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[[File:1149px-Kitchen debate.jpg|thumbnail|300px|left|Debate between Nikita Khrushchev and Richard Nixon in 1959 in American model kitchen in Moscow.]]
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Detente was a period lasting approximately from 1972 to 1981 in which there was a thaw in relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. It was punctuated by major and surprising events, including the end of American involvement in the Vietnam War, a large economic downturn in the West, and the opening of relations with China. This period proved to be starkly different than the escalations in Cold War tensions in the 1960s and 1980s and is generally credited as a major function of Richard Nixon's diplomacy.
==Major Political Changes==
[[File:Carter_Brezhnev_sign_SALT_II.jpg|200px300px|thumb|left|The SALT II Treaty signed in 1979.]]
There were a series of important shifts in the United States, China, and Soviet Union that allowed for policy to change. In the Soviet Union Premier Nikita Khrushchev was replaced by party hardliner Leonid Brezhnev. There was also increasing tension between the U.S.S.R. and People's Republic of China, which resulted in a brief border conflict in 1969. China's Great Leap Forward, intended to modernize and industrialize the country, had failed terribly, and dictator Mao Zedong sought alternatives to Soviet hegemony. The United States saw a prolonged period of instability initiated by the assassination of President John Kennedy in November 1963. Protests against involvement in Vietnam and a series of social issues continued to grow. By 1968 President Lyndon Johnson was broken in spirit and decided not to run for re-election. <ref>Gaddis, John Lewis, ''The Cold War: a New History.''' New York: Penguin Books, 2006. Pages 79-80.</ref>
==Start of a Thaw==
[[File:SovietInvasionAfghanistanMap.png|200px300px|thumb|left|The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 was a major factor in ending Detente.]]
Nixon's ascension brought competing ideas to light. In one regard, he was a Cold Warrior, launching a large escalation of bombing in Vietnam (and later Cambodia and Laos) while also dramatically reducing the number of combat troops in Southeast Asia. Nixon also ended the draft, undercutting a major argument of American doves. As both Brezhnev and Nixon were looked upon as hardliners, it appeared that a thaw might not be possible. The year before Nixon took office, Brezhnev launched a bloody repression of an uprising in Czechoslovakia.
==Conclusion==
The better relations between the United States with China and the Soviet Union was not a permanent development. As the United States and her allies fell into a deep "malaise" in the late 1970s the Soviets attempted to take advantage of the situation. The Soviets expanded their influence in the Middle East and invaded Afghanistan to prop up a puppet government in 1979. Brezhnev also kept Eastern Europe repressed with a heavy hand through the remainder of his dictatorship. It was in this backdrop that former California Governor Ronald Reagan ran and won for President in 1980, promising to end the Detente.
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{{Mediawiki:WWII}}
==References==
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==Related DailyHistory.org Articles==
*[[How did Vladimir Lenin Rise To Power?]]
*[[Angels of the Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski]]
*[[Causes of World War II Top Ten Booklist]]
*[[The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact- Stalin’s greatest mistake?]]
 
{{Mediawiki:WWII}}

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