containment strategy
Containment Strategy
Germany
it ended with the Soviet Union invading Afghanistan in 1979.
In the Cold War Period of America's history, the policy of trying to keep the Soviet Union's power and influence within defined political (and other) boundaries was known as containment. Through various means, but without resorting to nuclear weapons, the United States and its allies sought in this period to contain the aggressive effort by the Soviet Union to spread Communism throughout the world-community.
censorship and terror
The United States and the Soviet Union engaged in arms negotiations during a period of relaxed tensions also known as detente.
The Cold War.
The Cold War.
Germany
Relations between the United States and its NATO allies and the Soviet Union and its allies during the period 1946 - 1989 were often called "the Cold War" because of the continually adversarial nature of these relations in the absence of actual armed conflict.
No, they were not. The Chinese and Soviet versions of "communism" were different enough that the two countries didn't get along that well. In fact, the period from 1960-1989 is commonly referred to as the Sino-Soviet Split (Sino being a word for China).What it basically came down to is that Khruschev denouced the "cult of personality" that Stalin had cultivated (and Stalin himself, to a considerable extent), while Mao was using essentially the same strategy. Meanwhile, Mao did not want power to fall into the hands of the bureaucracy, which is essentially what Khruschev represented.For a part of that time, they weren't even nominal allies: the Sino-Soviet border conflict in 1969, for example, had them directly pitted against each other militarily, though it never escalated to the state of a formally declared war.
ended with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
suck redsa
A short range strategy is one aimed at covering a small region within a short period of time. A long range strategy is aimed at covering a larger area over a longer period of time.
period of rational thought about government
it ended with the Soviet Union invading Afghanistan in 1979.
In the Cold War Period of America's history, the policy of trying to keep the Soviet Union's power and influence within defined political (and other) boundaries was known as containment. Through various means, but without resorting to nuclear weapons, the United States and its allies sought in this period to contain the aggressive effort by the Soviet Union to spread Communism throughout the world-community.
Mikhail Gorbachev