Imagine two superpowers, once allies, now enemies. Weapons of mass destruction; stockpiled, but never used in battle. A war, never fought. From 1945 through 1950, the wartime alliance between the U.S.A. and Soviet Union deteriorated. Several times, during the next four decades, these powers clashed, though never physically. This period of fear and suspense was dubbed as the “Cold War”. But what what weapons were used to fight a war that was never physically fought? These “weapons” used fight the Cold War were economics, political alliances, and nuclear munition. One “weapon used to fight the Cold War was economics. The United States loaned more money the the U.K. and France under the Marshall Plan than they did any other countries (Doc. A).
During the long and gruesome second world war, the Soviet Union and the United States were allies because their mutual goal was to destroy the strong military powerhouse of Germany. After completing this daunting task, the United States and Soviet Union each became eager to obtain sole possession atop the international spectrum, meaning the world’s leading superpower. An era known as the Cold War began immediately following World War II and lasted well into the latter twentieth century, but this “war” was not the usual physical war that fills history but a bloodless war of social and governmental world dominance. Although the Cold War did not involve actual fighting and the loss of numerous United States soldiers’ lives, the tension filled
Q7. Women began demanding more political and social freedoms after they had taken on more responsibilities when all of the men had left for war. Women believed that by taking on more responsibilities back at home, they were entitled to more of the same freedoms like men. At the beginning of World War I, men were happily being shipped off to war in order to fight for their country; however, they hadn’t the slightest idea of what they got themselves into. They would find that they would be sending their men off to the slaughter.
From 1945 to 1982, Canada looked to become not only trustworthy trading partners with the U.S, but trustworthy military collaborates with them. With the commencement of the Cold War, both Canada and the United States had to stop, control, and protect the North Atlantic Community from soviet attacks and the spread of communism. A way in which Canada and the United States strengthened their relations during the Cold War was through NATO. Since “The USSR pursued a policy of aggressive military expansion at home and subversion abroad,” the United States and Canada feared Soviets would impose communism on countries such as France, Italy, and Germany. As a result, a military alliance called NATO created between Canada, the United States, Britain,
The cold war was a battle not like many wars, as wars usually include battles that involved killing and a lot of physical fighting, but the cold war didn’t include to much of things like that. The cold war started after World War Two and was mainly between the Soviet Union and United States. It was a war where instead of face to face fighting, it was a race to gain more arms and build up armies, and to create more and more weapons on the way. It began because of tensions building up between the soviets and the United States when americans were afraid of the possible expansion of the soviet union and their possible plans for world domination. When americans agreed that the soviet union was a threat, the United States started to build up their arms to try and contain the Soviet Union and keep them from
During World War II (WWII) the United States (U.S.) and Russia fought as allies against the Nazis. Following WWII, the relationship between the two countries quickly began to deteriorate. Around 1947 the WWII era ended and a Cold War involving the U.S. and Soviet Russia began. The Marshall Plan was implemented following Soviet aggression in Europe in order to provide aid and relief to an already war-torn nation.
In the late 1940’s, the cold war began. The war was a long period of stiffness between democratic countries (Western World) and communist countries (Eastern Europe). The United States (U.S.) led the West and the Soviet Union (U.S.S.R.) led the East. The U.S. and the U.S.S.R. were known as the superpowers. Even though they did not officially declare war on one another; they fought each other in proxy wars, the arms race, and the space race.
An event which resulted in the change of relations between the USSR and Western Allies between 1945 and 1949 was the bombing of the cities Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the US, using the first ever atom bomb. The United States and the Soviets were considered to be the most prominent superpowers in the world as of the time; both were extremely wealthy, and most importantly, both had great military capacity and were in competition with each other to gain the upper hand in that field. So, inevitably, when President Truman of the US took the leader of Russia, Joseph Stalin, aside to inform him that they had gained nuclear capacity and that they were planning to utilise it against the Japanese just under two weeks before proceeding to do so on the 6th
The Cold War was one of if not the most major conflict in the 20th century. Even though war never broke out between the United States and Soviet Union, the Cold War still had a profound impact in modern history. After the Cold War, the United States would become the foremost world power while the Soviet Union would cease to exist. The Cold War in general is still a contentious debate among historians. Among the most heated of these debates is which nation, the United States or the Soviet Union, actually started the Cold War.
From the 1940’s through 1991, America and the Soviet Union were in the middle of a constant stalemate pitted against the ideologies of the Untied States idea of capitalism and the Soviet Union’s idea of Communism. Although most of the conflict was based around political viewpoints rather than military action, in between the 1945 to 1948, by 1950 the Soviet Union lead the communist takeover of China. According to the Teaching Elenaor Roosevelt Glossary study on the Cold War, by 1960, both sides had invested in a large amounts of money and effort towards nuclear weapons. From the perspective of both sides, this was seen as an attempt to maintain parity with each other's stockpiles, but also the idea of deterring conflict through "mutually assured destruction". This had come to be regarded as vital and dire to the national interest of both governing bodies.
The Cold War—a 45-year-long rivalry between the US and USSR—was one of the most intense parts of US history. Tensions were extremely tight; one mistake in foreign policy could cost the US their freedom. Though US evasion of communism is evidence alone that US foreign policy was successful, there were other ways in which US foreign policy achieved its goals. Reagan’s pristine combination of two vastly different foreign policies as well as Truman’s containment policy proves that the United States’ foreign policy during the Cold War was successful. Looking at the Berlin Airlift, the Marshall Plan, and the Truman Doctrine can affirm the success of Harry Truman’s foreign policy of Containment during the Cold War.
Soviet and the USA what on to make many different weapons including missiles, bombs, and guns ,and many more aircraft and vehicles. during the Cold War almost everyone in the world is at risk of nuclear war or a nuclear hit in their country. Two of the world's biggest states were out there fighting. the kids at school practice the attack for any reason and they went in the hallways under desks and under in the basement of the school. US and Soviet we're having a race to see who could get the most nuclear power.
The Military-Industrial Complex Today the “military-political situation” in the world has changed qualitatively (Dubovtsev, Galymzhanuly, 2011). There is no immediate threat of nuclear war and diminish the role of military force as an instrument of foreign policy. However, the need to maintain internal order, the protection of borders, protect the territorial integrity of the state, its security and defense when there is still the danger of war that requires from every country in the world to pay serious attention to equipping its military establishments with modern military technology. Military-industrial base of most countries in the world often unable to meet all the needs of the national army in armaments, and the demand is covered by
Tensions were very high between the Soviet Union and America at the end of WWII, and would only continue to escalate. America and the USSR rarely agreed and during WWII they were only able to work together because of the common enemy of Germany. At this point in time the USSR was communist and expanding their hold on land around them. At the Yalta conference in 1945, America and Great Britain agreed to give the Soviet Union control over Poland and Ukraine, and in return the Soviets agreed to use free elections in those countries. The Soviets went back on their word and ruled with communism.
The Cold War lasted from 1945 to 1991. During World War II, the Soviet Union and the United States were allies. However at the end of World War II, the Soviet Union sought to expand Communist influence, while the United States sought to contain Communism and expand democracy. (Cold War History.) The opposite political ideologies of both nations led to technological competitions such as races to determine dominance in the areas of aeronautics, nuclear warfare, and global influence.
Fingers were fixed on the big red button and nukes were pointed at opposing nations. The United States and The Soviet Union were in a deadlock as neither nation refused to back down. Though no real battles were fought directly, many battles were fought through other nations. For example, The Soviet Union backed North Korea, while the U.S. backed South Korea in the Korean War. Through the Vietnam and Korean wars, the U.S. and The Soviet Union pulled the strings.