Editors' Picks
Great books about your topic, Cold War, selected by Encarta editors
Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Cold War

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Cold War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The Cold War was the period of conflict, tension and competition between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies from the mid-1940s until the early 1990s ...

  • Cold War - Special Reports from CNN.com

    From Yalta to Malta: Experience CNN's landmark documentary series in this award-winning Web site: • Navigate interactive maps • See rare archival footage online

  • Cold War Skateboards

    Danimal scored a Monday Cover on EPM, as well as a spread of four other shots. Check it out on Earth Patrol Media.

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Page 2 of 2

Cold War

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Major Events of the Cold WarMajor Events of the Cold War
Article Outline
IV

End of the Cold War

The early 1980s witnessed a final period of friction between the United States and the USSR, resulting mainly from the Soviets’ invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 to prop up a Communist regime and from the firm line adopted by U.S. president Ronald Reagan after his 1980 election. Reagan saw the USSR as an “evil empire.” He also believed that his rivals in Moscow respected strength first and foremost, and thus he set about to add greatly to American military capabilities. The Soviets initially viewed Reagan as an implacable foe, committed to subverting the Soviet system and possibly willing to risk nuclear war in the process.

Then in the mid-1980s Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the USSR. Gorbachev was determined to halt the increasing decay of the Soviet system and to shed some of his country’s foreign policy burdens. Between 1986 and 1989 he brought a revolution to Soviet foreign policy, abandoning long-held Soviet assumptions and seeking new and far-reaching agreements with the West. Gorbachev’s efforts fundamentally altered the dynamic of East-West relations. Gorbachev and Reagan held a series of summit talks beginning in 1985, and in 1987 the two leaders agreed to eliminate a whole class of their countries’ nuclear missiles—those capable of striking Europe and Asia from the USSR and vice versa. The Soviet government began to reduce its forces in Eastern Europe, and in 1989 it pulled its troops out of Afghanistan. That year Communist regimes began to topple in the countries of Eastern Europe and the wall that had divided East and West Germany since 1961 was torn down. In 1990 Germany became once again a unified country. In 1991 the USSR dissolved, and Russia and the other Soviet republics emerged as independent states. Even before these dramatic final events, much of the ideological basis for the Cold War competition had disappeared. However, the collapse of Soviet power in Eastern Europe, and then of the USSR itself, lent a crushing finality to the end of the Cold War period.

See also American Foreign Policy



Prev.
|
Next
Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2008 Microsoft