Well, yes, we and the USSR were basically the only real country's in the war. However the cold war never really was a literal war.
However the Korean War and the Vietnam War were effects of the Cold War, Also the Cuban Missile Crisis was as well.
the movement of Soviet troops to Afghanistan
cold war
The Cold War had no direct involvement between the united states and the Soviet Union that's why it's called the cold war
I don't know look in your book!
The United States became involved in the cold war with the Soviet Union. This situation would escalate from 1946 to 1989, the year the Soviet Union fell.
The Korean War was the FIRST "Hot" battle of the Cold War.
the cold wars
A war between nations that does not escalate to troops fighting one another is a 'cold' war. In the cold war, the Soviet Union and the United States were fighting each other by threatening with more powerful weapons, placing strong defensive troops on borders, and the diplomatic climate was 'cold' between the two.
1. There is no Soviet Union, and there hasn't been for 20 years. 2. If there was "shooting" in Afghanistan, then it was a hot war. 3. Cold War=No Shooting 4. Hot War=Is Shooting
The Cold War between the Soviet Union and the Western powers started in 1945 at the end of World War II and lasted until the end of the Soviet Union in 1991. Australia's most direct involvement in this conflict occurred during the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
The soviet espionage during the cold war was managed by the KGB.
The nature of the American involvement in Southeast Asia was to contain Soviet and communist expansion through the Domino Effect Theory. Thus the Cold War became hot not in Europe but through American and United Nations involvement in Korea, and America with some Allied assistance in Vietnam.