Shy & Humble!

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2012
The Cold Ward and U.S. Diplomacy
President Ronald Reagan
Valerie Kendricks
              POL 300 – International Problems
Professor Lorna Maloney
8/31/12
Revised
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[Type the company address]

2012
The Cold Ward and U.S. Diplomacy
President Ronald Reagan
Valerie Kendricks
              POL 300 – International Problems
Professor Lorna Maloney
8/31/12
Revised
[Type the company name]

The Cold War and U.S. Diplomacy
#1
For instance the situation that ultimately required U.S. diplomatic effort while President Ronald Reagan resided in office was the fall of the Soviet Union. Ultimately for so many years we had seen the USSR as a threat and moreover considered it as a permanent menace. President Reagan saw the USSR sponsored “wars of national liberation” in El Salvador, Angola, Ethiopia and Cambodia. (Plot or Serendipity, 2000) Regrettably the President saw a revolt against Communist rule as a result being shoved out of Afghanistan while the stirrings of democracy extinguished in Poland. President Reagan wanted the tide of Soviet excursions to a haul and suddenly setback. In the beginning of his presidency Reagan had a vision of things inside the armor of the Soviet Union especially the economy. In the speech on March 8, 1983 Reagan branded the Soviet Union as an “evil empire” and he lambasted those who would place the United States in a position of military or moral inferiority by supporting a freeze in both sides of nuclear arsenals. (Walker, Hunt, 2011)
Meanwhile when President Reagan came to power in 1981 he reinstated diplomacy in the region. To illustrate the point U.S. seized an opening of resolution to civil war which linked U.S. support implementing a UN resolution on neighboring Namibia ironically withdrawing Cuban forces from Angola. The Untied States withdrew the South Africans from Namibia otherwise preventing a Soviet Cuban proxy’s government (the...