Talk:Cold War/temp
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This is an attempt at an outline for a tighter single-article version of Cold War. Feel free to discuss on this talk page: Talk:Cold War/temp/talk
Lead paragraphs
conclude with distinction between objective facts and interpretations of motive and cause/effect - link to Cold War historiography for the schools and trends
Contents |
[edit] Background and origins, to 1953
Although there had been simmering differences between the US and Russia since the 19th century, after World War II they developed into an open rivalry polarizing much of the world into two camps, each publicly committed to bringing an end to the other by any means available.
deep origins, into 19th century
- Britain and the expansion of Tsarist Russia
- The U.S., Russia, and the development of Manchuria
- The Bolshevik Revolution and Allied intervention
- The First Red Scare in the U.S.
- Soviet-U.S. trade in the interwar years
- The Munich Conference and the Non-Aggression Pact
Use US-Soviet relations, 1917 to 1941 for interwar details
[edit] Distrustful Allies
political maneuvering up to the end of WWII, economic spheres, atomic bomb
wartime trade?
Yalta conference, Potsdam conference, United Nations formation
[edit] "Declarations of war"
1945 to 1947
US, UK, and SU declarations of Cold War - Iron Curtain speech, Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Molotov Plan, Partition of Germany
postwar reconstruction of Europe
international control of atomic technology (does article exist?)
Iranian crisis of 1946, Turkish crisis of 1946
Greek crisis of 1947?
[edit] Opening maneuvers
1948 to 1950
George F. Kennan, Long Telegram, containment, NSC-68
China
[edit] Korean War
how Korean War developed out of jockeying for position, rely on war article for operational narrative
[edit] Intensification, 1953-1962
The period from 1953 to 1962 saw an intensification of the Cold War, made more acute by growing amounts of nuclear weaponry and the ability to launch first strikes, culminating in the Cuban missile crisis, the closest-ever approach to general war.
[edit] New rulers, new strategies
Khrushchev replaces Stalin, changes in style and strategy
Eisenhower and Dulles set new US direction
Operation Solarium, brinksmanship, H-bomb
New look
decolonization, defense pacts, and program of covert actions around the world, summarize briefly and link to articles for details
Indochina episode
[edit] 1954 to 1957
ballistic missile development
The overthrow of Arbenz in Guatemala, 1954
[edit] 1957 to 1962
Francis Gary Powers, Paris Summit
[edit] Cuban missile crisis
identify Cuban missile crisis as turning point - post-crisis agreement to tone down confrontations
[edit] Accommodation and ending, 1962-1991
After Cuba, the powers sought to stand down from risky direct confrontation and instead continued with various proxies and political maneuvers, a seemingly perpetual situation until the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, much to the surprise of the US.
[edit] Adventures in Vietnam
Vietnam War, flexible response
[edit] Rise and fall of Détente
Détente and arms control efforts initiated
Oil embargo of 1973 (indirect relation to Cold War)
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
[edit] Noisy confrontation, quiet negotiation
1979 to 1988
Low intensity conflicts, Invasion of Grenada, Iran-Contra
summits?
Intervention/aid in Central American civil wars
[edit] End of the Cold War
1988 to 1991
internal changes in Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
Gorbachev, perestroika, glasnost
[edit] Aftermath of the Cold War
Stand-down of military forces, Russian and US situation, role in creating present-day threats
[edit] Cold War in culture
effects on culture - literature, movies, computer games, etc
metaphors and attitudes
[edit] External links
Cold War International History Project at the Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars http://wwics.si.edu/index.cfm?topic_id=1409&fuseaction=topics.home
Parallel History Project on NATO and the Warsaw Pact http://www.isn.ethz.ch/php/