truman Doctrine
-
- The Truman Doctrine was the impetus for the change in United States foreign policy,
- from
- isolationist to internationalists; thus we were drawn into two wars of containment and into
- world affairs. The Truman Doctrine led to a major change in U.S. foreign policy from its
- inception - aid to Turkey and Greece - to its indirect influence in Korea and Vietnam. The
- aftermath of World War II inspired the U.S. to issue a proclamation that would stem
- Communist influence throughout the world. However, our zeal in that achievement sent our
- soldiers to die in Vietnam and Korea for a seemingly futile cause.
- It must be the policy of the U.S. to support free peoples. This is no more than a
- frank recognitions that totalitarian regimes imposed on free peoples . . .
- undermine the foundations of . . . peace and security of the United States.
-
- The Truman Doctrine would change the foreign policy of the United States and the world.
-
- This policy would first go in aid to support the democratic regimes in Turkey and Greece.
- These
- nations were being threatened by Soviet-supported rebels seeking to topple the government
- and install a Communist regime. The Soviets were also making extreme territorial demands
- especially concerning the Dardanelles.
- A direct influence of this Doctrine was, of course, the Marshall Plan. The Marshall
- Plan
- was designed to give aid to any European country damaged during World War II. It
- tremendously helped ravaged European nations such as Italy and France. By helping them
- economically, the Marshall Plan indirectly helped to stem growing Communist sentiment in
- these countries.
- The process whereby the Truman Doctrine came to fruition was a long and arduous one.
- After World War II, the Soviet Union and the United States stood at the pinnacle of world
- power. By the late '40's, the U.S.S.R. had caught up to the United States' nuclear weapons
- programs. In addition, they were very land-hungry. Throughout Russia's history, they have
- been in search of a port - a quest advanced further by Peter the Great and Catherine the
- Great. The Soviets in that respect were direct threats to their non-Communist neighbors:
- Greece, Turkey, and Iran.
- In Iran, the U.S.S.R. was not evacuating Iran's northern provinces despite entreaties
- from
- the United States. In Turkey, the Soviet Union coveted several naval bases along the
- Straits of Dardanelles. Further, they pressured Turkey for border cessions that Turkey had
- taken from Russia after World War I. In Greece, the Soviets encouraged the insurgent leader
- Markos Vafiades with arms and economic support. The British troops helping the Grecian
- government were strangled of supplies due to poor economic times in Britain. Also, further
- territorial requisitions to Yugoslavia, Albania, and Bulgaria were being made.
- Seeing the deteriorating U.S. - Soviet relations, Truman issued two statements about
- "agreements, violations, reparations, and Soviet actions threatening U.S. security." "1.
- The Middle East is of strategic importance to the U.S.S.R.(from which they are in range of
- an air attack.) 2. The U.S. must be prepared to wage atomic and biological warfare."
- (Ferrel 247) Soon after, he sent bombers to the Middle East. He desired the return of all
- arms given to U.S.S.R. under the Lend-Lease Act.
- There isn't a doubt in my mind that Russia intends an invasion of Turkey and
- seizure of the Black Sea straits to the Mediterranean. Unless Russia is faced
- with an iron fist and strong language another war is in the making, How many
- divisions have you?
-
- Truman had his eye on the Soviets and on war. However, The U.S.S.R. never made such
- invasions and thus quelled Truman's paranoia.
- The Truman Doctrine was starting to develop during 1947 when Truman issued several
- statements.
- 1. The present Russian ambassador . . . persona non grata . . . does not belong
- in Washington. 2. Urge Stalin to pay us a visit. 3. Settle the Korean question . .
- . give the Koreans a government of their own. 4. Settle the Manchurian question .
- . . support Chang Kai-Shek for a strong China. 5. Agree to discussion of Russia's
- lend-lease debt to the U.S. 6. Agree to commercial air treaty. 7. Make it plain
- that we have no territorial ambitions. That we only want peace, but we'll fight
- for it!
- Truman also set several goals for questioned territories:
- The U.S. would go to war if provoked. The Danube, Trieste, Dardanelles, Kiel
- Canal, and Rhine-Danube waterway should by free to all nations. Manchuria should
- be Chinese, Dairen should be a free port. Russia should have Kuriles and Sakhalin
- . . . Germany should be occupied 'according to Yalta.' Austria should not be
- treated as an enemy country.
-
- After these announcements the British disclosed that they could no longer give aid to Turkey
- and Greece and that the U.S. must pick up the slack. This left Greece in extreme danger of
- toppling into Communist control. "If Greece fell . . . Turkey isolated in the Eastern
- Mediterranean, would eventually succumb . . ."
- Truman's plan for peacetime aid -- The Truman Doctrine -- was unprecedented in history
- (a sum of more than $400 million) and he faced a hostile Republican Congress through which
- to pass it. However, Truman informed the Congress of the troubles facing Italy, Germany
- and France. They and small, fragile Middle-eastern states faced direct threats from
- Communism. In retort, the Congress had problems with Truman's plan that included: The Greek
- government was corrupt and undemocratic; Turkey, too, was not a Democracy. Turkey had been
- neutral during the war. Further, the President's plan for aid gave no attention to
- Communism outside Europe. Nonetheless, two months later the bill passed on May 15, 1947.
- Truman added while signing the legislation into law:
- We are guardians of a great faith. We believe that freedom offers the best chance
- of peace
- and prosperity for all, and our desire for peace cannot be separated from our
- belief in liberty. We hope that in years ahead more and more nations will come
- to know the advantages of freedom and liberty. It is to this end that we have
- enacted the law I have now signed.
-
- It was brought to Truman's attention that Europe was by no means content in their
- economic recovery. Britain was near bankruptcy, Italy, France, and Germany were plagued by
- a terrible winter. More aid was needed to keep their democratic governments afloat.
- Thus, a direct result from the Truman Doctrine was the Marshall Plan. This came about
- when Truman appointed General Marshall as Secretary of State. In that position, he observed
- "Europe's economic plight." Marshall proposed a plan that would offer aid to all nations
- "West of the Urals." (Truman, 355) This included the U.S.S.R. and her Eastern European
- satellite states. They, however, refused the aid. By March 1948, Congress had appropriated
- the first installment. Truman signed it into law on April 3, 1948. By its consummation in
- 1952 it would provide more than $13 billion in aid to war-ravaged Europe.
- This was a grand change in U.S. Foreign policy. We had gone from isolationists to
- internationalists. This Doctrine is in direct contrast to the Monroe Doctrine. The Monroe
- Doctrine served as the U.S. Foreign policy for well over 150 years. It essentially stated
- that the U.S. would not intervene in the World's affairs as long as no one interfered with
- hers. With the Truman Doctrine, we completely reversed that role that had been only briefly
- breached during the World Wars. Our new policy was one of Containment: To contain the
- spread of Communism to the states in which it presently inhabits.
- Our relationship with the U.S.S.R. after Truman's declaration was in continuing
- deterioration. A major threat to our relationship was the Berlin Blockade of 1948. On June
- 24, 1948, the Soviets enacted a total blockade on Berlin. The U.S. response was to airlift
- supplies into the cutoff West Berliners. By its end 277,804 sorties delivered 2,325,809
- tons of goods to Berlin -- more than a ton a piece to every Berliner.
- That threat brought Truman to prepare for war. He asked Congress for two measures in
- addition to the Marshall Plan to fortify America: The first was to temporarily enact the
- Draft. The Second was a long range plan called Universal Military Training. This was
- designed to train all males graduating from high school for combat. This idea never had a
- chance in Congress. Truman also made a pact with Canada, Portugal, Italy, Norway, Denmark,
- Iceland, and Brussels pact nations.
- This was all a prelude to the upcoming conflict in the Korean War. We had not been
- able
- to assess the relative strength of the U.S.S.R. However, what we did know was that we had a
- far bigger atomic buildup than the Soviets -- nearly 300 bombs! However, conventionally, we
- were far poorer.
- On June 24, 1950 Truman was told that North Korea had invaded South Korea or in
- Containment terms: Communism was spreading! The UN Security took a unanimous vote to
- declare war on North Korea. Truman hastily sent 10,000 troops from Japan to combine with
- the weak South Korean Army. Even together, they were hardly a match for the 90,000 battle-
- hardened and strong North Koreans. General MacArthur was put in charge and ceded much space
- in order to buy time for reinforcements. Meanwhile, the American public was not seeing the
- value of killing their boys in Korea. "We demand that you stop murdering American boys and
- Korean People . . ."
- Truman increased military spending to finance the war reinforcements. With newly
- received reinforcements, MacArthur brilliantly turned the tide of war. MacArthur moved
- speedily up the Korean Peninsula until Chinese intervention. They briefly provided a
- problem but they had no air force with which to support their own troops. Truman fired
- MacArthur on insubordination charges. The U.N. forces continued the war until a cease-fire
- was made in 1953. This reestablished the border at the 38th parallel. During this war, the
- U.S. lost about 60,000 troops. What results did we get? No border changes, a minor
- containment of Communism that probably would not have made much difference to the U.S.
- anyway. Only the death of Americans was gained.
- The next result of the Truman Doctrine was the Vietnam War. This was another anti-
- Communist containment war. Ho Chi Minh had invaded South Vietnam. It began with the Gulf
- of Tonkin incident in which Vietnam Torpedo boats attacked U.S. destroyers. From there,
- more and more troops were poured into Vietnam. U.S. began bombing raids in 1965. By the
- end of that year more than 200,000 troops were in Vietnam. In 1968, 525,000 troops were
- there. Several peace initiatives were given by the U.S. but were refused, however by the
- Vietnamese. The Tet offensive renewed lagging conflict and eventually led to the end of
- all-out U.S. involvement in 1973. In 1970, the U.S. entered Cambodia due to a coup.
- However, in three months the U.S. troops were withdrawn. At the end of our withdrawal
- nearly 60,000 troops were killed and this time we had not even saved the country we were
- defending. The veterans received nearly no welcome as the public was not interested in
- fighting a war too far away to matter.
- One great event that has caused the U.S. to escalate world aid and involvement was the
- collapse of the Soviet Union. No longer are we fighting to contain Communism, but instead
- to maintain Democracy any and everywhere.
- Still, today the Truman Doctrine prevails in determining our foreign policy. Most
- recently, we fought the stunning Gulf War. This was not a war of containment but it served
- a similar purpose. It sought to prevent an aggressor from overtaking a weaker neighbor.
- Luckily,
-
- we had minimal casualties. This war was one different from Korea and Vietnam. It had a
- significant impact on the United States. We fought for our oil supply. Thus, this war did
- have a significant purpose.
- The U.S. has also fought minor skirmishes in hot spots around the world. In the
- Mideast
- we fought in Lebanon and Libya, not to mention our massive aid to Israel. In Central
- America, we have given aid to Nicaragua, fought in Panama, Grenada, and Haiti. All of these
- illustrate the impact of the Truman Doctrine on our foreign policy. In Europe, we have not
- fought any wars but have given massive aid. From the Marshall Plan to a World Monetary Fund
- $10 billion grant to Russia, we have aided Europe throughout half a century. We formed many
- alliances such as NATO to combat Communism and preserve Independence there. And the most
- recent conflict of all is the Balkan conflict. We are again in danger of being drawn into a
- war with no clear purpose or advantage to the U.S. But in the continuance of the Truman
- Doctrine, we have stationed troops there. Hopefully, no casualties will come about but no
- one can prognosticate the future of such a hot spot for combat.
- The Truman Doctrine has impacted everyone in the U.S. and nearly every country in the
- world since its declaration in 1947. Some critics castigate the Doctrine: "Critics blamed
- involvement in Korea and Vietnam on the Truman Doctrine. Without the Doctrine . . . the
- U.S. might have minded its own business." (McCullough, 571) While other critics argue: "
- Truman was trying to restore the European Balance of Power and had neither the intention nor
- the capability of policing the world." (McCullough, 571) He may have not had that intention,
- but that is exactly the Doctrine's ramification. All over the world U.S. troops sit waiting
- to protect Democracy. The Truman Doctrine ensures that even without a valid threat to U.S.
- security we must waste American lives to "protect the free peoples of the World."
- (McCullough, 571) Would the world have been a worse place if we had not acted to protect
- South Korea and South Vietnam? Would the U.S.S.R. have fallen due to its own economic
- instability and only fleeting control over its massive population? These questions can be
- cogitated but never answered. One thing is certain, people should not die for a cause that
- is nonexistent, or one that could have destroyed itself.
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- Bibliography
- Ferrel, Robert. Harry S.Truman, A Life. London: University of Missouri Press, 1994. pp.
- 246- 268, 353-357. McCullough, David. Truman. New York: Simon and Schuster,
- 1992. pp. 550-575 Truman, Margaret. Harry S.Truman. New York: William Morrow and Co.,
- Inc., 1973. pp. 344- 372. "The Truman Doctrine." Grolier
- Encyclopedia. 1993 ed. "Vietnam War." Microsoft Encarta. 1994 ed. Primary Sources:
- Draper, Theodore. "American Hubris: From Truman to the Persian Gulf." New York Review of
- Books, 16 Jul. 1987, pp.40-48.
- "Truman Doctrine Speech." gopher://wiretap.spies.com:70/00/Gov/US-Speech/Truman.47
- "The Truman Doctrine: The Unstoppable Boulder." Economist, 14 Mar. 1989, pp.19-22.
- Serfaty, Simon. "Lost Illusions." Foreign Policy, Spring 1988, pp. 3-19.
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