Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The Truman Doctrine was created by President Truman in March 1947, in response to the perceived communist and authoritarian threat in Turkey and Greece. In a speech to Congress, Truman stated that "it must be the policy of the United States to support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures".

  2. The Truman Doctrine was an American initiative introduced in 1947, which marked a change of international policy from isolationism to containment. Introduced by President Truman in a speech to Congress, this was launched to obtain financial aid to help Turkish and Greek monarchists fighting against Communists. While the Truman Doctrine does not ...

  3. The Truman Doctrine was the overally message that President Truman wanted to get across during his time as president. It was his most important piece of policy, around which all the rest of his foreign policy revolved. The basic idea of it was to hold back the growth of the Soviet Union (The USA's most prominent rival) which we call containment.

  4. The Truman Doctrine declared that the United States would aid anyone in the fight against communism, seen most successfully in Italy and the Greek Civil War. This was reinforced by Marshall Aid which aided the economic situation at home as well as preventing the spread of Soviet influence.

  5. Clearly, the Truman Doctrine worked to greatly increase the enmity and tension – considering the American notion of ‘domino theory’ and thus their utmost need to contain the Soviet Union. The Marshal Plan later in 1948 further served to deteriorate the relations.

  6. With the spread communism and the threat posed by the Soviet Union's increasing sphere of influence, President Truman established the Truman Doctrine in March 1947, by shifting U.S. foreign policy away from isolationism toward containment, specifically ceasing the spread of communism. The U.S. first intervened in Greece stopping a communist ...

  7. President Harry Truman issued the doctrine in a speech on 12th March 1947, in hopes that it would stop or slow the spread of Communism throughout Europe. The spread of Communism was seen as a form of expansion of the USSR, which was seen as dangerous by Western leaders.

  8. Extended Intro/ overview of argument : The relative roles of Stalin and Truman were both influential in contributing to the politically turbulent circumstances of 1945-49 in the origins of the Cold war. The significance of their roles is primarily characterizied by the conflicting ideologies of Capitalism and Communism between the USA and USSR respectively.

  9. The Truman Doctrine was a clear opposition towards communism and many historians regard it as the defining moment of when the Cold War began. In February 1947 Britain could no longer aid Greece against the Communists and Truman realised that if Communism was going to be stopped, America would have to get involved.

  10. The Berlin blockade and airlift was a major incident in the Cold War because it was the first case of direct conflict between the US and the USSR. Indeed, both the blockade and the airlift had the potential to spark war. Consequently, it greatly increased tensions between the two superpowers. The blockade had convinced the Western powers that ...

  1. Searches related to truman doctrine

    marshall plan
    truman doctrine upsc
  1. People also search for