Respuesta :
Correct answer: Â B) secured Allies for the United States.
Explanation/context:
The "Marshall Plan" was named after the man who then was US Secretary of State, George C. Marshall. Â Officially the plan was called the European Recovery Program. Â Marshall announced the plan in 1947, and it went into effect in 1948. Â The intent was to provide aid and rebuilding to European economies after the damaging effects of World War II. Â Eastern bloc countries, however, rejected the plan, so it ended up as a plan that benefited Western European nations and not Eastern European nations.
In his speech introducing the plan, Secretary Marshall had said: Â "Our policy is not directed against any country, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos. Any government that is willing to assist in recovery will find full co-operation on the part of the United States. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist."
The view in the communist-controlled Eastern bloc was that the US was trying to use such a policy to spread its influence and threaten their patterns of government under communism. Â So the plan ended up building allies for the US in Western Europe, while the Eastern European countries sided with the Soviet Union.