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Cold War
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== Toward A New World Order == In the course of the 1960s and ā70s, however, the bipolar struggle between the Soviet and American blocs gave way to a more complicated pattern of international relationships in which the world was no longer split into two clearly opposed blocs. A major split had occurred between theĀ Soviet UnionĀ and China in 1960 and widened over the years, shattering the unity of the communist bloc. In the meantime, western Europe andĀ JapanĀ achievedĀ dynamicĀ economic growthĀ in the 1950s and ā60s, reducing their relative inferiority to theĀ United States. Less-powerful countries had more room to assert their independence and often showed themselves resistant to superpower coercion orĀ cajoling. The 1970s saw an easing of Cold War tensions as evinced in theĀ Strategic Arms Limitation TalksĀ (SALT) that led to the SALT I and II agreements of 1972 and 1979, respectively, in which the two superpowers set limits on their anti-ballistic missiles and on their strategic missiles capable of carrying nuclear weapons. That was followed by a period of renewed Cold War tensions in the early 1980s with [[wikipedia:Ronald Reagan|Ronald Reagan]]'s election as U.S. President as well as [[Leonid Brezhnev]] (and [[Yuri Andropov]] after him) renewing hostility towards the United States. The two superpowers continued their massive arms buildup and competed for influence in theĀ Third World. But the Cold War began to break down in the late 1980s during the administration of Soviet leaderĀ Mikhail S. Gorbachev. He dismantled the totalitarian aspects of the Soviet system with the introduction of ''glasnost'' and ''perestroika'' and began efforts to democratize the SovietĀ political system. When communist regimes in the Soviet-bloc countries of eastern Europe collapsed in 1989ā90, GorbachevĀ acquiescedĀ in their fall. The rise to power of democratic governments inĀ East Germany,Ā Poland, Hungary, andĀ CzechoslovakiaĀ was quickly followed by the unification of West and East Germany underĀ NATOĀ auspices, again with Soviet approval. Gorbachevās internal reforms had meanwhile weakened his own [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Communist Party]] and allowed power to shift to Russia and the otherĀ constituentĀ republics of the Soviet Union. In late 1991 the Soviet Union collapsed and 15 newly independent nations were born from its corpse, including a Russia with a democratically elected, anticommunist leader. The Cold War had come to an end.
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