Tensions within the Grand Alliance

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- History - Cold War (Origins of the Cold War) Quiz on Tensions within the Grand Alliance, created by Alex Skliros on 05/04/2018.
Alex Skliros
Quiz by Alex Skliros, updated more than 1 year ago
Alex Skliros
Created by Alex Skliros about 6 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Stalin was considering a secrate peace with Germany as late as when?
Answer
  • September 1943
  • October 1941
  • July 1942
  • December 1939

Question 2

Question
Stalin suspected the Allies of letting Hitler destroy the Soviet Union with their decision not to invade [blank_start]France[blank_end] until [blank_start]1944[blank_end]. by [blank_start]May[blank_end] 1945 [blank_start]25[blank_end] Million Russians had been killed. To protect against future German attack the USSR wanted to reclaim German and Polish land from beyond the river [blank_start]Oder[blank_end] and to annex the [blank_start]Baltic[blank_end] states (Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia) and [blank_start]Bessarabia[blank_end].
Answer
  • France
  • 1944
  • 25
  • May
  • Oder
  • Baltic
  • Bessarabia

Question 3

Question
by [blank_start]1944[blank_end] Stalin's vision for postwar Europe was divided in [blank_start]three[blank_end]: Direct Soviet control of its immediate [blank_start]buffer[blank_end] states [blank_start]Bulgaria, Romania, Poland[blank_end] and a [blank_start]Soviet[blank_end] zone of [blank_start]Germany[blank_end]. an Intmideate zone with [blank_start]coalition[blank_end] governments of Communists and [blank_start]liberal[blank_end], and [blank_start]socialist peasant[blank_end] parties: [blank_start]Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia[blank_end], and [blank_start]Finland[blank_end].This would be the '[blank_start]bridge[blank_end]' to a non-communist western europe.
Answer
  • 1944
  • three
  • buffer
  • Germany
  • coalition
  • liberal
  • socialist peasant
  • Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia
  • Finland
  • Bulgaria, Romania, Poland
  • Soviet
  • bridge

Question 4

Question
The view that America was too busy fighting the war against Japan and Germany to worry about the shape of postwar Europe is typical of a revisionist historian in the 1960s and 1970s.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 5

Question
[blank_start]Melvyn Leffler[blank_end] argues that the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour on the [blank_start]7[blank_end]th [blank_start]December[blank_end] 19[blank_start]41[blank_end] made America feel vulnerable to threats of foreign powers. Consequently in [blank_start]1943-4[blank_end] US officials drew up plans for a chain of bases that would let the US control both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. This would also give the US access to trade [blank_start]raw[blank_end] materials from [blank_start]Europe[blank_end] and Asia. US actions alarmed [blank_start]Stalin[blank_end] and helped create a [blank_start]spiral of distrust[blank_end].
Answer
  • Europe
  • Melvyn Leffler
  • 7
  • December
  • 41
  • 1943-4
  • raw
  • spiral of distrust
  • Stalin

Question 6

Question
FDRs economic ambitions of a large Free Trade area, where tariffs and economic nationilism were abolished was inspired by which president?
Answer
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • J Edgar Hoover
  • James Monroe
  • Andrew Jackson
  • George Washington

Question 7

Question
What did the US want of other countries in postwar Europe?
Answer
  • Decolanisation fo empires such as France and Britain
  • no more attempts for an Autarchic economy such as Germany and Italy
  • The abolition of high steel tariffs in Finland and the Baltic states
  • abolishment of protectionist Trade such as the Dutch and Portugese

Question 8

Question
In 1941 FDR and Churchill drew up an [blank_start]Atlantic Charter[blank_end], a democratic world order to be underpinned by [blank_start]the UN[blank_end]. FDR's vison was of an assembly were all countries would be represented and a [blank_start]security council[blank_end] on which would sit, China, Britain, [blank_start]France[blank_end], America and Russia.
Answer
  • Atlantic Charter
  • Atlantic Treaty
  • Atlantic agreement
  • the UN
  • NATO
  • SEATO
  • security council
  • Executive Committee
  • Board of International Significance
  • France
  • Brazil
  • South Africa

Question 9

Question
What were Britain's Aims in 1944?
Answer
  • To emerge from the war still a great power with its empire intact.
  • To protect the Suez Canal through which Britain had acces to India and oil from the Middle East.
  • To see a democratic government in Warsaw as Britain had gone to war over Poland.
  • To enforce massive reparations on Germany for starting the War.
  • To dissolve the Empire and create a free trade area in the Commonwealth.
  • To export democracy to the Middle East and Asia.

Question 10

Question
in the Foreign Ministers Meeting of October 1943 in Moscow, what was decided by the big three?
Answer
  • The European Advisory Commission: to finalize plans for postwar Germany.
  • The Declaration on General Security: to propose the creation of a world organisation to maintain peace and security (the UN)
  • The USSR informed Cordell Hull of Its intention to join the war against Japan
  • The Declaration on International Security: to propose the creation of a world organisation to maintain peace and security (the UN)
  • The European Advisory Commitee: to finalize plans for postwar Germany.
  • Britain informed Cordell Hull of Its intention to join the war against Japan

Question 11

Question
At which conference did Churchill, FDR and Stalin meet to discuss the following points: - The USSR claimed its intention to annex territory seized in the Baltic and Poland (Poland would be compensated with German land) - The decision to land Commonwealth and US troops in France as opposed to in the Balkans as Churchill wanted - acceptance that western powers would liberate western Europe and the USSR would liberate eastern Europe
Answer
  • Teheran Conference November 1943
  • Yalta Conference February 1945
  • Potsdam July 1945

Question 12

Question
October 1944 - Churchill and Stalin meet in Moscow to propose a division of spheres of intrest. Which of the following where Churchill and Stalin's Percentages agreements?
Answer
  • USSR 90% Romania
  • USSR 75% Bulgaria
  • Britain 90% Greece
  • 50/50 yugaslavia and Hungary
  • USSR 90% Bulgaria
  • USSR 75% Romania
  • Britain 90% Yugoslavia
  • 50/50 Czechoslovakia

Question 13

Question
Churchill dropped the percentegese agreement because he knew FDR would not aprove it.
Answer
  • True
  • False
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