Following World War I, there was social discourse in the United States. Although the United States delayed entering the war, the nation still felt the financial burden of war. This led to public dissatisfaction with the United States government, which created a sense of mistrust between the American people and their government . Around the same time in the Soviet Union, Vladimir Lenin and his administration were seeking to push the idea of a communist regime around the world. The goal of communism was to allow the working people of the world to rise up against oppressive governments. The Soviet Union, a communist state, sought to bring out the inadequacies in both the United States and the United Kingdom. The U.S and the U.K, which were a capitalist state and monarchy …show more content…
The United States was founded on the basis of a republic. The United Kingdom, also a western power, followed a monarchial rule. The United States, in particular, was a symbol of the free world where its’ peoples were represented through their government. The Soviet Union feared the strong relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States, as they posed a threat to the communist ideology. The Soviet Union, under the rule of Josef Stalin, had hopes of spreading communism around the world. This fear of the western powers is outlined in the Roberts Cables, written in 1946. Frank Roberts, a British Ambassador, writes that, “…the very vehemence of Soviet criticism and the almost hysterical manner in which we are being attacked at all points at once suggest a fear of our inherent strength.” The Soviets were aware that the only way they would spread any trace of communism into Europe and the western world would be through the fallout of the United States and the United Kingdom who both represented the two strongest western powers at the