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B1 متوسط الإنجليزية 13:34 Educational

The Cold War: Crash Course US History #37

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00:00

Hi I’m John Green; this is Crash Course U.S. history and today we’re gonna talk

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about the Cold War. The Cold War is called “Cold” because

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it supposedly never heated up into actual armed conflict, which means, you know, that

00:11

it wasn’t a war. Mr. Green, Mr. Green, but if the War on Christmas

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is a war and the War on Drugs is a war… You’re not going to hear me say this often

00:17

in your life, Me from the Past, but that was a good point. At least the Cold War was not

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an attempt to make war on a noun, which almost never works, because nouns are so resilient.

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And to be fair, the Cold War did involve quite a lot of actual war, from Korea to Afghanistan,

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as the world’s two superpowers, the United States and the U.S.S.R., sought ideological

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and strategic influence throughout the world. So perhaps it’s best to think of the Cold

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War as an era, lasting roughly from 1945 to

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Discussions of the Cold War tend to center on international and political history and

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those are very important, which is why we’ve talked about them in the past. This, however,

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is United States history, so let us heroically gaze--as Americans so often do--at our own

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navel. (Libertage.)

00:59

Stan, why did you turn the globe to the Green Parts of Not-America? I mean, I guess to be

01:06

fair, we were a little bit obsessed with this guy.

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So, the Cold War gave us great spy novels, independence movements, an arms race, cool

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movies like Dr. Strangelove and War Games, one of the most evil mustaches in history.

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But it also gave us a growing awareness that the greatest existential threat to human beings

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is ourselves. It changed the way we imagine the world and humanity’s role in it.

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In his Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, William Faulkner famously said, “Our tragedy today

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is a general and universal physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear

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it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. There is only the question: When will I be

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blown up?” So, today we’re gonna look at how that came

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to be the dominant question of human existence, and whether we can ever get past it.

01:53

intro So after WWII the U.S. and the USSR were the

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only two nations with any power left. The United States was a lot stronger – we had

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atomic weapons, for starters, and also the Soviets had lost 20 million people in the

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war and they were led by a sociopathic mustachioed Joseph Stalin.

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But the U.S. still had worries: we needed a strong, free-market-oriented Europe (and

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to a lesser extent Asia) so that all the goods we were making could find happy homes.

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The Soviets, meanwhile, were concerned with something more immediate, a powerful Germany

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invading them. Again. Germany--and please do not take this personally, Germans--was

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very, very slow to learn the central lesson of world history: Do not invade Russia. Unless

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you’re the Mongols. (Mongoltage.)

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So at the end of World War II, the USSR “encouraged” the creation of pro-communist governments

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