The Cold War

The cold war was a conflict between the United States and Soviet Union. Though these two nations never faced each other through direct military confrontation, both threatened each other with nuclear annihilation. They participated in proxy wars frequently by supporting numerous wars such as Vietnam and Korea. Each side viewed the cold war as a between civilization.

Relations between the two superpowers were driven by a complex interplay of ideological, political, and economic factors. The tensions started when the three big leaders American President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin met in Tehran for a coordinated strategy. There was a heated debate unto which polish faction should be allowed to take control of Poland between communism and capitalism.  Stalin was backing communism while the other two wanted the people of Poland to be allowed to choose what they wanted (Craig & Logevall, 2012).  The Soviet Union was interested in the control of Poland since Germany used it to attack them. To make sure that attacks through Poland can never happen again, he wanted a communist Poland largely controlled by the Soviet Union.

The Yalta agreement s resulted to the Poland becoming a communist state while Stalin signed an agreement of “Declaration of Liberated Europe”. When President Franklin died, the vice president who had no knowledge of what Franklin conceded in Yalta viewed the soviet interventions in Europe as a violation of the Yalta agreement (Craig & Logevall, 2012). The war of power began between the two nations. After the World War 2, the U.S. and the Soviet Union were the only countries that could propagate their systems globally. Each feared and distrusted the other which in the end resulted to the cold war.

Reference

Craig, C., & Logevall, F. (2012). America’s Cold War. Harvard University Pr

 

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