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Cold War strategies

During the Cold War, major powers, primarily the USA and the USSR, employed strategies like containment, deterrence, and proxy wars. Containment aimed to prevent the spread of communism, while deterrence involved building nuclear arsenals to discourage attacks. Proxy wars were conflicts where these powers supported opposing sides, like in Korea and Vietnam, without direct confrontation. Both sides engaged in espionage and propaganda to gain an ideological edge. This period also saw the formation of military alliances, such as NATO and the Warsaw Pact, highlighting the global divide between capitalist and communist ideologies.

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    During the Cold War, from the late 1940s to the early 1990s, the U.S. and the Soviet Union employed various strategies to gain global influence without direct conflict. These included containment, aimed at stopping the spread of communism; deterrence, maintaining strong military capabilities to prevent attacks; and propaganda, promoting ideologies through media and culture. Proxy wars, where both superpowers supported opposing sides in conflicts elsewhere, were common, reducing direct confrontation. Diplomatic negotiations and arms control agreements also played a crucial role in managing tensions and preventing escalation into nuclear war.