Cold War

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The Cold War was the protracted geopolitical, ideological, and economic struggle that emerged after World War II between the global superpowers of the Soviet Union and the United States, supported by their military alliance partners. It lasted from about 1947 to the period leading to the dissolution of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991.

The global contest was popularly termed The Cold War because direct hostilities never occurred between the United States and the Soviet Union. Instead, the "war" took the form of an arms race involving nuclear and conventional weapons, networks of military alliances, economic warfare and trade embargos, propaganda, espionage and proxy wars, especially those involving superpower support for opposing sides within civil wars. The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was the most important direct confrontation, together with a series of confrontations over the Berlin Blockade and the Berlin Wall. The major civil wars polarized along Cold War lines were the Greek Civil War, Korean War, Vietnam War and the Soviet war in Soviet-Afghan War, along with more peripheral conflicts in Angola, El Salvador, and Nicaragua.

The greatest fear during the Cold War was the risk it would escalate into a full nuclear exchange with hundreds of millions killed. Both sides developed a deterrence policy that prevented problems from escalating beyond limited localities. Nuclear weapons were never used in the Cold War.

The Cold War cycled through a series of high and low tension years (the latter called detente). It ended in the period between 1989 and 1991, with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and later the Soviet Union. Historians continue to debate the causes in the 1940s, and the reasons for the Soviet collapse in the 1980s. Many people, however, see the end of the Cold War as signifying the triumph of democracy and freedom, including religious freedom, over oppression and tyranny. Some fear that socialist ideals of welfare and of constraints on the accumulation of wealth will also be jettisoned. Some fear that as one super-power emerges without the limitations imposed by a rival, the world may become a less safe place. Many believe that the time is right to move forward into a world where armed conflict is replaced by negotiation, and humankind can concentrate on creating enough food and resources for all who inhabit our common planetary home.

Historical overview

Origins

Tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States resumed after the Second World War ended in August 1945. They escalated in 1945–1947. Historians differ, but the usual starting year is 1947 for the Cold War that lasted until the fall of the Berlin Wall (Nov. 11, 1989) or the end of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991.

Historians looking at the Soviet perspective take two approaches, one emphasizing the primacy of Communist ideology, the other emphasizing the historical goals of the Russian state, specifically hegemony over Eastern Europe, access to warm water seaports, and the defense of Eastern Orthodoxy and other Slavic peoples. The roots of the ideological clashes can be seen in Lenin's seizure of power in the Russian Revolution of 1917. Walter LaFeber stresses Russia's historic interests, going back to the Czarist years when the United States and Russia became rivals. From 1933 to 1939 the United States and the Soviet Union had a sort of détente, but relations were not friendly. After the USSR and Germany became belligerents in 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt made a personal commitment to help the Soviets. The U. S. Congress never voted to approve any sort of alliance. The wartime cooperation was never friendly. For example, Josef Stalin was reluctant to allow American forces to use Soviet bases. Cooperation became increasingly strained by February 1945 at the Yalta Conference, as it was becoming clear that Stalin intended to spread communism to Eastern Europe which he succeeded in doing and then, perhaps, to France and Italy.

Some historians such as William Appleman Williams also cite American economic expansionism as the roots of the Cold War. These historians use the Marshall Plan and its terms and conditions as evidence to back up their claims.

These geopolitical and ideological rivalries were accompanied by a third factor that had just emerged from World War II as a new problem in world affairs: the problem of effective international control of nuclear energy. In 1946 the Soviet Union rejected a United States proposal for such control, which had been formulated by Bernard Baruch on the basis of an earlier report authored by Dean Acheson and David Lilienthal, with the objection that such an agreement would undermine the principle of national sovereignty. The end of the Cold War did not resolve the problem of international control of nuclear energy, and it re-emerged as a factor in the beginning of the Long War (or the war on global terror) declared by the United States in 2006 as its official military doctrine.

Global Realignments

This period began the Cold War in 1947 and continued until the change in leadership for both superpowers in 1953 - from Presidents Harry S Truman to Dwight D Eisenhower for the United States and from Josef Stalin to [[Nikita Khrushchev}} in the Soviet Union.

Events include the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, the Berlin Blockade and Berlin Airlift, the Soviet Union's detonation of its first atomic bomb, the formation of NATO in 1949 and the Warsaw Pact in 1955, the formation of East and West Germany, the Stalin Note for German reunification of 1952 superpower disengagement from Central Europe, the Chinese Civil War and the Korean War.

The American Marshall Plan intended to rebuild the European economy after the devastation incured by the Second World War in order to thwart the political appeal of the radical left. For Western Europe, Foreign aid|economic aid ended the dollar shortage, stimulated private investment for postwar reconstruction and, most importantly, introduced new managerial techniques. For the U.S., the plan rejected the isolationism of the 1920s and integrated the North American and Western European economies. The Truman Doctrine refers to the decision to support Greece and Turkey in the event of Soviet incursion, following notice from Britain that she was no longer able to aid Greece in its Civil War against Communists activists. The Berlin blockade took place between June 1948 and July 1949, when the Soviets, in an effort to obtain more post-World War II concessions, prevented overland access to the allied zones in Berlin. Thus, personnel and supplies were lifted in by air. The Stalin Note was a plan for the reunification of Germany on the condition that it became a neutral state and that all Western troops be withdrawn.

Escalation and Crisis

Two opposing geopolitical blocs had developed by 1959 as a result of the Cold War. Consult the legend on the map for more details.

A period of escalation and crisis existed between the change in leadership for both superpowers in 1953 when Josef Stalin Suddenly died and the American presidential election of 1952 until the resolution of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.

Events included the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, the erection of the Berlin Wall in 1961, the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 and the Prague Spring in 1968. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, in particular, the world was closest to a third (nuclear) world war. The Prague Spring was a brief period of hope, when the government of Alexander Dubček (1921 – 1992) started a process of liberalization, which ended abruptly when when the Russian Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia.

Thaw and Détente, 1962-1979

The Détente period of the Cold War was marked by mediation and comparative peace. At its most reconciliatory, German Chancellor Willy Brandt forwarded the foreign policy of Ostpolitik during his tenure in the Federal Republic of Germany. Translated literally as "eastern politics", Egon Bahr, its architect and advisor to Brandt, framed this policy as "change through rapprochement".

These initiatives led to the December 7, 1970 Warsaw Treaty between Poland and West Germany, the 3 September, 1971 Quadripartite or Four-Powers Agreement between the Soviet Union, United States, France and Great Britain, and a few east-west German agreements including the Basic Treaty of 21 December, 1972.

Limitations to reconciliation did exist, evidenced by the deposition of Walter Ulbricht by Erich Honecker as East German General Secretary on May 3, 1971.

Second Cold War

The diversified state of the Cold War relations in 1980. Consult the legend on the map for more details.

The period between the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev Soviet leader in 1985 was characterized by a marked "freeze" in relations between the superpowers after the "thaw" of the Détente period of the 1970s. As a result of this re-intensification, the period is sometimes referred to as the "Second Cold War".

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 in support of an embryonic communist regime in that country led to international outcries and the widespread boycotting of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games by many Western countries in protest at Soviet actions. The Soviet invasion led to a protracted conflict, which involved Pakistan, an erstwhile US ally, in locked horns with the Soviet military might for over 12 years.

Worried by Soviet deployment of nuclear SS-20 missiles (commenced in 1977), NATO allies agreed in 1979 to continued Strategic Arms Limitation Talks to constrain the number of nuclear missiles for battlefield targets, while threatening to deploy some 500 cruise missiles and MGM-31 Pershing II missiles in West Germany and the Netherlands if negotiations were unsuccessful. The negotiations as expected, failed. The planned deployment of Pershing II met intense and widespread opposition from public opinion across Europe, which became the site of the largest demonstrations ever seen in several countries.[3] Pershing II missiles were deployed in Europe from January 1984. They were withdrawn beginning in October 1988.

The "new conservatives" or "neoconservatives" rebelled against both the Richard Nixon-era policies and the similar position of Jimmy Carter toward the Soviet Union. Many clustered around hawkish Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, a Democrat, and pressured President Carter into a more confrontational stance. Eventually they aligned themselves with Ronald Reagan and the conservative wing of the Republicans, who promised to end Soviet expansionism.

The election, first of Margaret Thatcher as British Prime Minister in 1979, followed by that of Ronald Reagan to the American Presidency in 1980, saw the elevation of two hardline cold warriors to the leadership of the Western Bloc.

Other events included the Strategic Defense Initiative and the Solidarity Movement in Poland.

"End" of the Cold War

Changes in borders in Europe and Central Asia with the end of the Cold War. 23 new countries were formed.

This period began at the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev Soviet leader in 1985 and continued until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Events included the Chernobyl accident in 1986, the Autumn of Nations when one by one, communist regimes collapsed. This includes the famous fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989), the Soviet coup attempt of 1991 and collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Other noteworthy events include the implementation of the policies of glasnost and perestroika, public discontent over the Soviet Union's war in Afghanistan, and the socio-political effects of the Chernobyl nuclear plant accident in 1986. East-West tensions eased rapidly after the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev. After the deaths of three elderly Soviet leaders in quick succession beginning with Leonoid Breshnev in 1982, the Politburo elected Gorbachev Soviet Communist Party chief in 1985, marking the rise of a new generation of leadership. Under Gorbachev, relatively young reform-oriented technocrats rapidly consolidated power, providing new momentum for political and economic liberalization and the impetus for cultivating warmer relations and trade with the West.

Meanwhile, in his second term American President Reagan surprised the neoconservatives by meeting with Gorbachev in Geneva, Switzerland in 1985 and Reykjavík, Iceland in 1986. The latter meeting focused on continued discussions around scaling back the intermediate missile arsenals in Europe. The talks were unsuccessful. Afterwards, Soviet policymakers increasingly accepted Reagan's administration warnings that the U.S. would make the arms race an increasing financial burden for the USSR. The twin burdens of the Cold War arms race on one hand and the provision of large sums of foreign and military aid, upon which the socialist allies had grown to expect, left Gorbachev's efforts to boost production of consumer goods and reform the stagnating economy in an extremely precarious state. The result was a dual approach of cooperation with the west and economic restructuring (perestroika) and democratization (glasnost) domestically, which eventually made it impossible for Gorbachev to reassert central control over Warsaw Pact member states.

Thus, beginning in 1989 Eastern Europe's Communist governments toppled one after another. In Poland, Hungary, and Bulgaria reforms in the government, in Poland under pressure from Solidarity, prompted a peaceful end to Communist rule and democratization. Elsewhere, mass-demonstrations succeeded in ousting the Communists from Czechoslovakia and East Germany, where the Berlin Wall was opened and subsequently brought down in November 1989. In Romania a popular uprising deposed the Nicolae Ceauşescu regime during December and led to his execution on Christmas Day later that year.

Conservatives often argue that one major cause of death of the Soviet Union was the massive fiscal spending on military technology that the Soviets saw as necessary in response to NATO's increased armament of the 1980s. They insist that Soviet efforts to keep up with NATO military expenditures resulted in massive economic disruption and the effective bankruptcy of the Soviet economy, which had always labored to keep up with its western counterparts. The Soviets were a decade behind the West in computers and falling further behind every year. The critics of the USSR state that computerized military technology was advancing at such a pace that the Soviets were simply incapable of keeping up, even by sacrificing more of the already weak civilian economy. According to the critics, the arms race, both nuclear and conventional, was too much for the underdeveloped Soviet economy of the time. For this reason Ronald Reagan is seen by many conservatives as the man who 'won' the Cold War indirectly through his escalation of the arms race. However, the proximate cause for the end of the Cold War was ultimately Mikhail Gorbachev's decision, publicized in 1988, to repudiate the Leonid Brezhnev doctrine that any threat to a socialist state was a threat to all socialist states.

The Soviet Union provided little infrastructure help for its Eastern European satellites, but they did receive substantial military assistance in the form of funds, material and control. Their integration into the inefficient military-oriented economy of the Soviet Union caused severe readjustment problems after the fall of Communism.

Research shows that the fall of the USSR was accompanied by a sudden and dramatic decline in total warfare, interstate wars, ethnic wars, revolutionary wars, the number of refugees and displaced persons and an increase in the number of democratic states. The opposite pattern was seen before the end. [1]

Arms race

File:Buran AN-225.jpg
Soviet Shuttle Buran, carried by Antonov An-225 carrier, the world's largest powered aircraft.

Technology

A major feature of the Cold War was the arms race between the member states of the Warsaw Pact and those of NATO. This resulted in substantial scientific discoveries in many technological and military fields.

Some particularly revolutionary advances were made in the field of nuclear weapons and rocketry, which led to the space race (many of the rockets used to launch humans and satellites into orbit were originally based on military designs formulated during this period).

Other fields in which arms races occurred include: jet fighters, bombers, chemical weapons, biological weapons, anti-aircraft warfare, surface-to-surface missiles (including SRBMs and cruise missiles), inter-continental ballistic missiles (as well as IRBMs), anti-ballistic missiles, anti-tank weapons, submarines and anti-submarine warfare, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, electronic intelligence, signals intelligence, reconnaissance aircraft and spy satellites.

Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)

One prominent feature of the nuclear arms race, especially following the massed deployment of nuclear ICBMs due to the flawed assumption that the manned bomber was fatally vulnerable to surface to air missile|SAMs, was the concept of deterrence via assured destruction, later, mutually assured destruction or "MAD". The idea was that the Western bloc would not attack the Eastern bloc or vice versa, because both sides had more than enough nuclear weapons to reduce each other out of existence and to make the entire planet uninhabitable. Therefore, launching an attack on either party would be suicidal and so neither would attempt it. With increasing numbers and accuracy of delivery systems, particularly in the closing stages of the Cold War, the possibility of a first strike doctrine weakened the deterrence theory. A first strike would aim to degrade the enemy's nuclear forces to such an extent that the retalitatory response would involve "acceptable" losses.

Civil Society and the Cold War

Within civil society in the West, there was great concern about the possibility of nuclear war. Civil defense plans were in place in many Western countries in case of nuclear disaster, with certain people designated for protection in secret safe-havens that were built with the expectation that occupants would survive. In late 1958, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament was formed by such people as J B Priestley (1894-1984), the British writer and broadcaster, Bertrand Russell (1872-1970), the philosopher, A. J P Taylor (1906-90) the historian with Peggy Duff (1910-1981) as the founder organiser. Committed to unilateral nuclear disarmament, CND held rallies, sit-ins outside nuclear basis especially when Margaret Thatcher replaced Britain's polaris missiles with Trident. From 1980 to 1985 as General Secretary, then from 1987 until 1990 as President, Monsignor Bruce Kent was one of the most prominent peace activists and a household name in Britain, giving Christian involvement in the disarmament campaign a very high public profile. Amnesty International, founded by Catholic attorney Peter Benenson and the Quaker Eric Baker in 1961 monitored and campaigned on behalf of prisoners of conscience. The Soviet Union was especially a focus of attention. The organisation is not explicitly religious but attracts religious and non-religious activists. The organization published a great deal of material on the soviet system and how it prevented freedom of expression and freedom of thought. In 1977, Amnesty International won the Nobel Peace Prize. Other groups were especially concerned about religious freedom behind the Iron Curtain (the popular term for the border between Eastern and Western Europe). Many people also focused on China during this period.

Intelligence

Military forces from the countries involved, rarely had much direct participation in the Cold War—the war was primarily fought by intelligence agencies like the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) (United States), Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) (Britain), Bundesnachrichtendiens (BND) (West Germany), Stasi (East Germany) and the KGB (Soviet Union).

The abilities of ECHELON, a U.S.-UK intelligence sharing organization that was created during World War II, were used against the USSR, China and their allies.

According to the CIA, much of the technology in the Communist states consisted simply of copies of Western products that had been legally purchased or gained through a massive espionage program.[4] Stricter Western control of the export of technology through COCOM (Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls) and providing defective technology to Communist agents after the discovery of the Farewell Dossier contributed to the fall of Communism.

Origin of the Term "Cold War"

The origins of the term "Cold War" are debated. The term was used hypothetically by George Orwell in 1945, though not in reference to the struggle between the USA and the Soviet Union, which had not yet been initiated. American politician Bernard Baruch began using the term in April 1947 but it first came into general use in September 1947 when journalist Walter Lippmann published a series of newspaper columns (and books) on US-Soviet tensions entitled The Cold War.

Historiography

Three distinct periods have existed in the Western scholarship of the Cold War: the traditionalist, the revisionist, and the post-revisionist. For more than a decade after the end of World War II, few American historians saw any reason to challenge the conventional "traditionalist" interpretation of the beginning of the Cold War: that the breakdown of relations was a direct result of Stalin's violation of the accords of the Yalta conference, the imposition of Soviet-dominated governments on an unwilling Eastern Europe, Soviet intransigence and aggressive Soviet expansionism. They would point out that Marxism|Marxist theory rejected liberal democracy, while prescribing a worldwide proletarian revolution and argue that this stance made conflict inevitable. Organizations such as the Comintern were regarded as actively working for the overthrow of all Western governments.

Later New Left revisionist historians were influenced by Marxist theory. William Appleman Williams in his 1959 The Tragedy of American Diplomacy and Walter LaFeber in his 1967 America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945–1966 argued that the Cold War was an inevitable outgrowth of conflicting American and Russian economic interests. Some new left revisionist historians have argued that U.S. policy of containment as expressed in the Truman Doctrine was at least equally responsible, if not more so, than Soviet seizure of Poland and other states. Some date the onset of the Cold War to the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, regarding the U.S. use of nuclear weapons as a warning to the Soviet Union, which was about to join the war against the nearly defeated Japan. In short, historians have disagreed as to who was responsible for the breakdown of U.S.-Soviet relations and whether the conflict between the two superpowers was inevitable. This revisionist approach reached its height during the Vietnam War when many began to view the U.S. and U.S.S.R. as morally comparable empires.

In the later years of the Cold War, there were attempts to forge a "post-revisionist" synthesis by historians. Prominent post-revisionist historians include John Lewis Gaddis. Rather than attribute the beginning of the Cold War to the actions of either superpower, post-revisionist historians have focused on mutual misperception, mutual reactivity and shared responsibility between the leaders of the superpowers. Gaddis perceives the origins of the conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union less as the lone fault of one side or the other and more as the result of a plethora of conflicting interests and misperceptions between the two superpowers, propelled by domestic politics and bureaucratic inertia. Melvyn Leffler contends that Truman and Eisenhower acted, on the whole, thoughtfully in meeting what was understandably perceived to be a potentially serious threat from a totalitarian communist regime that was ruthless at home and that might be threatening abroad. Borrowing from the realist school of international relations, the post-revisionists essentially accepted U.S. European policy in Europe, such as aid to Greece in 1947 and the Marshall Plan. According to this synthesis, "Communist activity" was not the root of the difficulties of Europe, but rather a consequence of the disruptive effects of the Second World War on the economic, political and social structure of Europe, which threatened to drastically alter the balance of power in a manner favorable to the U.S.S.R.

The end of the Cold War opened many of the archives of the Communist states, providing documentation which has increased the support for the traditionalist position. Gaddis has written that Stalin's "authoritarian, paranoid and narcissistic predisposition" locked the Cold War into place. "Stalin alone pursued personal security by depriving everyone else of it: no Western leader relied on terror to the extent that he did. He alone had transformed his country into an extension of himself: no Western leader could have succeeded at such a feat and none attempted it. He alone saw war and revolution as acceptable means with which to pursue ultimate ends: no Western leader associated violence with progress to the extent that he did."[5]

Legacy

The Cold War, it has been said, was won by capitalist democracy and free-trade providing goods and services better than the Soviet system. On the other hand, some of the ideals of Marxist thought, such as universal employment, welfare, and equality have tended to be neglected because they were associated with the system that failed. Marxism set out to create a Utopian society but, without checks and balances on power, ended in a totalitarian state. Among those who claim credit for ending the Cold War are Pope John Paul II and Sun Myung Moon. Both resolutely opposed the Soviet system, as did such cold war warriors as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. The Catholic Church, Sun Myung Moon's Unification movement and other religious agencies, kept up a barrage of pro-democracy and pro-civil liberties propaganda that contributed to the peoples' desire, in the end, for such freedoms their leaders had denied them. Of these the most comprehensive and far ranging response to Communism was that of Sun Myung Moon. His efforts included the constant mobilization and extreme levels of sacrifice by his religious followers toward this end. Further it entailed the investment of untold resources into creating and maintaining major institutions at all levels of society devoted to opposing and challenging Communism. Perhaps most importantly however was the work of his community under his direction at the philosophical and ideological level. Unification thought provided the foundation for a rigorous philosophical challenge to dialectical and historical materialism, penetratingly rendered and developed, and relentlessly disseminated by Unification philosophers. Ultimately, the Soviet system collapsed from within, unable to provide the goods and services necessary to sustain its people, or to make welfare payments to the elderly. Soviet youth felt betrayed by their revolutionary grandparents who had promised a better society than in the capitalist West.

During the Cold War, both sides had unrealistic sterotypes of the other which aggravated tensions. In the USA, Senator Joseph McCarthy promoted paranoia about communism through the Committee on Un American Activities. It targeted almost any person whose ideas and sympathies were thought to be left of center. In its foreign policy, the USA propped up dictators and armed insurgents, however brutal they wielded their personal power, as long as they were anti-communist. They thus aided Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire, the Contras in Nicaragua and the Taliban in Afghanistan, among others. The Soviet Union did the same thing with its foreign policy, propping up dictatorial regimes that opposed the West. The Vietnam War and its conclusion reflected this policy. The Soviet Union's intervention in Afghanistan a decade later was widely referred to as the the Soviet Union's Vietnam.

While both US and Soviet intervention remained focused on one another, many conflicts and economic disasters went unaddressed. The United Nations Security Council suffered frequent deadlock, since the US and the Soviet Union could each veto any resolution. The Soviet representative, Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov (1890-1986) was known as "Mr. Veto" because he often vetoed applications for membership of the UN. This was in part retaliation for the US opposition to membership of the various Soviet republics, which were considered puppet states. On September 11, 1990, U.S. President George H. W. Bush spoke of the start of a new age following the end of the Cold War, warning that dictators could no longer "count on East-West confrontation to stymie concerted United Nations action against aggression" since a "new partnership of nations" had begun. In this new world order, he said, aggression would not be tolerated and all the "nations of the world, East and West, North and South, can prosper and live in harmony." He intimated that without compromising US security, the defense budget could also be reduced. The end of what was often called the bi-polar age (with two world powers) has been seen as an opportunity to strengthen the United Nations.

President George H.W. Bush set a goal of international co-operation not only to achieve peace but also to make the world a much better place, "A world where the rule of law supplants the rule of the jungle. A world in which nations recognize the shared responsibility for freedom and justice. A world where the strong respect the rights of the weak." The end of the cold war provided both new opportunites and dangers. Civil wars and terrorism have created a new era of international anarchy and instability in the power vacuum left by the Cold War. From the genocides in Rwanda and Sudan, to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, we have witnessed both failure of peacekeeping by the United Nations, and the inability of the United States, as the lone superpower, to keep world order. A nobler and better use of power is required for future world order.

Notes

  1. Peace and Conflict 2005: A Global Survey of Armed Conflicts, Self-Determination Movements, and Democracy [1][2]

Further reading

Overviews
  • Ball, S. J. The Cold War: An International History, 1947–1991 London ; New York : Arnold ; New York : Distributed exclusively in the United States by St. Martin’s Press, 1998 ISBN 0340591684 British perspective
  • Brager, Bruce L. The Iron Curtain: The Cold War in Europe Philadelphia : Chelsea House, c2004 ISBN 0791078329 foreword by Mitchell, George; introduction by James I. Matray
  • Brzezinski, Zbigniew. The Grand Failure: The Birth and Death of Communism in the Twentieth Century New York : Collier Books, 1990 ISBN 0020307306
  • Flory, Harriette and Jenike, Samual. The Modern World 16th century to present White Plains, N.Y. : Longman, c1988 ISBN 0582367565
  • Friedman, Norman. The Fifty Year War: Conflict and Strategy in the Cold War Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2000 ISBN 1557502641
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. The Cold War: A New History New York : Penguin Press, 2005 ISBN 1594200629 recent overview
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. Russia, the Soviet Union and the United States. An Interpretative History 2nd ed. New York : McGraw-Hill Pub. Co, c1990 ISBN 0075572583
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. Long Peace: Inquiries into the History of the Cold War New York : Oxford University Press, 1987 ISBN 0195043367
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. Strategies of Containment: A Critical Appraisal of Postwar American National Security Policy New York : Oxford University Press, 1982 ISBN 0195030974
  • LaFeber, Walter. America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945–1992 8th ed. New York : McGraw-Hill, c1997 ISBN 0070360642
  • Lundestad, Geir. East, West, North, South : Major Developments in International Relations since 1945, translated from the Norwegian by Gail Adams Kvam, 5th ed, London ; Thousand Oaks, Calif. : Sage Publications, 2005 ISBN 1412907489
  • Ninkovich, Frank. Germany and the United States: The Transformation of the German Question since 1945 New York : Twayne Publishers ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada ; New York : Maxwell Macmillan International, c1995 ISBN 0805792236
  • Paterson, Thomas G. Meeting the Communist Threat: Truman to Reagan New York : Oxford University Press, 1988 ISBN 0195045335
  • Powaski, Ronald E. The Cold War: The United States and the Soviet Union, 1917–1991 New York : Oxford University Press, 1998 ISBN 0195078519
  • Sivachev, Nikolai and Yakolev, Nikolai Russia and the United States Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1979 ISBN 0226761495 by Soviet historians, translated by Olga Adler Titelbaum.
  • Ulam, Adam B. Expansion and Coexistence: Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917–1973, 2nd ed. New York: Praeger 1974
  • Westad, Odd Arne The Global Cold War: Third World Interventions and the Making of our Times Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2005 ISBN 0521853648
Historiography
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila. "Russia's Twentieth Century in History and Historiography," The Australian Journal of Politics and History, Vol. 46, 2000
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History Oxford : Clarendon Press ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1997 ISBN 0198780702
  • Kort, Michael. The Columbia Guide to the Cold War New York : Columbia University Press, c1998 ISBN 0231107722
  • Matlock, Jack E. "The End of the Cold War" Harvard International Review, Vol. 23 (2001)
  • Walker, J. Samuel. "Historians and Cold War Origins: The New Consensus", in Gerald K. Haines and J. Samuel Walker, eds., American Foreign Relations: A Historiographical Review (1981), 207–236.
  • White, Timothy J. "Cold War Historiography: New Evidence Behind Traditional Typographies" International Social Science Review, (2000)
  • William Appleman Williams The Tragedy of American Diplomacy W. W. Norton & Company, 1988 (New edition)ISBN 0393304930
    • Berger, Henry W. ed. A William Appleman Williams Reader Chicago : I.R. Dee, c1992 ISBN 1566630029
    • Gardner, Lloyd C. ed. Redefining the Past: Essays in Diplomatic History in Honor of William Appleman Williams. Corvallis, Or. : Oregon State University Press, c1986 ISBN 0870713485
  • Westad, Odd Arne (ed.) Reviewing the Cold War: Approaches, Interpretations, Theory Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2005 ISBN 0521853648
Origins
to 1950
  • Chen Jian, China's Road to the Korean War: Making of the Sino-American Confrontation New York : Columbia University Press, c1994 ISBN 0231100248
  • Cumings, Bruce The Origins of the Korean War Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1981-c1990, 2 v. ISBN 0691101132 (v. 1), ISBN 0691078432 (v. 2), friendly to North Korea and hostile to US
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. The United States and the Origins of the Cold War, 1941–1947 New York : Columbia University Press, c2000 ISBN 023112239X
  • Holloway, David . Stalin and the Bomb: The Soviet Union and Atomic Energy, 1959–1956 New Haven : Yale University Press, 1994 ISBN 0300060564
  • Goncharov, Sergei, Lewis, John Wilson and Xue, Litai Uncertain Partners: Stalin, Mao and the Korean War Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c1993 ISBN 0804721157
  • Leffler, Melvyn. A Preponderance of Power: National Security, the Truman Administration and the Cold War Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c1992 ISBN 0804719241
  • Mastny, Vojtech. Russia's Road to the Cold War: Diplomacy, Warfare, and the Politics of Communism, 1941–1945 New York : Columbia University Press, 1979 ISBN 0231043600
  • Levering, Ralph, Pechatnov, Vladamir, Botzenhart-Viehe, Verena and Edmondson, C. Earl Debating the Origins of the Cold War Lanham, Md. : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, c2002 ISBN 0847694089
  • Trachtenberg, Marc. A Constructed Peace: The Making of the European Settlement, 1945–1963 Princeton University Press, 1999 ISBN 0691002738

Intelligence
  • Aldrich, Richard J. The Hidden Hand: Britain, America and Cold War Secret Intelligence Woodstock, NY : Overlook Press, 2002 ISBN 1585672742
  • Ambrose, Stephen E. Ike's Spies: Eisenhower and the Intelligence Establishment Jackson : University Press of Mississippi Banner Books, c1999 ISBN 1578062071
  • Andrew, Christopher and Mitrokhin, Vasili The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB New York : Basic Books , c1999 ISBN 0465003109
  • Andrew, Christopher, and Gordievsky, Oleg KGB: The Inside Story of Its Foreign Operations from Lenin to Gorbachev New York, NY : HarperCollinsPublishers, c1990 ISBN 0060166053
  • Bogle, Lori, ed. Cold War Espionage and Spying Routledge, 2001, 1 edition, ISBN 0815332416 (The Cold War, Volume 4), essays
  • Dorril, Stephen. MI6: Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service New York : Free Press, c2000 ISBN 0743203798
  • Gates, Robert M. From The Shadows: The Ultimate Insider's Story Of Five Presidents And How They Won The Cold War New York, NY : Simon & Schuster, c1996 ISBN 0684810816
  • Haynes, John Earl, and Klehr, Harvey Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America New Haven, Conn. : Yale University Press, c1999 ISBN 0300077718
  • Helms, Richard. A Look over My Shoulder: A Life in the Central Intelligence Agency New York : Random House, c2003 ISBN 037550012X
  • Koehler, John O. Stasi: The Untold Story of the East German Secret Police Boulder, Colo. : Westview Press, 1999 ISBN 0813334098
  • Murphy, David E., Kondrashev, Sergei A. and Bailey, George Battleground Berlin: CIA vs. KGB in the Cold War New Haven : Yale University Press, c1997 ISBN 0300072333
  • Prados, John. Presidents' Secret Wars: CIA and Pentagon Covert Operations Since World War II New York : W. Morrow, c1986 ISBN 068805384X
  • Rositzke, Harry. The CIA's Secret Operations: Espionage, Counterespionage, and Covert Action Boulder : Westview Press, 1988, c1977 ISBN 0813376041
  • Trahair, Richard C. S. Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies and Secret Operations Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2004 ISBN 0313319553 by an Australian scholar; contains historiographical introduction
  • Weinstein, Allen, and Vassiliev, Alexander The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America—The Stalin Era New York : Random House, c1999 ISBN 0679457240
1950s and 1960s
  • Beschloss, Michael. Kennedy v. Khrushchev: The Crisis Years, 1960–63 New York, NY : Edward Burlingame Books, c1991 ISBN 0060164549
  • Brands, H. W. Cold Warriors. Eisenhower's Generation and American Foreign Policy New York : Columbia University Press, 1988 ISBN 0231065264
  • Brands, H. W. The Wages of Globalism: Lyndon Johnson and the Limits of American Power New York : Oxford University Press, 1995 ISBN 0195078888
  • Brzezinski, Zbigniew. Soviet Bloc: Unity and Conflict, New York: Praeger (1961), ISBN 0674825454
  • Chen Jian, Mao's China and the Cold War Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, c2001 ISBN 0807849324
  • Divine, Robert A. Eisenhower and the Cold War New York : Oxford University Press, 1981 ISBN 0195028244
  • Divine, Robert A. ed., The Cuban Missile Crisis 2nd ed. New York : M. Wiener Pub., 1988 ISBN 091012986X
  • Freedman, Lawrence. Kennedy's Wars: Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam New York : Oxford University Press, 2000 ISBN 0195134532
  • Fursenko, Aleksandr and Naftali, Timothy J. One Hell of a Gamble: Khrushchev, Castro, and Kennedy, 1958–1964 New York : Norton, c1997 ISBN 0393040704
  • Kunz, Diane B. The Diplomacy of the Crucial Decade: American foreign Relations during the 1960s New York : Columbia University Press, c1994 ISBN 0231081774
  • Navratil, Jaromir. The Prague Spring 68´ New York : Central European University Press, c1998 ISBN 9639116157
  • Mastny, Vojtech. The Cold War and Soviet Insecurity: The Stalin Years New York : Oxford University Press, 1996 ISBN 0195106164
  • Melanson, Richard A. and Mayers, David Allan, eds. Reevaluating Eisenhower. American Foreign Policy in the 1950s Urbana : University of Illinois Press, c1987 ISBN 0252013409
  • Paterson, Thomas G. ed., Kennedy's Quest for Victory: American Foreign Policy, 1961–1963 New York : Oxford University Press, 1989 ISBN 019504584X
  • Reynolds, David, ed. The Origins of the Cold War in Europe: International Perspectives New Haven, CT : Yale University Press, c1994 ISBN 0300058926
  • Stueck, Jr. William W. The Korean War: An International History Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1995 ISBN 0691037671
  • Vandiver, Frank E. Shadows of Vietnam: Lyndon Johnson's Wars College Station : Texas A&M University Press, c1997 ISBN 0890967474
  • Williams, Kirrian. The Prague Spring and its Aftermath : Czechoslovak Politics, 1968–1970 Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1997 ISBN 0521588030

Detente
1969–1979
  • Edmonds, Robin. Soviet Foreign Policy: The Brezhnev Years Oxford [Oxfordshire] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1983 ISBN 019285125X
  • Garthoff, Raymond. Détente and Confrontation: American-Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan, 2nd ed., Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution, c1994 ISBN 0815730411, detailed narrative
  • Isaacson, Walter. Kissinger New York : Simon & Schuster, c1992 ISBN 0671663232
  • Kissinger, Henry. White House Years Boston : Little, Brown, ISBN 0316496618 and Years of Upheaval Boston : Little, Brown, c1982 ISBN 0316285919
  • Nixon, Richard. RN : the memoirs of Richard Nixon, New York : Simon & Schuster, 1990 ISBN 0671707418
  • Ulam, Adam B. Dangerous Relations. The Soviet Union in World Politics, 1970–1982 New York : Oxford University Press, 1983 ISBN 0195032373
Second Cold War
1979–1986
  • Brzezinski, Zbigniew. Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977–1981 New York : Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1985 ISBN 0374518777
  • Edmonds, Robin. Soviet Foreign Policy: The Brezhnev Years Oxford [Oxfordshire] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1983 ISBN 019285125X
  • Mower, A. Glenn Jr. Human Rights and American Foreign Policy: The Carter and Reagan Experiences New York : Greenwood Press, c1987 ISBN 0313250820
  • Smith, Gaddis. Morality, Reason and Power:American Diplomacy in the Carter Years New York : Hill and Wang, 1986 ISBN 0809070170
End of Cold War
1986–1991
  • Beschloss, Michael, and Talbott, Strobe At the Highest Levels:The Inside Story of the End of the Cold War Boston : Little, Brown, c1993 ISBN 0316092819
  • Bialer, Seweryn and Mandelbaum, Michael, eds. Gorbachev's Russia and American Foreign Policy Boulder : Westview Press, 1988 ISBN 0813307511
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. The United States and the End of the Cold War: Implications, Reconsiderations, Provocations New York : Oxford University Press, 1992 ISBN 0195052013
  • Garthoff, Raymond. The Great Transition:American-Soviet Relations and the End of the Cold War Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution, c1994 ISBN 0815730594 detailed narrative
  • Hogan, Michael ed. The End of the Cold War. Its Meaning and Implications Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1992 ISBN 0521437318 articles from Diplomatic History online at JSTOR
  • Kyvig, David ed. Reagan and the World New York : Greenwood Press, 1990 ISBN 0313273413
  • Matlock, Jack F. Autopsy of an Empire : the American ambassador’s account of the collapse of the Soviet Union New York : Random House, c1995 ISBN 0679413766 by US ambassador to Moscow
  • Shultz, George P. Turmoil and Triumph: My Years as Secretary of State New York : Scribner’s ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada ; New York : Maxwell Macmillan International, c1993 ISBN 0684193256
Economics and Internal Forces
  • Heiss, Mary Ann. "The Economic Cold War: America, Britain, and East-West Trade, 1948–63" The Historian, Vol. 65, (2003)
  • Hogan, Michael J. The Marshall Plan: America, Britain and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947–1952 Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1987 ISBN 0521251400
  • Keohane, Robert O. and Joseph S. Nye. Power and Interdependence 3rd Edition Longman; 2000 ISBN 0321048571
  • Kunz, Diane B. Butter and Guns: America's Cold War Economic Diplomacy New York : Free Press, c1997 ISBN 0684827956
  • Morgan, Patrick M., Nelson, Keith L. and Arbatov, G. A., eds. Re-Viewing the Cold War: Domestic Factors and Foreign Policy in the East-West Confrontation Westport, Conn. : Praeger, 2000 ISBN 0275966372
Popular culture
  • Boyer, Paul S. By the Bomb's Early Light: American Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 1994 ISBN 0807844802
  • Hendershot, Cynthia. "I Was a Cold War Monster: Horror Films, Eroticism and the Cold War Imagination" Bowling Green, OH : Bowling Green State University Popular Press, c2001 ISBN 0879728507
  • Mulvihill, Jason. "James Bond's Cold War Part I" Journal of Instructional Media, Vol. 28, (2001)
  • Schwartz, Richard Alan. Cold War Culture: Media and the Arts, 1945–1990 New York : Checkmark Books, c2000 ISBN 0816042640
  • Shapiro Jerome F. Atomic Bomb Cinema: The Apocalyptic Imagination on Film New York : Routledge, 2002 ISBN 0415936608
  • Whitfield, Stephen J. The Culture of the Cold War Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, c1996 ISBN 0801851955
  • Burdick, Eugene, and Wheeler, Harvey Fail-Safe Hopewell, N.J. : Ecco Press ; New York, NY : Distributed by W.W. Norton, 1999 ISBN 088001654X
Primary sources
Documents and memoirs
  • Acheson, Dean. Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department London, Hamilton, 1970 ISBN 0241018668
  • Etzold, Thomas and Gaddis, John Lewis, eds., Containment: Documents on American Policy and Strategy, 1945–1950 New York : Columbia University Press, 1978 ISBN 0231043988
  • Chang, Laurence and Kornbluh, Peter, eds., The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1952 New York : The New Press, 1992 ISBN 1565840445
  • Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich. Memoirs:
    • Talbott, Strobe, ed. Khrushchev Remembers London, Deutsch, 1971 ISBN 0233963383
      • Schecter, Jerrold L. and Luchkov, Vyacheslav V, eds. Khrushchev Remembers: The Glasnost Tapes Boston : Little, Brown, 1990 ISBN 0316472972
  • Kissinger, Henry
    • vol 1 White House Years Boston : Little, Brown, c1979ISBN 0316496618
    • vol 2 Years of Upheaval Boston : Little, Brown, c1982 ISBN 0316285919
    • vol 3 Years of Renewal New York, NY : Simon & Schuster, c1999 ISBN 0684855712 1974–76
  • Nixon, Richard. RN : the memoirs of Richard Nixon, New York : Simon & Schuster, 1990 ISBN 0671707418
  • Shultz, George P. Turmoil and Triumph: My Years as Secretary of State New York : Scribner’s ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada ; New York : Maxwell Macmillan International, c1993 ISBN 0684193256
  • Hanhimäki, Jussi M. and Westad, Odd Arne, eds. The Cold War: A History in Documents and Eyewitness Accounts Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN 0198208626

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