American Decades
Cold War: The Bomb
Its Public and Political Acceptance.
After U.S. bombers shocked the world in August 1945 by dropping horrendously destructive atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to end World War II, the administration of President Harry S Truman pledged never again to introduce atomic weapons into a conflict. By November 1950, however, the president was reconsidering. Responding to reports by military advisers that A-bombs could shorten the Korean War by efficiently destroying Soviet military bases in Asia and forcing the Soviet and Chinese Communists to think twice before intervening, Truman made veiled references to the option of atomic force to end the conflict.
Public Support for the Bomb.
If Truman had decided to employ atomic weapons in Korea, he would have had little trouble selling the idea to the American people. In 1949 a Gallup poll determined that 70 percent of Americans were against their government's pledge of no...
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1950's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Cold War: The Bomb
- Cold War: The Korean Conflict
- Cold War: Sputnik
- Government and Business
- Government and Education
- Nationagl Politics: Election 1950
- National Politics: Republican Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Election 1952
- National Politics: Election 1954
- National Pollitics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1956
- National Politics: Republican Convention 1956
- National Politics: Election 1956
- National Politics: Election 1958
- The Press and the Presidency
- Spending and the Federal Government
- Spending at the State and Local Levels
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1950–1959
