CW attempts to reduce tension

Cards (56)

  • Détente, meaning the relaxing of tension between rivals, was used to describe the relationship between the USA and the Soviet Union in the later 1960s and 1970s.
  • Superpowers agreed to limit the number of nuclear weapons they had.
  • No further production of strategic ballistic weapons (short-range, lightweight missiles) under SALT 1.
  • No increase in number of intercontinental ballistic weapons (ICBMs) (though new ones could be added to replace old ones) under SALT 1.
  • No new nuclear missile launchers under SALT 1.
  • New submarines that could launch nuclear weapons (SLBMs) only allowed as replacements for existing missile launchers under SALT 1.
  • The Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty limited both sides to two ABM deployment areas under SALT 1.
  • The Helsinki Agreements were signed in Helsinki, Finland, in 1975, by all European countries except Albania and Andorra, as well as the USA, the Soviet Union and Canada.
  • Representatives from 35 countries agreed on security issues, cooperation, human rights and borders at the 1975 Helsinki Conference.
  • Agreement on borders East and West Vest Germany accepted each other officially at the 1975 Helsinki Conference.
  • Trade cooperation the USA agreed to buy oil from the Soviet et Union and the Soviet Union agreed to buy wheat from bo the USA at the 1975 Helsinki Conference.
  • The Soviet Union could not keep up with the US due to its poor economy and high spending on weapons.
  • Gorbachev recognized that the economy was failing and that the Soviet people were unhappy and dissatisfied with government.
  • The Soviet Union was bogged down in the war in Afghanistan.
  • The Soviet Union could not keep pace with the USA's new missile technology.
  • Gorbachev never planned to cause the end of the Soviet Union.
  • The INF Treaty largely applied in Europe where most of these missiles were deployed.
  • Gorbachev tried to cover up the scale of the massive nuclear accident at Chernobyl.
  • The changing attitudes of Reagan and Gorbachev represented an easing of Cold War tensions and led to greater cooperation between the USA and the Soviet Union.
  • The changing attitudes of Reagan and Gorbachev led to arms control agreements, the INF Treaty and START I.
  • Gorbachev introduced perestroika, which meant new ways of doing things, and glasnost, which meant more openness for people to express their thoughts.
  • Gorbachev did not want capitalism, just a stronger socialism.
  • Living standards were very low right across the Eastern bloc.
  • The INF Treaty, signed in December 1987, got rid of all 500-5500 km nuclear missiles each superpower had better than SALT 1.
  • Mikhail Gorbachev became the Soviet Union's last leader in 1985 and tried to address the country's economic, social, and political problems.
  • The Soviet Union lacked the USA's computing expertise.
  • Gorbachev was slow to allow democratic elections in the Soviet Union.
  • SALT 1 slowed down the arms race by placing limits on the number of bombers, ICBMs and SLBMs each side could have.
  • SALT 1 led to further negotiations that culminated in the SALT 2 Treaty in 1979.
  • British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher argued that nuclear weapons kept the peace in Europe and the world.
  • The Soviet Union's economy was weaker than the United States, and so the Soviet Union found it increasingly difficult to keep up in the arms race.
  • US technology was developing fast in the 1980s, especially computing.
  • The USA poured money into developing new missile technology.
  • Gorbachev and Reagan met at the Geneva summit in November 1985 and agreed to more meetings.
  • Gorbachev and Reagan meet for the first time in Geneva, 1985.
  • SALT 2 counted warheads while SALT 1 simply counted missiles and bombers.
  • Each superpower was limited to 2250 warheads under SALT 2.
  • Nuclear deterrence occurs when the possibility of a response with nuclear weapons prevents the other side from acting aggressively.
  • The SALT 2 Treaty failed due to opposition from West German politicians and US politicians.
  • Arms control agreements placed limits on the number of anti-ballistic missiles (ABMS), intercontinental ballistic weapons (ICBMS), nuclear weapons (SLBMs) and long-range bombers each side had.