- Origins Of The Cold War Ch.2 Full Test Bank Chafe - Unfinished Journey 9e | Solution Bank Chafe by William H. Chafe. DOCX document preview.

- Origins Of The Cold War Ch.2 Full Test Bank Chafe

Chapter 02 - Origins of the Cold War

Test Bank

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 1

1) Soviet suspicion of the United States went back to

a. World War I

b. The hostile US reaction to the Bolshevik revolution

c. Disagreements between Roosevelt and Stalin during World War II

d. The Berlin Blockade

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 2

2) Unlike the Soviets, the US presented its foreign policy as based in

a. Isolationism

b. National self-interest

c. Morals and idealism

d. Reluctant leadership

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 3

3) The Soviet Union’s priority during World War II was to gain

a. Security

b. Free trade

c. The free exchange of ideas

d. The victory of the working class

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 4

4) Soviet deaths during World War II totaled

a. About 300,000

b. Over 1 million

c. Around 10 million

d. Over 18 million

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 5

5) Roosevelt focused on the lend-lease program early in the war and personally intervened to rush shipments of supplies to the Soviet Union

a. In order to build trust between the two countries

b. Because he understood how much the USSR was suffering from the Nazi invasion

c. Because American lives were being saved by the damage the Soviets were inflicting on the Nazi armies

d. All of the above

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 6

6) One of the primary problems with the lend-lease program was

a. German submarine assaults that sunk thousands of tons of supplies

b. The slowness of American industrial retooling

c. American reluctance to share resources

d. Lack of raw materials

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 7

7) The Soviets pushed for the establishment of a second, western front in Europe because

a. They wanted sole credit for defeating the Nazis

b. A second front would draw German divisions into France and out of Russia

c. Stalin thought it would give his allies an idea of what the Soviets had been facing since 1939

d. They hoped it would aid the Soviet goals of territorial acquisition in Europe

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 8

8) The Americans and British wanted a peace guided by universalism, meaning

a. Each country liberated from Germany would have the opportunity to determine its own political structure

b. Europe would be split into two spheres of influence: American and Soviet

c. One, united European government

d. A requirement for democratic governments throughout Europe

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 9

9) Instead of supporting self-determination by the people, the Allies negotiated with Fascist governments in

a. Germany

b. France

c. The USSR

d. Italy

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 10

10) The US and British legitimized the Soviet desire to unilaterally create governments in eastern Europe by

a. Refusing to go to war over them

b. Signing a treaty that allocated this sphere of influence to the Soviets

c. Doing the same thing in Italy and North Africa

d. All of the above

Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin sit near each other at Yalta.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 11

11) This image of Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin at Yalta represents

a. One of the face-to-face meetings of the three leaders during the war

b. A pre-war negotiation of the alliance between the US, USSR, and UK.

c. A celebration of the end of World War II

d. An attempt at appeasing Hitler’s desire for territory through a mutual conference

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 12

12) By the end of the war, most well-informed Americans believed

a. That Soviet suspicion of Western Europe was rational, given repeated invasions of Russian territory

b. That Soviet representatives tended to mean what they said

c. That Stalin was a homicidal maniac bent on world domination

d. That Stalin was far less of a threat than Hitler.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 13

13) Roosevelt felt that the best way to deal with the Soviets was to

a. Assume they shared the same ideals and goals as Americans

b. Dictate terms to them in order to prevent them from running rampant throughout Europe

c. Forge a path of mutual accommodation that would sustain a mutual partnership through disagreements

d. Convince the Soviets that American ways were better than theirs

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 14

14) Roosevelt’s belief that he could build trust with the Soviet government and with Stalin rested on

a. His belief in their inherent goodness

b. His belief in their basic pragmatism

c. His belief in the skill and professionalism of US diplomats

d. His belief in his own ability to develop a personal relationship of trust

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 15

15) President Roosevelt died in

a. June of 1944

b. April of 1945

c. August of 1945

d. December of 1946

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 16

16) Which of the following is not one of the major causes of the Cold War?

a. The future of Germany

b. Colonialism in Africa

c. The economic reconstruction of Europe

d. Poland

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 17

17) The Soviets demanded a postwar Polish government friendly to themselves in order to

a. Ensure their border security

b. Serve as a base for invasion of Europe should it ever be necessary

c. Advance communism in Europe

d. Exploit Poland’s natural resources

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 18

18) Many Western diplomats suspected that the Soviet army allowed the Nazis to crush resistance in Warsaw in 1944 because

a. The Warsaw Poles supported a pro-Soviet government

b. Of logistical difficulties

c. The Warsaw Poles wanted a democratically elected government

d. They were predominately Jewish

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 19

19) At Yalta, Roosevelt hoped to convince Stalin to

a. Allow immediate free and fair elections throughout eastern Europe

b. Publicly commit to future elections to satisfy American scruples

c. Allow open economies and free trade throughout Europe

d. End colonialism

The Manhattan Project produced a new kind of collaboration between industry, government.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Chapter 2 Question 20

20) How does this map reflect a new kind of collaboration between industry and government on the Manhattan Project?

a. It shows that the majority of the atomic bomb was built on military bases

b. It shows industry using government facilities to produce the atomic bomb

c. It shows that military schools played a pivotal role in developing bomb technology

d. It shows the various companies across the country who produced components for the atomic bomb, which was assembled and tested by the military

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
2
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 2 - Origins Of The Cold War
Author:
William H. Chafe

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