Social Sciences, asked by pati52, 1 year ago

explain the causes of cold war

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Answered by gghg1811p2jn4e
1
Although The U.S. and Soviet Union were allies during WWII, there were many tensions early on and once the common threat of Germany and Japan were removed, it was only a matter of time for the shaky relationship to fall apart. Here are some possible factors that contributed to the Cold War:

The Soviet Union refused to become part of the UN for a long time

Stalin felt that America and Britain were delaying D-Day, causing more Soviet losses in a plot to weaken the Soviet army. Almost sixty times more Soviets died in the war than the Americans.

The “Big Three” clashed during the Tehran Conference about Poland and other Eastern European countries that bordered with Germany. Stalin felt independent countries were a security threat to Russia because they have been weak enough to let Germany attack the Soviet Union through them several times. Britain and America wanted these countries to be independent, not under communist rule.

The Soviets and Germans had a non-aggression pact in the first two years of the war with a secret protocol

The support of the Western allies of the Atlantic Charter

The Eastern Bloc of Soviet satellite states that was created

The Allies allowing Germany to rebuild an industry and army, scrapping the Marshall and Morgenthau plans

The Allies allowing Germany to join NATO

American and British fears of communist attacks and the Soviet Union’s dislike of capitalism

The Soviet Union’s fear of America’s nuclear weapons and refusal to share their nuclear secrets

The Soviet Union’s actions in Eastern Germany, in the Soviet zone

The USSR’s aim to promote communism across the world and their expansion into Eastern Europe



Answered by ShivenDada
1
These are the reasons
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