CHAPTER 10
The Tale of Two Terms: The Reagan
Diplomatic Transition
Many strategists assumed that the Cold War, in large measure shaped by
the nuclear bomb, would be resolved in a string of mushroom clouds.
As this chapter will illustrate, that the Cold War ended without such
a clash was due in large measure to the efforts of American president
Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in spurring the
process to reduce nuclear arsenals. These two charismatic leaders, who
differed in so many ways, were an oddly matched pair who sought to
lessen the prospects of a nuclear war. Reagan, the older of the two, was a
convinced, out-spoken anti-Communist, who came to the White House
with little understanding of the Soviet Union and largely uniformed about
the intricacies of nuclear weaponry.
Without intellectual or analytical pretensions, his fear that these
destructive weapons might be used would lead him to urge the develop-
ment and deployment of a questionable missile defense system and seek
a halt to building nuclear weaponry. Gorbachev, a dedicated commu-
nist bent on domestic reform, provided the imaginative leadership that
redirected Moscow’s relations with the West even while it led to the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Overriding the opposition in the Polit-
buro, Professor Robert English has recorded, he sincerely believed “that
he could end the Cold War solely by cutting weapons and halting the arms
race.” Both leaders put great stock in personal contact and their ability to
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Switzerland AG 2021
A. Warren and J. M. Siracusa, US Presidents and Cold War
Nuclear Diplomacy, The Evolving American Presidency,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61954-1_10
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