Containment is a policy of stopping the enlargement of an enemy, or the ideals of the enemy. This came into play in the Cold War with the United States using it to stop the spread of communism.
Containment Containment is a policy of stopping the enlargement of an enemy, or the ideals of the enemy. President Harry Truman put into effect that the United States would support any nation who was anti-communist or under siege from a communist nation.
This came into play in the Cold War with the United States using it to stop the spread of communism. Although Uses of the policy of containment prior to the Cold War include the attempt to stop the Nazis in WWII, and the U.S. trying to contain Japanese imperialism from 1937-1941.
What the Truman Doctrine and the policy of containment showed the world was that the United States was willing to do almost anything to stop the spread of communism. For the U.S., the "iron curtain" had spread far enough, and it needed to be stopped.
Containment. Containment is a policy of stopping the enlargement of an enemy, or the ideals of the enemy. This came into play in the Cold War with the United States using it to stop the spread of communism.
The Truman Doctrine. President Harry Truman put into effect that the United States would support any nation who was anti-communist or under siege from a communist nation. The support could be military, economic, and/or political assistance.
The Truman Doctrine was issued on March 12, 1947 in front of Congress in reply to the communist threats in Greece and Turkey after Great Britain stopped giving aid to those countries. President Truman wanted to stop any communist regime from growing and spreading its roots into other nations.
The Truman Doctrine gave support to countries trying to escape the grasps of communism and attempted to stop it in its tracks.