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Summary A-Level History- Option 2Q - Eisenhower Foreign Policy

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AQA A Level History Notes – Option 2Q: The American Dream: Reality & Illusion- EISENHOWER FOREIGN POLICY Created by an A* student (A* in A Level History, Grade 9 at GCSE) Consistently achieved top marks throughout sixth form using these notes. Includes detailed summaries of Eisenhower's foreign policy. Clearly organised and focused on exam-relevant AO1 content. ⏳ Took over 2 years to create - saves you hours of preparation. Perfect for students aiming for top grades with efficient, effective revision.

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Eisenhower- Foreign policy
Background:
Election 1952:
●​ Republican
●​ Very popular candidate ‘i like ike’. Wanted by democrats and republicans. Landslide victory
●​ K1C2, tackling korea, communism and corruption
●​ Dynamic conservative. Conservative with money, liberal with people
●​ General in ww2
●​ Nixon as ‘goodwill ambassador’ for fpol. Eisenhower could not travel as much due to his age.
●​ Sec of State. John Foster Dulles. Strict containment policy. Aggressive anti communism. Designed seato.
Focused on international mutual security agreements- contained communism and allowed reduction of troops in
us military
●​ Eisenhower prioritised foreign and defence policy- aims included
-​ Preventing Western Europe from Communism by strengthening it
-​ Prevent Soviet control in middle east- middle east contains half the world’s oil
-​ Southeast Asia was critical- support French in vietnam
-​ Avoid overspending on defence

Eisenhower considered a sound economy essential for national security, saying ‘a bankrupt America is a
defenseless America’. Sought to balance the budget.
●​ Defence expenditure had rocketed to 300% in Truman’s final 30 months
●​ Defence cuts generated great antagonism
●​ Republicans, Democrats and the press were critical when the Soviets took the lead in the space race
●​ Continuous pressure on Eisenhower from the ‘military industrial complex’ caused him to spend far more on
defence than he considered necessary. Still far less than many Americans wanted.
-​ Influential figures in armed forces and defence industry with vested interest in war
Cold War Thaw:
●​ Stalin died march 1953
●​ Malenkov took over temporarily and talked of ‘mutual understanding’ with the US
●​ Replaced with khrushchev who advocated peaceful coexistence with the west but his words and actions triggered
the Hungarian revolt of 1956 and the berlin crisis 1958-59
●​ Secret speech 1956, obtained by the cia. Khrushchev calls stalin a bad leader and advocates de stalinization.
NATO:
●​ North Atlantic treaty organisation
●​ Key members UK, US and France
●​ Formed in 1949
●​ Military alliance to counterweigh soviet armies stationed in europe after ww2
SEATO 1955:
●​ Southeast asia treaty organisation
●​ Preventing communism from spreading around the region
●​ International defence treaty made by dulles
●​ Generally a failure
●​ Dissolved 1977
●​ Us, france, britain, new zealand, australia, thailand, pakistan
CENTO
●​ Formed 1955
●​ Dissolved 1979
●​ Created by Dulles as NATO parallel, Iraq, Pakistan, Turkey, UK
●​ Made to counter threat of soviet expansion into vital middle east oil producing regions
●​ US did not join due to ‘pro israeli lobby’ at home who would have disapproved of an alliance with Arab nations
●​ Never very effective
Pactomania-
●​ NY times article 1955
●​ America made a significant amount of pacts in short period of time
The new look
●​ In attempt to reconcile conflicting demands of military (wanted to spend more money) and treasury (wanted to
spend less) initiated the ‘New Look’ defence policy
●​ Fewer conventional forces and ‘massive retaliation’

, ●​ ‘More bang for the buck’- cost effective. Reliance on nuclear weapons rather than excessive expenditure on
conventional forces.
●​ Covert warfare, spying and cia (allen dulles)
●​ Brinkmanship- taking opponent to brink of war, forcing them to back down.
●​ Aimed to prevent crises by stopping Communist aggression and expansionism
●​ Criticised by new York Times as risky and dangerous.
●​ Army Chief of Staff Matt Ridgway- inflexible and left US only one option in crisis
●​ Eisenhower never used nuclear weaponry + maintained peace through threat of American nuclear arsenal and
his military reputation

Europe:
When Eisenhower became president, Western Europe was securely in the American camp and Eastern Europe
was part of the Soviet empire.
Germany
●​ Background.
-​ End of ww2, 1945. Feb yalta conference it was agreed that germany would be divided into 4 sectors.
Berlin lay in soviet sector but would be split.
-​ 1948 berlin blockade. Stalin blockaded west berlin and us airlifted supplies in
●​ 1954- west germany rearmament. Eisenhower persuaded the french to agree to this. Strengthened NATO.
●​ However he failed to persuade Western European governments to spend more on defence and rely less on the
united states.
●​ Krushchev disliked how
-​ The West refused to give East Germany diplomatic recognition
-​ West Berlin was a centre of Western espionage and a magnet for skilled East German workers
●​ Berlin crisis 1958-61
-​ Nov 1958- Khrushchev demanded west berlin become a ‘free city’ and western troops leave
-​ Eisenhower ignored Khrushchev , did not want to give in to soviet demands.
-​ Thought ongoing presence of troops needed to protect wb freedom.
-​ Led to mass criticism from democrats, press, defence department and arms industry. Accused of not
taking crisis seriously.
-​ Accused of ‘putting a balanced budget ahead of national security’
-​ Made it clear US would always support WB but denied that their was a berlin crisis
-​ Gave Khrushchev room to retreat and crises passed
-​ July 1961- east german government backed by ussr built a barrier between east and west.
-​ Paris summit 1960- met to discuss the situation.
-​ Damaged eisenhower reputation and raised political tensions
●​ Eisenhower asked for too much. Wanted a free united Germany and freedom of eastern european nations. Met
with khrushchev in 1955 at geneva summit but no agreements were made

Hungarian Revolt 1956
●​ Causes- Hungarians hated russian communism. Poor country but most of their goods were sent to russia.
Religious but communism banned religion.
●​ When Hungarian gov talked of leaving the warsaw pact, the soviets sent in tanks and 250,000 soldiers
●​ Expected American aid following their promises on rollback.
●​ Timeline
-​ 23 Oct- students and workers smashed up stalin statue
-​ 24 ocr- imre nagy took over as pm. Asked khrushchev to take our russian troops and khrushchev agreed.
-​ New hungarian gov introduced democracy and freedom of speech. Nagy announced hungary would
leave warsaw pact.
-​ Nov- 1000 russian tanks rolled in, 60,000 troops, 250,000 soldiers- 4000 hungarians killed
-​ Eisenhower did not intervene, prioritised suez
-​ Showed eisenhower's alleged ‘commitment’ to rollback to be a sham
-​ 1957- eisenhower doctrine created to avoid repetition of events in hungary

Impact of Sputnik
●​ US detonated atomic bomb in 1945, Soviets in 1949
●​ US exploded first hydrogen bomb in 1952, soviets in 1953
●​ In 1953, US had 1500 nuclear weapons
●​ By 1961, it was around 6000

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