It increased the nations fear of one another
President Nixon visited the Soviet Union in an effort to improve trade relations.
The glasnost was the political reform that affect freedom of speech. This led President Reagan resuming relations with the Soviet Union.
Soviet foreign policy was essentially the cause of the Cold War. Their ambition to forcefully take countries and demolish the free market motivated the conflict.
J. L. Black has written: 'Soviet perception of Canada, 1917-1987' -- subject(s): Attitudes, Bibliography, Canadianists, Foreign news, Foreign public opinion, Russian, Foreign public opinion, Soviet, History, Journalists, Public opinion, Relations, Russian Foreign public opinion, Scholars, Soviet Foreign public opinion 'Nearly Neighbours' 'Soviet newspaper reporting on Canada, 1945-1987' -- subject(s): Foreign public opinion, Soviet, Press, Soviet Foreign public opinion 'Canadian-Russian relations' -- subject(s): Congresses, Foreign relations 'Canadian-Soviet relations, 1917-1985' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Relations 'Soviet-Canadian relations, 1917-1985' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Foreign relations
Relations between US and Soviet Union during Cold War Relations between US and Vietnam during Vietnam war Soviet relations with PRC
containment
Detente between the United States and the Soviet Union led to a softening of the tensions between the two nations. It eventually led to the end of Cold War.
improved relations with the Soviet Union
1933
William Peyton Coates has written: 'A history of Anglo-Soviet relations' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Great Britain, Soviet Union
The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was a joint effort between the United States and the Soviet Union. Conducted in July 1975, it marked the first international human spaceflight mission, where an American Apollo spacecraft docked with a Soviet Soyuz spacecraft. This mission symbolized a significant thaw in U.S.-Soviet relations during the Cold War and laid the groundwork for future international cooperation in space exploration.
President Carter supported Soviet dissidents.