The Cold War

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The Cold War Page 20

by Robert J. McMahon


  McNamara, Robert S. 91, 97–98

  Malaya 36, 47–49, 70

  Manchuria 3, 25–27, 37, 41–43

  Mao Zedong 39–45, 49–50 Korean War 53

  and President Nixon 125

  Taiwan Strait crisis 79–80

  Manila 3

  Markusen, Ann 118

  Marshall, George C. 29–31, 43, 116–117

  Marshall Plan 29–32, 47–48, 109–110

  Marxism-Leninism 14–15, 17, 26–27, 64, 142–143

  Masaryk, Jan 32

  Mexico 11

  Middle East 64–70

  Middle East crisis (1973) 131–132

  military bases Soviet 88–93

  United States 7–8, 46, 51, 89–90, 92, 129–131

  MIRVs (multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles) 124–126

  missile sites 88–89, 92

  Mobuto, Joseph 85–86

  Molotov, V. M. 14–15, 22, 29–31

  Morocco 7

  Mossadeq, Mohammed 65–67, 72–73

  MPLA (Movement for the Popular Liberation of Angola) 133–134, 136–137

  MRBMs (Medium Range Ballistic Missiles) 88–89

  Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) doctrine 94

  MX (Missile Experimental) 143

  N

  Nagasaki 3, 25

  Nagy, Imre 62–63

  Napoleon, Emperor 11

  Nasser, Gamal Abdel 67–69, 107–108

  national security Soviet Union 11–12, 18–20

  United States 11–12, 18–20

  NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) 33–34, 51, 57, 76, 92–93, 140–141, 144–145 France and 95

  German reunification 163

  Vietnam War 96–97, 99–100

  West Germany and 59

  natural gas 148–149

  Nehru, Jawaharlal 107–108

  Netherlands, the 33–34, 47–49, 96–97, 104, 110, 150

  neutron bombs 129–130

  New Left 114

  New Republic 10

  New Zealand 7, 72

  Ngo Dinh Diem 72, 86

  Nicaragua 138, 145–146

  Nitze, Paul 134–135, 152

  Nixon, President Richard M. 87, 116–117, 120, 122–123, 127–128 detente 123, 126

  and Middle East crisis 131–132

  SALT talks 124–125

  and Vietnam War 132–133

  visit to China 125

  Watergate scandal 127, 132

  Nkrumah, Kwame 107–108

  Norway 33–34

  nuclear weapons 7–8, 156 arms race 57, 73–76, 78, 92–93, 155–156

  Berlin crisis 82–83

  Cuban missile crisis 78, 88–91, 94–95

  dual track balance 150

  INF Treaty 158

  and Middle East crisis 132

  public opinion on 146–148, 152–153

  SALT 124–127, 134–139

  and Second World War 12–13, 25

  superpower parity 122

  and Taiwan Strait crisis 80–81

  O

  oil 64–67, 132, 140–141, 156–157

  Olympic Games (1980) 140–141

  Outer Mongolia 37, 41–42

  P

  Pahlavi, Mohammed Reza Shah 65–66

  Pakistan 46–47, 67, 72, 105–107

  Panama 7

  Paterson, Thomas G. 1

  Pathet Lao 86

  peace movement 150–153

  Pearl Harbor (1941) 6–7, 10–11, 17–18

  Pechatnov, Vladimir O. 32

  People’s Republic of China see China

  percentages agreement 20

  perestroika (restructuring) 156

  Pershing II missiles 144–145, 150–152

  Persian Gulf 140–141

  Peru 7

  Philippines 3, 36, 46, 48–51, 72, 107

  Poland 2–3, 12, 17, 27, 61–62, 128–129 post-war 20–24

  Second World War casualties 2–3

  Solidarity 148, 159–162

  Polish corridor 11

  Portugal 33–34, 133–134

  Potsdam Conference (1945) 23–25, 51–52

  Powers, Gary 83

  Prague Spring (1968) 113

  propaganda 17–18, 83

  Putin, Vladimir 163–164

  R

  racism 114–115

  Reagan, President Ronald 129–130, 134–135, 160 anti-communism of 141–143, 150–152, 157

  and Premier Gorbachev 157–159

  softening of anti-communist rhetoric 153–154, 157

  trans-Siberian pipeline 148–149

  Reagan Doctrine 145–146

  Red Army 14–15, 17–18, 22, 27–28, 74–75

  reparations 12–13, 20–22, 24–25

  Reykjavik summit (1986) 158

  Reynolds, David 111, 146–148

  Rhee, Syngman 51–52

  Roberts, Adam 163

  Romania 23–24, 27, 61, 159–162

  Roosevelt, President Franklin D. 7–8, 17–22 and Chiang Kai-shek 40–42

  peace terms 20–22

  Soviet commitment to enter Pacific war 41–42

  Rupieper, Herman-Josef 109–110

  Rusk, Dean 65, 91–92, 99

  Russia 11, 163–164

  S

  SAC (US Strategic Air Command) 74

  Sadat, Anwar al- 131

  Sakharov, Andrei 135–136

  SALT (strategic arms limitation treaty) accords 124–127, 129–130, 134–139

  Sandinistas 138

  Sargent, Daniel J. 127–128

  satellites 75

  Saturday Evening Post 10

  Saudi Arabia 107

  Schell, Jonathan 152–153

  Schmidt, Chancellor Helmut 150

  Schultz, George P. 152–153, 155

  Scowcroft, Brent 163

  SDI (Strategic Defense Initiative, US) 144, 158

  SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) 72

  Second World War 1–2 American supplies to Soviet Union 17–18

  American support for Chiang Kai-shek 40–42

  in Asia 3, 37

  casualties 1–3, 6, 10–11, 25

  peace terms 19–20

  second front during 18–19

  segregationism 114–115

  Senegal 7

  September 11th terrorist attacks 6–7

  Shevardnadze, Eduard 155–156, 162–163

  Shirer, William 2–3

  Siberia 11, 148–149

  Singapore 36

  Sino-Soviet Treaty (1950) 44–45, 49–50, 53–55

  Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Mutual Assistance (1945) 41–42

  social psychology 115–116

  Solidarity 148, 159–162

  South Korea 107

  Southeast Asia 45–50, 70–72; see also individual countries

  Soviet Union 4–6, 97–98, 127–128 aid to new revolutionary regimes 136–137

  arms race 94–95, 129

  and China 121

  collapse of 163

  commitment to enter Pacific war 20–22, 25, 41–42

  in Congo 85–86

  Cuban Missile Crisis 88–94

  in East Asia 37

  economy 112, 156–157

  expansionist policy 10–15

  genesis of détente policy 121

  Helsinki agreements 129

  and Hungarian revolt 62–63

  ideology 14–15

  importance of international status to 13, 123–124

  invasion of Afghanistan 138–141

  and Japan 41

  and Middle East 131–132

  non-aggression pact with Germany 16

  post-war devastation 2–3, 10–11

  and Premier Gorbachev 155–163

  response to rearmed West Germany 58–59

  in Second World War 18–19

  shooting down Korean airliner 144–145

  Stalin purges 13–14

  Suez crisis 69

  support for North Vietnam 100–101

  Third W
orld policy 64–65

  U-2 spy plane incident (1960) 83

  and Vietnam 49–50, 100

  and Warsaw Pact 61

  and United States 17–18

  and West Germany 128–129

  Smith, Gaddis 137–138

  Spellman, Cardinal Francis 117–118

  Sputnik satellites 75

  Somoza Debayle, Antonio 138

  SS-20s 137, 150

  Stalin, Joseph 13–16, 21, 23, 25, 33–34, 42, 53, 64 and China 42, 44–45

  death of 60–61

  and German reparations 12, 19–22

  Khrushchev denounces 62

  and the Marshall Plan 29–31

  percentages agreements 20

  President Truman’s opinion of 25

  second front during Second World War 18–19

  START (strategic arms limitations) 153–154

  Stevenson, Adlai 116–117

  Stimson, Henry 25

  Suez Canal 56

  Suez Crisis (1956) 67–70

  Sukarno 47, 72–73, 105, 107

  Syria 72–73, 131

  T

  Taiwan 43, 56

  Taiwan Strait crisis (1958) 79–81

  Tehran conference (1943) 19–20

  Thailand 48–49, 72, 107

  Thatcher, Margaret 148–149

  Third World 64–65, 72–73, 85–86, 103–108, 120–121, 127, 129–131, 134; see also individual countries

  Tito, Joseph Broz 61

  Tokyo 3

  trade 9 Eastern and Western Europe 128–129

  embargoes 86–87, 140–141

  for peace and stability 9

  Soviet–American 127

  Trident submarines 143

  Truman, President Harry S. 2–3, 6–8, 22–27, 117–118 Chinese policy 43–44

  Greek–Turkish aid package 29

  and Korea 50–52

  opinion of Stalin 25

  rearmament of West Germany 58

  and Southeast Asia 70–71, 104

  Truman Doctrine 29

  Tudeh Party 65–66

  Turkey 27–29, 67, 92–93

  U

  Ukraine 163–164

  Ulbricht, Walter 84–85

  unemployment 110–111

  United Nations 20–22, 52–53, 62–63, 153–154, 162

  United States 4–6, 15, 143, 145–146 alliance with Pakistan 105–106

  anti-detentists in 134–135, 137–138

  anti-nuclear campaigns 113–114

  arms race 73–75

  belated diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union 16–17

  Bretton Woods Conference (1944) 9, 127–128

  Chinese policy 40–45, 137, 140–141

  Cold War’s impact on 114–119

  communism in 114–117

  Congo 62–63

  covert operations 72–73, 79

  Cuban Missile Crisis 87–95

  defence spending 118, 140–141, 143

  in East Asia 37

  economy 6, 122–123, 127–128

  fear of Marxism-Leninism 17

  genesis of detente policy 121–122

  Geneva Conference 61–62

  German question 24–25, 31–32

  Helsinki agreements 129–130

  and Iran 65–67, 138–139

  and Korean War 50–55

  and Middle East 65–70, 131–132

  national security of 6–9, 17–18, 27, 52–53, 121–122, 156

  and NATO 37, 41–42, 47–48

  and new world order 9–10, 15

  and Philippines 46–47

  and post-war Japan 37–39

  rearmament of West Germany 51, 58–59

  SALT talks 124–127, 129–130, 136–139

  sanctions policy 148–149

  Southeast Asian policy 45–50, 70–73

  Strategic Defense Initiative 144

  Taiwan Strait standoff 79–81

  trade embargoes 86–87, 140–141

  Truman Doctrine 29

  Vietnam War 96–101, 121–125, 132–133

  war casualties 6, 132–133

  wartime supplies to Soviet Union 17–18

  V

  Valenti, Jack 98–99

  Vance, Cyrus R. 135–136

  Vienna 2–3

  Vietnam 47, 49–50, 71–72, 86, 104–105, 108

  Vietnam War (1964–75) 96–101, 121–125, 132–133 crippling costs of 123

  final stages of 132–133

  W

  Warsaw 2–3

  Warsaw Pact 61–63

  Watergate scandal 127, 132

  Wedemeyer, General Albert 43

  West Berlin 32–33, 128–129

  West Germany 31–33, 82, 109–110, 114, 148–152 and detente 128–129

  peace movement 150–152

  rearmament 51, 58–59

  reunification 162–163

  Westad, Odd Arne 64, 136–137

  Whitfield, Stephen J. 115–116

  Wilhelm, Kaiser 11

  World Bank 9, 67–68

  World Council of Churches 152–153

  world order 3–4, 9–10, 15

  World War II see Second World War

  Y

  Yalta Conference (1945) 20–22, 41–42, 125

  Yoshida, Shigeru 44–45

  Young, John 117–118

  Yugoslavia 1–2, 20–22, 61

  Z

  Zhdanov, Andrei 32

  Zhou Enlai 125

 

 

 


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