Truman Doctrine
Truman Doctrine
The Truman Doctrine was the impetus for the change in United States foreign policy,
from
isolationist to internationalists; thus we were drawn into two wars of containment and into
world affairs. The Truman Doctrine led to a major change in U.S. foreign policy from its
inception - aid to Turkey and Greece - to its indirect influence in Korea and Vietnam. The
aftermath of World War II inspired the U.S. to
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of the World.\"
(McCullough, 571) Would the world have been a worse place if we had not acted to protect
South Korea and South Vietnam? Would the U.S.S.R. have fallen due to its own economic
instability and only fleeting control over its massive population? These questions can be
cogitated but never answered. One thing is certain, people should not die for a cause that
is nonexistent, or one that could have destroyed itself.
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