who first coined the term cold war
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Who first coined the term cold war?
✒The term 'Cold War' is explained by Bernard Baruch on 16 April 1947.
Additional information :-
- He predicted that a nuclear-armed state would be “at once unconquerable and in a permanent state of ‘cold war’ with its neighbours.”
- The term was popularized by Walter Lippman in a series of articles in Foreign Affairs in 1947. He later said that it came from a French term from the 1930s, la guerre froide.
- In my personal experience the term was used in a somewhat ironic and generic sense for most of the post-war period I grew up thinking it was the background in which actual hot wars like Vietnam happened, rather than a thing in itself.
- It seemed, as Orwell’s predicted, the permanent state of affairs, rather than something that would have an end date.
- I think in the 1980s, I saw more references of it as an actual war that could end and did with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
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Answer:
Bernard Baruch
Multimillionaire and financier Bernard Baruch, in a speech given during the unveiling of his portrait in the South Carolina House of Representatives, coins the term “Cold War” to describe relations between the United States and the Soviet Union.
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