YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Early Cold War the KGB and the CIA
Essays 1 - 30
In seven pages this paper examines the pre Second World War Cold War period in a consideration of CIA and KGB successes with the K...
In five pages this research paper examines the Cold War in a contrast and comparison of the CIA and the KGB. Eight sources are ci...
Stalin and subsequent leaders, going through many name changes, and ultimately becoming the KGB in 1954 (University of San Diego, ...
Aldrich Ames worked. According to one Western intelligence official, the commitment of Ames to his task was absolute, he acted ...
In eight pages this paper discusses the CIA's role in regions such as Guatemala and Chile and such topics as technology and the im...
principles were rationalized due to the assumptions made about the nature of the Cold War and, also, literature suggests that thes...
Russian and U.S. Intelligence alike were characterized by two distinct components. These were technology and people. Sometimes i...
the human omnipotence and the genuinely powerless. The books grim analysis of totalitarianisms origin leads the author to ass...
be issued an invitation" (Krahmann, Terriff and Webber, 2001). Despite the opposition, the U.S. position won the day (Krahmann, Te...
work essentially takes the reader through many eras as it relates to what was going on in the nation (lynchings etc.) and in polit...
In five pages this paper discusses American intelligence in a consideration of the vast involvement of the CIA in the Cold War. F...
In seven pages the Cold War arms race between the U.S. and the Soviet Union is discussed in terms of CIA experiences and the roles...
In 8 pages this paper examines the hierarchy of the CIA and considers its functions with a primary focus being on the Cold War. E...
Revolution-and the movements even before that date-is considered relevant to the rest of the century. Russia would come into its o...
In seven pages this paper reviews Lohbeck's text in an emphasis upon the roles of Islam and the CIA in the author's Afghan reality...
arms in Germany, which appeared to Stalin that the US was rearming that country. He was enraged at this perceived betrayal (Vidal...
The many aspects of the Cold War as examined in Berkin's text are discussed in this paper containing six pages and include not onl...
that agreement. The Conference at Yalta was the last meeting the United States, Great Britain and Russia would have under...
neighbor of the US, "one of the two superpowers defining the post-war world," the Canadian government chose to move "closer to the...
or her to make allowances for the various aspects of the book that seem somewhat sensationalized or overblown. It will also serve ...
which it is most closely identified is the Bay of Pigs, which was an unmitigated disaster.3 It may have been this failure that led...
The Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union (USSR) was at it's height in 1979, the year in which the Iranian Revolution to...
as necessary and correct (Crockatt, 1995). However, the "second wave" of historians, writing perhaps 20 years later, and informed ...
about much of its own global discord by virtue of its imperialistic mindset. While opinions about why Vietnam occurred are as vas...
with the wall in the 1990s. Communism, the panacea of the cold war, was something that never materialized as Marx intended. Instea...
as it was during what was deemed the cold war. II. The Cold War The expression "cold war" was used for the first time by...
In eleven pages this paper examines congressional records and presidential papers in a consideration of such Cold War inspired leg...
be desired from the Russian perspective. At the Teheran Conference Stalin was indifferent to the division of Germany into separa...
In five pages this paper examines how the Cold War originated and its early stages of development and is not limited merely to the...
In fifteen pages this paper examines the Cold War 'Red' hysteria that gripped the United States during the early 1950s and how thi...