Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Harry S. Truman (1945-1953)

Harry S. Truman became President of the United States with the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, 1945.Nobody in whether party, not a professional politician, not a reporter, not even his own mother-in-law doubted that Tom Dewey would be the next president. The effect of a Newsweek poll of fifty top political commentators nationwide who were asked to predict the outcome was Dewey 50, Truman 0.

Who was Truman? He was a child of Missouri. Born on May 8, 1884, in the town of Lamar, grew up in Independence, only ten miles east of Kansas City. As a child he used to devoure history books and literature, played the piano enthusiastically, and dreamed of becoming a great soldier.
Truman instead of attending a four-year college because of financial problems, worked on his family farm in the middle of 1906 and 1914. He wed in 1919 after romantic adventures with Virginia "Bess" Wallace and five years later had their first and only child, Mary Margaret.

Nuclear Weapons

In 1914, after his father's death, Truman tried unsuccessfully to earn a living as an owner and operator of a small mining business and oil business, all the while remaining involved with the farm. In 1917, Truman's National Guard unit shipped out to France as a part of the American Expeditionary Force fighting the world war. The soldiering life excellent Truman, who turned his battery -- which had a reputation for unruliness and ineffectiveness -- into a top-notch unit.

How did he arrive to political scenes? He had arrived first in Washington in the 1930s as a senator supreme mainly for his background in the notorious Pendergast engine of Kansas City. He was of Scotch-Irish descent, and like many of Scotch-Irish descent -he could be narrow, clannish, short-tempered and stubborn to a fault. But he could also be intensely loyal and courageous. Senator Truman supported the New Deal, although he proved only a marginally leading legislator. He became a national form during World War Ii when he chaired the "Truman Committee" investigating government defense spending. President Franklin D. Roosevelt chose Truman as his running mate in the 1944 presidential campaign largely because the Missourian passed muster with Southern Democrats and party officials. The Roosevelt-Truman label won a comfortable victory over its Republican opposition, though Truman would serve only eighty-two days as vice president. With the death of Fdr on April 12, 1945, Harry S. Truman became the thirty-third President of the United States.

How were his political health and his question that confronted?
During his nearly eight years in office, Truman confronted immense challenges in both foreign and domestic affairs. Truman's policies abroad, and especially toward the Soviet Union in the emerging Cold War, would come to be staples of American foreign course for generations. At home, Truman protected and reinforced the New Deal reforms of his predecessor, guided the American cheaper from a war-time to a peace-time footing, and industrialized the cause of African-American civil rights. Historians now rank Truman among the nation's best Presidents.

Truman took office as World War Ii in Europe drew to a close. The German leader Adolf Hitler committed suicide in Berlin only two weeks into Truman's presidency and the allies declared victory in Europe on May 7, 1945. The war in the Pacific, however, was far from being over; most experts believed it might last other year and require an American invasion of Japan. The U.S. And British governments, though, had confidentially begun to construct the world's most deadly weapon -- an atomic bomb. Upon its completion and thriving testing in the summer of 1945, Truman beloved its use against Japan. On August 6 and 9, 1945, the U.S. Army Air Force dropped atomic bombs on two cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, immediately killing upwards of 100,000 population (with possibly twice that whole dying from the aftereffects of radiation poisoning). Japanese emperor Hirohito agreed to surrender days later, bringing World War Ii to a close.

Truman faced unprecedented and defining challenges in international affairs during the first years of his presidency. American relations with the Soviet Union -- nominal allies in the battle against Germany and Japan -- began to deteriorate even before victory in World War Ii. Serious ideological differences -- the United States supported democratic institutions and shop principles, while Soviet leaders were totalitarian and ran a command cheaper -- separated the two countries. But it was the diverging interest of the emerging superpowers in Europe and Asia which sharpened their differences.

In response to what it viewed as Soviet threats, the Truman supervision constructed foreign policies to comprise the Soviet Union's political power and counter its forces strength. By 1949, Soviet and American policies had divided Europe into a Soviet-controlled bloc in the east and an American-supported grouping in the west.That same year, a communist government sympathetic to the Soviet Union came to power in China, the world's most populous nation. The Cold War in the middle of the United States and the Soviet Union, which would last for over forty years, had begun.

At home, President Truman presided over the difficult transition from a war-time to a peace-time economy. during World War Ii, the American government had intervened in the nation's cheaper to an unprecedented degree, controlling prices, wages, and production. Truman lobbied for a lasting government role in the immediate post-war cheaper and also for an immense liberal schedule that built on the New Deal. Republicans and conservative Democrats attacked this strategy of the President mercilessly. An immediate postwar cheaper characterized by high inflation and buyer shortages added eroded Truman's maintain and contributed to the Democrats losing operate of Congress in the 1946 midterm elections. Newly empowered Republicans and conservative Democrats stymied Truman's liberal proposals and began rolling back some New Deal gains, especially straight through the Taft-Hartley labor law moderately restricting union activity. Other leading case was the selection of 1948; he intelligently counterattacked with skill, fire, and wit and also took steps to energize his liberal Democratic base, especially blacks, unions, and urban dwellers, issuing executive orders that pushed transmit the cause of African-American civil rights and vetoing (unsuccessfully) the Taft-Hartley bill.

Truman won the presidential nomination of a severely divided Democratic party in the summer of 1948 and faced New York's Republican governor Thomas Dewey in the normal election. Few improbable him to win, but the President waged a vigorous campaign that excoriated Republicans in Congress as much as it attacked Dewey. Truman defeated Dewey in November 1948, capping one of the most astonishing political comebacks in American history.

I should notice that he was already in foreign affairs providing his most efficient leadership.

In 1947 as the Soviet Union pressured Turkey and, straight through guerrillas, threatened to take over Greece, he asked Congress to aid the two countries, enunciating the schedule that bears his name--the Truman Doctrine. The Marshall Plan, named for his Secretary of State, stimulated spectacular economic saving in war-torn Western Europe.
When the Russians blockaded the western sectors of Berlin in 1948, Truman created a immense airlift to furnish Berliners until the Russians backed down. Meanwhile, he was negotiating a forces alliance to safe Western nations, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, established in 1949.

In June 1950, when the Communist government of North Korea attacked South Korea, Truman conferred abruptly with his forces advisers. There was, he wrote, "complete, almost unspoken acceptance on the part of every person that whatever had to be done to meet this aggression had to be done. There was no suggestion from whatever that whether the United Nations or the United States could back away from it."

A long, discouraging struggle ensued as U.N. forces held a line above the old boundary of South Korea. Truman kept the war a microscopic one, rather than risk a major conflict with China and possibly Russia.
Deciding not to run again, he retired to Independence; at age 88, he died December 26, 1972, after a stubborn fight for life.

While opponents of Truman blame Truman because of Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombardment, evidences show that "at that time Truman did not understand at all what was involved"as he told the secretory of war, Mr Stimson"to use it so that forces objectives and soldiers and sailors are the target and not the women and children".

To put the issue into perspective, learning about Truman's life, we come up with this conclusion that Truman's legacy has come to be clearer and more impressive in the years since he left office. Most scholars admit that the President faced immense challenges domestically, internationally, and politically. While he occasionally failed to part accurately the nation's political tenor and committed some requisite course blunders, Truman achieved supreme successes. Domestically, he took leading first steps in civil rights, protected many of the New Deal's gains, and presided over an cheaper that would enjoy nearly two decades of unprecedented growth. In foreign affairs, the President and his advisers established many of the basic foundations of America foreign policy, especially in American-Soviet relations, that would guide the nation in the decades ahead. On the whole, Truman is currently supreme by the public, politicians, and scholars alike.

References

1. Biography of Harry S.Truman, 29 March 2006; http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/ht33.html>

2. President Truman-Harry S.Truman presidential Museum and library 28 March 2006; http://www.trumanlibrary.org/>

3. Atomic Bomb: Decision--Truman Diary, July 25 1945, 29 March 2006 http://www.dannen.com/decision/hst-jl25.html>

4. Leo Szilard, Interview: president Truman Did Not Understand, 29 March 2006 http://www.peak.org/~danneng/decision/usnews.html>

5. The American president: Harry Truman, 29 March 2006
http://www.americanpresident.org/history/harrytruman/>

6. Atomic Bomb: Decision -- legal Bombing Order, July 25, 1945, 29 March 2006
http://www.dannen.com/decision/handy.html>

Harry S. Truman (1945-1953)

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