Harry Truman was the 33rd President of the United States from about the end
of World War 2 and from the beginning of the Cold War in 1945 until he retired
in January, 1952.
Harry Truman was born in 1884, in Missouri. In April
1945 Truman assumed office as the President on the death of Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
From the 16th of July to the 2nd of August the Potsdam
conference was held in Potsdam, Berlin. Truman and Stalin and Churchill attended
the conference until Churchill was beaten in an election by Atlee and replaced.
Truman was worried about this encounter with Stalin as he was not very well
informed on him, as Roosevelt had not involved him in political issues therefore
he lacked the knowledge on how to handle Stalin. The main issue at the
conference was on Germany. They established the principle occupations, which
were to de-nazify,de-militerise, de-centeralise de-industrialise and democrasise
all of Germany. Germany’s reparations were decided. They also established that
Germany’s future would be jointly worked out, no separate development without
consultation of forgien ministers.
Also at Potsdam the Polish borders
were defined, and Russia agreed entry to the Pacific War.
Truman
distrusted the Russians before the conference and by the end of the conference
in August Truman had developed an even larger distrust towards Russia. He felt
the Russians had been given too much at Yalta and he was adopting a harder
attitude. He also felt that with the power he held with the Atomic bomb, USSR
were under control. The relationship between the superpwers worsened
considerably at Potsdam.
On the 6th of August 1945 Truman authorised an
Atomic bomb to be dropped on Hiroshima, a city in Japan and another in Nagasaki,
two days later, they caused horrendous damage, and many thousands of people
died. After the bombs were dropped US troops occupied Japan not allowing any
other forces in.
Truman had told Stalin little about the bomb, first
informing him at Potsdam and when he authorised the drop, he had not consulted
or warned Stalin, this angered him as he had wanted to gain some Japanese
territory before the end of the war and the tension began to build.
The
rise of two new “superpowers”developed after the war, the USA and the USSR, both
wanting to be the more powerful nation. There was a rising tension between
Truman and Stalin, as Truman had a different attitude to the USSR and Stalin
than Roosevelt had previously.
Roosevelts ideas to give USSR a large
post-war reconstruction loans, were dropped by Truman as he was not going to
give USSR any economic assistance, as it was a threat to communist expansion.
Tension contiued to build through the rest of 1945. When Truman spoke to
Molotov the Soviet foreign minister, he did not express any agreement with USSR
in having a pro-communist government in Poland. Truman failed to see how
important Poland was to USSR, leaving an increasingly angered Stalin.
1945 also saw the beginning of the arms race as USA held the only atomic
bombs. In 1946 the USA proposed that the United Nations should assume control of
atomic energy and research, but the USSR rejected the proposal on the grounds
that this would enable the USA to maintain its monopoly over atomic weapons.
America’s sole possesion to the atomic bomb ended in 1949 when the USSR had
developed their own atomic bomb.
1947 saw the beginning of the Truman
doctrine, it’s main aim was to assist countries which were threatened by
commuist expansion. Truman sent a message to the US congress, pledging American
support for ‘free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed
minorities or by outside pressures’. (dictionary of 20th centuary...). prompted
by the need to give military and economic aid to Greece and Turkey, the Truman
doctrine marked a change to positive anti-communism on the part of the
administration.
On the 5th of June1947 General Marshall, offered
American finiancial aid for a programme of European recovery, on a condition
that the European countries themselves took the first steps towards economic
collaboration. The plan was supprt by the west but the Russian foreign
minister,Molotov rejected it. After long consulation the Western powers
organised a conference for July ‘47, the OEEC was set up and this organisation,
which stands for Organisation for European Economic cooperation consisted of 18
European countries and USA and Canada. The OEEC administered Marshall
Aid,otherwise known as the Marshall Plan which totalled 17 billion dollars, it
stimulated the speedy recovery of Europe from the disturbance of war.
The Presidential Elections of 1948 saw a re-election of Truman against
Dewey which confounded all predictions of Trumans ability, as he won
convincingly.
1949 saw the introduction of the ‘four point programme’,
or Point Four as it came to be called, it’s idea was to be a broad programme
aimed at giving aid to under developed countries. Although Truman was very
enthuiastic about this, his Secretary of State, Dean Acheson did not support
this idea. Acheson offered absolute loyalty and an appreciation of the
Presidents requirments, surpassing any of Trumans other Secretaries of
State.(Man of the people :p510). Instead of trying to talk Truman out of it, he
dragged it through the planning process and let it fade in Congress. In the end,
it recieved 26.9 million in Sept 1950, unfortunately for Truman this was hardly
enough to assist many countries to recover a country after war, let alone a
large proportion of the under developed world.
A North Atlantic treaty
was signed on 4th April 1949, in Washington by 12 signatories of major Eastern
European and North American states stating that they would provide mutual
assistance should any one member be attacked, mainly directed at the threat of
USSR . As a result the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation was set up, otherwise
known as NATO. Truman worked hard to promote NATO, as the most dominant part of
his policy to stop the spread of communism, was to give aid to under developed
countries threatened by USSR. (World History;p618/ Dict of 20th...;p305)
In 1950 Truman authorised the US intervention into Korea and nominated
Douglas Macarthur as commander-in-chief of the UN forces. When the Chinese
communist troops entered North Korea Macarthur demanded forces to attack Chinese
territory, Truman refused this advance and after Macarthur’s appeals to the
people of the USA, Truman dismissed him to emphisise USA’s limited involvment in
Korea in support of the UN.
(Who did what?;p162)
In 1951 Truman
signed a mutual defence treaty with the Phillipines, after the US had given the
them over 800 million US dollars in economic aid since 1946 to assist their
development as a republic. (International affairs;p113)
Also in 1951 the
US drew up a draft peace treaty with Japan without consulting USSR. This was
rejected by Stalin and accepted by the other western powers. The Treaty was
signed on the 8th of sept 1951 by 48 countries. It came into effect on the 28
April 1952, and at the same time the allied occupation of Japan officially
ended.
At the same time as the peace treaty a security pact was signed
by the US and Japan, permitting US troops to stay in Japan until it was definite
there was no threat to the region. Mainly in reference to the war in Korea. The
over all affect of the treaty was to convert Japan into an ally of the USA. The
conservative governments that prevailed in Japan after 1947 were anti-communist
and pro-western. Truman thought it was imperitive that part of Japan’s forward
defense system in the Pacific should be set up to help contain communist
China.(internat. affairs;p120)
Truman realised the intellectual need to
give up presidency, but the decision was emotionally difficult. He announced his
decision on March 29th 1952 in a speech in Washington stating that he “shall not
be a candidate for reelection” (man of the..;p605). He concluded retirment after
hearing Dwight D. Eisenhower was standing for election, although Truman was not
Republican he supported Eisenhower who became his succeessor as president,
previously Eisenhower had been the chief of staff in Washington and the supreme
commander of NATO forces in Europe.
In January 1953 Truman retired into
private life in Independance, Missouri. Where he died on Dec 26th 1972 at the
age of 90./