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because the league of nations placed sanctions on italy which only caused them to leave and brought them closer to nazi germany.
Both superpowers striving for their own self interest
A détente basically meant a cooling of tensions between the two superpowers, US and USSR, during the Cold War period. It served as a short period of time to stabilize and militarize if necessary the army. A détente sometimes showed some acts of friendly relations between the two nations, direct or indirect did not matter. But usually the superpowers used this time to plan ahead for the future, because other times they would be in crises. For example the Cuban Missile Crisis. In other words: the nations had some fresh air before going in the ring of cold staring to each other.
The relations between Cuba and the US are tense due to it being declared as a communist country, by Castro, in 1961. The Bay of Pigs occurred in 1961, and the Cuban missile crisis occurred in 1962.
Kathleen Fearn-Banks has written: 'Crisis Communication' 'Crisis communications' -- subject- s -: Public relations, Crisis management, Case studies, Management, Advertising 'Crisis Communications' -- subject- s -: Case studies, Public relations, Crisis management, Management, Advertising 'Instructor's Manual to Accompany Crisis Communications'
the Cuban Missile Crisis affected Cuba because after the U.S. blockaded Cuba and prevented Cuba from receiving or giving trade goods, the economy dwindled until it got to the point that Cuba couldn't afford launching the missile that the soviet union gave them.
Standoff between John F. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in October 1962 over Soviet plans to install nuclear weapons in Cuba. Although the crisis was ultimately settled in America's favour and represented a foreign policy triumph for Kennedy, it brought the world's superpowers perilously close the brink of nuclear confrontation.
the 1979 hostage crisis
It began the process of ending the Cold War
crisis = singular, crises, plural
Hungarian Crisis- relations between the Soviet Union and Western Europe soured. The Hungarian Revolution caused Hungarians dissidents to launch a popular uprising in November 1956 to demand democratic reforms. For several days they had control of the government but Soviet troops soon took over again.
Noreen Zaka has written: 'The Guatemalan crisis of 1954 and Anglo-American relations'