Containment
The Eisenhower policy of nuclear brinkmanship was taking the country from crisis to another. Brinkmanship was eventually replaced with the Detente Policy by both the United States as well as the Soviet Union. Efforts began to thaw the Cold War.
they wanted to rebuild the empire during the cold war.
Nuclear weapons WERE the cold war. No Nukes, No Cold War.
President Harry Truman isssued the policy of containment
Containment
Tepid water is between hot and cold.
it is neither cold or hot in a tube of fight.
Communist containment/stopping communist aggression.
for you to be neither cold neither hot just normal
The Eisenhower policy of nuclear brinkmanship was taking the country from crisis to another. Brinkmanship was eventually replaced with the Detente Policy by both the United States as well as the Soviet Union. Efforts began to thaw the Cold War.
Earth.
they wanted to rebuild the empire during the cold war.
72 F is a pleasant room temperature, neither hot nor cold.
neither
what idea was the major justification for U.S. foreign policy during the Cold War era?
Well, between cold water and cold water.... I would have to say, Cold water 1) You mean cold water or hot water, and 2) Neither. I would go for lukewarm water. 1) You mean cold water or hot water, and 2) Neither. I would go for lukewarm water.