Political Science, asked by dongleylowang3, 1 year ago

what is cold war?how did it spread?500 words​

Answers

Answered by ankurgupta9123
0

Answer:

The origins of the Cold War involved the breakdown of relations between the Soviet Union versus the United States, Great Britain and their allies in the years 1945–1949. ... By 1949, the lines were sharply drawn and the Cold War was largely in place in Europe.

Explanation:

The Soviet Union put Governments who were Communist in power in Eastern Europe. ... The Soviet Union and China helped any other groups that tried to spread Communism in other countries. Because they tried to spread Communism, wars broke out. The United States joined the war to try to stop the spread of Communism

Answered by snaha34
0

Answer:

The Cold War was a period of geopolitical tension between the Soviet Union with its satellite states (the Eastern Bloc), and the United States with its allies (the Western Bloc) after World War II. The historiography of the conflict began between 1946 (the year U.S. diplomat George F. Kennan's "Long Telegram" from Moscow cemented a U.S. foreign policy of containment of Soviet expansionism) and 1947 ( the Truman Doctrine). The Cold War began to de-escalate after the Revolutions of 1989. The collapse of the USSR in 1991 (when the proto-state Republics of the Soviet Union declared independence) was the end of the Cold War. The term "cold" is used because there was no large-scale fighting directly between the two sides, but they each supported major regional conflicts known as proxy wars. The conflict split the temporary wartime alliance against Nazi Germany and its allies, leaving the USSR and the US as two superpowers with profound economic and political differences.

The capitalist West was led by the United States, a federal republic with a two-party presidential system, as well as the other First World nations of the Western Bloc that were generally liberal democratic with a free press and independent organizations, but were economically and politically entwined with a network of banana republics and other authoritarian regimes, most of which were the Western Bloc's former colonies.[1][A] Some major Cold War frontlines such as Indochina, Indonesia, and the Congo were still Western colonies in 1947.the Union, on the other hand, was a self-proclaimed Marxist–Leninist state that imposed a totalitarian regime that was led by a small committee, the Politburo. The Party had full control of the state, the press, the military, the economy, and local organizations throughout the Second World, including the Warsaw Pact and other satellites. The Kremlin funded communist parties around the world but was challenged for control by Mao's People's Republic of China following the Sino-Soviet split of the 1960s. As nearly all the colonial states achieved independence in the period 1945–1960, they became Third World battlefields in the c War.

India, Indonesia, and Yugoslavia took the lead in promoting neutrality with the Non-Aligned Movement, but it never had much power in its own right. The Soviet Union and the United States never engaged directly in full-scale armed combat. However, both were heavily armed in preparation for a possible all-out nuclear world war. China and the United States fought an undeclared high-casualty war in Korea (1950–53) that resulted in a stalemate. Each side had a nuclear strategy that discouraged an attack by the other side, on the basis that suchad to the total destruction of the attacker—the doctrine of mutually assured destruction (i). Aside from the development of the two sides' nuclear arsenals, and their deployment

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