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Search results 631 - 640 of 1519 matching essays
- 631: Explain the U.S. & Russian Positions In The Cold War
- ... their sphere of influence in the Middle East. The Soviet Union considered the possibility that they could ultimately establish a communist government in Egypt; this action helped lead to the Suez conflict. The Cuban Missile Crisis Russian aid to the country of Cuba caused the US to be faced with the problem of nuclear missiles being within striking distance of every one of it's major cities. President Kennedy was faced ...
- 632: The Dropping of The Atomic Bomb: Was It The Best Way to End The War?
- ... Asia, and that problem is not solved completely still now. Of course, Takashi Hiraoka acknowledges the fact seriously. He says that we Japanese should be ashamed of that as a human and heartily apologize to Asian people.(57) Then, is it all right whatever was done to Japan? Takashi Hiraoka thinks of the idea to be wrong. Certainly, a cruel act must not be allowed. For all that, the idea that ...
- 633: Bystanders are the Real Criminal
- Bystanders are the Real Criminal From the smallest crisis to the largest catastrophe, bystanders are found in nearly all negative situations. A bystander may be defined as a person who observes such disagreeable circumstances but does nothing to aid in their resolution. There is ...
- 634: Reasons For The Fall Of Socialism/Communism In Russia
- ... fact that he had started to seize more power and "His efforts to streamline party organizations produced chaos and conflict among party administrators." He was also blamed for the Russia "defeat" during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and of not accomplishing anything toward the reunification of Germany under East German rule. After the ousting of Khrushchev, Leonid Brezhnev became the Soviet Communist Party Secretary General in October of 1964. Under his administration ...
- 635: Stalin and The Soviet Union
- ... as Ukraine), and the Belorussian SSR (Belorussia). The number of union republics and exact boundaries of the USSR shifted over time. The Turkmen and Uzbek republics (Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) were carved out of the Central Asian part of the RSFSR in late 1924. In this same region, the Tajik republic (Tajikistan) was demarcated from Uzbek territory in 1929, and the Kazakh and Kirgiz republics (Kazakhstan and Kirgizia) were likewise formed from ...
- 636: Tupac Amaru And The Comunero Revolt
- ... soon be controlled...there's nothing to worry about! The question is, what does it take for a revolution to be called a revolution? Is this well known concept, only suited for a time of crisis, when all other options have been forgone? When we, modern society members, think of a revolution we immediately imagine bloodshed. What ever the reason behind it might be, we generally don't acknowledge it as ...
- 637: Vietnam War
- ... young Americans had been killed in the war when Nixon took office in January 1969. In July 1969, he issued a Nixon doctrine which stated that US troops would no longer be directly involved in Asian wars. He ordered the withdrawal of 25,000 troops. Nixon also setted a Phoenix Program a secret CIA operation that resulted in the assassination of 20,000 suspected NFL guerrillas. The operation increased funding for ...
- 638: Kosovo
- ... their determination for the independence of Kosovo in the 1991 referendum, and the Kosovar parliament has declared the independence of Kosovo, first from Serbia, then from the Yugoslav federation, after its disintegration. The present Kosovo crisis began in early 1998 when fighting broke out, resulting in the displacement of some 300,000 people. A cease-fire was agreed in October 1998, which enabled refugees to find shelter. A Verification Mission was ...
- 639: Rise of Superpowers After WWII
- ... a lesser extent that of Italy, can be explained by this decline of imperial power. They were simply attempting to fill the power vacuum in Europe that Britain and France unwittingly left. After the economic crisis of the 1930's, Britain and France lost much of their former international standing--as the world markets plummeted; so did their relative power. The two nations were determined to maintain their status as great ...
- 640: The French Revolution
- ... had on not only France, but of all of Europe, and eventually the entire world. The effects of the Revolution left a new model in government for the world to look at in times of crisis and it makes us remember to see the world through Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.
Search results 631 - 640 of 1519 matching essays
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