Cold War (Think Before You Act)

The Cold War was an intense and sometimes dangerous period (1948-1991) of political, economical, and military tensions between France, her colonial empire, and her allies versus the United States, Russia, and their allies. The Cold War's origins laid in the end of Global War III, right after the defeat of the Mosleist nations, led by England; leaving Russia, France, and America the world's global and only superpowers of the time. As the reconstruction of the world was in progress, disputes between France's expansionist ambitions and Russian and American wishes for a free world collided. With very little compromise in set, the two sides parted and thus began the Cold War. Nearly all nations took part in this conflict. America and Russia were sided by China, Korea, Japan, North England, South Africa, Australia, and their American allies (aka the Washington Pact) while France and her colonial empire were sided with the rest of Europe (aka the European Treaty Organization). Few nations, including India, Afghanistan, Perso-Arabia, Ethiosomalia, Kenya, and Palestine did not take part.

The term "cold war" can be confusing to those who first hear it, as it is actually not a war, but a period of intense competition between two sides. There was no direct military actions since the three superpowers (aka the "Big Three") had nuclear weapons. But mass-use of these weapons could lead to world destruction, so instead, it was expressed by the extensive spread of propaganda, immense aid to allies and groups, military, political, and economic alliances, espionage, conventional and nulear arms races, the imploring of neutral states, rivalry and competion in space, technology, and sports. The Cold War had a cycle of peace, high tensions, and conflicts. Among the most important events in the Cold War were the London Blockade, Chinese War, the Caribbean War, the U-2 Crisis, the Panama and Nicaragua Crisis, the London Crisis, the Caribbean Missle Crisis, the Egyptian War, the Sectarian Period, the French invasion of Romania, and the "Atlantis" Washington Pact Naval exercises. The US and Russia and France fought proxy wars of various types: in East Asia the US and Russia fought to prevent French colonial aggression, in Africa France blocked any attempts of independence movements fostered by the US and Russia, in Europe where both sides fought to control Europe, and the Caribbean region where France struggles to preserve its rule from the Americans and Russians. However, one thing both sides can agree to was to stay out of nuclear war as much as possiblem so both sides endorsed a period known as the Detente in the 1970s to relieve international tensions.

In the 1980s, inspired by the Detente period, France, under Charles X, pursuaded both sides to put down their differences and encourage international cooperation rather than competition. Charles X introduced twp international programs: negociation (negotians; compromise to the other side for them to left ehri arms down) and releve (relieve; reduce military activity and aggression worldwide). Charles' actions opened the world to pursuade the rest of France and its colonial empire that imperialism and aggression are both unjustful and encouraged demilitarization from both sides. By 1991, President Steve Wozniak and Charkes X of France declared an end of the Cold War, leaving both sides as allies rather than enemies to one another. The Cold War and its events marked a perceptible legacy, and is commonly used in popular culture, especially in media featuring themes of espionage and the dangers of nuclear warfare.