Note Pages
D'Souza, Dinesh. How Reagan Won The Cold War. (Cover Story). National Review 49.22 (1997): 36. MAS Ultra - School Edition. Web. 13 Apr. 2016.
1. Reagan demanded that Soviet leader, Gorbachev, remove the Berlin Wall by standing at the gate and saying “tear down this wall!” It showed his determination to get rid of the iron curtain of communism.
2. Reagan viewed the Soviet Union as an “evil empire” that must be taken down.
3. Strobe Talbott, a journalist, claimed that Reagan relied on the superiority of the US’s technology and economy to win the Cold War.
4. A defense build-up was vital in taking down the communist Soviet Union.
5. Most Americans believed that the Soviet Union would be impossible to overthrow and would endure
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Communism has prevailed in some countries even after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Freidel, Frank and Hugh Sidey. Ronald Reagan. 30 December 2014. White House Historical Association. 3 April 2016. .
1. Reagan’s described his plan for ending the Cold War as “peace through strength.”
2. As an actor, Reagan saw first-hand the effects of the communism threat in America. He witnessed conflicts about the treat occur in the film industry (i.e. Hollywood Ten). This motivated him to end Cold War tensions.
3. Ronald Reagan began as a liberal, but became a conservative. This can be seen in his policies and actions as president.
4. Reagan beat Jimmy Carter in the presidential election of 1980. He represented a change for voters who were afraid of the current inflation and Iranian Hostage Crisis.
5. Reagan worked to improve the economic conditions in America.
6. Reagan wanted to obtain peace with the Soviet Union, but simultaneously built up arms by increasing defense spending by 35%.
7. Reagan signed many treaties with Soviet leader, Gorbachev, to reduce a nuclear threat.
8. Reagan backed anti-communist rebels in Central America, Asia, and Africa.
9. Reagan suffered a large deficit to build up the US’s
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In 1983, Reagan sent troops to save Grenada from communist control.
7. Reagan felt strongly that it was his responsibility to end the Cold War to keep US citizens safe.
8. When Reagan fired air traffic controllers for going on strike, he showed his ability to make quick decisions and be authoritative. Soviet leaders took note of this.
9. The Cold War was a time of dangerous tensions between the democratic US and the communist Soviet Union.
10. During the Cold War, both the US and the Soviet Union built up their arms to assert their power over the other.
11. After the Vietnam War, defense spending decreased, but Reagan was determined to change this and make the US more powerful.
12. Reagan wanted to outspend the Soviet Union on military buildup to ensure that the US could retain its power.
13. With the Reagan Doctrine, the US supported smaller anti-communist groups to fight the spread of communism.
14. Some people supported Reagan’s policy of peace through strength, but others thought it was teasing the Soviet Union and would cause conflict.
15. In his second term, Reagan met with Soviet Leader, Gorbachev, five times in search of a solution to the Cold
In the early 1980s, Reagan created a massive military buildup in the United States. Because of the military buildup, the Soviet Union was forced to follow suit. The Soviet Union however, experienced struggles with keeping up with the U.S. buildup due to its already struggling economy.
Reagan believed that Eat-West relations would improve if he could make the Soviet Union share his fear of a nuclear doomsday. Surprisingly Reagan's rhetoric did not stop negotiations. By his second term, Reagan had opened an East-West dialogue of a scope and intensity not seen since the era of détente under Nixon (Kissinger 769). This time however, Reagan had the public support that Nixon had so desperately needed and wanted.
The Cold War was also a conflict in the 1980s.People were being drafted Ronald Reagan was a big part in the u.s involvement in the cold war he was very humble with this big conflict.
On that front, Reagan could also be credited for the rebuilding of the military and the arms forces after Carter 's time. Reagan
Reagan increased defense spending. U.S. exports were falling, creating a negative balance of trade where the country was buying more from foreign countries than it was selling to them.
As seen on the movie Lord of War starring Nicholas Cage, the Soviet Union after the cold war did sell many of its weapons. Ronald Reagan was given much of the credit for the collapse of the Soviet Union. Reagan did play a major role and did come up with many of the ideas however without the people being able to do the task at hand many of Reagans plans would never have worked. It can be argued that without Ronald Reagan the people would not have been pushed to make the technology leap that they did.
He would argue back and forth with them. Reagan was so determined to end this Cold War that “when Reagan became President he had only one well-defined foreign policy goal: containing the Soviet Union, or the "evil empire" as he once referred to it.” (“Spark Notes”). Reagan's persistence with the Soviets didn't go to waste because “For the first time since the beginning of the Cold War, a Soviet leader approached the United States to seriously discuss a possible peace. This initiative took the Reagan administration completely by surprise, but Reagan quickly responded in kind” (“Spark Notes”). Finally after a long time of negotiating and dealing with the Soviets Reagan got his way, ¨Gorbachev and President Reagan themselves sat together in both Washington and Moscow on a number of occasions to hammer out agreements”. (“Spark Notes”). Reagan negotiating with the Soviets really was what brought the Cold War to an end. If Reagan was not as persistent as he was the Cold War could have lasted a lot longer then it had already
Reagan’s economic system, known as Reaganomics, is what is credited for abolishing communism. Under communism, no one can have an increase in their wages. This means that everybody is the same; no one is rich and no one is poor. But under Reaganomics, people had more money to spend, thus boosting economy. Reagan took this extra “boosted” money, and funded national defense (We The People). The Soviet Union couldn’t keep up to this funding, because their economic state stayed the same, due to everybody’s equality. The Soviet Union then just began to collapse in on itself (Young). Generally speaking,
The United States during the mid to late 70’s was in a constant state of alert; millions of citizens waiting for the piercing sounds of the air raid sirens to slice through the night air. America was in need of a leader, someone who could unify a divided country and save it from crushing economic failure. One man saw his need and stood up to the task, his name is President Ronald Reagan. Reagan rose to power as President during one of the most critical periods in not only American history, but also, World history: The arms standoff of the cold war. His actions as a unifier in the homeland and as a diplomat in foreign halls changed the way Americans and citizens of the world lived their lives.
President Reagan during his presidency implemented something he called Reganomics which was focused on tax cuts. It was supposed to help deregulate businesses, use private contractors and decrease spending on social programs. President Reagan had a foreign policy known as the Reagan Doctrine that was designed to roll back global inflation in an attempt to end the cold war. President Reagan’s policy placed a heavy emphasis on military built up so they could show off better defensive
The whole idea that Reagan and his administration had was to weaken the Soviet Union and strengthen the United States. He believed in “peace through strength” (Wikipedia, May 1) and that is what he showed throughout the Cold War. The first part of his plan was to decrease the Soviet’s access to advanced technology and lower the value of their goods on the world market. This would hopefully
The primary goal of the Ronald Reagan administration’s foreign policy of was winning the Cold War against Communism—which was achieved in Eastern Europe in 1989 and in the end of the Soviet Union in 1991. The Cold War grew out of post-World War II tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union that lasted for much of the second half of the 20th century resulted in mutual suspicions, heightened tensions and a series of international incidents that brought the world’s superpowers to the brink of disaster. The Cold War was won through a strategy of "peace through strength” and a warming of relations with the Soviet Union, 1981-89. These foreign policies became known as the "Reagan Doctrine,” the United States also offered financial and logistics support to the anti-communist opposition in central Europe and took an increasingly hard line against socialist and communist governments in Afghanistan, Angola, and Nicaragua. Reagan also increase the size of the military, spent billions on national defense, to fight Communists throughout the
Reagan’s economic system, known as Reaganomics, is what is credited for abolishing communism. Under communism, no one can have an increase in their wages. This means that everybody is the same; no one is rich and no one is poor. But under Reaganomics, people had more money to spend, thus boosting economy. Reagan took this extra “boosted” money, and funded national defense. The Soviet Union couldn’t keep up to this funding, because their economic state stayed the same, due to everybody’s equality. The Soviet Union
One of Ronald’s mantras was ‘peace through strength.’ This saying stood for more than just a good morning; it represented hard working Americans who cared for one another. America was the most powerful nation at the time and the Vietnam War was over. Ronald Reagan understood the feeling of the times and his message and feelings spread across America. Reagan spent a lot of money rebuilding military forces.
In the minds of many Americans Ronald Reagan is the president that ended the Cold War, but is this view accurate? They claim Reagan's unprecedented military spending forced the Soviets to crumble. However, many critics of the president's outspending theory claim that the Russian economy would have imploded without such spending, and a military buildup of that kind did nothing but delay peace. Although, Reagan's willingness to negotiate was a clear factor in ending the Cold War, his aggressive arms race may have done more to forestall peace than abet it. The ascendance of Mikhail Gorbachev to power, the stagnating economy of Russia, and the personal friendship forged between Gorbachev and Reagan were the clear factors that contributed to