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15 - Winning the Hot Peace: Reagan’s Great-Power Competition, 1981–1990

from Part II - From Great Power to Superpower

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2024

Donald Stoker
Affiliation:
National Defense University, Washington, DC
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Summary

Ronald Reagan decided he would win the Cold War against the Soviet Union. This required a strong economy. He supported the Federal Reserve breaking inflation with high interest rates. He also reduced taxes and regulation. After a short recession, the economy boomed. Reagan harnessed all elements of national power in pursuit of democracy and freedom abroad. Military strength was key, and he launched a massive rearmament program. He pushed human rights issues, pointed out Soviet abuses and hypocrisy, separated the Eastern Bloc from Western money and technology, blocked Soviet advances in the Third World, and used insurgencies against Soviet clients as Moscow did against the West. But Reagan also feared a nuclear exchange and was eager to negotiate reductions in nuclear weapons. He benefitted from Soviet economic weakness, political bankruptcy, and the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev, who realized the Soviet Union needed reduced tensions with the West in order to reform its broken system. George H. W. Bush succeeded Reagan, continued his grand strategy, and reaped the benefit of victory in the Cold War with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the spread of democracy to Eastern and Central Europe, as well as other areas, particularly Latin America.

Keywords

Type
Chapter
Information
Purpose and Power
US Grand Strategy from the Revolutionary Era to the Present
, pp. 497 - 534
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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