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The foreign policy of the Truman administration manifested by the policy of his name was rooted in containing Soviet aggression and expansion. Flashpoints of the Truman Doctrine were in attempts of Soviet subversion of Turkey and Greece after the War.
Because it pledged to support efforts to resist the expansion of Soviet influence.
the answer to this question is the Nixon Doctrine
The USA used the policy of containment to help provide aide to those countries who were susceptible to fall under Soviet rule.
Monroe Doctrine :) i hope this answer helped It's actually the Big Stick Policy.:)
The Brezhnev Doctrine was the Soviet policy (named after Premier Leonid Brezhnev) of using military force to topple any government within the Warsaw Pact which began to show bourgeois tendencies. It's first and only implementation was against Czechoslovakia in 1968, where armies of the Warsaw Pact were successfully able to force liberal Communist Alexander Dubcek from power.
Brezhnev stagnation
The foreign policy of the Truman administration manifested by the policy of his name was rooted in containing Soviet aggression and expansion. Flashpoints of the Truman Doctrine were in attempts of Soviet subversion of Turkey and Greece after the War.
That policy was known as the Truman Doctrine.
Because it pledged to support efforts to resist the expansion of Soviet influence.
1) he withdrew soviet forces from afghanistan as this caused great expenditure to the government in terms of money and soviet lives. 2) in direct contrast to the brezhnev era which advocated
Robert Waring Herrick has written: 'Soviet naval strategy' 'Soviet Naval Doctrine and Policy 1956-1986 (Studies in Russian History, 8)' 'Soviet Naval Doctrine and Policy, Vol. 3 1956-1986 (Studies in Russian History, 8)' 'Soviet naval strategy: fifty years of theory and practice'
Mikhail Gorbachev
the answer to this question is the Nixon Doctrine
Monroe Doctrine
Truman Doctrine
The doctrine of containment was a U.S. policy to prevent the spread of communism. It was made in response to the Soviet Union's moves to enlarge communist presence in Eastern Europe.