While the end of World War II conveyed calm and prosperity to most Americans, it furthermore conceived a intensified state of stress between the Soviet Union and the United States. Fearing that the Soviet Union proposed to "export" communism to other countries, America centralised its foreign principle on the "containment" of communism, both at dwelling and abroad. Although formulation of the Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, (Halberstam, 2007) and the Berlin Airlift proposed that the United States had a specific anxiety with the disperse of communism in Europe, America's principle ...