The cold war was never cold nor hot.
Vietnam was a "hot" battle of the "Cold War". The Korea was the first "hot" battle of the "Cold War."
The Cold War was not "cold" per say, but was simply the name of a war that took place.
A cold war is a war that is fought politically by diplomacy with no actual shot being fired. A hot war is a war where military action is used.
The term "hot war" should, and was intended to be used, only in conjunction with the term "cold war." Meaning that a "cold war" is a non-shooting war; and a "hot war" is a shooting war. Extra examples: 1. People die in "hot wars." 2. People do not die in "cold wars." (accidents don't count).
The term "hot war" was only used in conjuction with the term "cold war." Cold war meaning no war; hot war meaning a war.
The cold war was never cold nor hot.
Which event is an example of the Cold War becoming hot?
Cold war no bullets fly, hot war everything flies.
The Korean war was the first hot war in the cold war.
Only if it went hot. If it did...it would've been MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction). MAD=Nukes
The Cold War was a war where there is standoffs, but no weapons fired. Hot war is where weapons are used.
The Korean War was the most important event in the 1950s as a hot spot in the cold war.
Vietnam was a "hot" battle of the "Cold War". The Korea was the first "hot" battle of the "Cold War."
Vietnam was a hot battle of the cold war.
No. The cold war never went hot.
Vietnam was a "hot" battle of the cold war.