fleepbasding
HSC TUTOR
Wasn't containment only a formal US policy under Truman a few years after the war?Husayn said:Have you ever heard of the Yalta conference?
The occupation of Germany as stated at this conference was to:
"destroy German militarism and Nazism and to ensure that Germany will never again be able to disturb the peace of the world"
Other terms:
The Soviets reaffirmed their intention to fight Japan and in return expected to occupy areas in the East. The secret Yalta agreement was signed on February 11, 1945 by Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin in which Russia agreed to declare war on Japan "in two or three months" after the surrender of Germany, in return for: (1) Preservation of the status quo in Outer Mongolia, (2) return of Southern Sakhalin and adjacent islands, internationalization of Dairen, restoration of Port Arthur as a leased naval base, joint Chinese-Russian operation of the Chinese Eastern Railroad and the South Manchurian Railroad, which provides an outlet for Dairen ("China shall maintain full sovereignty in Manchuria"); (3) Kurile Islands to be "handed over" to Russia. In this agreement, the United States and Britain also agreed to support Ukraine and White Russia as separate states in the UN. Moreover, the United States, Britain and Russia gave themselves "supreme authority" to take any steps deemed necessary to prevent future German aggression, including "dismemberment" of Germany.
Does this seem as though it was a containment strategy? Ofcourse it wasn't, the Allies were fooled.
How were the allies fooled?- they had to make the agreement regardless of suspicions concerning the USSR because they needed their support to win the war against Germany.