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Factors which Led the Emergence of the Superpowers 1945, Soviet Union, THE…
Factors which Led the Emergence of the Superpowers 1945
Political
Britain and France after war position international was weak as they could stop Germany in 1940.
The ideology of the Nazis was rejected by literature.
Britain and France became second ranked powers.
Britain lost the most after war as it lost a dominant role in the worlds economy.
Almost all of the expectations for a progressive post-war order in the West rested on the
Since they had great economic strength, the U.S
After war America emerged as the most powerful nation of the east.
The war brought Soviet influence into view more specifically.
Stalin's state became the main political force throughout eastern Europe and Asia in the lack of any strong neighbour.
The war guaranteed communism 's longevity
The war was used to portray the Soviet Union as the country that was going to provide change.
The red army triumphed.
Economical
Britain lost most from the war
old balance of power
the empire
dominant role in the world’s economy
America's economy emerged
strengthened by war
capable of out producing all
the other great powers together.
the USA (alone) possessed the economic power to prevent the return to economic depression and international instability.
Military
America had:
Twelve million men in the armed forces.
Over 70 thousand naval
vessels.
almost 73 thousand of aircrafts
Atomic Bombs, as they dropped 2 in Japan
siege/paranoid mentality of the pre-war era conceded the possibility of international collaboration through the new instruments of world market regulation, the IMF and GATT.
By 1940 France and Britain found their post-war international position fatally weakened by their
inability to stop Germany.
Soviet Union
THE USA
GERMANY
AKEMI RODRIGUEZ AND ANDREA FRISANCHO