answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Proxy wars are better than wars on your own teritory.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What lesson can be learned from the mistakes of the Cold War?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Has the world learned from the lesson of pre world war 1 militarism?

what was the lesson learned in world war one


To what extent did USinvolvement in Vietnam reflect lessons learned in other twentieth-century wars including the Cold War?

The lesson learned was "look before you jump."


What life lesson learned from the Revolutionary War?

That WAR Is Very Very Bad ?! :)


What lesson is learned in the book twilight?

All's fair in love and war.


What lesson was learned in world war 2?

How to make an atomic bomb


What lesson could be learned in World War 2?

How to make the atomic bomb.


Which was a lesson learned at the First Battle of Bull Run?

That this was not going to be a short and glorious war.


Which is an effective question for launching historical inquiry related to the Cold War?

1. How did the atomic bomb create the cold war? 2. Why did the atomic bomb create the cold war? 3. Why couldn't North VN be invaded? 4. Why wasn't North VN invaded? 5. Why weren't nukes used in the VN war? 6. What would have been the possible after effects if the "A-bomb" was used in VN? 7. What lesson was learned when the US invaded N. Korea in 1950; and this lesson was "apparently" adhered to when fighting in VN?


What happened in the 3rd punic war?

You need to pay attention in class. That's what happned ....Lesson learned?


What did the allies do at the end of world war 2 to show they learned their lesson?

Went back to their own country.


How did technology change during the cold war?

by the nuclear weapons or atomic weapons from WW2 a Russian man hacked the lesson of how to make destructive bombs in WW2 to make a cold war.


What film is a comedy about the cold war?

Dr. Strangelove or How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb