During this Cold War, United States military aircraft flew thousands of covert reconnaissance intelligence flights. |
|
There is also the thing, which I think explains a lot of this, is a Cold War mentality. |
|
In the 1950s the United States recruited Pakistan as an ally in its Cold War with the Soviet Union. |
|
None of this would have happened if there was still a Cold War and if there was still a Soviet Union. |
|
But Americans in 1963 were in the midst of a Cold War, still haunted by the specters of Cuba and Berlin and Korea. |
|
In 1958, at the height of the Cold War, Cliburn won the first International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow. |
|
Growing up in the 60's and 70's was to grow up with the words Cold War hanging over your head every day. |
|
Think about what we did in World War I, World War II, throughout the Cold War. |
|
The Cold War was over, colonialism was history, an era of global peace and prosperity seemed imminent. |
|
The passing of the Cold War was therefore likely to unveil a new age of power politics, untrammelled by the checks and balances of the Cold War. |
|
Superficially, their Cold War roles might seem to have been remarkably similar. |
|
The obverse, of course, was that such positive inducements would be withheld if the Soviet Union continued to pursue Cold War policies. |
|
If you believe that, I have a shiny hunk of useless Cold War hardware to sell you. |
|
Although the Cold War ended more than a decade ago, its impact continues to haunt the international community to this day. |
|
In the event, these were to make a decisive contribution to the final outcome of the Cold War. |
|
The beginning of the Cold War intensified anxieties about the nation's supply of strategic resources. |
|
During the Cold War, the threat of strategic attack using nuclear weapons dominated air force war planning. |
|
He is widely regarded as a leading proponent of strategic bombing to break the enemy will, and his philosophies echoed throughout the Cold War. |
|
The other has to do with the place of Japanese art history within area studies in the context of Cold War geopolitics. |
|
When Bobby Fischer met Boris Spassky at the 1972 World Chess Championship, the event was redolent with the superpower politics of the Cold War. |
|
|
The end of the Cold War has also seen the end of acceptance of trade unions by big business as the palatable alternative to Communism. |
|
Current production facilities were generally built to handle Cold War requirements for major end items and accommodate a mobilization surge. |
|
Offices are regularly swept for bugs, and even after the Cold War the United Nations remains for some a hotbed of espionage. |
|
The Cold War could have produced a hot war that might have ended human life on the planet. |
|
Both had a vested interest in the continuation of the Cold War and the escalation of the hot war in Vietnam. |
|
Did the plight of the boat people refine his understanding of how the hot war played out in the Cold War? |
|
The existence of sweatshops in Hong Kong is directly attributable to the Cold War. |
|
If Red Army paratroops were equipped with watches that could not withstand a two foot fall, no wonder they lost the Cold War! |
|
One major factor has been India's economic reform process, which began with the passing of the Cold War. |
|
With the passing of the Cold War, humanity's experience of nuclear weapons and their meaning may turn to other regions. |
|
All of which becomes rather puzzling when considering that the spying profession was rendered entirely obsolete with the passing of the Cold War. |
|
We were told that the end of the Cold War would bring a new period of peace and reduced military spending. |
|
It was believed the end of the Cold War would allow for a peace dividend, freeing up dollars by reducing military spending. |
|
After all, they had felt the worst of the Cold War, therefore they deserved to have the best of a peace dividend. |
|
The end of the Cold War brought about a peace dividend in the form of reduced budgets and manpower. |
|
The peace dividend, which benefited the economy after the Cold War ended, has now gone. |
|
I think we let our defenses down a bit after the Cold War and wanted to enjoy the peace dividend. |
|
He was the head of the Progressive Party and ran on a pure liberal New Deal platform, but one that also advocated engagement with the Soviet Union instead of a Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War the city was used by film-makers as a stand-in for St Petersburg in movies such as Reds, The Kremlin Letter and Doctor Zhivago. |
|
Today it remains enslaved to this Cold War legacy, with both its structure and vision predicated on a world divided into states and spheres of influence. |
|
|
But, sooner or later, this Cold War relic will be cast aside. |
|
If there's anything that Reagan should be honoured for it was his preparedness to welcome the initiative offered by Mikhail Gorbachev to declare a Cold War truce. |
|
This definition emerged from intense and difficult negotiations in a Cold War context, and it is marked by the biases of the men who negotiated and approved it. |
|
The world has not been clearly reconfigured since the end of the Cold War, which signaled the collapse of a two-polar structure in the world. |
|
This was done in many ways, in particular by using pro-Western dictatorships during the Cold War period. |
|
Almost immediately, the emergence of the Cold War undercut hopes that the United Nations could serve as a means of collective security. |
|
The absence of genuine collective security during the Cold War did not prevent misuse of the term. |
|
As a result, lieutenant colonels, colonels, and general officers must operate in a more complex task environment than during the Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War, nuclear danger grew to threaten all points of the compass. |
|
That desire was strongly in evidence in a Gaullist France even during the Cold War. |
|
Kennan's name is inseparable from the doctrine of containment that influenced American foreign policy throughout the Cold War. |
|
Larger rockets to carry nuclear bombs on intercontinental flights were developed during the Cold War. |
|
As the threat of a Cold War recedes, they unleash their tanks and firepower on prehistoric burial mounds. |
|
Capitalist internationalism received new impetus from its opposition to communist or socialist internationalism of the Cold War era. |
|
The Air Force ended the Cold War with a substantial stockpile of conventional weapons. |
|
During the Cold War years, Western Europe encompassed the area to the west of the Iron Curtain. |
|
In the wake of the Cold War, U.S. policymakers remain firmly committed to this goal. |
|
He became a hero in the US for wresting the world chess crown from Soviet domination during the Cold War. |
|
The use of propaganda during the Cold War, for example, led to the dumbing down of valuable political ideas. |
|
If the UFO turned out to be a spy plane, it could bring back memories of stories of flying saucers frequently found during the Cold War period. |
|
|
The higher politics of the Cold War were more important than stopping Pol Pot's genocide. |
|
Nash, a brilliant mathematician but an awkward human being, goes mad during the Cold War period, hallucinating about spies and counterspies. |
|
But it was only recently, after the end of the Cold War, that we began letting the vice squad run foreign policy. |
|
Like our nuclear arsenal during the Cold War, our cyberweapons arsenal must be pretargeted and ready to launch. |
|
As already noted, Soviet power was certainly an important element in the Cold War balance of power in East Asia. |
|
Peace in Europe during the Cold War rested on two pillars that made up the balance of power between the United States and the Soviet Union. |
|
The Cold War turned the race to reach the moon into a battle of ideological honour. |
|
Those aren't the words of somebody who was serious about fighting the Cold War. |
|
The Admiral remembers all too clearly returning from long Cold War submarine patrols, and having to queue on a rainswept jetty to use a phone. |
|
And the rapprochement between China and South Korea has helped temper Cold War tensions in Northeast Asia. |
|
The deep pessimism which infects the classic Cold War novel gives way to a complacence born of the hero's capacity to survive. |
|
It's a Cold War story based on a Tom Clancy book, so the locations are plentiful and the political intrigue calls for realism. |
|
During the relative peace following the Korean conflict, America rearmed for the Cold War. |
|
The recessive 1930s brought the reversal of this globalism while a new one was later formed during the Cold War. |
|
Kinsey's first major work on sexuality appeared during the first years of the Cold War, on the eve of the McCarthyite witch-hunts. |
|
The author notes a symbiosis between Cold War events and southern red-baiting but never fully explores these connections. |
|
In that respect the kind of analysis that is going on is no different to the Kremlinology of the Cold War. |
|
The best of his scoreless period is a 1964 Cold War thriller and one of the most arresting films of any era. |
|
What advice do you expect to get from a xenophobic Cold War warrior dripping in petty prejudices and half-baked homilies? |
|
This U.S. military support, a remnant of America's Cold War containment policy, prevents China from using force to end the impasse. |
|
|
Orange County was a prime beneficiary of Cold War largesse, and the enemy in Washington was their prime economic supplier. |
|
Reprehensible, too, were the succession of Cold War alliances with repressive but anti-Soviet regimes. |
|
Years later, amid Cold War tensions, Democratic President John F. Kennedy chose Republican Douglas Dillon as Treasury Secretary. |
|
During the Cold War, NATO's strongest deterrent against Soviet aggression was the threat of nuclear retaliation. |
|
A similar story was a regular feature of anti-communist propaganda during the Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War, anti-communists dreamed of rolling back the tide of Soviet conquests but were constrained by the threat of nuclear war. |
|
At the end of the Cold War, Russia was left with nearly 200 nuclear submarines rusting at the dockside. |
|
The republic was narrowing itself into the ideological rigidities of the Cold War. |
|
In the arithmetic of superpower rivalry during the Cold War people tended to be forgotten, the reality buried under rhetoric. |
|
The aftermath of the Cold War produced renewed interservice rivalry over allocation of roles, missions, and budgetary shares. |
|
During the Cold War, the U.S. established a super secret underwater listening post at Midway in an attempt to track Soviet submarines. |
|
Proponents of the plan liken it to the Cold War strategy of boosting military spending while pushing for arms-control talks. |
|
By the same token, we were able to negotiate specific arms-control pacts with the Soviet Union but never an end to the Cold War. |
|
I have reservations about it because I think it could trigger another Cold War and escalate the arms race once again. |
|
The writers convincingly expose the essence and consequences of the arms race in Cold War years. |
|
Such views triumphed after World War II in the context of the Cold War and the arms race. |
|
The arms race of the Cold War may be dead, but the race for hot weapons has never been so alive. |
|
Indeed, since the end of the Cold War, more states have actually given up their nuclear weapons arsenals than have created new ones. |
|
The ending of the Cold War has had profound effects upon the philosophy of, and approach to, military logistics. |
|
But the Cold War was still going on, and obtaining Russian and Chinese speaking translators was given priority. |
|
|
He sagely laboured to reduce the miniaturization of the Cold War and prevent nuclear conflict between the East and West. |
|
The world now awaits a verbal fudge that will end seven days which took us back to the Cold War. |
|
At the macrolevel, we won the Cold War by engaging in a long-term expenditure of resources while maintaining a large standing military. |
|
Few if any of the serious scholarly treatments of the Cold War and its end credit a single policy or factor or agent. |
|
What demanded resistance was their own imbrication in Cold War intrigues, worsened by state corruption and materialist excess. |
|
There was a real and deeply worrying possibility that it would reopen the Cold War division between East and West. |
|
Though the film is undoubtedly a product of widespread Cold War paranoia, the film distances itself enough to objectify its horrors. |
|
The ideological battleground of the Cold War stretched far and wide and Africa was not an exception. |
|
The strategy of deterrence which served us so well during the decades of the Cold War will no longer do. |
|
The Cold War and the nuclear threat got us into the habit of timorously cowering at the prospect of any great action. |
|
In many ways Cold War cultural production was ideologically driven to a degree not seen before or since. |
|
His design was a tour de force, and it became one of the most glamorous and widely admired of all the Cold War embassies. |
|
The mid-air catch manoeuvre has been resurrected from the days of the Cold War. |
|
The end of the Cold War brought a measure of freedom and a movement toward democracy in much of the former Soviet domains. |
|
Happily, the spy flick trappings are a mere smokescreen for the film's clever satire of Middle American society and Cold War paranoia. |
|
What happened to the neo-Jeffersonian critique of profiteering and of the military-industrial complex during the long and expensive Cold War? |
|
The new American policy provides the missing link in a vicious circle that is as dangerous as the arms race of the Cold War, if not more so. |
|
A staple of the Cold War espionage novels that used to populate best-seller lists was the sleeper agent. |
|
The over-arching framework of bipolarity seemed to render other struggles and rivalries nothing more than local manifestations of the Cold War. |
|
The Polygon, a Cold War development, had a U.S. counterpart located on traditional Shoshone territory in Nevada. |
|
|
For a very long time during the Cold War years, we never mobilized Army Reserve soldiers. |
|
Real connoisseurs of Cold War sporting tussles treasure the memory of the USSR beating the USA in the 1972 basketball final. |
|
If this distinction were ever true, it was only in the depths of the Cold War, when the eyes of satellites were to focus on Soviet missile silos. |
|
Sigint's main predictive capability goes back to the Cold War, when it was used to detect unexpected troop or aircraft movements. |
|
The blushing bride shunned a traditional wedding car in favour of a converted Cold War fighter plane. |
|
In the multipolar world that has ensued from the end of the Cold War, submerged tensions between the US and Europe have come out into the open. |
|
With the Cold War now well under way, nuclear-weapons development became a high national priority. |
|
Growing up in Cold War Australia in the 1960s, I was vaguely aware of this murky family past, though it was rarely talked about. |
|
We were neck deep in the Cold War, and building a bomb shelter still seemed like a pretty good idea. |
|
Talking heads are juxtaposed with offbeat Cold War footage and recurring tunnel imagery in split screen shots, montages and slo-mo sequences. |
|
It provided the closing bookend for the project with the beginning bookend being the ending of the Cold War. |
|
The countries bordering the Baltic Sea, for example, were in the front line during the Cold War. |
|
Much of the city's old heart was left unreconstructed, until the end of the Cold War. |
|
When the Cold War ended, these neoconservatives began casting about for a new crusade to give meaning to their lives. |
|
The end of the Cold War has ushered in a new epoch of imperialist conflicts. |
|
It was not bridging the gulf that has grown between Europe and the U.S. since the end of the Cold War. |
|
Since the end of the Cold War and all that, I thought Nasa had slowed down as the space race had lost momentum. |
|
He was a man who believed in non-intervention, non-coercion, non-violence in the era of the Cold War. |
|
The Cold War was a result of this division of power and of the important policy of spheres of influence. |
|
On this basis, they have said, Anthony Blunt was considered to have committed treason by spying for the Soviet Union during the Cold War. |
|
|
During the Cold War, the US needed Japan to act as a bulwark in Asia against the spread of communism. |
|
The US supported efforts to unify Western Europe economically and politically, to establish a stable bulwark in the Cold War. |
|
These two visionary leaders forged an enduring relationship that has weathered many challenges from the Cold War to the terrorism we face today. |
|
One consequence of the end of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet Union was a burst of joint efforts aimed at resolving armed conflicts. |
|
Ending three decades of enmity, the two visionaries shelved Cold War differences to unite against a growing Soviet threat. |
|
Cavalrymen familiar with the command and control squadrons of the border regiments during the Cold War will recognize this organization. |
|
It is sad that we have squandered the opportunity with the ending of the Cold War. |
|
Crucially, neither side actually used military force directly against the other at any time during the half-century of the Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War, large standing forces were available to counter the Soviet threat. |
|
The Cold War nuclear stand-off did much to sharpen Kubrick's awareness of global politics. |
|
It's two-and-a-half hours of Cold War politics and recitative operatics! |
|
After a string of disappointing books, the Cold War spymaster is back with a great new novel. |
|
The latter similarly sprang from a private association that dates to 1975, when the Cold War often shaped cultural strategies in Germany's once and future capital. |
|
That was all a relict from the times of the Cold War, and had to go. |
|
And Putin, to his great delight, got to revel in imitating a Cold War giant. |
|
His main pitch was that Stevenson was too left and too weak to manage the Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War, it was the Russians who left their mark. |
|
Before the end of the Cold War, the Baltic region of Northeastern Europe was an area of little political action or interest for the United States. |
|
So, yes, be wary of Greek dominos falling, but remember the domino theory was wrong during the Cold War yet it sowed fear. |
|
This cannot erase his record as a weak sister during the Cold War. |
|
|
The basic political physiognomy of the UAW remains the same today as it was during the Cold War, above all its fear of socialism and hatred of its Marxist opponents. |
|
From hip-hop to electronic and indie rock, with artists like Cold War Kids and Meltdown, see which music videos are going viral. |
|
Operation Open Spirit took the Force to the bay of Riga, where shipping lanes were cleared of explosives left from the two world wars and the Cold War era. |
|
Kennan was the legendary Cold War strategist who authored the doctrine of containment. |
|
In the immediate postwar years he, then Labour foreign minister, was a key figure in the creation of Nato, the central plank of US military strategy during the Cold War. |
|
Rockets, turbines, computers, solid-state electronics, and nuclear and thermonuclear devices were all relatively new to members of the early Cold War generation. |
|
Deterrence, a centerpiece of Cold War diplomacy, encompasses maintaining credible forces and showing the flag at appropriate locations to deter an enemy's aggression. |
|
Hollywood was late to catch on, not least because no-one in the Cold War days would have touched a movie about two communists such as Kahlo and Rivera. |
|
The ending of the Cold War has resulted in diminished interest in, and budgeting for, civil defence in the traditional sense as a response to military attack. |
|
During the Cold War we were careful to reach across the Iron Curtain. |
|
During the Cold War, the West confronted a unidimensional threat from Soviet Marxism-Leninism, an adversary whose motives were certain and whose moves were expected. |
|
While a vocal segment of public opinion expressed fear of becoming too closely aligned with the United States, the onset of the Cold War dictated otherwise. |
|
The Atlantic alliance that won the Cold War is virtually dead. |
|
His reference to the Cold War as his touchstone gives him away. |
|
It was routine in Cold War times to see Chiang and Mao and the parties they led as opposites in every way. |
|
Yet it is no exaggeration to say this lanky Texan with prodigious talent fired a huge salvo in the thawing of the Cold War. |
|
Wallner brings the 1970s Soviet Union to life in this suspenseful tale of love and espionage during the Cold War. |
|
Some of them have compared their present concerns to those felt in the Cold War, a struggle won as much by capitalism and the power of ideas as by force of arms. |
|
He demonstrates that first-aid very slowly trickled down to needy Germans and how individualistic attitudes replaced communal ones as the Cold War intensified. |
|
During the Cold War, the West Germans used to pay the East Germans to release political prisoners and allow them to emigrate. |
|
|
The Cultural Cold War contains some silly mistakes and some real gaffes. |
|
He did so in language that hinted darkly at a revival of the Cold War. |
|
In international matters, the common western front of the Cold War required Canada's less stringent repression of leftism to remain domestic and provincial. |
|
The most secure border in modern history was probably the Cold War border between East and West Germany. |
|
It is merely the latest in a series of clashes as the bipolar Cold War institutional framework is reshaped by the pressures of today's unipolar world. |
|
In addition, while Marxist and neo-Marxist formulations diminished with the end of the Cold War, other approaches emerged to organize the work of IR in Europe and elsewhere. |
|
And so I wonder if there is a reversion to some of that Cold War mindset. |
|
Tropico is the excellent nation-builder game that simulates a Caribbean banana republic during the Cold War. |
|
His perestroika changed global politics, ended the Cold War, and won him a Nobel Peace Prize. |
|
The upside is a short-term deal that would lead to the Mideast equivalent of ending the Cold War with the Soviet Union. |
|
Since the Cold War, some in the anti-globalization movement have excused Hugo Chavez for the same reason. |
|
Accusing his opponents of being locked in a Cold War mind-set, it is Stone who is beholden to old orthodoxies. |
|
Analysts say that the stigma of the CIA's experiments with mind-altering drugs during the Cold War has long tainted the field. |
|
The Western appropriation of communist kitsch thrived during the Cold War, for purposes both earnest and ironic, and it has not abated since then. |
|
During the Cold War, anti-communism was the glue that bonded the American conservative movement together. |
|
These three factors are the reasons behind the United States dropping the atomic bomb on Japan, as they unknowingly and unintentionally began the nuclear age and the Cold War. |
|
As the world environment grows more tense than it has been since the end of the Cold War, the UN shows itself hopelessly inefficient at tackling such threats. |
|
The great supporters of human rights during the Cold War now quite readily either roll them back in their own countries or encourage others to do so and turn a blind eye. |
|
Britain's Cold War spymasters secretly discussed plans to train flocks of homing pigeons to attack enemy targets with tiny but deadly biological weapons. |
|
During the Cold War, the unthinkable was nuclear Armageddon. |
|
|
The end of the Cold War lowered the threat of nuclear Armageddon and brought an end to many of the proxy wars through which the two sides struggled to exert their influence. |
|
Ten years after the end of the Cold War, the threat of a nuclear Armageddon has receded, but the collapse of world communism and its repercussions are still works in progress. |
|
But, unlike some more militant libertarian thinkers, Ron Paul never dismissed the threat of communism during the Cold War. |
|
Thousands of Americans were blacklisted during the Cold War. |
|
The thaw between Washington and Cuba finally begins to close a chapter of the Cold War. |
|
Recall the growth of a military-industrial complex during the Cold War. |
|
As the Cold War entered its final years, the film enjoyed a warmer reception in Russia. |
|
The Chinese do not view it as a zero-sum game in the manner of the Cold War. |
|
Gone is the need for massed arrays of troops in static positions waiting to confront a Soviet attack in Western Europe as during the Cold War years. |
|
Neither in World War II nor in the Cold War did US administrations go so far in restricting civil liberties or arrogating unlimited power to the executive branch. |
|
The dominant Western powers viewed Nasser through the prisms of colonialism and the Cold War. |
|
The end of the Cold War and the emergence of the United States as the only superpower raised several questions concerning the direction of the country's foreign policy. |
|
After experiencing official restrictions during World War II and red-baiting during the Cold War, they drew back from close governmental cooperation. |
|
As the Cold War developed, the two superpowers jockeyed for position. |
|
As the Cold War receded into history, the new world order was redefined again. |
|
Many continued to make the supreme sacrifice in Korea and the Cold War. |
|
I swallowed H.S. Tsien's deportation and Cold War paranoia and Joe McCarthy and the Yellow Peril and the coming war with China. |
|
You Are One of Them By Elliott Holt A novel of the Cold War experience told through a ghost story. |
|
In the loopy logic of the Cold War, this actually made sense. |
|
Since the end of the Cold War, the world has been awash in hot wars. |
|
|
By helping show Gorbachev that he could safely release Eastern Europe, Reagan helped end the Cold War. |
|
For a few minutes it seemed like old times, a return to the clearer fault-lines of the Cold War. |
|
This had been the dream of the transatlantic Enlightenment, and throughout the Cold War American leaders argued on its behalf in the struggle against Communism. |
|
But behind the outwardly chummy relations between the two countries, it has been business as usual for Russian agents, who have continued to spy on their former Cold War foes. |
|
In a nod to existing Cold War tensions, Gozer is played by Serbian model Slavitza Jovan. |
|
Cold War fears could be manipulated through misleading art to attract readers to daunting material. |
|
He sort of saw the handwriting on the wall, that it was going to be the end of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. |
|
To be fair, there are nonpartisan, academic roots to the vision of the Cold War as a model of stability, not volatility. |
|
My Cold War childhood was like an unending session of Soviet show-and-tell. |
|
The events it recounts are set in the Cold War when the space race dominated the world's media and another race for supremacy dominated the oceans. |
|
He helped win the Cold War for a country that he would probably now disown more than ever. |
|
This need for global reach is a dimension of national security where the peace dividend that many sought with the end of the Cold War has proved elusive. |
|
Yes, it was a huge peace dividend because of the end of the Cold War. |
|
Few believe these same Cold War hawks actually care about foreign peoples, as they were fairly open about their indifference to human rights not so long ago. |
|
And George Herbert Walker Bush for smoothly overseeing the end of the Cold War. |
|
As the Cold War died down and nuclear destruction never came to fruition, the underground complex slowly slipped into disrepair. |
|
In fact, the deployment of the Pershings helped end the Cold War. |
|
Reagan learned this in the midst of negotiating historic arms-reduction treaties with the soviets at the height of the Cold War. |
|
It is now regarded as the nation's most complete Cold War relic, and three years ago was given the same protection as Stonehenge as a scheduled monument. |
|
Russia reportedly developed anti-satellite weapons at the height of the Cold War and China is judged to pose a threat to the US's strategic superiority in space. |
|
|
Formerly HMS Upholder, she was the first of the four boats launched between 1986 and 1991, but by 1994 they had been laid up, with no role to play as the Cold War was over. |
|
The U.S., allied with Afghans, helped defeat the advance of the Red Army in Afghanistan spurring the end of the Cold War. |
|
As during the Cold War era, the links with Latin America's military commanders and chiefs of state are reinforced by institutions like the US Army's School of the Americas. |
|
They understand, increasingly, that Cold War approaches do not serve their national interests and that Russian and American strategic interests overlap in many areas. |
|
The United States saw the conflict as a chapter of the Cold War. |
|
Although he is a registered Democrat, he has close ties with conservative Republicans, and has become something of a champion of their Cold War views. |
|
At the end of the Cold War, the ICRC's work actually became more dangerous. |
|
Although leased for 99 years, US forces withdrew in 1995, as part of the wave of base closures following the end of the Cold War. |
|
In the wake of the Cold War, the Admiralty Gunnery Establishment was established at Barrow Hill. |
|
The direct motivation for Soviet weapons development was to achieve a balance of power during the Cold War. |
|
In the following decades the Olympics became one of the ideological fronts of the Cold War. |
|
The year 1990 saw the Cold War drawing to a close, and East Germany was welcomed into the Community as part of a reunited Germany. |
|
In the years following the end of the Cold War, the popularity of the Black Sea as a tourist destination steadily increased. |
|
British opinion polls from the Cold War revealed ambivalent feelings towards the United States. |
|
As World War II ended and the Cold War began, the Arctic became a place where countries that did not get along were close to each other. |
|
The system was established during the Cold War and still exists, but the members of the militia now are volunteers only. |
|
During the Cold War, Woomera had the second highest quantity and rate of rocket launches in the world after NASA's facilities at Cape Canaveral. |
|
During the Cold War, most of the countries on the Balkans were governed by communist governments. |
|
During most of the Cold War, NATO's watch against the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact did not actually lead to direct military action. |
|
The Cold War continued, with significant technological advances in warfare, and the army saw the introduction of new weapons systems. |
|
|
Most historians point to its success as the product of exhaustion, economic prosperity, or the constraints imposed by the Cold War. |
|
The two sides engaged in the Cold War, with actual conflict taking place not in Europe but in Asia in the Korean War and the Vietnam War. |
|
Following the end of the Cold War, the threat of direct conventional military confrontation with other states has been replaced by terrorism. |
|
The Cold War ended during his tenure, and in 1989, Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe overthrew their respective communist governments. |
|
In the ensuing Cold War, the two sides clashed indirectly using mostly proxies. |
|
With the end of the Cold War and the Options for Change defence review in the early 1990s, BFG has been considerably reduced. |
|
Significant amounts of Soviet resources during the Cold War were allocated in aid to the other socialist states. |
|
During the Cold War, Swiss authorities considered the construction of a Swiss nuclear bomb. |
|
Following the end of the Cold War there have been a number of attempts to curb military activity or even abolish the armed forces altogether. |
|
In 1952, Greece joined NATO, reinforcing its membership in the Western Bloc of the Cold War. |
|
The emergence of this new political entity, in the frame of the Cold War, was complex and painful. |
|
Of the nations that comprised former Russian Empire, only Finland would remain independent throughout the Cold War. |
|
Its position during the Cold War and during other spying periods of the 19th and 20th centuries is legendary. |
|
During the Cold War, Kalinin was home to the Kryuchkovo air base, which is no longer in service. |
|
In the scope of the Cold War, the Portuguese fleet actively participated in the defense of the North Atlantic against the Soviet naval threat. |
|
After the end of the Cold War, the UN took on major military and peacekeeping missions across the world with varying degrees of success. |
|
There is disagreement among historians regarding the starting point of the Cold War. |
|
The Philippines supported American policies during the Cold War and participated in the Korean and Vietnam wars. |
|
Since the end of the Cold War the international community through international institutions has been focusing on preventive diplomacy. |
|
The Central Intelligence Agency in Langley was involved in various Cold War events, including as the target of Soviet espionage activities. |
|
|
The agreement was a rare case of international cooperation during the Cold War. |
|
During the Cold War, the Bering Strait marked the border between the Soviet Union and the United States. |
|
American policymakers, including Kennan and John Foster Dulles, acknowledged that the Cold War was in its essence a war of ideas. |
|
In 1953, changes in political leadership on both sides shifted the dynamic of the Cold War. |
|
If so, prior to the end of the Cold War, socialist law would be ranked among the major legal systems of the world. |
|
By 1950, with the Cold War at its height, Steele's association with the communists was a crucial electoral liability. |
|
The following year the Cuban Missile Crisis threatened to turn the Cold War into a nuclear one. |
|
In 1955, at the Bandung Conference in Indonesia, dozens of Third World governments resolved to stay out of the Cold War. |
|
Although indirect conflict between Cold War powers continued through the late 1960s and early 1970s, tensions were beginning to ease. |
|
Similarly, the Czechoslovak border was lined with high electric fence during Cold War to prevent emigration from Czechoslovakia. |
|
The end of the Cold War resulted in cooperation with Russia and reduced military activity. |
|
The end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 left the United States as the world's sole superpower. |
|
These complexes, though their origins may be found as early as the 19th century, snowballed considerably during the Cold War. |
|
His doctoral dissertation on the Cold War presents a controversial sociohistory of 1950s America. |
|
During the Cold War, Russia and America would each spy on each other for recon. |
|
The Warsaw Treaty Organization claimed it needed to balance the 'threat' posed by NATO, thus justifying the Cold War arms race. |
|
Here he will be welcomed by the post Cold War hawks, who will deify him and hold him in great esteem because he is after Putin's presidency. |
|
Like the Cold War, World War IV will last for decades, and will be waged overseas and on the home-front. |
|
Various perspectives on whether the US was or continues to be a hegemon have been presented since the end of the Cold War. |
|
Citizens of Liechtenstein were forbidden to enter Czechoslovakia during the Cold War. |
|