Soviet Union and its satellite nations
It was when both Soviet Russia and the US competed against one another to see who could build the most nuclear weapons, and who could build them the fastest.
relied on small nuclear arms.
containment
Glasnost .
The Soviet Union made their own nuclear weapons to compete with the US
Soviet Union and its satellite nations
The Eisenhower policy of nuclear brinkmanship was taking the country from crisis to another. Brinkmanship was eventually replaced with the Detente Policy by both the United States as well as the Soviet Union. Efforts began to thaw the Cold War.
Brinkmanship was a foreign policy practiced in the 1950s by President Eeisenhower's secretary of State John Foster Dulles. The term came from Dulles's policy of pressing Cold War issues with the Soviet Union to the brink of war. Hence "brinkmanship."
It was when both Soviet Russia and the US competed against one another to see who could build the most nuclear weapons, and who could build them the fastest.
Brinkmanship is the act of pushing a situation to the verge of war, in order to threaten and encourage one's opponent to back down. Brinkmanship in the Cold War refers to the constant competition between the U. States of America and the Soviet Union.
Brinkmanship is the act of pushing a situation to the verge of war, in order to threaten and encourage one's opponent to back down. Brinkmanship in the Cold War refers to the constant competition between the U. States of America and the Soviet Union.
relied on small nuclear arms.
containment
Glasnost .
George F. Kennan
soviet union didn't exist until 1922