Cold War History

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The period of the Cold War was very important in the development of the world going into the 21st century. As the conflict died down in the late 1980s to early 1990s, the United States was already positioned as the single world superpower whereas Russia had taken a backseat as a world leader. To better understand the current situation, we must step back to the origins of the Cold War and the true causes for it.
The end of the Second World War set up the world dynamics for decades to come, the immense damage all across Europe left most of the countries in a bad shape. The United States lost lives fighting but it was nowhere near as bad as the European countries and none of it was on their soil. This advantage allowed their economy to boom and their establishment as world leaders. Russia on the other hand, did have vast losses from the war. They were not in the heart of the action and were also able to stay clear of the territorial damages of the war. Ultimately, as George Kennan warned in his telegram, the United States and the Soviet Union were able to position themselves as leaders in a way where conflict was inevitable.
In order to better understand this conflict we must go back to 1917 and the Bolshevik Revolution. Many, including David Foglesong, believe this was the start of the Cold War because it was the first clash between communism in the east and capitalism in the west. The Communist Red Army was trying to overthrow the Tsar’s White Army and the American’s aided the Tsar. These were the first efforts to avoid communism but were unsuccessful and thus commenced its slow but steady growth, by 1946 communism controlled all of Eastern Europe.
What most people would consider the start of the Cold War and I would agree is 19...

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...USSR nor the US is to solely be blame for the Cold War. American historian, J.L. Gaddis stated that, “The cold war grew out of a complicated interaction of external and internal developments” both of these “developments” as he states established themselves out of the control of either country. Additionally, both superpowers glorified the strength and threat of the other, and much of the growing tension of the 1940s was a result of a pattern of ‘action and reaction.’ The tensions was building from the war and thus lead for an inevitable conflict between both countries, which then lead to the Cold War.
Ultimately, the Cold War was an inevitable clash between the communist party and the capitalists; coexistence atop the political world was impossible because of their opposing views. Both sides were responsible to a certain extent but the conflict was also inevitable.

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