YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Cold War in its Early Days
Essays 211 - 240
A bomb could be launched and hot another country with no need for any military personal to step on foreign soil. The United Stat...
a time, Friedman states, world societies were shaped largely by tradition and political ideology, which is symbolized by the olive...
policy and the position of the British government. Britain was trying to assert itself as a world power during those decades and t...
onto the editorial boards of intellectually-oriented newspapers.6 Grose tells of how American intelligence agencies recruited Alb...
meddling, it further presents an improved picture of Russia. The article goes on to criticize the United States because it refuse...
Magazine, 2004). Furthermore, by the end of the war, American and British intelligence were involved (along with the Vatican) in r...
Stalin and subsequent leaders, going through many name changes, and ultimately becoming the KGB in 1954 (University of San Diego, ...
official reports which conclude that two of its MI6 officers had actually been involved with the passing of fake documentation to ...
that something was being done, and they were actually given (leaked) disinformation so that it would seem that there were existing...
the Cold War. Another author, Professor Gerhard Rempel, approaches the issue from a different perspective in terms of discussin...
stimulating innovation and organizing research. However, Fukuyama also acknowledges that scientific progress does not directly exp...
NATO. From the US perspective, they were merely protecting a weakened Europe from Soviet aggression. The viewpoint propelled the U...
Russian and U.S. Intelligence alike were characterized by two distinct components. These were technology and people. Sometimes i...
States power and security position? Many questions linger. Since the cold war has ended, many thought that it was the end of secu...
In five pages this paper examines the Cold War, globalization, and communism's collapse in this conceptual view of the 'New World ...
hippos in the river that Schweitzer came up with the phrase "reverence for life," which he later asserted was his only message for...
Hidemi Suganamis "Narratives of War Origins and Endings: A Note On The End Of the Cold War in Millennium" explores the causative f...
that was more accommodating to the US. At its height, the congress for Cultural Freedom had offices in 35 countries, which frequen...
5,000 people a year, but it resulted in an influx of immigrants. According to Don Barnett, the annual average for refugee immigrat...
enough tinder on the firebox to light a conflagration. During the early days of the war, American policy was focused on co...
The expression "cold war" was used for the first time by a journalist who wrote a speech for financier Bernard Baruch in 1947 (Saf...
all-hearing media leech that hovers over some of the most vital - yet dangerous - decision-making processes, broadcasting to the w...
means of murder, war and starvation (Kurth, 1995). Disaster after disaster followed one upon another through the middle nineteen ...
less than a month later with Sputnik II, in which a dog was successfully launched into orbit, it appeared as if the Soviet Union w...
rationalized by President Theodore Roosevelt on the grounds that the U.S. had an "obligations to intervene elsewhere in the Wester...
pursuing a d?tente "that would stabilize mutual deterrence and contain the costs of competition in regional affairs" (Herrmann and...
for this type of research, but in explaining Lefflers work, Trachtenberg has gone into substantial detail about Trumans policies, ...
was accepted as justification for intervention in Southeast Asia. The background to the American intervention shows how the Vietn...
This stereotypical clash with womens new on-the-job expectations created a shift in the treatment they received when toiling at a ...
There was Pearl Harbor and there was the internment in the United States to boot. During the cold war days, there was a great deal...