The Cold War American History
When we look back
over the span of - centuries that represents American history, it is easy to call
out major military engagements which represent the major wars of -this
country. From World War II to the Civil
War to Korea to World War I, America has been involved in many military engagements
and emerged victorious in all but a few of them. But one of - the strangest, longest lasting
wars that America has entered into was the one that was called “The Cold War”.
For many Americas
living today, The Cold War was a fact of life for decades. The reason it was a cold war was that there
was no battlefield, no armies on deployment, no body counts and no major
engagements to report. Instead it was a
long period of silent animosity between the United States and the Soviet Union
that lasted from the end of - World War II up to the early 1990s.
The strange thing
was that the cold war grew out of - our relationship with the Soviet Union during
World War II which was a relationship of friendship. But the seeds of the “conflict” were in place
at the end of that horrible war. With
the presence of nuclear technology, the concept of - a “superpower” was
born. This was not itself a source of
tension until the Soviet Union themselves developed the bomb as well and a long cold stand off ensued in
which both nations trained thousands of - these weapons on each other to warn the
other that they must never consider firing those weapons.
It was a staring
contest that lasted almost fifty years and created a tremendous drain on both
economies. Both countries had to
maintain “parity” of - their nuclear weapons so neither country got more than the
other thus throwing of the balance of - power and giving one combatant an unfair
advantage. This was a strange logic in
that both countries possessed enough weaponry to destroy the earth dozens of - times over but still they insisted on “having parity” throughout the cold war.
It was clear that no
battle between the Soviet Union and America could ever be tolerated. The potential outcome of - engaging those weapons
had the power to destroy life on planet earth.
But neither country was prepared to lay down their arms and begin the
process of - making peace with the other. So
the weapons continued to point at each other, day after day, year after year,
for fifty years.
So instead of - conducting battles
directly, the two countries fought each other through small wars around the
world. The Soviet Unions, working with
China happily contributed to the humiliating loss in Vietnam that the United
States endured. But the United States
then turned around and armed the Afghan Mujahideen
which lead to the defeat of - the Soviet Union in their occupation of that
country. From proxy wars, the space
race, and occasional face offs such as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Cold War
continued for decades testing the will and resolve of - both countries never to
look away and give the other the advantage.
Finally the pressure
on the economies of - the two countries took its toll in the early 1990s, particularly
in the Soviet Union as the stress of - sustaining such an expensive and
unproductive war forced the Soviet economy into collapse and the empire broke
up. The United States had won the cold
war by sheer will to endure and stubborn refusal to give in. This is a seldom spoken of - element of - the
American spirit but it is one that the Soviets learned to their own disaster
not to test. Hopefully no other
“superpower” will ever think they are equipped to test it again.
0 comments:
Post a Comment