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Marshall Plan as  the start of Cold War Between 1948 and 1952, the United States allocated $13 billion (equivalent to over €150 billion today) to provide Europe with food supplies, industrial aid, and infrastructure development. This massive investment played a pivotal role in revitalising the European economy, effectively pulling it out of a state of severe stagnation. The importance of this effort extended beyond the economic; its political implications were equally profound. The support effectively cemented an unbreakable bond between Western Europe and the United States, underscoring a strong but asymmetrical alliance.