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         Cold War:     more books (100)
  1. The Cold War: A History by Martin Walker, 1995-06-15
  2. The Cold War (20th Century Perspectives) by David Taylor, 2001-05
  3. Turning Points in Ending the Cold War (Hoover Institution Press Publication)
  4. Cold War Civil Rights: Race and the Image of American Democracy (Politics and Society in Twentieth Century America) by Mary L. Dudziak, 2002-01-28
  5. The Cold War and the Color Line: American Race Relations in the Global Arena by Thomas Borstelmann, 2003-09-15
  6. The Cold War & the University: Toward an Intellectual History of the Postwar Years by Noam Chomsky, Laura Nader, et all 1998-02
  7. Conflict After the Cold War, Updated Edition (2nd Edition) by Richard K. Betts, 2004-06-25
  8. The Cold War and After: Prospects for Peace (International Security Readers)
  9. Cold War Orientalism: Asia in the Middlebrow Imagination, 1945-1961 by Christina Klein, 2003-03-10
  10. The Christian Church in the Cold War (Hist of the Church) by Owen Chadwick, 1993-10-07
  11. Homeward Bound: American Families in the Cold War Era by Elaine Tyler May, 1990-01
  12. Mao's China and the Cold War (The New Cold War History) by Chen Jian, 2001-06-25
  13. The End of the Cold War: Its Meaning and Implications
  14. The Cold War Swap by Ross Thomas, Stuart M. Kaminsky, et all 2003-05-16

21. Lance Missile A.k.a The Neutron Bomb
Summary information, photographs and links to further information on the last U.S. shortrange nuclear missile of the cold war era.
http://www.manuelsweb.com/lancemissile.htm
lance missile home message board search site map
1/32 FA
41st Bde
1/12 FA
75th Bde If you see this message your web browser's JavaScript is off. Some links will not work. Find out about enabling JavaScript (Click on pictures below to enlarge. Then use your browser's back button to return.) I was stationed in Germany 1985-1986 during the worst nuclear disaster in history: The meltdown of the Chernobyl power plant. All of Europe was concerned with the nuclear fall out from the accident. While back in Germany, U.S. Forces were on alert because of the bombings of Rhein-Main's Air Force Base in Frankfurt and later the April 5, 1986 bombing of a discotech in Berlin. I remember seeing the windows blown out on several large buildings near the BX. I was sent to Rhein-Main on guard duty while security barriers were installed. The Lance crewmen were assigned to two different crews. The first crew picked up the main missile assemblage and warhead (both stored in containers) and loaded them up on 5-ton trucks. Later they would open the containers and 'mate' the warhead to the missile. The assembled missile would be placed onto a tank-like vehicle called a loader-transporter The second crew would load the missile onto a similar tracked-vehicle capable of launching the missile. The tracked-vehicle would drive to a marked location where the missile would be layed with survey equipment and gunner's sight quadrant attached to the missile. If it was a nuclear round, launching codes would be entered into the warhead. The missile would then be launched which was a spectacular site. I saw the Lance fired at the NATO base in Crete, Greece and in White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. I've never seen anything move so fast. It takes flight at a speed of Mach 3. During battle the Lance missile would be used against the Soviet's front line.

22. BerlinBrigade.com | 2002 Edition
The unofficial site for U.S Army garrison based in West Berlin during the cold war.
http://www.berlinbrigade.com
CLICK HERE TO ENTER CLICK HERE TO ENTER

23. Home
Analyzes the political, economic, and some other problems faced by the Islamic World and the role of Islam in the new millennium.
http://ghazali.net/book2/
Presents
Islam in the
Post-Cold War Era
An analysis of the problems faced by the Islamic Worldand the role of Islam in the new millennium
By Abdus Sattar Ghazali
Start Reading

24. Cold War Spies And Espionage
cold war Espionage. The emblem of the Center for October 1998 online The Atlantic Monthly. Revised 4/10/03 by Schoenherr cold war Policies.
http://history.acusd.edu/gen/20th/coldwarspies.html
Cold War Espionage
The emblem of the Center for Cryptologic History, from the NSA Venona page On the early history of cryptology, see the NSA National Cryptologic Museum
1943 - Stalin ends the Comintern - KGB and GRU (Soviet Army Intelligence) assume all espionage activities - 200 agents in U.S.
The emblem of the KGB, from the NSA Venona page
1943/02/01 - the U.S. Army's Signal Intelligence Service, a forerunner of NSA, began a secret program, later codenamed VENONA , to exploit, encrypted Soviet diplomatic communications collected since 1939
1944 - Viktor Kravchenko defected in Washington from the Soviet Government Purchasing Commission AMTORG
1944/02 - Stalin creates Department S to use American scientists as Russian spies, including Oppenheimer, Bohr, Fermi, Szilard. See the excerpt at Pathfinder from Atomic Secrets: A KGB Spymaster's Tale of How the Soviets Got the Bomb by Pavel Anatolievich Sudoplatov, and the comments on this book by Robert Conquest
1945/01 - HUAC made a permanent House committee - under John Rankin until 1946/10
1945/06/06 - Amerasia raid by FBI - arrested were editor Phil Jaffe, State Dept employees Emmanuel Larsen and

25. Taylor & Francis Group - Not Found
Refereed journal providing a forum for discussion of the broadening spectrum of security issues emerging in the postcold war world.
http://www.frankcass.com/jnls/csp.htm
Sorry The page you have requested does not exist. Please check the address and try again. Please select an area from the list below and update your bookmarks.

UK Head Office: 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Email: Webmaster

26. Submarine Cincinnati Museum Foundation
Save the USS Cincinnati Submarine cold war Peace and Freedom Memorial.
http://www.usscincinnati.org/

27. On The Front Lines Of The Cold War: Documents On The Intelligence War In Berlin,
On the Front Lines of the cold war Documents on the Intelligence War in Berlin, 1946 to 1961. Edited by Donald P. Steury. Table of Contents. Preface. Introduction.
http://www.cia.gov/csi/books/17240/

History Staff
Center for the Study of Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
On the Front Lines of the Cold War:
Documents on the Intelligence
War in Berlin, 1946 to 1961
Edited by Donald P. Steury
Table of Contents

28. Professor Adam B. Ulam
A Harvard professor emeritus and former Russian Research director's interpretations and writings about World War II, Lenin, Stalin, cold war, and current politics.
http://www.aulam.org/

Ongoing: Family Letters
Adam B. Ulam
Professor Emeritus
Harvard University
Former Director, Russian Research Center
and Gurney Professor of History and Political Science
Contact Us
Leopolis Press
Adam Ulam's Memoir
About Stanislaw Ulam
Woodrow Wilson Center paper
Speech by the President of Poland
An A. B. Ulam article
Appreciations American Philosophical Society note Harvard Memorial Minute
The Transaction Publishers edition of Understanding the Cold War, containing newly discovered autobiographical material and analysis, plus an introduction by Paul Hollander, remains available. A list of the chapter headings: Part One: Farewell to Poland The Last Summer Pre-War Poland: An Assessment Part Two: A Polish Youth in a New Land The New Country; A New Life War Years A Fugitive Stays with Jozef Ulam: George Volsky's Tale Echoes of the Holocaust Part Three: The Professor Early Harvard Years A Young Instructor Implications of the Cold war On Being an "Expert" Lenin Turbulent Foreign Relations Vietnam The Fall of the American University The Tyrant's Shadow Stalin The Surprising 70s The Curse of the Bomb Part Three [cont'd] Back to the Past with Revolutionary Fervor The Communist World Novel Uncertainties Poland: A Determined and Nonviolent Resistance Stan Travels Abroad Gorbachev and the Beginning of the End To the Bialowiezha Forest Russia Again Part Four: Postlude Of Professor Ulam's book Understanding the Cold War

29. Cold War - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
cold war. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This article is part of the cold war series. 19471953. 1953-1962. 1962-1991. The cold war and US culture.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War
Cold War
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
This article is part of
the Cold War
series. Edit this box
A reorganization of this article is being worked on at Cold War/temp , feel free to help. The Cold War (c. ) was the open yet restricted rivalry that developed after World War II between groups of nations practicing different ideologies and political systems. On one side were the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.) and its allies, often referred to as the Eastern bloc . On the other side were the United States and its allies, usually referred to as the Western bloc . The struggle was called the Cold War because it did not actually lead to fighting, or "hot" war, on a wide scale. The term was first used by the American financier and presidential adviser Bernard Baruch during a congressional debate in The Cold War was characterized by mutual distrust, suspicion, and misunderstandings by both the United States and the Soviet Union, and their allies. At times, these conditions increased the likelihood of a third world war. The United States accused the Soviet Union of seeking to expand their version of Communism throughout the world. The Soviets, meanwhile, charged the United States with practicing imperialism and with attempting to stop revolutionary activity in other countries.
The Cold War continued from the end of World War II until the breakup of the Soviet Union in the early . The Korean War , the Vietnam War and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan were some of the occasions when the tension between those two ideologies took the form of an armed conflict, but much of it was conducted by or against surrogates and through spies and traitors who were working undercover. In those conflicts, the major powers operated in good part by arming or funding surrogates. Hence that part of the war at least had lessened direct impact on the populations of the major powers.

30. Intelligence Resource Program
The American intelligence community was shaped by nearly half a century of cold war with the Soviet Union. With the end of the cold war the community faces extraordinary challenges. This site is a comprehensive resource on the past and future of the American intelligence community.
http://WWW.fas.org/irp
FAS Search Join FAS
Hot Documents Subscribe to Secrecy News
This site provides a selection of official and unofficial resources on intelligence policy, structure, function, organization and operations. It was created by John Pike and is maintained by Steven Aftergood Federation of American Scientists
1717 K Street, NW, Suite 209
Washington, DC 20036 Steven Aftergood voice (202) 454-4691
fax (202) 675-1010
email saftergood@fas.org
FAS Search Join FAS
http://www.fas.org/irp/

31. Links To Cold War Studies On The Internet
Index List of all cold war links on this site (text only). Lists of Links Links to lists of cold war Internet sites. Miscellaneous
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~hpcws/links.htm
Archival Publications Links to publishers and other sources of published archival materials Declassified Documents Links to Internet sites that disseminate newly declassified materials online Foreign Governments and International Organizations Links to Foreign government agencies, foreign archives, and international organizations Index List of all Cold War links on this site (text only) Lists of Links Links to lists of Cold War Internet sites Miscellaneous Sites Links to various other organizational and individual sites about the Cold War Private Research Organizations Links to private academic and other institutions, research projects, and organizations U.S. Government Agencies Links to U.S. Government sites with documents or information on Cold War events and themes

32. CNN - Pondering A Post-Cold War Meeting Of The Minds - March 20, 1997
A short essay on the many of the domestic problems facing the Russians since the collapse of communism and the end of the cold war.
http://cnn.com/US/9703/20/cold.war/
Pondering a post-Cold War meeting of the minds
March 20, 1997
Web posted at: 10:13 p.m. EST (0313 GMT) Essay by Correspondent Garrick Utley NEW YORK (CNN) As Russian President Boris Yeltsin and U.S. President Bill Clinton meet in Finland this week to discuss NATO expansion plans, there is a noticeable lack of thrall among Americans. Earlier summits promised great things, and the world turned its head to watch. There was Cold War tension: Kennedy went head-to-head with Khrushchev; Nixon faced off with Brezhnev. Later, viewers followed the summit between Gorbachev and Reagan with excitement and hope, and we all learned how to pronounce "perestroika." Russia is no longer the core of the "evil empire," no longer a military threat. Yet the meeting between Bill and Boris, as they call each other, is still compelling.
Russia a gamble on two counts
True, it is no longer a bastion of Communism. What it is, still, is a high-stakes gamble. Democracy now operates on the surface. Western nations are gambling that it will take root and provide stability. Russia still has a ways to go on this count: Not everyone in Russia, or even among the democratically elected members of its Parliament, observes the code of conduct of the democratic process.

33. Bibliography
cold war Bibliography. (Revised 224-2000). The cold war has generated an enormous body of scholarship. Here we have organized some
http://www.cmu.edu/coldwar/bibl.html

Cold War Bibliography
(Revised 2-24-2000)

The Cold War has generated an enormous body of scholarship. Here we have organized some of it under several conceptual headings.
Please use our guestbook to suggest additional material.
Recent Books on the Cold War
Concise annotated bibliography
Institutions of the Cold War
Economic Impact of the Cold War ...
Text Only Index

34. Sacrificial Lamb Of The Cold War: The Nationalists Of Korea
Account of Korean nationalist movements from 1940 to 1955 and a brief history of Korean nationalism.
http://www.kimsoft.com/2001/abook.htm
The Sacrificial Lamb of the Cold War
The Nationalists of Korea
Please send your comments and critiques to: mailto:ysk@kimsoft.com Please excuse the dusts. I am still adding bits and pieces of memory as they bubble up from the depth of my repressed memory. If you have any information relevant to my story, please help me out. Thank you. Chapter Title Major Topics Preface Preface Cold War and Korea Introduction Introduction Kim Gyong Chun, war of independence Chapter 1 The Beginning General Sherman, Yi Dong Whi, Kim Alexandra Chapter 2 The Years of Bad Omen My father - communist/capitalist, Free City Incident, Uiyoldan Chapter 3 Kapsan: My Birthplace Samsu Kapsan, Gen. Hong Bom Do, my family Chapter 4 The Second Wind Anti-Japanese Army, Kim Il Sung in Kapsan, Rich/Poor Kids Chapter 5 World War II Sissy in Girls Classes, My Father Arrested, Down with Cholera, Chapter 6 The New Masters Soviets in Kapsan, Kim Gu, Rhee Syngman, Kim Il Sung Chapter 7 US and Soviet Occupation Escape to Hamhung, Japanese Refugees, In A Soviet Prison Chapter 8 Korea Divided Cheju 4.3 Uprising, Yosu Mutiny, Winds of War

35. "Toward The 21st Century: Trends In Post-Cold War International Security", By G.
Addresses key changes since the cold war ended, lessons, current problems and issues. Commissioned by the Swiss Ministry of Defense.
http://www.isn.ethz.ch/securityforum/Online_Publications/WS4/Treverton/Treverton
rd International Security Forum
and
st Conference of the PfP Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes
"Networking the Security Community in the Information Age" Workshop 4: Toward the 21 st Century: Trends in Post-Cold War International Security Policy
Online Publications
RAND
    Toward the 21st Century: Trends in Post-Cold War International Security Gregory F. Treverton and Marten van Heuven, with Andrew Edward Manning DRU-1894 July 1998 Prepared for Swiss Ministry of Defense
      National Security Research Division
    The RAND unrestricted draft series is intended to transmit preliminary results of RAND research. Unrestricted drafts have not been formally re-viewed or edited. The views and conclusions expressed are tentative. A draft should not be cited or quoted without permission of the author, unless the preface grants such permission. RAND is a nonprofit institution that helps improve public policy through research and analysis.
    RAND's publications and drafts do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of its research sponsors. Back to Workshop 4 Back to the Workshop Overview Back to the main page of the 3rd International Security Forum, Kongresshaus Zurich, 19-21 October 1998

36. Cold War Connection
cold war Connection the web site of the Carnegie Mellon cold war Science and Technology Studies Program, directed by Prof. The cold war Science Technology.
http://www.cmu.edu/coldwar/
Studies Program
Directed by
David A. Hounshell
Department of History
Carnegie Mellon University
Text only/site map furthering research in the field of Cold War science and technology by supporting several graduate students and a postdoctoral fellow
contributing to curriculum development at the secondary and college levels
serving as a clearinghouse for anyone doing research in Cold War related topics on the web
maintaining an annotated bibliography and filmography, as well as several syllabi from university courses on the Cold War.
The booklet, Science, Technology, and Democracy in the Cold War and After , more fully explains the scholarly questions that guide our research efforts.
Department of History
at Carnegie Mellon University This website, the Cold War Connection , is the Program's web site. It is maintained by Dr. Anthony A. McIntire, the program's coordinator.
Faculty
Participants Programs Guestbook ...
Hot News

Cold War Science and Technology Study Program
history, Joel Tarr, cold war history, cold war science and technology, NSF, Hounshell, history department, history courses, Ed Constant, history offerings, Carnegie Mellon University History Department, David Hounshell, RAND, Bibliographies, Filmography, Web Links, Dan Resnik, cold war history, Kiron Skinner, John Modell.

37. Cold War International History Project Electronic Bulletin
Includes two articles related to Bohr and Soviet espionage.
http://www.hfni.gsehd.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/CWIHP/BULLETINS/b4toc.htm
Issue 4 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C. Fall 1994
Germany and the Cold War
Soviet Espionage and the Bomb Soviet Nuclear History
  • Letters: Stalin, Kim, and Korean War Origins ...
  • Spy vs. Spy: The KGB vs. the CIA
    Vladislav M. Zubok
  • More Documents from the Russian Archives
    Germany and the Cold War
  • The Soviet Occupation: Moscow’s Man in (East) Berlin
    Norman M. Naimark
  • Germany and the Cold War: New Evidence from East-bloc Archives
    Jim Hershberg
  • Stalin and the SED Leadership, 7 April 1952: “You Must Organize Your Own State”
  • New Evidence on Khrushchev’s 1958 Berlin Ultimatum
    Translation and Commentary by Hope M. Harrison
    Soviet Espionage and the Bomb
  • Atomic Espionage and Its Soviet “Witnesses”
    Vladislav M. Zubok
  • The KGB Mission to Niels Bohr: Its Real “Success”
    Yuri N. Smirnov
  • Documents: Niels Bohr
    Soviet Nuclear History
  • Soviet Cold War Military Strategy: Using Declassified History
    William Burr
  • Cold War Soviet Science: Manuscripts and Oral Histories Ronald Doel and Caroline Moseley
  • Moscow’s Biggest Bomb: The 50-Megaton Test of October 1961 Viktor Adamsky and Yuri Smirnov
  • Nuclear Weapons after Stalin’s Death: Moscow Enters the H-Bomb Age Yuri Smirnov and Vladislav Zubok Return to the Cold War International History Project Electronic Bulletin Homepage
  • 38. CSPN
    The cold war and Red Scare in Washington State. A curriculum project for Washington schools developed by. The Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest.
    http://www.washington.edu/uwired/outreach/cspn/curcan/main.html
    The Cold War and Red Scare in Washington State
    A curriculum project for Washington schools developed by The Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest
    Michael Reese University of Washington Department of History
    CONTENTS
    I. Introduction: How to Use This Packet
    II. The Cold War and Red Scare in Washington: Historical Context
    A. Radicalism and Anti-radicalism in Washington Politics
    B. The Cold War System of International Relations
    C. Hunting Reds in the Evergreen State
    D. The Cold War and Washington's Hot Economy
    E. The Legacy of the Cold War
    III. Time Line
    IV. Glossary
    V. Bibliography
    A. Other Collections of Primary Documents
    B. Books on Related Topics
    C. Videos
    D. Museums and Historical Sites
    VI. Teaching about the Cold War
    A. Inside the Classroom
    B. Outside the Classroom
    VII. Sources and Concordance to the Documents
    INDEX LISTING OF SOURCE MATERIAL
    I. Introduction: How to Use This Packet
    The documents presented here are designed to be used in classes about Pacific Northwest history or US history. Although the documents deal specifically with events in Washington state, they are still potentially useful for a course about US history as a whole. As historian Richard Fried has observed, "'McCarthyism' is so often characterized in abstract terms that its meaning remains fuzzy. To sense the emotional bite of the Communist issue and to understand both how it affected life for those who ran afoul of it and how it shaped the nation's political culture, it is useful to look at specific cases." These documents allow students to explore such specific cases.

    39. Britains Small Wars
    Photographs, stories, background information, and other resources on British participation in conflicts in South Asia, Malaya, the cold war, Kenya, Cyprus, Aden, Suez, Boreno, Vietnam, and elsewhere.
    http://www.britains-smallwars.com/
    The History of British Military Conflicts since 1945
    Dedicated to the Men and Women who served in Forgotten conflicts

    India, Palestine, Malaya, Korea, Suez Canal Zone, Kenya, Cyprus, Suez 1956, Borneo, Vietnam, Aden, Radfan, Oman, Dhofar,
    Northern Ireland, the Falklands War, the Gulf War, Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone and many more. This web site was update on 5th of February 2004. Click Here
    Most people have heard of Britain's involvement in military conflicts in the later half of this century, such as the Falklands War and the Gulf War. What the younger generation does not realize is that soldiers, sailors, and airmen from Britain and the Commonwealth have been fighting small wars to defend Britain's shrinking empire since the end of World War Two. From the insect ridden jungles of Malaya to the frozen hills of Korea, in the back streets of Aden and Cyprus, from the African bush of Kenya to the rain soaked hills of the Falkland Islands, young National Servicemen and regular British soldiers have been defending the British empire and her allies for the last 58 years. This is their story. This site was started in January 1999 and the Webmasters are constantly updating various chapters. If the campaign you served in is not listed within this web site, please e-mail us and tell us about it. Please note that NEGATIVE e-mails will be ignored. It is not our intention to ignore any military conflict since 1945, it just takes time to gather all the information and publish it. Please look to our SITREP section to see what we're going to publish soon

    40. John Kennedy And The Cold War
    Kennedy and the cold war Throughout official. While in Congress, he supported all of America s overseas activities in waging the cold war.
    http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/progjfk5.htm
    Kennedy and the Cold War T hroughout his pre-presidential career, JFK was an active Cold Warrior. As noted, his first Congressional campaign boasted of taking on the anti-Cold War faction of the Democratic party led by Henry Wallace, and as a congressman he aligned himself with those who said the Truman Administration wasn't being tough enough, when he willingly attached his name to the chorus demanding "Who Lost China?" One does not even have to rehash his relationship with Joseph McCarthy to show how JFK willingly played the "tough on communism" issue in all his campaigns. In 1952, while running for the Senate, he proudly trumpeted the fact that during his first term in the House, even before Nixon had won fame for the exposure of Alger Hiss, JFK's work on a labor committee led to the conviction of a communist union official. While in Congress, he supported all of America's overseas activities in waging the Cold War. Even while running for President in 1960, JFK appealed to the "tough on the Soviets" issue by consistently hammering at Eisenhower for America's supposed lack of leadership, and America "falling behind the Soviets." It was JFK, promising more money for defense spending and American readiness when he charged Eisenhower for allowing a non-existent "missile gap" to develop between the U.S. and Soviet nuclear arsenals. And it was JFK, who during the debates with Nixon, charged that Eisenhower policy had resulted in the loss of Cuba.

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