The world still shivers from the cold breeze of a seventy-year strong hurricane called the Cold War. The Cold War or so called the bitter state of indirect conflict, was a period of opposition, hostility and antagonism which took part from 1945 to 1991. It was an ideological clash between Communism led by the Soviet Union and Capitalism led by the United States of America. It started with the closing of the Second World War as it was the end of the temporary alliance between the two superpowers to bring the common enemy Germany down. Most of Europe was then split between the USSR and the USA making them world powers. This “big power clash” was due to the strong competition between these two contentious countries who were vying for influence and domination. So who was to blame for this permanent tornado …show more content…
They had generally disliked each other. America had always been against Communism, it hated and feared it since its first apparition in the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917; The Bolshevik leaders promised to destroy Capitalism and this led America to refuse to recognise the Soviet government. In addition to the radical difference between the two system of governance Communism and Capitalism that defines the economic, political and social implications of the two countries which pushes them to be bound not get along, the intervention of the west in the USSR’s civil war and the appeasement policy only added grudge. It is true that both Truman and Stalin helped building the tensions in Asia and Europe immediately after the World War II. The need-friendship that had been formed between the USA and the USSR during the second world war was not authentic and strong enough to overcome all the years of suspicion and look beyond the unease between the two nations. Moreover, even though both leaders ought to attend their postwar security objectives, none of them was fully willing to compromise as they both were interested in their own interests and focused on their individual