Relations With Post-War Germany, 1945-1948
Relations With Post-War Germany, 1945-1948
An examination of the policy conflicts between the U.S., Soviet Union and Great Britain on how to deal with defeated Germany. Includes wartime decisions, Allied Conferences, reconstruction, leadership, borders, Truman Doctrine, Berlin Blockade and more.
4,050 words (
approx. 16.2 pages) |
20 sources |
2000
Paper Summary:
An examination of the policy conflicts between the U.S., Soviet Union and Great Britain on how to deal with defeated Germany. Includes wartime decisions, Allied Conferences, reconstruction, leadership, borders, Truman Doctrine, Berlin Blockade and more.
From the Paper:
"Problem of Germany (1945-1948)
This research paper discusses the policy conflicts which arose between the United States and other Western powers and the Soviet Union over the problem of Germany during the years 1945 through 1948. Those policy conflicts and the underlying events are analyzed from the perspectives offered by different interpretations of them by traditional, realist, revisionist and neo-revisionist schools of thought.
The wartime Western-Soviet alliance effectively dealt with the common Nazi German military threat. However, by the end of World War II, the victors had agreed on little more than to occupy, de-nazify and jointly administer their defeated and devastated German former enemy. The traditional approaches of the United States and the Soviet Union to foreign policy largely..."
Relations With Post-War Germany, 1945-1948 (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Relations-With-Post-War-Germany-1945-1948/15486
"Relations With Post-War Germany, 1945-1948" 15 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Relations-With-Post-War-Germany-1945-1948/15486>