Friday, June 4, 2021
Mad Men - For Immediate Release
Monday, May 31, 2021
Mad Men - The Other Woman
Mad Men - The Other Woman - Season 5, Episode 11
Watch this episode and complete the essay below for Monday, June 7th, 2021.
Mad Men's "The Other Woman" highlights the hazards of being consumed by the idea of getting ahead. Many involved in the pursuit of the Jaguar contract at Sterling Cooper Draper Price are willing to make an immoral choice for the sake of moving the organization forward and by extension benefiting themselves. When the truth comes out about what really was done to succeed Don Draper is crestfallen.
What aspect(s) of the American character serve to identify with his disappointment?
Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Mad Men - The Suitcase
Mad Men - Shut the Door and Have a Seat
Essay question due May 31
Thursday, May 20, 2021
Mad Men - Meditations in an Emergency
Season 2, Episode 13 – Meditations in an Emergency
View this episode by Wednesday, May 26, 2021 for the purposes of discussion.
This episode is filled with “emergencies” – Don’s disappearance in California, Betty’s pregnancy while she struggles with Don’s infidelity, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the uncertain future of Sterling Cooper after being acquired by a British firm.
Consider what people seek when facing endings in their lives.
Nixon vs Kennedy Discussion Questions
Monday, May 17, 2021
Mad Men - Smoke Gets in Your Eyes Essay Questions and Nixon vs Kennedy Preparation Assignment
1. "Band of Gold" is the song being played in the bar where we find Don Draper at the beginning of the episode, "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes." Explain how people in the episode conflate the importance of being married with the importance of being in love and evaluate what aspects of the American ethos may be contributing to this confusion. To justify your position, consider the approaches used, suggested or implied by individuals in the story to find a marriage partner as well as the lyrics of the song.
5. Explain the irony in the way the episode,"Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" ends with the song,"On the Street Where You Live."
On the Street Where You Live Lyrics
https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/bobbydarin/onthestreetwhereyoulive.html
On the Street Where You Live - Vic Damone
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SabMZ6z-KRU
7. Today, we have different social attitudes and norms with respect to who men and women are and how they are expected to act. We are told these new norms are more authentic, but are they or are they just a different brand that leaves different people feeling disconnected?
Complete ONE of the essays above for Thursday, May 20, 2021.
Things to consider before and after viewing:
Thursday, May 13, 2021
Mad Men - Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Watch the episode by May 16th. If you have questions about the content for discussion below, attend Friday's office hour.
Leading questions and ideas to consider before and after viewing:
Consider how Don deals with Pete Campbell’s sexual harassment of Peggy. Is this effective?
Don tells the Lucky Strike executives that, "Advertising is based on one thing - happiness." Don defines happiness by example. He says, "It's the smell of a new car. It's freedom from fear. It's a billboard on the side of the road that screams with reassurance, 'Whatever you're doing, it's OK. You are OK.' " What does Don really mean? Is there a connection between Don's definition and what Jefferson meant when he defined "life, liberty and happiness" to be "unalienable rights"?
Don outlines his philosophy of life to Rachel Menken that,"True love doesn't exist. It was invented by guys like me to sell nylons," that, "You are born alone in this world and you die alone," and therefore he chooses to live like there is no tomorrow, "because there isn't one." Rachel responds, "I don't think I realized it until this moment, but it must be hard being a man too. I don't know what it is you really believe in but I do know what it feels like to be out of place - to be disconnected. To see the whole world laid out in front of you the way other people live it. There's something about you that tells me you know it too." Based on all the social attitudes and norms that we see exhibited in this episode, what do you think she is commenting on?
Tuesday, May 11, 2021
Mad Men - A Look at America at Its Most Exceptional
It has always been an aim of this course to look at aspects of American popular culture as a reflection of the American psyche. Given that we have now covered a good deal of the nation's history, as promised, we will now begin to look more closely at one example of this popular culture -- the television series Mad Men. Because we are only going to watch a few episodes out of seven years of programming, it is necessary for me to fill in a few blanks in the story that will help you make sense of things as we jump from one season to another. In simple terms, this means that below starting with the "Who is Don Draper?" section, there are a few spoilers. My advice -- Deal with it. It's not going to ruin your life and believe me, Don, Roger and the rest of the gang have plenty of other surprises up their sleeves to keep you watching if you get hooked and absolutely have to watch the entire series.
Why Mad Men?
In part, Mad Men provides insight into America at the height of American exceptionalism and then beyond. It is set in the late 1950's through the 60's, a transitional time for the country. During the first three seasons of the series we see a nation that is still basking in the afterglow of saving the world from Nazi tyranny, flexing its considerable industrial muscle to at once rebuild a world shattered by war and spread the "good life" into the suburbs of its cities at home -- all the while maintaining and upgrading its military capacity for a newfound geopolitical purpose as defender of the free world in the struggle against Soviet communist hegemony. It is a time of great pride and patriotism. We see this reflected in the show's characters who exhibit a constructivist, can do attitude that is highly ambitious and largely accepting of prevailing social attitudes and norms.
Gradually, as the series moves into its second half we see that confidence and sameness of purpose eroding as social and racial conflicts percolate on the home front and beyond to geopolitics. In 1960, John Fitzgerald Kennedy declared America's willingness to, "pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and success of liberty. " By 1966, as the price paid in Vietnam continues to mount, the American firmness of purpose in the Cold War is waning. The President who so confidently defined that commitment in the fight against communism -- a man who embodied what the country was about and where it was going-- young, raising young children, comfortable in his own skin, sure of the country's place in the world and glowing with the purpose to boldly seek out challenges -- that man was gone and with him the constructivist, can do attitude focused on moving onward and upward, accepting of conventional wisdom and traditional social attitudes was also gone. Consequently we see rising conflicts between the characters in the world of Mad Men too.
Mad Men is also centered on the advertising world, a world that occupies a significant portion of the American consciousness. Advertisers promote consumerism and in this era it's not just about the pursuit of the "good life" - in late 50's/early 60's Cold War America it's about the validation of capitalism and the indictment of communism; the celebration of individualism and the rejection of collectivism. In short, in the back of every advertiser's mind is the idea that consumerism shows what we have, and they don't -- and the fact we have more, proves we live better -- and because we live better, our system is better (political, economic, social) -- and that means the more of a consumer you are, the more American you are -- and the more American you are, the more of a patriot you are -- and the more of a patriot you are, the more you are doing your part to fight for a free world. That's a pretty fertile environment to work in as an advertiser -- not only is your work important but it may in fact be existential! No wonder firms invested what they did to sell their products.
Why Mad Men? (The Name)
The series is set with a focus on Sterling Cooper, a boutique advertising firm on New York's Madison Avenue, known as the center of the advertising universe. The men who worked there called themselves "Mad Men" in reference to the "work hard, play hard" culture. The term celebrated excess and the revenue they generated was, in their minds, validation for their existence. The television show clearly puts a lot of bad behavior on display, but it also has a way of showing the unavoidable costs of such behavior -- sooner or later.
Here are two quick looks at the history of Madison Avenue as a force in the advertising world.
https://www.advertisingweek360.com/a-history-of-new-york-advertising/
https://americanhistory.si.edu/advertising-business/madison-avenue
Who is Don Draper?
The main character of the Mad Men series is Don Draper. But that's not the whole story. Don Draper is actually Dick Whitman. Dick volunteered to go fight in Korea and after being under enemy fire for the first time, he accidentally dropped a lighter igniting gasoline that had run into the trench he and the real Don Draper, his CO were occupying. Don Draper was killed by the blast and Dick Whitman, desperate to escape his own life back home (that's another story) switched his dog tags with Don, knowing Don was near the end of his tour of duty.
This secret comes back to task him several times over the course of his life, resulting in interminable guilt, sometimes paralyzing fear that he will be imprisoned as a deserter, and the loss of a lucrative business contract that requires a security check for all company executives. It does, however, also result in a close friendship with the real Don Draper's widow, Anna who finds Dick living his life under Don's identity when she is searching for her husband who she thinks has abandoned her after returning from the war. Dick tells her the truth, commits to supporting her and Anna becomes, in Dick's estimation, the only person who truly knew him. Anna Draper divorces Don (Dick) in order to allow him to marry Betty and start a new life for himself. Anna and Don remain close until her death from bone cancer, which is a devastating loss for Don.
In Dick's creation of the Don Draper persona he outwardly becomes the ideal of what he believes the quintessential American man ought to be -- an image no doubt in part formed out of the advertising Dick grows up with -- and as Don Draper he outwardly lives the American Dream. But inwardly, Don suffers from his unresolved conflicts about his childhood, his dissatisfaction with Betty and his suburban existence, his guilt over stealing another man's identity to escape his childhood family where he never felt love or belonging. Don immerses himself in the trappings of the American Dream in search of a happiness that he never finds because underneath the polished persona, Don the man has no real connection to anything or anyone.
Don does have virtues and he does have a strong sense of right and wrong, but he struggles to live up to those virtues when his own selfish impulses are motivated. And yet, precisely because of his virtues he is mercilessly tortured by his conscience making him feel entirely inadequate, a fraud and confirming in his own mind that he does not deserve to be loved.
Throughout the series, Don lives through plenty of changes in his life and some enormous peaks of truly amazing triumphs and valleys of inconsolable despair, but the only thing that remains steady and unswerving is his undeniable talent as an ad man -- he is most at home creating perceptions of how people see things. This of course, comes naturally to him because he lives a life creating perceptions about himself. How does he do this?
Through his professional life, Don tells stories and creates memories that form a folklore of legends -- a sort of mythology. Most literally that mythology represents the brand he is building. However, beneath his carefully constructed branding to sell resides an unmistakably American ethos -- the universally understood axioms that form the basis of what motivates us.
America is a nation different from any other because it was founded on the basis of an idea. Because of its unique founding, one may be born in America but still has to become an American over time through an acculturation to its ethos of individual liberty, assertiveness, competitiveness, and the core elements of American exceptionalism - religiosity, industriousness, community life, and egalitarianism. Don's stories are firmly rooted in the American ethos. In effect, through his work Don is creating the legends and folklore that are part of the American mythology. He is selling Glo-Coat floor wax to be sure, but to do so he is selling America. And this is not lost on his clients. Hotelier Conrad Hilton tells Don that,"It is my purpose in life to bring America to the world, whether it likes it or not." In Don, Hilton has found precisely what he wants -- an ad man who blurs the lines between a campaign and a crusade.
See the link below for some background on the other major characters in the show:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Characters/MadMenTheMainCharacters
https://www.businessinsider.com/what-the-women-of-madison-avenue-really-looked-like-in-1963-2012-4
Here is an article about some of the best Madison Avenue advertising agencies as rated by a former advertising executive:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/avidan/2016/02/02/the-15-agencies-i-admired-most-during-my-three-decades-on-madison-avenue/#4a6c948b32fb
McCann-Erickson is the giant firm that from time to time competes with Sterling Cooper and its successors, Sterling Cooper Draper Price and Sterling Cooper and Partners. McCann pursues Don Draper hard but Don hates the idea of working at the firm -- too big and impersonal and as a control enthusiast, Don feels he won't have the freedom and creative license that he craves. Here's a link to the real company, now known as McCann Worldgroup:
https://www.mccann.com
Post Cold War Thinking - Now What?
With the fall of the Soviet Union, the end of the Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall, and the reunification of Germany, issues concerning World War II were finally settled. As a result, US foreign policy was suddenly in search of purpose. The political reality of the Cold War had served to clearly carve out the positions of both major political parties. Democrats were typically "doves" taking softer stands in the Cold War, preferring to err on the side of "peaceful coexistence". Republicans were typically "hawks" taking tougher stands, preferring to err on the side of "security through strength". The end of the Cold War stripped both parties of their old reliable talking points and began a period of political quicksand, where the entire nation regardless of political affiliation was taking stock before moving forward.
Although Reagan's policies ultimately proved to be successful in this instance, it did not influence the political discussion in terms of where America was going next. To be more precise, there was surprisingly little weight given to the arguments of those who wanted to maintain a strong military as a means of protecting the country against any future threat. After all, what threat comparable to the Soviet Union could there possibly be? It seemed as if America was now the only remaining economic and military superpower, and this realization made Americans suddenly uncomfortable.
The old isolationist tendencies which characterized her in the first one hundred and forty years were rising to the surface again. There was a sense of relief, validation and accomplishment which accompanied the end of the Cold War. There was also the sense that while America had acted in her own best interests and self-preservation, through its considerable efforts in the Cold War, the nation had again served the better interests of the world by defending freedom and confronting aggression. In short, the majority of Americans felt the country had done its part and should now look inward and focus its efforts at home.
Being "the world's policeman" was not something Americans were comfortable with or politically supportive of. So the end of the Cold War marked the beginning of a significant military draw down. Suddenly many Republicans joined Democrats in shutting down bases, slowing equipment purchases, reducing research and development funding for weapons and reducing the size of the military's service personnel. A new age seemed to be dawning, but beyond the reduced need for defense, it seemed that there was a vacuum in terms of where American foreign policy was going.
In Russia, Gorbachev was clearer on the way forward for his country. He had helped to end the confrontation with the West which had cost his people dearly. With normalized relations, he sought to bring Russia into the world and use this new openness to build ties that would help Russia both diplomatically and economically. Within the Soviet Union, he had instituted his policies of "glasnost" (openness - permitting public discourse and criticism of government policy with an eye to moving forward) and "perestroika" (restructuring). He also coined the phrase, "New World Order" to describe his desire that the post Cold War era be characterized by historic new cooperation between the US and Russia for international good. It was a master stroke politically, as it was well received by a Cold War weary world and yet at home it showed Gorbachev's determination to find a role for Russia that would help it keep its influence.
New World Order
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_world_order_(politics)#Post.E2.80.93Cold_War_.22new_world_order.22
Gorbachev's view
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_world_order_(politics)#Mikhail_Gorbachev's_formulation
President Reagan's successor, George H.W. Bush seemed to be reacting to Gorbachev's diplomacy, and US foreign policy remained relatively in flux until Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Out of this invasion, America's reaction and the Gulf War effort, Bush found a voice for America's version of the New World Order.
George H.W. Bush's view
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_world_order_(politics)#Gulf_War_and_Bush's_formulation
The Bill Clinton Era
After the success of Desert Storm, where the US led more than 100 nations in a UN approved mission to get Iraq out of Kuwait after the former invaded the latter, few thought that George H.W. Bush could be beat in 1992. But with an economy slipping into recession and Bush agreeing to a tax increase after pledging to not raise taxes during the election campaign, Bush was vulnerable and Bill Clinton, an unknown governor from Arkansas turned out to have the formula for exploiting Bush's weaknesses and propelling himself into the White House. See a summary of the Clinton presidency below.
Friday, May 7, 2021
The Reagan Revolution and Victory in the Cold War
The Kennedy assassination kicked off a downward spiral of unrest stemming from social conflict over civil rights, protests over the expanding war in Vietnam (started by Kennedy), and the subsequent assassination of civil rights leader Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson also began a series of spending programs designed to "wage war on poverty". These well intentioned government programs, along with a continuing war effort in Vietnam was causing the US government to run a larger deficit and accumulate significant debt. Meanwhile, large labor unions were demanding higher and higher wages for their workers resulting in strikes and lost productivity while postwar Europe and Asia were beginning to boom.
Scandal in the form of the break-in at the Watergate hotel led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon and combined with the failure of US policy in Vietnam and the high level of social discord with respect to the direction of the country, Americans were for the first time uncertain that the future would be better then the past.
The election of Jimmy Carter did little to change the state of affairs, as the President seemed mired in more problems. See the link below for a review of the election.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980_United_States_presidential_election
Meanwhile, Leonid Brezhnev was steadily moving forward with the Soviet plan for the spread of communism. American failure in Vietnam and discord at home encouraged him to move while the US seemed distracted and divided. His invasion of Afghanistan during the Carter presidency was clear evidence of his confidence and conviction to take aggressive action. Carter called the invasion the greatest threat to world peace since 1945. He increased military spending in the last part of his presidency. However, he had lost the confidence of the American public and was soundly beaten by California Governor and film actor Ronald Reagan. While all would agree that Reagan would take a harder, tougher line with the Soviet Union, no one could have foreseen the consequential result of Reagan's policies --- the end of the Cold War.
Carter and his supporters tried to paint Reagan as a simpleton who was trigger happy and would plunge the US into nuclear war. Reagan disarmed the public by his debate performance. While he attacked Carter directly on his policies, Reagan was seen as positive and affable; hardly the wide-eyed extremist that his adversaries had made him out to be. Ultimately, Reagan largely won the support of the American people by asking a simple question at the end of the televised debate with Jimmy Carter.
Two pivotal clips from the 1980 debate. "There you go again, Mr. President," and... the question, "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=px7aRIhUkHY
According to President Carter's Press Secretary Jody Powell's memoirs, internal tracking polls showed the President's tiny lead turning into a major Reagan landslide over the final weekend.
Election Night
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsDe-8cOSYY&feature=related
Ronald Reagan explained supply-side economics or "Reaganomics" as it became popularly known by a single phrase, "A rising tide lifts all boats." It was a powerful image and it made good sense to the American people - tax cuts were desirable for all Americans including the wealthy because those extra dollars would be spent, giving the economy a much needed shot in the arm. Reagan arrived as president during a deep recession and double digit interest rates. He left office as the man who presided over the greatest peacetime period of economic growth in American history.
His approach to the Cold War was no different. He had simple goals, "We win, they lose. How do you like that?" He asked a key advisor when explaining his strategy concerning the Soviet Union. Indeed, Reagan re staked the moral high ground for Americans in the Cold War. In his famous "Evil Empire" speech, Reagan reminded Americans of the fundamental differences which separated the superpowers.
"So, in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals, I urge you to beware the temptation of pride - the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.
I ask you to resist the attempts of those who would have you withhold your support for our efforts, this administration's efforts, to keep America strong and free, while we negotiate real and verifiable reductions in the world's nuclear arsenals and one day, with God's help, their total elimination.
While America's military strength is important, let me add here that I've always maintained that the struggle now going on for the world will never be decided by bombs or rockets, by armies or military might. The real crisis we face today is a spiritual one; at root, it is a test of moral will and faith.
I believe we shall rise to the challenge. I believe that communism is another sad, bizarre chapter in human history whose last pages even now are being written. I believe this because the source of our strength in the quest for human freedom is not material, but spiritual. And because it knows no limitation, it must terrify and ultimately triumph over those who would enslave their fellow man. For in the words of Isaiah: "He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might He increased strength . . . But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary . . .
Yes, change your world. One of our Founding Fathers, Thomas Paine, said, "We have it within our power to begin the world over again." We can do it, doing together what no one church could do by itself.
God bless you, and thank you very much."
In his discussions with General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev, Reagan wanted to clearly communicate his willingness to discuss arms reductions so long as the Soviet Union was prepared to accept UN inspections to ensure agreements were kept. To do so, Reagan learned a Russian phrase, "Doveryai no Proveryai" - trust but verify. After Reagan used the phrase at the signing of the INF Treaty, Gorbachev responded: "You repeat that at every meeting," to which Reagan answered "I like it."
Part of Reagan's persuasive power came from his skill in front of the television cameras. Below you will find various points in his presidency where this power came to the fore:
Reagan Distinguishes Himself From Bush - Viewed as Republican Uniter
Feb 23, 1980.
In the New Hampshire primary, a single symbolic act dramatized the debut of Reagan's new image as a candidate and the demise of Bush's presidential hopes. It occurred during what was scheduled to be a two-person debate between Bush and Reagan in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Feburary 23, the Saturday before balloting. As it turned out, Bush crumpled under pressure orchestrated by Reagan's camp.
Initially, both Reagan and Bush had seen advantages in a two-person debate sponsored by a local newspaper. When the FEC ruled that newspaper sponsorship of the debate amounted to an illegal campaign contribution and when Bush refused to pay half of the debate's cost, Reagan agreed to underwrite it himself.
Reagan then moved to include the other five contenders - a move that identified him both as a candidate and a unifier. When the other candidates showed up on stage, Bush froze.
As Reagan made his case for inclusion of the other candidates, the moderator ordered Reagan's mike turned off. Reagan responded, "I'm paying for this microphone, Mr. Green." The fact that the moderator's name was Breen seemed to matter little. The crowd cheered. When neither newspaper hosting the debate nor Bush would accede to the inclusion of the others, the other candidates left the stage. Reagan's prospects had been boosted, Bush's buried. Reagan carried New Hampshire 50% to Bush's 23%.
(Excerpted from "Packaging The Presidency: A History and Criticism of Presidential Campaign" by Kathleen Hall Jamieson)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OO2_49TycdE
A Time for Choosing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJGb_gg4Cuw&feature=related
Reagan on the Tonight Show
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHoT561u1zY
First Inaugural
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8dkM-iZITo
Breaking the Air Traffic Controllers Strike
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVwhhdVJKaU
The state of taxation at the time that Ronald Reagan took office:
https://web.stanford.edu/class/polisci120a/immigration/Federal%20Tax%20Brackets.pdf
Today's marginal tax rates:
https://www.bankrate.com/finance/taxes/tax-brackets.aspx
Who pays the most taxes?
https://www.thebalance.com/breakdown-of-who-pays-most-taxes-4178924
Tuesday, April 27, 2021
The Cold War in Five Minutes
You are to prepare a brief oral presentation based on a number of the following topics as assigned in class. Initials are beside your topic:
Theaters of the Cold War
- Korean War JB
- Khrushchev and De-Stalinization
- 1956 Hungarian Revolution CP
- 1953 Iranian coup d'etat VB
- Congo Crisis CR
- Cuban Revolution, Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile Crisis RR
- 1968 Czechoslovakian Invasion and the Brezhnev Doctrine AT
- Vietnam War MK
- Nixon goes to China
- 1973 Chilean coup d'etat and Operation Condor
- Detente, SALT, Helsinki Accords
- SALT II, Iranian Revolution and US Hostages, Nicaraguan Revolution IBM
- Soviet invasion of Afghanistan AH
- Berlin - the Rise and Fall of the Wall SJ
- Army - McCarthy hearings
- JFK, RFK, Martin Luther King Jr. assassinations AR
- Hippie/counterculture movement
- Watergate Scandal JP
- Three Mile Island nuclear accident BJ
- The Space Race FT
- Strategic Defense Initiative - Star Wars LK
- Summary of what happened
- Relationship to the Cold War (i.e where do US and USSR fit in?)
- Ultimate Impact
- A one page report that will be distributed to the class with all of your topics included
The Cold War
Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam Conferences
The Ideological Divide Between the Soviet Union and the United States
Stalin Drops the Iron Curtain
While there was considerable concern in the west that this expanded Soviet territory would mean the emergence of a new threat to European peace, a long and costly war marginalized the voices who advocated confronting Stalin, the Soviet dictator over his demands. Consequently, the United States organized NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization - countries at the time included Denmark, Canada, Belgium, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, United Kingdom, United States) to be a military umbrella which coordinated the resources of its member countries against Soviet aggression and the spread of communism worldwide.
The Need for Long Term Post War US Involvement in Europe
Greece, Turkey and the Truman Doctrine
The Marshall Plan - Diffusing Hunger in Europe to Halt the Spread of Communism
Bizonia, Trizonia and the Emergence of West Germany
Berlin Blockade and the Birth of NATO
Throughout the Cold War, there was very little "hot conflict" which involved the main participants - the US and the USSR. Instead, each side supported another nation against a local antagonist who was in turn supported by the rival side. Often these conflicts were based on local self determination issues. In other words, the United States and NATO supported efforts aimed at democratization while the Soviet Union supported communist regimes. However, in some instances, the United States would give aid or military support to dictatorships in places where the strategic support of that government against communism was important to stop the spread of Soviet influence. As time went on, the Cold War became less about Europe and its perceived security and more about a battle of ideas -- a choice between individual freedom and free market capitalism vs. state control and socialism.
The advent of nuclear weapons added another dimension to the Cold War conflict. The United States was first to create and then detonate a nuclear device, using the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to bring a quick end to the war in the Pacific without the need for a boots on the ground invasion. Speculation has suggested that the United States went ahead with using the atomic bomb as a result of the growing disagreements with the Soviet Union over Europe after the fall of Germany. Specifically, the US believed that if the Soviet Union was involved in a land invasion of Japan which was expected to be protracted and bloody, Stalin would use his casualty count to buy him more territory in Asia. The atomic bomb at once signalled the military superiority of the United States and avoided the potential spread of Soviet communism. This advantage was, of course, short lived. Through their own intelligence on the Manhattan Project, the Soviets created and tested their own nuclear copy of "Fat Man," the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1949. This test marked the beginning of an era where the US and USSR were considered "superpowers" and the start of an arms race which would continue well into the 1980's.
The Arms Race