Origins and responsibilities for starting the Cold War.

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Bonasso

Origins and responsibilities for starting the Cold War:

Josef Stalin and the inevitable conflict of ideology

Historians have debated and studied for decades who or what was responsible for the start of the cold war and continue to come up different results. We can place the blame on a number of actors and events.  Was it Roosevelt, Churchill, Truman, or Stalin? The majority of historians place the blame on Stalin for several reasons which I will discuss.  This essay will argue that not only Stalin, but Churchill, Roosevelt, and Truman all played a role in instigated the crisis.  I will also address the question, using the individualistic aspect, of whether the cold war was inevitable and unavoidable as a result of conflictual ideologies.

The natures of communist and capitalist ideologies were themselves a major contributor to the start cold war.  Alexis de Tocqueville claimed, “There are now two great nations in the world, which starting from different points, seem to be advancing toward the same goal: the Russians and the Anglo-Americans… [E]ach seems called by some secret design of providence one day to hold in its hands the destinies of half of the world.” These two ideas were, by nature, destined to one day conflict.  He predicted the bipolarity struggle but not necessarily the hostility one hundred years earlier.  Lenin said that communist revolutions would happen spontaneously. One of Stalin’s major flaws was that he discredited this and felt that communism must be a result of coercion.  Even Nikita Khrushchev thought that after World War II that Europe would naturally “embrace socialism” while capitalism collapsed.  This was never the case, which angered Stalin.  The Anglo-American sphere of influence would increase largely by consent, but the Soviets could only maintain themselves by coercion and expansion.  This asymmetry would bring the two ideologies into conflict after World War II, not simply because of their nature but also because Stalin was leading one of them.  

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The power vacuum created after the war brought about a clash.  John Lewis Gaddis agreed, “when a power vacuum separates great powers, as did the US and USSR after WWII, they are unlikely to fill it without bumping up and bruising each other’s interests.

The simple principles of the ideologies were a big contributor to the cold war; however, if we want to choose an actor, Stalin is most responsible. He made a fundamental mistake in ignoring many previous writings on communism.  The Lenin-Trotsky goal of world revolution claimed peaceful coexistence between capitalism and communism.  As mentioned earlier, in the ...

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