In 1946, less than a year after the end of World War Two, Britain's wartime leader sounded an urgent warning about the Soviet threat to the West.
A resolution calling for a nuclear freeze was on the agenda in 185 Vermont towns on this day in history.
Vytautas Landsbergis deserves to stand alongside Lech Walesa.
The New Republic on MSN
How the End of the Cold War Saved the Siberian Tiger
What was it like to live at the end of the Cold War? While Francis Fukuyama mulled Kojève, Hegel, and the end of history, a ...
On March 24, 1985, a Soviet sentry shot and killed U.S. Army Maj. Arthur D. "Nick" Nicholson. He was the last American killed ...
The first Trump administration framed China as a trade abuser. Tariffs were the weapon of choice, but the second iteration of confrontation, called Cold War Two, is more systemic. It is no longer ...
Simon Clark on MSN
How the Cold War led us to climate change
In this video I talk about the genesis of climate change in the cold war between the United States and the Soviet Union. This ...
A look at how Cold War caution, regional geography and quiet information-sharing shaped India-Iran intelligence contacts without ever forming a formal alliance.
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