The
Cold War was a decades-long struggle for global supremacy
that pitted the capitalist United States against the communist
Soviet Union. Although there are some disagreements as
to when the Cold War began, it is generally conceded that
mid- to late-1945 marks the time when relations between
Moscow and Washington began deteriorating. This deterioration
ignited the early Cold War and set the stage for a dynamic
struggle that often assumed mythological overtones of good
versus evil.
At the close of World War II,
the Soviet Union stood firmly entrenched in Eastern Europe,
intent upon installing governments there that would pay
allegiance to the Kremlin. It also sought to expand its
security zone even further into North Korea, Central Asia,
and the Middle East. Similarly, the United States established
a security zone of its own that comprised Western Europe,
Latin America, Southeast Asia, Australia, New Zealand,
and Japan. From the long view of history, it is clear that
both sides were jockeying for a way to secure their futures
from the threat of another world war, but it was the threat
that each side perceived from the other that allowed for
the development of mutual suspicion. It was this mutual
suspicion, augmented by profound distrust and misunderstanding
that would ultimately fuel the entire conflict.
Interestingly, for the first few years of the early Cold
War (between 1945 and 1948), the conflict was more political
than military. Both sides squabbled with each other at
the UN, sought closer relations with nations that were
not committed to either side, and articulated their differing
visions of a postwar world. By 1950, however, certain factors
had made the Cold War an increasingly militarized struggle.
The communist takeover in China, the pronouncement of the
Truman Doctrine, the advent of a Soviet nuclear weapon,
tensions over occupied Germany, the outbreak of the Korean
War, and the formulation of the Warsaw Pact and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization as rival alliances had
all enhanced the Cold War's military dimension. U.S. foreign
policy reflected this transition when it adopted a position
that sought to "contain" the Soviet Union from further
expansion. By and large, through a variety of incarnations,
the containment policy would remain the central strategic
vision of U.S. foreign policy from 1952 until the ultimate
demise of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Successive American presidents and successive Soviet
premiers tried to manage the Cold War in different ways,
and the history of their interactions reveals the delicate
balance-of-power that needed to be maintained between both
superpowers. Dwight Eisenhower campaigned
as a hard-line Cold Warrior and spoke of "rolling back" the
Soviet empire, but when given a chance to dislodge Hungary
from the Soviet sphere-of-influence in 1956, he declined.
The death of Stalin in 1953 prefaced a brief thaw in East-West
relations, but Nikita Kruschev also
found it more politically expedient to take a hard line
with the United States than to speak of cooperation.
By 1960, both sides had invested huge amounts of money
in nuclear weapons, both as an attempt to maintain parity
with each other's stockpiles, but also because the idea
of deterring conflict through "mutually assured destruction" had
come to be regarded as vital to the national interest of
both. As nuclear weapons became more prolific, both nations
sought to position missile systems in ever closer proximity
to each other's borders. One such attempt by the Soviet
government in 1962 precipitated the Cuban Missile Crisis,
arguably the closest that the world has ever come to a
large-scale nuclear exchange between two countries.
It was also in the early 1960s that American containment
policy shifted from heavy reliance on nuclear weapons to
more conventional notions of warfare in pursuit of a more "flexible
response" to the spread of communism. Although originally
articulated by President Kennedy, it was in 1965 that President
Johnson showcased the idea of flexible response when he
made the initial decision to commit American combat troops
to South Vietnam. American thinking had come to regard
Southeast Asia as vital to its national security, and President
Johnson made clear his intention to insure South Vietnam's
territorial and political integrity "whatever the cost
or whatever the challenge." (1)
The United States ultimately fought a bloody and costly
war in Vietnam that poisoned U.S. politics and wreaked
havoc with its economy. The Nixon administration inherited
the conflict in 1969, and although it tried to improve
relations with the Soviets through detente – and
even took the unprecedented step of establishing diplomatic
relations with Communist China – neither development
was able to bring about decisive change on the Vietnamese
battlefield. The United States abandoned the fight in 1973
under the guise of a peace agreement that left South Vietnam
emasculated and vulnerable.
Although Nixon continued to negotiate with the Soviets
and to court Maoist China, the Soviet Union and the United
States continued to subvert one another's interests around
the globe in spite of detente's high-minded rhetoric.
Leonid Brezhnev had been installed as Soviet premier in
1964 as Kruschev's replacement, and while he too desired
friendlier relations with the United States on certain
issues (particularly agriculture), genuinely meaningful
cooperation remained elusive.
By the end of the 1970s, however, the chance for an extended
thaw had utterly vanished. Jimmy Carter had been elected
president in 1976, and although he was able to hammer out
a second arms limitation agreement with Brezhnev, the 1979
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan significantly soured U.S.-Soviet
relations. Seeking to place a greater emphasis on human
rights in his foreign policy, Carter angrily denounced
the incursion and began to adopt an increasingly hard line
with the Soviets. The following year, Americans overwhelmingly
elected a president who spoke of waging the Cold War with
even greater intensity than had any of his predecessors,
and Ronald Reagan made good on his promises by dramatically
increasing military budgets in the early 1980s.
Nonetheless, by 1985 Mikhail Gorbachev had replaced Brezhnev
in Moscow, and he quickly perceived that drastic changes
to the Soviet system were necessary if the USSR. was to
survive as a state. He instituted a series of liberal reforms
known as perestroika, and he seemed genuinely
interested in more relations with the West, known as glasnost.
Although President Reagan continued to use bellicose language
with respect to the Soviet Union (as when he labeled it
an "evil empire" (2)), the
Gorbachev-Reagan relationship was personally warm and the
two leaders were able to decrease tensions substantially
by the time Reagan left the White House in 1989.
Despite improved East-West relations, however, Gorbachev's
reforms were unable to prevent the collapse of a system
that had grown rigid and unworkable. By most measures,
the Soviet economy had failed to grow at all since the
late 1970s and much of the country's populace had grown
weary of the aged Communist hierarchy. In 1989 the spontaneous
destruction of the Berlin Wall signaled the end of Soviet
domination in Eastern Europe, and two years later the Soviet
government itself fell from power.
The Cold War had lasted for forty-six years, and is regarded
by many historians, politicians, and scholars as the third
major war of the twentieth century.
Notes:
- Lyndon B. Johnson, " Annual Message
to the Congress on the State of the Union," January 12,
1966,Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum.
Internet on-line. Available From http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/speeches.hom/660112.asp.
- Ronald Reagan, "Address to Members
of the British Parliament," June 8, 1982,Ronald
Regean Presidential Library. Internet on-line. Available
From http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/resource/speeches/1982/60882a.htm.
Sources:
Gaddis, John Lewis. The United States and the Origins
of the Cold War, 1941-1947. New York: Columbia University
Press, 1972, passim.
Schulzinger, Robert D. American Diplomacy in the 20th Century.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1994, passim.