{"id":10765,"date":"2017-11-02t10:00:51","date_gmt":"2017-11-02t17:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/?p=10765"},"modified":"2017-10-28t16:17:45","modified_gmt":"2017-10-28t23:17:45","slug":"cold-war-apush-topics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/ap\/cold-war-apush-topics\/","title":{"rendered":"the cold war: apush topics to master before test day"},"content":{"rendered":"
the cold war. it\u2019s a huge topic. it\u2019s been thoroughly realized and satirized in film, music, and television<\/a>, to varying degrees of success. but what is its significance (outside of making the united states and russia forever frenemies), and what cold war apush topics do you need to know for the exam? keep reading to find out.<\/p>\n i wasn\u2019t kidding earlier when i said that the topic of the cold war is huge. there are lot of dates, names, and proxy wars to consider. (in fact, one of the most neglected proxy wars is the soviet invasion of afghanistan<\/a>.)<\/p>\n this being the apush exam, we can put some limits on what this blog post will address. this blog post will touch on the following:<\/p>\n obviously, there are many, many other things that could have been included in this list. however, we have a finite amount of time and space. with that, let\u2019s get started!<\/p>\n *if you are confused by why the soviet union is called the soviet union in this blog post, please reference this article on the russian revolution<\/a>. <\/p>\n one of the policies that contributed to this being a \u201ccold war\u201d between the soviet union and the united states was the idea of containment. essentially, containment was the idea that while the united states would not actively oppose the idea of communism<\/a>, they would oppose the spread<\/strong> of communism. that policy lead to many of the proxy wars i mentioned earlier. the vietnam war<\/a> is one of the most important proxy wars (to the united states) during the overall cold war.<\/p>\n this whole story would be relatively straightforward (and minor) if each country was just doing its own thing without any extremely deadly and world-changing weapons in their arsenal. <\/p>\n but remember wwii? the united states had dropped an atomic bomb \u2013 twice \u2013 and that changed things. <\/p>\nfirst: a discussion about boundaries<\/h2>\n
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cold war apush topic #1: the start of the cold war<\/h2>\n
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\n <\/li>\ncold war apush topic #2: us policy of containment<\/h2>\n
cold war apush topic #3: nuclear warfare<\/h2>\n