The Cold War
When we look back over the span of
centuries that represents American history, it is easy to call out major
military engagements which represent the major wars of this country. From World War II to the Civil War to Korea
to World War I, America has been involved in many military engagements and
emerged victorious in all but a few of them.
But one of the strangest, longest lasting wars that
For many
The strange thing was that the cold war
grew out of our relationship with the
It was a staring contest that lasted almost fifty years and created a tremendous drain on both economies. Both countries had to maintain “parity” of their nuclear weapons so neither country got more than the other thus throwing of the balance of power and giving one combatant an unfair advantage. This was a strange logic in that both countries possessed enough weaponry to destroy the earth dozens of times over but still they insisted on “having parity” throughout the cold war.
It was clear that no battle between the
Soviet Union and
So instead of conducting battles directly, the two countries fought each
other through small wars around the world.
The Soviet Unions, working with China
happily contributed to the humiliating loss in Vietnam
that the United States
endured. But the United States then turned around and armed the Afghan Mujahideen which lead to the defeat of the Soviet Union in their occupation of that country. From proxy wars, the space race, and
occasional face offs such as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Cold War continued
for decades testing the will and resolve of both countries never to look away
and give the other the advantage.
Finally the pressure on the economies of
the two countries took its toll in the early 1990s, particularly in the

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