Because they are all of similar strength, launching a war will cause the country's economy to decline rapidly.
The United States and the Soviet Union were the two countries on opposite sides during the Cold War. The Cold War ended in 1991.
No, stalemate is a chess term, meaning an end with no winner. As long as the Cold War lasted and both sides were still able to one-up each other, it was not a stalemate.
The Cold War.
there is a amount of people that changed sides that we dont know
Dude! There was a LOT of outer space activity on both sides during the Cold War! The Space Race was one of the most visible parts of the Cold War.
The allies won WW2 and the allies won the cold war. They are related because both buildups on both sides of the cold war started during WW2 to fight the Axis powers. As both sides became very powerful, each saw the other as a threat and neither did not trust each other.
Berlin Germany was caught in the middle during the cold war, it near evenly split the Europeans on both sides.
Because they are all of similar strength, launching a war will cause the country's economy to decline rapidly.
Spying. Both sides sent up Satallites to spy on each other.
The United States and the Soviet Union were the two countries on opposite sides during the Cold War. The Cold War ended in 1991.
No, stalemate is a chess term, meaning an end with no winner. As long as the Cold War lasted and both sides were still able to one-up each other, it was not a stalemate.
The Cold War.
The Cold War had a great impact of science and technology by rapidly increasing development. Satellites were quickly deployed by both sides which have since become a major part of daily lives.
there is a amount of people that changed sides that we dont know
At the heart of the Cold War and the development of nuclear weapons lay the concept of "Mutually Assured Destruction, fittingly shortened to MAD.The meaning of this was that both sides had so much weaponry that it was impossible to knock the enemy out completely with the first blow.And if you didn't manage that, the revenge would damage your countrybeyond what was considered acceptable.So it was called a "cold" war, because while it never broke out into a real war, both sides kept preparing and posing as if it MIGHT happen.
At the heart of the Cold War and the development of nuclear weapons lay the concept of "Mutually Assured Destruction, fittingly shortened to MAD.The meaning of this was that both sides had so much weaponry that it was impossible to knock the enemy out completely with the first blow.And if you didn't manage that, the revenge would damage your countrybeyond what was considered acceptable.So it was called a "cold" war, because while it never broke out into a real war, both sides kept preparing and posing as if it MIGHT happen.