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The Cold War: The War At Home

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Title: Canada: Post WWII Author: Teacher Last modified by: admin Created Date: 5/4/2005 7:27:42 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Cold War: The War At Home


1
The Cold War The War At Home
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Canada Post WWIINewfoundland joins Canada
  • On March 31, 1949 Newfoundland entered
    confederation as the tenth province.
  • Joey Smallwood spearheaded the movement for union
    with Canada and became Newfoundlands first
    premier
  • There was a referendum in Newfoundland regarding
    confederation and there was a significant amount
    of opposition a vote was held and 45 of the
    people voted in favor of creating a responsible
    government, while 41 voted to join Canada, and
    14 voted for a commission Government.
  • This vote was considered unclear, and in a second
    vote union with Canada obtained a majority vote.

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Boom in resource development
  • A wave of prosperity swept Canada in the fifties.
    Western oil and Natural gas reserves yielded new
    sources of power for Canadian industry.
    Hydroelectric projects were initiated to harness
    electricity
  • As new resources were discovered new industries
    sprung up to support them. Ex the St. Lawrence
    Seaway was constructed to aid in the transport of
    materials.
  • A great deal of this economic growth was largely
    due to foreign investment, much of it American.
    This contributed to the wealth of Canada during
    the 1950s and 1960s. Unfortunately this also
    led to future conflicts over the ownership and
    financial control of Canadas resources

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The Baby Boom
  • Canadas population grew more quickly in the 15
    years after WWII than at any other time. By 1961
    there were 50 more Canadians than there had been
    at the end of the war.
  • Many Canadian soldiers had married overseas and
    brought their war brides home.
  • People began to move to the suburbs, shopping
    malls, cars and expressways became part of the
    Canadian way of life.
  • In this post-war period more immigrants came to
    Canada than at any time since the turn of the
    century. Many were refugees from Eastern European
    countries like Poland, Yugoslavia, and Latvia.
    Now that their homelands were ruled by communists
    they felt they could no longer live there.
  • By 1951, only 47 of Canadians had their roots in
    Britain. The multicultural society had arrived

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The Fabulous Fifties
  • Economically things looked good in the 50s.
  • Television became a common feature in Canadian
    homes. Mass Marketing becomes much more effective
    and is beginning to be aimed at the growing teen
    population
  • The fifties brought prosperity and excitement.
    But rapid change can be hard. The divorce rate
    began to creep up. The move to the suburbs
    increased reliance on the automobile. Cities,
    fashions, lifestyles and values were transformed
    in the 50s
  • Rock and Roll emerged as a new form of musical
    expression and drew attention to the new culture
    of youth that was developing because of the Baby
    Boom
  • The 50s marked the beginning of the civil rights
    movement in the US and this would effect Canada
    as well.
  • World War II was over, however the Cold War was
    just beginning.

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  • TV Commercial on Ford

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TV Commercials
  • Barbie
  • Rice Krispies

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Socialism in Canada
  • The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, or CCF
    was elected in 1944 in Saskatchewan under the
    leadership of Tommy Douglas.
  • The CCF favored socialist policies, designed to
    increase government involvement in the economy
    and improve social programs.
  • During the cold war the CCF faced a great deal of
    criticism and were occasionally denounced as
    communists.
  • In 1961 Douglas resigned from the CCF to become
    the national leader of the newly organized New
    Democratic Party (NDP)
  • Ultimately the CCF and the NDP under the
    leadership of Douglas, were responsible for the
    introduction of Medicare for Canada.

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The Cold War
  • In the 1950s the cold war became the dominant
    force in international politics. It divided the
    world between two opposing ideologies
    totalitarian Communism and democratic Capitalism
  • The capitalist nations, led by the US and the
    communist countries, led by the Soviet Union,
    competed for influence over, or control of, the
    rest of the world.
  • Most of the countries the two sides sought to
    dominate were developing countries or former
    colonies of Western powers.
  • The developing world became the battleground for
    the two new superpowers.

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Igor Gouzenko
  • Igor Gouzenko was a clerk for the Soviet embassy
    in Canada who gave away Soviet spy secrets and
    defected.
  • Gouzenko is often credited with helping start the
    Cold War.
  • His defection highlighted the distrust between
    the West and Eastern Powers

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The Cold War Continued Korea
  • In 1951 the Cold War centered on Korea
  • This was the first open warfare between Communist
    forces and pro-Western forces.
  • Within days of the invasion of South Korea,
    Canada offered 3 naval destroyers to the UN
    force. By the end of the Korean war, about 25 000
    Canadians saw action in the conflict. 312
    Canadians were killed
  • The USSR and China vs. USA and its allies. The
    Korean War ended in 1953 only to be replaced by a
    long and bloody war in French Indo-China, that
    would eventually draw the US into combat in
    Vietnam

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  • Cold War destruction

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Cold War The Arms Race
  • In 1951 the US tested its first hydrogen bomb.
  • Through out the Cold War the US and the Soviet
    Union develop weapons of Mass destruction.
    Building bombs nearly 1000x as powerful as the
    bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • The USSR followed by testing its first hydrogen
    bomb in 1953.
  • The Arms race was on. By the end of the decade,
    guided missiles were beginning to replace
    bombers. The US and the USSR were now able to
    attack targets 10 000 km away in less than 1 hour.

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The Cold WarThe Space Race
  • The arms race led to the space race.
  • If missiles could send hydrogen bombs halfway
    around the world, then they could also carry
    nuclear payloads into space.
  • The USSR launched its first satellite armed with
    a nuclear warhead in 1958 the US soon followed.
  • Soon scientists began exploring the possibility
    of using satellites for peaceful means, such as
    communications and space exploration.

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  • American Propaganda against Communism

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NATO countries and the Warsaw Pact
  • NATO countries include
  • Norway, Great Britain, Portugal, Spain, France,
    Belgium, Netherlands, West Germany, Italy,
    Greece, Turkey and of course the USA and Canada
  • Warsaw countries include
  • The Soviet Union, East Germany, Czechoslovakia,
    Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania

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Canada and the Cold War
  • Canada had a precarious position in the Cold War.
  • Canada is located between the two major players
    in the Cold War the US and the USSR. Canada was
    firmly on the side of the US in the Cold war and
    became a member of both, NATO ( North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization and NORAD (North American Air
    Defense Command) this changed in 1981 to (North
    American Aerospace Command), which acted as the
    North American defense system.
  • The Communists had their own defensive
    organization known as the Warsaw Pact

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Canada and the Cold War the Avro Arrow
  • During the 1950s the Canadian government was
    involved in the development of a new military jet
    aircraft. The Avro Arrow was built by the A.V.
    Roe Company in Ontario.
  • It was expected to be one of the most advanced
    war planes of its kind.
  • The Arrow was initially approved by the Liberal
    government in 1953, however when the
    conservatives took power under Diefenbaker in
    1957, he cancelled the Arrow project.
  • This led to a great deal of controversy
    thousands of people lost their jobs.
  • People charged that the government had abandoned
    a made-in-Canada project in favor of a made in
    the US defense policy. They claimed that the
    entire Canadian aircraft industry was crippled by
    Diefenbaker's decision.
  • Despite being partially responsible for the
    creation and passage of the Bill of Rights in
    1960, Diefenbakers decision to ground the Arrow
    contributed to the Conservative party defeat in
    1963.

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The Suez Canal Crisis
  • The French built the Suez Canal in the 1860s
    Soon after the British bought a majority of
    shares in the Suez Canal Company, in order to
    make the canal part of their route to India. The
    British were at this time occupying Egypt. In
    1955 with Brittan's eastern empire gone, Britain
    agreed to withdraw from Egypt.
  • At the same time as the British were removing
    themselves from Egypt. The Egyptians under the
    Leadership of Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser began
    the completion of the Aswan High Dam across the
    Nile.
  • In 1956 because of Nassers dealings with the
    USSR, Britain and the US cut off aid for the
    Aswan project.
  • In return Nasser seized the Suez Canal Company.
    He also encouraged more terrorist attacks on
    Israel, and invited the USSR to help him finish
    the dam. This made the British very angry. The
    British believed that the US and the rest of the
    Commonwealth would share there anger over the
    Suez incident.

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  • Suez Canal News Report

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The Suez Canal Crisis Continued
  • The Commonwealth, with the exception of Australia
    and New Zeeland, were not sympathetic to what
    was viewed as an example of British imperialism.
  • Canada did not care about the Canal, however it
    was very concerned about the effect of the crisis
    on international relations.
  • Canada realized that while the US might not agree
    with Nassers actions, they would not support
    Britain in an aggressive action against Egypt.
  • France and Israel supported Britain.
  • The Israelis were supposed to attack Egypt on
    Nov. 1, 1956. The plan was that the French and
    English would use this as a pretext to step in
    and guard the vital international waterway.
  • Their hope was that Nassers government would
    then topple.
  • On Oct. 29 Israeli paratroops struck. On Oct. 30,
    Britain and France ordered both Egypt and Israel
    to stay 16km away from the Canal.
  • The USSR responded with an ultimatum Atomic
    Bombs would rain down on London and Paris if the
    invasion did not end.

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The Suez Canal Crisis Continued
  • The Americans were very angry with the British.
  • The U.N. Security Council ordered Israel to
    withdraw, Britain and France used their vetoes
    for the first time.
  • The issue was taken before the U.N. General
    Assembly. There, 65 nations supported a
    resolution denouncing the invasion. Canada
    abstained from the vote.
  • Canada was torn over the issue. A small majority
    supported the British invasion. Prime Minister
    St. Laurent did not.
  • The Prime Minister and then Secretary of State
    for External Affairs, Lester Pearson told England
    that there would be no Canadian support for the
    Attack on Egypt.
  • Pearson proposed that an emergency UN force be
    sent in.
  • This gave the French and British a pretext to
    withdraw from Egypt. Nassar agreed that the force
    was acceptable.
  • Pearson had found the formula that kept Britain
    and France from humiliation, and the UN, NATO and
    the Commonwealth survived the confrontation
    intact.
  • In 1957 Pearson was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
    for his role in the Suez Crisis.
  • This is the climax of Canadas role as first of
    the middle powers

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Bomarc Missiles
  • First long-range anti-aircraft missiles in the
    world developed by Canada with the help of the
    Americans.
  • They were put all around the coasts and the
    border to protect against soviet planes.

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NORAD
  • Stands for North American Aerospace Defence
    Command.
  • The US pressured Canada to setup a missile
    defence program to worn of incoming nuclear
    weapons.
  • The program was established in 1958.

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The DEW Line
  • Stands for Distance Early Warning Line and was
    used in the fifties.
  • A system of radar stations in the far north that
    would detect soviet bombers.
  • Became outdated as it became possible for
    countries to launch nuclear weapons without
    planes.

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Cold War Europe
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