Relations (1)

cross_type 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts

The Cold War and the Soviet Union are intrinsically linked as the Soviet Union was the primary geopolitical adversary during the Cold War [1], and the conclusion of this era was marked by the collapse of the Soviet Union [2]. Intelligence operations and foreign policy strategies were fundamentally shaped by the ongoing tensions between the two entities {fact:1, fact:2, fact:5}.

Facts (5)

Sources
United States Foreign Intelligence Relationships everycrsreport.com EveryCRSReport.com 2 facts
accountThe U.S. intelligence community reduced its collection capabilities in the 1990s following the end of the Cold War and the de-emphasis of collection on the former Soviet Union.
claimThe Cold War influenced the evolution of U.S. foreign intelligence partnerships, as relations with traditional allies solidified based on a shared perception of the threat posed by the Soviet Union.
The European quest for autonomy at a time of shifting paradigms tepsa.eu TEPSA 1 fact
accountFollowing the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, there was a prevailing belief that liberal democracy had achieved a definitive victory and that history had ended.
Steven M. Greer - Wikiquote en.wikiquote.org Wikiquote 1 fact
claimSteven Greer claims that John F. Kennedy intended to rein in the military-industrial complex, end the Cold War, make peace with the Soviets, and dissolve the CIA.
Rethinking Espionage in the Modern Era cjil.uchicago.edu Chicago Journal of International Law 1 fact
accountShared intelligence was utilized for monitoring purposes during American and Soviet negotiations over nuclear stockpiles during the Cold War.