Cold War
Cold War | Ronald Reagan’s Policies Ended the Cold War
Margaret Thatcher, Great Britain’s first female prime minister, served during Ronald Reagan’s tenure as U.S. president (1981–1989) and joined him in opposition to the Soviet Union. In the following viewpoint, taken from a speech to the Heritage Foundation’s “Leadership for America” gala on December 12, 1998, Thatcher argues that it was the Reagan Doctrine that won the Cold War. According to Thatcher, appeasement of the Soviet Union weakened the West. When Reagan took office, Thatcher maintains, he took an aggressive stand against communism and convinced the American people...
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- Introduction
-
From Allies to Enemies: The Origins of the Cold War
- Chapter 1 Preface
- The United States Should Seek Peace with the Soviet Union
- The United States Should Not Seek Peace with the Soviet Union
- The United States Should Contain Soviet Expansion
- The Soviet Union Should Contain U.S. Imperialism
- Soviet Expansion Policies Initiated the Cold War
- U.S. Containment Policies Initiated the Cold War
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Coexistence and Conflict
- Chapter 2 Preface
- The War in Korea Should Be Expanded
- The War in Korea Should Be Limited
- The Soviet Union Seeks Peaceful Coexistence with the United States
- The Soviet Union Does Not Seek Peaceful Coexistence with the United States
- The United States Could Have Won the War in Vietnam
- The United States Could Not Have Won the War in Vietnam
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From Détente to the Cold War’s End
- Chapter 3 Preface
- Détente Is a Constructive
- Détente Is a Flawed U.S. Policy
- The United States Must Develop a Defensive Weapons System to Prevent Nuclear War
- U.S. Development of a Defensive Weapons System Would Increase Nuclear Proliferation
- Ronald Reagan’s Policies Ended the Cold War
- Mikhail Gorbachev’s Policies Ended the Cold War
- Reflections: The Impact of the Cold War
- For Further Discussion
- Copyright
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