How to End a Cold War
https://doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2020-1-13-49-59
Abstract
Histories of the end of the Cold War that have focused on the roles of the top leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union have neglected an important dimension of the ending of the antagonism between the West and the East. Before Ronald Reagan and M.S. Gorbachev met at Geneva in November 1985, citizens of the USA, the USSR, and European nations who were alarmed by the danger of nuclear war formed new organizations dedicated to overcoming the hostility between their nations. British members of European Nuclear Disarmament and American activists in groups such as Beyond War and Peace Links established connections to independent groups in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union as well as the Committee of Soviet Women and the Committee for the Defense of Peace in the USSR. These relationships made it possible to organize very ambitious citizen diplomacy projects. Hundreds of Soviet citizens made extensive speaking tours in the United States while numerous British and American activists visited the Soviet Union. These exchanges dispelled negative stereotypes and helped to end the mutual demonization that had been central to the Cold War since the late 1940s. Analysis of the experiences of the citizen diplomats in the 1980s yields lessons for contemporary international relations about the importance of avoiding one-sided blame for conflicts and the need to move beyond recriminations about the past in order to develop cooperation in the present and future.
About the Author
D. S. FoglesongUnited States
David S. Foglesong – PhD (History), Professor of History at Rutgers
08901-1108, New Brunswick, New Jersey, Seminary Place, 16
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Review
For citations:
Foglesong D.S. How to End a Cold War. Concept: philosophy, religion, culture. 2020;4(1):49-59. https://doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2020-1-13-49-59