YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The United States is to Blame for the Cold War
Essays 181 - 210
establish the status quo in the "New World". We adopted their language and their culture. Others arrived also; the Dutch, the Fr...
of Britain, France and Russia, US President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation declaring American neutrality (Kennedy, 1991). Ho...
In a paper that consists of three pages the increasing involvement by the United States in Vietnamese affairs are discussed as the...
a formidable presence in Afghanistan we are beginning to pull troops back from around the world and to more efficiently consolidat...
of self-preservation that had, up until that time, marked the soldiers of this war (McPherson 540). In short, though the Confedera...
no one would call it aggressive. While many suggest that nations need a strong defense, like the U.S. and Israel, one could ask ju...
2002). The threat of nuclear capabilities was so great that the president and other analysts believed the threat to be significan...
In eight pages this paper examines the Gulf War strategies of each combatant in a consideration of security issues and decision ou...
first stage of escalation sees the parties to the conflict shift from the use of light strategies towards heavy tactics. Light tac...
to regulate financial markets to prevent the fraud and over-speculation demonstrated in the past decade. Next he initiated his no...
Before dwelling specifically on the rioting that occurred during and just after the First World War, it should be realized by the ...
In nine pages this paper discusses the politics of Southeast Asia, Ho Chi Minh's Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and the US involv...
In a paper that consists of five pages the changes that followed the Second World War in terms of economic, military, and diplomat...
In ten pages the Second World War ambivalence between Finland and the U.S. is examined and includes a discussion of Finland's asso...
In two pages this paper argues that despite its reputed end the Cold War endures in the hearts and minds of those who survived tha...
The following examination focuses on the cost of war, both in terms of money and lives; as well as the question of whether or not ...
In seven pages the suppression of art in both the Soviet Union and the US during the Cold War is discussed. Six sources are cited...
al, 2000, p. 648). It appears that Wilson saw American industry as a way to spread democracy; he told a group of salesmen that the...
support for joining the war. Although it seemed as if the U.S. might become involved, the Americans were quite happy with Europe f...
was still mired in the Depression in 1940 when Roosevelt made the speech, and almost overnight things turned around (Faragher et a...
and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin, and everyone went home (The Korean War: Setting the Stage and Brief Overview, 2002). Roosevelts b...
society where mankind was neither chained to the past nor condemned to a deterministic future."5 On the other side of the w...
was designed to provide the Army of the Republic of South VietNam (ARVN) the time and support it needed to pacify the South Vietna...
newspaper, entitled Appeal to Reason. When the book was finally published in book form, it instigated a pure food movement, which ...
to have the approval of Parliament to commit troops to a foreign country, the President of the United States does have a certain l...
already effected a rapid conversion of the absolute government into the democratic government they desired. They had done so both...
to become involved in this large, European action. In the early thirties, prior to 1941 when the U.S. was attacked, the European...
the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, was awe inspiring to some, comforting to others, but to the millions of Japanese-Americans who...
and far-reaching of a strategy as that which has proven itself necessary in the wake of the September 11 attacks on America in New...
argued that insecurity has been "one fundamental factor affecting Soviet policy" (Diplomatic Telegrams) since the beginnings of th...