eedom offers the best chance of peace and prosperity for all, and our desire for peace  cannot be separated from our belief in liberty. We hope that in years  ahead more and more nations will come to know the advantages of  freedom and liberty. It is to this end that we have enacted the law I  have now signed.         It was brought to Truman's attention that Europe was by no  means content in their economic recovery. Britain was near bankruptcy,  Italy, France, and Germany were plagued by a terrible winter. More aid  was needed to keep their democratic governments afloat.         Thus, a direct result from the Truman Doctrine was the  Marshall Plan. This came about when Truman appointed General Marshall  as Secretary of State. In that position, he observed "Europe's  economic plight." Marshall proposed a plan that would offer aid to all  nations "West of the Urals." (Truman, 355) This included the U.S.S.R.  and her Eastern European satellite states. They, however, refused the  aid. By March 1948, Congress had appropriated the first installment.  Truman signed it into law on April 3, 1948. By its consummation in  1952 it would provide more than $13 billion in aid to war-ravaged  Europe.         This was a grand change in U.S. Foreign policy. We had gone  from isolationists to internationalists. This Doctrine is in direct contrast to the Monroe Doctrine. The Monroe Doctrine served as the  U.S. Foreign policy for well over 150 years. It essentially stated  that the U.S. would not intervene in the World's affairs as long as no  one interfered with hers. With the Truman Doctrine, we completely  reversed that role that had been only briefly breached during the  World Wars. Our new policy was one of Containment: To contain the  spread of Communism to the states in which it presently inhabits.         Our relationship with the U.S.S.R. after Truman's declaration  was in continuing deterioration. A major threat to our relationship was the Berli...