Many people think the cold war all leads back to the post war conferences of World War II after the death Adolf Hitler, leader of the Nazi superiority group of the late 1930's to the first half of the 1940's. "The Big Three" which were the three most powerful leaders of the world met with each other after World War II to discuss agreements and decisions that had to be made for the super power countries. The Big Three consisted of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) of the United States of America; Winston Churchill, the current Prime Minister of Great Britain at that time; and finally Josef Stalin, the dictator of the now abolished Soviet Union. The three met at many different places and it usually looked as if FDR and Churchill teamed up against Stalin. These decisions made the outcome of the cold war and were not weighed heavily on FDR. In the formalizing conference at Yalta, known as the Yalta Conference, the "Big Three" signed treaties to finalize all proposals that were passed. Should have Franklin Delano Roosevelt handled the Yalta Conference differently, the infamous cold war might not have started.
The cold war was the sour state of indirect problems that present between the United States and the former Soviet Union
3. Cayton, Andrew; Perry, Elizabeth Israels; Winkler, Allan M. America: Pathways
to join the war against the Japanese. FDR could have gained a lot if he was more consistent as Stalin.
2. Nisbet, Robert. The Freeman. Chicago: Formen's Publishing Company, 1991.
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