Cold war

  • Yalta conference

    The Yalta Conference was attended by three countries, the United States (Franklin Delano Roosevelt), Britain (Winston Churchill) and the Soviet Union (Joseph Vissarion Norwich Stalin) on February 4, 1945 Until February 11. A key summit on the formulation of a new world order and the distribution of benefits in the post-war world held in the Royal Palace in Yalta on the Crimean peninsula in the northern Black Sea
  • Potsdam conference

    The Potsdam Conference was held from July 17, 1945 to August 2, 1945 with the third war wartime in Potsdam, a suburb of Berlin, with the United States (Harry S. Truman), Britain (Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill) and the Soviet Union (Vissarionovich Stalin) Meeting.In order to discuss the settlement of post-war Germany and the settlement of post-war European issues, as well as for the Soviet Union to combat Japan as soon as possible.
  • Hiroshima bombling

    Japan's defeat was set in the summer of 1945, but Japan's frenzied resistance in places such as Okinawa led to the deaths of a large number of Allied officers. In order to protect the life of Allied officers and soldiers, as soon as possible to force Japan to surrender and thus suppress the Soviet Union, U.S. President Truman and senior military personnel decided to throw an atomic bomb in Japan to speed up the war. On August 6th the United States Threw an A-bomb at Hiroshima, Japan
  • Bombing of Nagasaki

    Japan's defeat was set in the summer of 1945, but Japan's frenzied resistance in places such as Okinawa led to the deaths of a large number of Allied officers. In order to protect the life of Allied officers and soldiers, as soon as possible to force Japan to surrender and thus suppress the Soviet Union, U.S. President Truman and senior military personnel decided to throw an atomic bomb in Japan to speed up the war. On August 9 the atomic bomb, code-named "fat man", was delivered to Nagasaki
  • Truman doctrine

    On March 12, 1947, the United States proposed that "Truman doctrine" is generally regarded as a new and drastic change in U.S. foreign policy."Truman doctrine" is synonymous with interfering in the internal affairs of other countries and its proposal marks the official start of the "Cold War" between the United States and the Soviet Union
  • Marshall Plan

    The U.S. plan to provide economic aid to the war-torn West European countries and help them rebuild after World War II had a profound impact on the development of European countries and the world political situation.Planners: Marshall, William Clayton, George Kennan
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    Molotov plan

    In 1947, the Soviet Union general term for the economic agreement signed with the countries of Eastern Europe in order to prevent the "departure from the Soviet Union" in Eastern Europe, strengthen economic ties with Eastern Europe, and aid the economic development in Eastern Europe.From July to August 1947, the Soviet Union signed trade agreements with Eastern European countries such as Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland to boycott and counterattack the "Marshall Plan,"
  • Brussels treaty

    The Treaty of Alliance concluded by Belgium, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom after the Second World War. Decided to merge the major bodies of the European Coal and Steel Community, the European Atom Energy Community and the European Economic Community into collectively referred to as the European Community. On March 17, 1948, a treaty was signed in Brussels, the capital of Belgium
  • Berlin blockade

    The first Berlin crisis, also known as the Berlin blockade. It was the first major international crisis during the Cold War era, and for the first time caused casualties. The "blockade of Berlin" refers to the international crisis caused by the blockade by the Soviet Union from the Western occupied area to West Berlin during the initial period after the Second World War
  • NATO

    Is an international military group established by the major developed countries in the United States, Western Europe and North America for their defense cooperation. This marks the military accomplishment of the strategic alliance by the Western camps after World War II and is an extension and development of the 'Marshall Plan' in the military field so that the United States can control the EU's defense system led by Germany and France
  • Soviet Creation of Nuclear weapons

    On August 29, 1949, at 4 a.m., the "Tykwa" (named after the first atomic bomb of the Soviet Union) was successfully tested in the atmosphere. Since then, the Soviet Union has broken the nuclear monopoly of the United States and became the second country in the world to have an atomic bomb that can be used in actual combat.
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    Korean war

    On June 25, 1950, North Korea won the tacit approval of the Soviet Union, attacking South Korea without declaring war and ending the three-year Korean War.On September 15, the U.S.-based United Nations Army landed in Incheon and started a massives counterattack. July 10, 1951, China, North Korea and U.S. Representatives to the United Nations Armistice Talks. After many negotiations, the Korean Armistice Agreement was finally signed on July 27, 1953.
  • Stalin's death

    March 5, 1953, Stalin died of stroke. His body was placed in a crystal coffin, placed in the tomb of Lenin. However, Stalin's remains were preserved for only eight years
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    Vietnam war

    Its essence is that the South Vietnam (Vietnam Republic) backed by the capitalist camp states such as the United States is fighting against the North Vietnam (Vietnam Democratic Republic) and the "Vietnam Southern National Liberation Front" backed by the socialist camp states such as the Soviet Union and China. Occurred during the Cold War Vietnam,Laos, Cambodia.And finally the United States failed in the Vietnam War
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    Hungarian revolution

    Is an armed uprising triggered by mass peace demonstrations in Hungary from October 23 to November 4, 1956. The incident was subdued under two military interventions by the Soviet Union. Altogether, about 2,700 Hungarians were killed.
  • NORAD

    Is a military organization jointly formed by the United States and Canada. It was established on May 12, 1958, and its role is to make the United States and Canada jointly air defense units in North America. Since 1963, North American Air Defense Command's main facility is located in the Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado, USA. Monitor all man-made aircraft flying over North America, including in space
  • Fidel Castro taking over

  • Bay of pigs

    On April 17, 1961, Cubans who fled to the United States with assistance from the CIA flew to Fidel Castro in Pig Bay (Pigou Bay, Córdocos Gulf, Bahía de los Cochinos) on the southwestern coast of Cuba. Led by the Cuban revolutionary government launched a failed invasion
  • Creation of the Berlin wall

    Is a frontier defense system in the territory of one's own country established by the German Democratic Republic on the West Berlin border with the aim of preventing the links between democratic Germany (including the capital East Berlin) and West Berlin belonging to the Federal Republic of Germany ("Federal Germany" or "West Germany") Personnel free exchange. The Berlin Wall is a symbol of Germany's split and an important symbol of the Cold War
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    End of the Cuban missile crisis

    In 1962, a crisis in the Cuban missile that shocked the world occurred in the Caribbean.It was caused by the deployment by the United States of medium-range ballistic missile Raytheon missiles and Jupiter missiles in Italy and Turkey in 1959, and the former Soviet Union deployed missiles in Cuba in an effort to regain its disadvantage.This is the fiercest confrontation between the two major powers of the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
  • Nuclear Arms Treaties

    On July 1, 1968, they opened their offices in Washington, Moscow and London respectively. At that time, 59 countries signed up for the contract. The treaty aims to prevent nuclear proliferation, promote nuclear disarmament and promote international cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy
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    Afghanistan war

    At the end of 1979, the Soviet army assembled 10 divisions and invaded Afghanistan in a massive manner, causing the bloody military coup of the various forces in Afghanistan to evolve into a protracted national war between the Afghan guerrillas and the invading Soviet Army. February 15, 1989, the Soviet government ended its withdrawal from Afghanistan issued a statement: The withdrawal of the Soviet Union from Afghanistan has ended, this action fully in line with the Geneva agreement.
  • Solidarity in Poland

    Is a Polish union federation founded in 1980 in Gdansk's shipyard, led by Lech-Wałęsa. In the 1980s it organized the domestic movement from Catholics to anti-communist leftists in Poland as a powerful anti-communist social movement and advocated a nonviolent revolt model.Opposition groups in other European communist countries followed the success stories of the guilds, culminating in the collapse of the communist regime in Eastern Europe and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s
  • Berlin wall falling

    On November 9, 1989, television viewers all over the world witnessed the great scene staged in Berlin. The Berlin Wall, which has long been the most powerful symbol of East-West confrontation, was finally overthrown. 1% of East German citizens poured into West Germany They have reunited with friends and relatives who were forced to part with their border closures in 1961.
  • Czechoslovakia revolution

    The "velvet revolution" refers, in narrow sense, to the democratization of Czechoslovakia in November 1989 (the period of the Eastern European upheaval). Broadly speaking, the velvet revolution is in contrast to the violent revolution. It refers to the change of political system without massive violent clashes.
  • End of the Cold war

    On December 3, 1989, the leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union announced at the summit in Malta an end to the cold war