Edward
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I should have thought, especially in a society which was still legally segregated, it was much easier to demonise the Japanese than the Germans along racial grounds.
I should have thought, especially in a society which was still legally segregated, it was much easier to demonise the Japanese than the Germans along racial grounds.
The most interesting aspect of how the US felt about Germany is how quickly the general public was convinced to turn around its viewpoint after V E Day. During the war itself, the official US line was that Germany itself bore collective guilt for the rise of the Nazis and that they, as a nation and a people, had to be made to pay for this. This view was hammered over and over again by the Roosevelt Administration thru the OWI. But as soon as the war was over and FDR was dead, the new group of foreign policy advisors surrounding President Truman made sure that line immediately shifted. The German people were now to be viewed as victims of the Nazis, not their enablers.
It's tempting to view this just as American compassion coming to the surface, but there were deeply political reasons for it. The Cold War had to be sold to the public, and that couldn't happen without first selling the idea that Germany was a now an ally,..."
Part of the reality of the post-war period was that the Soviet Union was occupying half of Europe, not just half of Germany. So the political landscape, as they say, had changed almost overnight. The term "iron curtain" became part of our vocabulary, mainly from its use by Churchill, although the expression was not new. Although it had literally changed overnight, it actually got worse through the 1950s. The Berlin Wall was not built until 1961.
The most interesting aspect of how the US felt about Germany is how quickly the general public was convinced to turn around its viewpoint after V E Day. During the war itself, the official US line was that Germany itself bore collective guilt for the rise of the Nazis and that they, as a nation and a people, had to be made to pay for this. This view was hammered over and over again by the Roosevelt Administration thru the OWI. But as soon as the war was over and FDR was dead, the new group of foreign policy advisors surrounding President Truman made sure that line immediately shifted. The German people were now to be viewed as victims of the Nazis, not their enablers.
It's tempting to view this just as American compassion coming to the surface, but there were deeply political reasons for it. The Cold War had to be sold to the public, and that couldn't happen without first selling the idea that Germany was a now an ally, a people and a nation and a culture with whom we had much more in common than the "Asiatic" now-common-enemy to the east. There was a strong racial component to this -- they didn't actually say "Aryan solidarity" out loud, but it was there between the lines if you could read it, especially in the policies advocated by George Kennan and his circle.
Pretty much everything that happened between the US and the USSR from 1947 to 1950 was a mutual case of "mine's bigger than yours." And the result was the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the arms race, to say nothing of what Russia ended up mutating into after the USSR folded, and various petty despotisms in the Middle East. It will be up to future generations to decide if it was really worth it. In the end, even George Kennan himself wondered that.