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- <text>
- <title>
- (1940s) Marshall Plan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1940s Highlights
- </history>
- <link 05102>
- <link 00112><article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Marshall Plan
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> [By 1947, the U.S. could more easily spare food for a
- continent that was still very close to starvation. But President
- Truman and his new Secretary of State, George Marshall, were
- beginning to recognize that in the longer term, just filling
- bellies was not going to be enough. American aid to help them
- resist the spread of Communism was called for. Truman spelled
- out his doctrine of aid for countries directly imperiled by
- Communism. But beyond that, Truman and Marshall considered a
- larger, more ambitious plan for economic recovery that would
- build up Europe's productive capacity, increase its prosperity
- and--not coincidentally--help insulate it against Communism.]
- </p>
- <p>(May 19, 1947)
- </p>
- <p> The Administration warily hinted at a further expansion of
- its foreign policy. Secretary of State Marshall wrote: "Enduring
- political harmony rests heavily upon economic stability."
- </p>
- <p> What Marshall meant was that the pressing struggle between
- communism and Western Democracy was not on a military plane or
- even (except as a means to an end) on an ideological level. It
- was a struggle between the U.S. and economic anarchy--a war
- which the U.S. must wage with good and fuel. On the outcome of
- that struggle depended the survival of the democratic world and
- the world's future. It was not only the world's prime ministers
- and premiers who turned to the U.S. The young turned their
- pinched and inquiring faces westward. If the U.S. failed them,
- their faces would turn toward Moscow.
- </p>
- <p>(June 30, 1947)
- </p>
- <p> "When the Marshall proposals were announced," said Ernie Bevin
- in Britain last week, "I grabbed them with both hands."
- </p>
- <p> So did Europe.
- </p>
- <p> As for the Russians, they seemed to be in a box, for once. If
- they joined Britain, France, and the rest of Europe in really
- working for a continental recovery plan, they would be
- conforming to U.S. initiative; if they stalled and sabotaged,
- the responsibility for a divided and impoverished Europe would
- fall clearly on the Kremlin.
- </p>
- <p> Europe had a chance to work out a blueprint of how the U.S.
- could save Europe whole--which would cost the U.S. much less
- than trying to save it piece by piece.
- </p>
- <p> Economic conferences would start immediately. Moscow, after
- some confusion, decided to pull up for a closer look. The
- Russians complained that they did not know what the Marshall
- plan meant--or what Bevin and Bidault had been up to--but they
- agreed to a British-French-Russian exploratory conference in
- Paris, this week.
- </p>
- <p>(July 7, 1947)
- </p>
- <p> An American farmer viewed the world beyond the flat horizon
- and said: "We can't feed the whole world. I don't mind sending
- them some food when they are hungry, but I'm beginning to wonder
- whether they work as hard in their fields as I do."
- </p>
- <p> The farmer had missed the point of the Marshall Plan. In the
- long run, it was not designed to send food to the Europeans, but
- tractors and other things which would permit Europeans to work
- harder and produce more. That is why the Marshall Plan had
- galvanized the hopes of a continent that had almost forgotten
- how to hope.
- </p>
- <p> For those nations which wanted to take part, the U.S. could
- push the Marshall Plan ahead without Russia. Eastern European
- nations would be forced by Russia to stay out. If western and
- central Europe recovered more rapidly, eastern Europeans would
- not thank Russia for blocking their recovery.
- </p>
- <p> [Committees of European delegates, meeting in the summer of
- 1947, determined how the Marshall Plan aid would be allocated
- and what specific requests they would make. Their shopping list:
- $20.4 billion in food and materials from the U.S. in four years,
- including $5.4 billion worth of food and fertilizer, $700
- million worth of coal, $500 million worth of petroleum, $400
- million worth of iron and steel, $400 million worth of timber.
- Congress passed the program in April 1948, and Paul Hoffman,
- president of Studebaker Corp., was named its administrator.
- </p>
- <p> After one year, the European Cooperation Administration, as
- it was called, was an astounding and heartening success.]
- </p>
- <p>(April 11, 1949)
- </p>
- <p> ECA was one year and $5 billion old. "America's answer to the
- challenge facing the free world!"--so President Harry Truman
- had trumpeted at its birth in April 1948. In a tremendous twelve
- month, ECA had primed the pump of European recovery, pushed
- ahead through Communist attacks and sabotage, plucked 270
- million people from the brink of chaos and despair. By all this
- it had added immeasurably to the chances of the U.S. and the
- world for enduring peace and prosperity. In the words of its
- chief, ECA Administrator Paul Gray Hoffman, it was on the way to
- proving itself "the best bargain the American people ever
- bought."
- </p>
- <p> ECA had helped France off the bread ration, cranked her
- textile and electrical industries into booming production. It
- was rebuilding rail transport, curbing black markets and
- inflation through fiscal reform and more production, filling the
- shops with goods again.
- </p>
- <p> Thanks to ECAid, Holland's Rotterdam was getting steel for
- new docks, cranes, sheds, bridges. Norway's fishermen had new
- nets from yarn spun in Italy out of cotton from the U.S. Danish
- stockmen had more fodder corn and oil cake; they could produce
- more bacon and butter for Britain and other customers.
- </p>
- <p> Western Germany, in contrast to the first three postwar years
- of hunger and desolation, looked almost prosperous again.
- Factory chimneys belched smoke as Volkswagen and Opels,
- Rolleiflexes and Leicas, steel girders and Rosenthal china
- flowed from production lines. Pneumatic hammers chattered as new
- buildings rose from the ruins of Munich, Frankfurt and
- Dusseldorf.</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-