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Détente

Détente (French for 'relaxation'; French pronunciation: [detɑ̃t])[1] is the relaxation of strained relations, especially political ones, through verbal communication. The diplomacy term originates from around 1912, when France and Germany tried unsuccessfully to reduce tensions.[2]

Leonid Brezhnev, Viktor Sukhodrev, and Richard Nixon during Brezhnev's 1973 visit to Washington, D.C., a high-water mark in détente between the United States and the Soviet Union

The term is often used to refer to a period of general easing of geopolitical tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States during the Cold War. Détente began in 1969 as a core element of the foreign policy of U.S. president Richard Nixon. In an effort to avoid an escalation of conflict with the Eastern Bloc, the Nixon administration promoted greater dialogue with the Soviet government in order to facilitate negotiations over arms control and other bilateral agreements.[3] Détente was known in Russian as разрядка (razryadka), loosely meaning "relaxation of tension".

Cold War edit

 
The "Three Worlds" of the Cold War era in 1975:
  First World: Western Bloc led by the United States and its allies
  Second World: Eastern Bloc led by the Soviet Union, China (Independent), and their allies

While the recognized era of détente formally began under the Richard Nixon presidency, there were prior instances of relationship relaxation between the United States and Soviet Union during the Cold War. Following the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, both the United States and Soviet Union agreed to install a direct hotline between Washington and Moscow, colloquially known as the red telephone. The hotline enabled leaders of both countries to communicate rapidly in the event of another potentially catastrophic confrontation.[citation needed]

The period of détente in the Cold War saw the ratification of major disarmament treaties such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the creation of more symbolic pacts such as the Helsinki Accords. An ongoing debate among historians exists as to how successful the détente period was in achieving peace.[4][5]

Détente is considered to have ended after the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in 1979, which led to the U.S.' boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics. Ronald Reagan's election as president in 1980, based in large part on an anti-détente campaign, induced a period of rising tension.[6] In his first press conference, Reagan claimed that the U.S.'s pursuit of détente had been used by the Soviet Union to further its interests.[7]

Relation had been continued to increasingly sour through the unrest in Poland, the U.S.'s withdrawal from the SALT II arms treaty, and the NATO Able Archer exercise.[8][9]

In response to the heightening tensions, U.S. secretary of state George P. Shultz shifted the Ronald Reagan administration's foreign policy towards another period of de-escalation with the Soviet Union especially following Mikhail Gorbachev coming to power. During Gorbachev's leadership, dialogue over the START arms reduction treaty meaningfully progressed. Diplomatic overtures were continued by the succeeding Bush administration, including the ratification of the START treaty, up until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. This period of a renewed de-escalation from 1983 to 1991 is sometimes referred to as the second period of détente.[10][11]

According to Eric Grynaviski, "Soviet and U.S. decision-makers had two very different understandings about what détente meant" while simultaneously holding "an inaccurate belief that both sides shared principles and expectations for future behaviour."[12]

Summits and treaties edit

 
Alexei Kosygin and Lyndon B. Johnson at the Glassboro Summit Conference in 1967

Before Richard Nixon became president, the foundations of détente were developed through multilateral arms-limitation treaties in the early to middle 1960s. These included the August 1963 Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, the January 1967 Outer Space Treaty, and the July 1968 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Historical developments such as the Cuban Missile Crisis and technological advancements such as the development of the intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) spurred these agreements.[13]

When Nixon came into office in 1969, several important détente treaties were developed. The Political Consultative Committee of the Warsaw Pact sent an offer to the U.S. and the rest of the West that urged a summit on "security and cooperation in Europe"[This quote needs a citation] to be held. The West agreed, and the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks began towards actual limits on the nuclear capabilities of both superpowers, which ultimately led to the signing of the SALT I treaty in 1972. It limited each power's nuclear arsenals but was quickly rendered outdated as a result of the development of MIRVs. Also in 1972, the Biological Weapons Convention and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty were concluded, and talks on SALT II began the same year. The Washington Summit of 1973 further advanced mutual and international relations through discussion of diplomatic cooperation and continued discussion regarding limitations on nuclear weaponry.[citation needed]

In 1975, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) met and produced the Helsinki Accords, a wide-ranging series of agreements on economic, political, and human rights issues. The CSCE was initiated by the Soviet Union and involved 35 states throughout Europe.[14] One of the most prevalent issues after the conference was the question of human rights violations in the Soviet Union. The Soviet Constitution directly violated the Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations, and that issue became a prominent point of separation between the United States and the Soviet Union.[15]

The Jimmy Carter administration had been supporting human rights groups inside the Soviet Union, and Leonid Brezhnev accused the US of interference in other countries' internal affairs.[15] That prompted intense discussion of whether or not other nations may interfere if basic human rights, such as freedom of speech and religion, are violated. This basic disagreement between the superpowers, a democracy, and a one-party state, did not allow that issue to be reconciled. Furthermore, the Soviets proceeded to defend their internal policies on human rights by attacking American support of South Africa, Chile, and other countries that were known to violate many of the same human rights.[15]

In July 1975, the Apollo–Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) became the first international space mission; three American astronauts and two Soviet cosmonauts docked their spacecraft and conducted joint experiments. The mission had been preceded by five years of political negotiation and technical co-operation, including exchanges of American and Soviet engineers between both countries' space centres.[citation needed]

Trade relations between both blocs increased substantially during the era of détente. Most significant were the vast shipments of grain that were sent from the West to the Soviet Union each year and helped to make up for the failure of the kolkhoz, the Soviet collective farms.[citation needed]

At the same time, the Jackson–Vanik amendment, signed into law by U.S. president Gerald Ford on 3 January 1975 after a unanimous vote by both houses of the U.S. Congress, was designed to leverage trade relations between the Americans and the Soviets. It linked U.S. trade to improvements in human rights in the Soviet Union, particularly by allowing refuseniks to emigrate. It also added to the most favoured nation status a clause that no country that resisted emigration could be awarded that status, which provided a method to link geopolitics to human rights.[16]

End of Vietnam War edit

Nixon and his national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, moved toward détente with the Soviet Union in the early 1970s. They hoped, in return, for Soviets to help the U.S. extricate or remove itself from Vietnam. People then started to notice the consciousness with which US politicians started to act.[17]

Strategic Arms Limitations Talks edit

 
Gerald Ford and Leonid Brezhnev signing a joint communiqué on the SALT I treaty during the Vladivostok Summit in 1974

Nixon and Brezhnev signed an ABM treaty in Moscow on 26 May 1972 as well as SALT I, the Interim Agreement, which temporarily capped the number of strategic arms (MIRVs, SLBMs, and ICBMs). That was a show of détente militarily since an expansion of nuclear ballistic arms had started to occur.[18]

The goal of Nixon and Kissinger was to use arms control to promote a much broader policy of détente, which could then allow the resolution of other urgent problems through what Nixon called "linkage." David Tal argued:[19]

The linkage between strategic arms limitations and outstanding issues such as the Middle East, Berlin and, foremost, Vietnam thus became central to Nixon's and Kissinger's policy of détente. Through employment of linkage, they hoped to change the nature and course of U.S. foreign policy, including U.S. nuclear disarmament and arms control policy, and to separate them from those practiced by Nixon's predecessors. They also intended, through linkage, to make U.S. arms control policy part of détente. ... His policy of linkage had in fact failed. It failed mainly because it was based on flawed assumptions and false premises, the foremost of which was that the Soviet Union wanted strategic arms limitation agreement much more than the United States did.

Apollo–Soyuz handshake edit

 
The Apollo–Soyuz crew in 1975

A significant example of an event contributing to détente was the handshake that took place in space. In July 1975, the first Soviet-American joint space flight was conducted, the ASTP.[20] Its primary goal was the creation of an international docking system, which would allow two different spacecraft to join in orbit. That would allow both crews on board to collaborate on space exploration.[21] The project marked the end of the Space Race, which had started in 1957 with the launch of Sputnik 1, and allowed tensions between the Americans and the Soviets to decrease significantly.[22]

Concurrent conflicts edit

As direct relations thawed, increased tensions continued between both superpowers through their proxies, especially in the Third World. Conflicts in South Asia and the Middle East in 1973 saw the Soviet Union and the U.S. backing their respective surrogates, such as in Afghanistan, with war material and diplomatic posturing. In Latin America, the U.S. continued to block any left-wing electoral shifts in the region by supporting unpopular right-wing military coups and military dictatorships. Meanwhile, there were also many communist or left-wing guerrillas around the region, which were militarily and economically backed by the Soviet Union, China and Cuba.[citation needed]

During much of the early détente period, the Vietnam War continued to rage. Both sides still mistrusted each other, and the potential for nuclear war remained constant, notably during the 1973 Yom Kippur War when the U.S. raised its alert level to DEFCON 3, the highest since the Cuban Missile Crisis.[23]

Both sides continued aiming thousands of nuclear warheads atop intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) at each other's cities, maintaining submarines with long-range nuclear weapon capability (submarine-launched ballistic missiles, or SLBMs) in the world's oceans, keeping hundreds of nuclear-armed aircraft on constant alert, and guarding contentious borders in Korea and Europe with large ground forces. Espionage efforts remained a high priority, and defectors, reconnaissance satellites, and signal intercepts measured each other's intentions to try to gain a strategic advantage.[citation needed]

Reignited tensions and the end of the first détente edit

 
Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan carried out in an attempt to shore up a struggling pro-Soviet regime, led to harsh international criticisms, and a boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics, held in Moscow. U.S. president Jimmy Carter boosted the budget of the U.S. Department of Defense and began financial aid to the office of Pakistan president Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, who, in turn, subsidized the anti-Soviet radical Islamist group of Afghan mujahideen fighters.[24]

Another contributing factor in the decline in the popularity of détente as a desirable U.S. policy was the interservice rivalry between the U.S. State Department and Department of Defense. From 1973 to 1977, there were three secretaries worth mentioning: Elliot Richardson, James Schlesinger, and Donald Rumsfeld. Schlesinger's tenure as secretary of defense was plagued by notably poor relations with Kissinger, one of the most prominent advocates of détente in the U.S.[25] Their poor working relationship bled into their professional relationship, and policy clashes would increasingly occur. They ultimately resulted in Schlesinger's dismissal in 1975. However, his replacement, Rumsfeld, had similar issues with Kissinger although their disagreements stemmed more from domestic resistance to détente.[26] As a result, clashes on policy continued between the State and the Defense Departments. Rumsfeld thought that Kissinger was too complacent about the growing Soviet strength. Although Rumsfeld largely agreed with Kissinger's stance that the U.S. held military superiority over the Soviet Union, he argued that Kissinger's public optimism would prevent Congress from allowing the Defense Department the funds that Rumsfeld believed were required to maintain the favorable gap between the US and the Soviets. Rumsfeld responded by regularly presenting a more alarmist view of the superior strength of the Soviets.[citation needed]

In response to the stranglehold of influence by Kissinger in the Nixon and Ford administrations and the later decline in influence over foreign policy by the Department of Defense, Richardson, Schlesinger, and Rumsfeld all used the growing antipathy in the U.S. for the Soviet Union to undermine Kissinger's attempts to achieve a comprehensive arms reduction treaty. That helped to portray the entire notion of détente as an untenable policy.[27]

The 1980 U.S. presidential election saw Reagan elected on a platform opposed to the concessions of détente. Negotiations on SALT II were abandoned as a result. However, during the later years of his presidency, Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Gorbachev pursued a policy that was considered to be détente.[28][29] However, the Reagan administration talked about a "winnable" nuclear war and led to the creation of the Strategic Defense Initiative and the Third World policy of funding irregular and paramilitary death squads in Central America, sub-Saharan Africa, Cambodia, and Afghanistan.[3]

Cuban thaw edit

 
Barack Obama and Raúl Castro at a press conference in Havana in 2016

On 17 December 2014, U.S. president Barack Obama and Cuba president Raúl Castro resolved to restore diplomatic relations between Cuba and the U.S. The restoration agreement had been negotiated in secret in the preceding months. The negotiations were facilitated by Pope Francis and hosted mostly by the Canadian government, which had warmer relations with Cuba at that time. Meetings were held in both Canada and the Vatican City.[30] The agreement would see some U.S. travel restrictions lifted, fewer restrictions on remittances, greater access to the Cuban financial system for U.S. banks, and the reopening of the U.S. embassy in Havana and the Cuban embassy in Washington, which both closed in 1961 after the breakup of diplomatic relations as a result of Cuba's alliance with the Soviet Union.[31]

On 14 April 2015, the Obama administration announced the removal of Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism list.[32] Cuba was officially removed from the list on 29 May 2015. On 20 July 2015, the Cuban and U.S. interest sections in Washington and Havana were upgraded to embassies. On 20 March 2016, Obama became the first U.S. president to visit Cuba since Calvin Coolidge visited in 1928.[33] In 2017, Donald Trump, Obama's successor, stated that he was "canceling" the Obama administration's deals with Cuba, while also expressing that a new deal could be negotiated between the Cuban and U.S. governments.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "détente – traduction". Dictionnaire Français-Anglais WordReference.com (in French).
  2. ^ Keiger 1983, pp. 69–70.
  3. ^ a b Hunt 2015, pp. 269–274.
  4. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  5. ^ Nuti 2008, p. 53.
  6. ^ "Ronald Reagan, radio broadcast on August 7th, 1978" (PDF). Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  7. ^ "Ronald Reagan. January 29, 1981 press conference". Presidency.ucsb.edu. 29 January 1981. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  8. ^ "Detente Wanes as Soviets Quarantine Satellites from Polish Fever". Washington Post. 19 October 1980.
  9. ^ Simes 1980, p. [page needed].
  10. ^ Cannon, Lou (29 May 1988). "Reagan, Gorbachev Two Paths to Detente". Washington Post.
  11. ^ "The Cold War Heats up – New Documents Reveal the "Able Archer" War Scare of 1983". Military History Now. 20 May 2013.
  12. ^ Grynaviski 2014, p. 49.
  13. ^ "Limited or Partial Test Ban Treaty (LTBT/PTBT)". Nuclear Museum. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  14. ^ Lapennal 1977, p. 1.
  15. ^ a b c Lapennal 1977, pp. 14–15.
  16. ^ Kissinger 1995, p. [page needed].
  17. ^ Rhodes 2008, p. 61.
  18. ^ Rhodes 2008, p. 112.
  19. ^ Tal 2013, pp. 1091–1092.
  20. ^ "NASA – Handshake in Space". Nasa.gov. 1 March 2010. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  21. ^ Morgan, Kellie (15 July 2015). "Celebrating historic handshake in space, 40 years later". CNN. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  22. ^ Samuels 2005, p. 669.
  23. ^ "The Long Arm of the October War" History News Network, 12 September 2013.
  24. ^ Garthoff 1985, p. [page needed].
  25. ^ Poole 2015, p. viii.
  26. ^ Poole 2015, p. 23.
  27. ^ Poole 2015.
  28. ^ "Reagan, Gorbachev two paths of Détente". Washington Post. Washington Post, 29 May 1988. 29 May 1988.
  29. ^ Norman Podhoretz (January 1984). "The First Term: The Reagan Road to Détente". Foreign Affairs (America and the World 1984).
  30. ^ Nadeau, Barbie Latza (17 December 2014). "The Pope's Diplomatic Miracle: Ending the U.S.-Cuba Cold War". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  31. ^ Schwartz, Felicia (20 July 2015). "As Embassies Open, a Further Thaw in Cuban-U. S. ties Faces Hurdles in Congress". WSJ. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  32. ^ "FACT SHEET: Charting a New Course on Cuba". whitehouse.gov. 17 December 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  33. ^ Michaels, Allison (21 March 2016). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 24 March 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
  34. ^ "Trump rolls back parts of what he calls 'terrible' Obama Cuba policy". Reuters. 16 June 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2023.

Works cited edit

  • Garthoff, Raymond L. (1985). Detente and Confrontation: American-Soviet Relations From Nixon to Reagan. The Brookings Institution. ISBN 978-0-8157-3044-6.
  • Grynaviski, Eric (2014). Constructive Illusions: Misperceiving the Origins of International Cooperation. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-5206-2. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt1287f2s.
  • Hunt, Michael (2015). The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present: A Documentary Reader. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-937103-7. OCLC 870439207.
  • Keiger, John F. V. (1983). France and the Origins of the First World War. ISBN 9781349172092.
  • Kissinger, Henry (1995). Diplomacy. ISBN 0-671-51099-1. OCLC 32350622.
  • Lapennal, Ivo (1977). Human Rights: Soviet Theory and Practice, Helsinki and International Law. Eastern Press.
  • Nuti, Leopoldo (2008). The Crisis of Détente in Europe. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780203887165.
  • Poole, Walter S. (2015). The Decline of Détente: Elliot Richardson, James Schlesinger, and Donald Rumsfeld 1973-1977 (PDF). Cold War Foreign Policy Series: Special Study 7. Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense.
  • Rhodes, Richard (2008). Arsenals of Folly: The Making of the Nuclear Arms Race. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-375-71394-1.
  • Samuels, Richard J., ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of United States National Security. Vol. 1. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-2927-7.
  • Simes, Dimitri K. (1980). "The Death of Detente?". International Security. 5 (1): 3–25. doi:10.2307/2538471. JSTOR 2538471. S2CID 154098316.
  • Tal, David (2013). ""Absolutes" and "Stages" in the Making and Application of Nixon's SALT Policy". Diplomatic History. 37 (5): 1090–1116.

Further reading edit

  • Bell, Coral (1977). The Diplomacy of Detente: The Kissinger Era. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-21122-6.
  • Bowker, Mike; Williams, Phil (1988). Superpower Detente: A Reappraisal. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-8039-8041-9.
  • Daigle, Craig (2012). The Limits of Détente: The United States, the Soviet Union, and the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1969-1973. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18334-4.
  • Gaddis, John Lewis (2006). The Cold War: A New History. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-303827-6.
  • Garthoff, Raymond L. (1994). Détente and Confrontation: American-Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan (revised ed.). Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 0-8157-3041-1.
  • Hanhimäki, Jussi (2013). The Rise and Fall of Détente: American Foreign Policy and the Transformation of the Cold War. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-076-1.
  • Jackson, Galen (2020). "Who Killed Détente? The Superpowers and the Cold War in the Middle East, 1969–77". International Security. MIT Press - Journals. 44 (3): 129–162. doi:10.1162/isec_a_00369. ISSN 0162-2889. S2CID 209892087.
  • Litwak, Robert S. (1986). Détente and the Nixon Doctrine: American Foreign Policy and the Pursuit of Stability, 1969–1976. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-33834-9.
  • McAdams, A. James (19 December 1985). East Germany and Detente: Building Authority After the Wall. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-26835-6.
  • Suri, Jeremi (2003). Power and Protest: Global Revolution and the Rise of Detente. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01031-4.
  • Sarotte, M. E. (2001). Dealing with the Devil: East Germany, Détente, and Ostpolitik, 1969-1973. Univ of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4915-6.

détente, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, detent, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, articles, suggestions, april, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, french,. For other uses see Detente disambiguation Not to be confused with Detent This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Detente French for relaxation French pronunciation detɑ t 1 is the relaxation of strained relations especially political ones through verbal communication The diplomacy term originates from around 1912 when France and Germany tried unsuccessfully to reduce tensions 2 Leonid Brezhnev Viktor Sukhodrev and Richard Nixon during Brezhnev s 1973 visit to Washington D C a high water mark in detente between the United States and the Soviet UnionThe term is often used to refer to a period of general easing of geopolitical tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States during the Cold War Detente began in 1969 as a core element of the foreign policy of U S president Richard Nixon In an effort to avoid an escalation of conflict with the Eastern Bloc the Nixon administration promoted greater dialogue with the Soviet government in order to facilitate negotiations over arms control and other bilateral agreements 3 Detente was known in Russian as razryadka razryadka loosely meaning relaxation of tension Contents 1 Cold War 1 1 Summits and treaties 1 2 End of Vietnam War 1 3 Strategic Arms Limitations Talks 1 4 Apollo Soyuz handshake 1 5 Concurrent conflicts 1 6 Reignited tensions and the end of the first detente 2 Cuban thaw 3 See also 4 References 5 Works cited 6 Further readingCold War edit nbsp The Three Worlds of the Cold War era in 1975 First World Western Bloc led by the United States and its allies Second World Eastern Bloc led by the Soviet Union China Independent and their allies Third World Non Aligned and neutral countriesWhile the recognized era of detente formally began under the Richard Nixon presidency there were prior instances of relationship relaxation between the United States and Soviet Union during the Cold War Following the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 both the United States and Soviet Union agreed to install a direct hotline between Washington and Moscow colloquially known as the red telephone The hotline enabled leaders of both countries to communicate rapidly in the event of another potentially catastrophic confrontation citation needed The period of detente in the Cold War saw the ratification of major disarmament treaties such as the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty and the creation of more symbolic pacts such as the Helsinki Accords An ongoing debate among historians exists as to how successful the detente period was in achieving peace 4 5 Detente is considered to have ended after the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in 1979 which led to the U S boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics Ronald Reagan s election as president in 1980 based in large part on an anti detente campaign induced a period of rising tension 6 In his first press conference Reagan claimed that the U S s pursuit of detente had been used by the Soviet Union to further its interests 7 Relation had been continued to increasingly sour through the unrest in Poland the U S s withdrawal from the SALT II arms treaty and the NATO Able Archer exercise 8 9 In response to the heightening tensions U S secretary of state George P Shultz shifted the Ronald Reagan administration s foreign policy towards another period of de escalation with the Soviet Union especially following Mikhail Gorbachev coming to power During Gorbachev s leadership dialogue over the START arms reduction treaty meaningfully progressed Diplomatic overtures were continued by the succeeding Bush administration including the ratification of the START treaty up until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 This period of a renewed de escalation from 1983 to 1991 is sometimes referred to as the second period of detente 10 11 According to Eric Grynaviski Soviet and U S decision makers had two very different understandings about what detente meant while simultaneously holding an inaccurate belief that both sides shared principles and expectations for future behaviour 12 Summits and treaties edit nbsp Alexei Kosygin and Lyndon B Johnson at the Glassboro Summit Conference in 1967Before Richard Nixon became president the foundations of detente were developed through multilateral arms limitation treaties in the early to middle 1960s These included the August 1963 Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty the January 1967 Outer Space Treaty and the July 1968 Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Historical developments such as the Cuban Missile Crisis and technological advancements such as the development of the intercontinental ballistic missile ICBM spurred these agreements 13 When Nixon came into office in 1969 several important detente treaties were developed The Political Consultative Committee of the Warsaw Pact sent an offer to the U S and the rest of the West that urged a summit on security and cooperation in Europe This quote needs a citation to be held The West agreed and the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks began towards actual limits on the nuclear capabilities of both superpowers which ultimately led to the signing of the SALT I treaty in 1972 It limited each power s nuclear arsenals but was quickly rendered outdated as a result of the development of MIRVs Also in 1972 the Biological Weapons Convention and the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty were concluded and talks on SALT II began the same year The Washington Summit of 1973 further advanced mutual and international relations through discussion of diplomatic cooperation and continued discussion regarding limitations on nuclear weaponry citation needed In 1975 the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe CSCE met and produced the Helsinki Accords a wide ranging series of agreements on economic political and human rights issues The CSCE was initiated by the Soviet Union and involved 35 states throughout Europe 14 One of the most prevalent issues after the conference was the question of human rights violations in the Soviet Union The Soviet Constitution directly violated the Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations and that issue became a prominent point of separation between the United States and the Soviet Union 15 The Jimmy Carter administration had been supporting human rights groups inside the Soviet Union and Leonid Brezhnev accused the US of interference in other countries internal affairs 15 That prompted intense discussion of whether or not other nations may interfere if basic human rights such as freedom of speech and religion are violated This basic disagreement between the superpowers a democracy and a one party state did not allow that issue to be reconciled Furthermore the Soviets proceeded to defend their internal policies on human rights by attacking American support of South Africa Chile and other countries that were known to violate many of the same human rights 15 In July 1975 the Apollo Soyuz Test Project ASTP became the first international space mission three American astronauts and two Soviet cosmonauts docked their spacecraft and conducted joint experiments The mission had been preceded by five years of political negotiation and technical co operation including exchanges of American and Soviet engineers between both countries space centres citation needed Trade relations between both blocs increased substantially during the era of detente Most significant were the vast shipments of grain that were sent from the West to the Soviet Union each year and helped to make up for the failure of the kolkhoz the Soviet collective farms citation needed At the same time the Jackson Vanik amendment signed into law by U S president Gerald Ford on 3 January 1975 after a unanimous vote by both houses of the U S Congress was designed to leverage trade relations between the Americans and the Soviets It linked U S trade to improvements in human rights in the Soviet Union particularly by allowing refuseniks to emigrate It also added to the most favoured nation status a clause that no country that resisted emigration could be awarded that status which provided a method to link geopolitics to human rights 16 End of Vietnam War edit Nixon and his national security advisor Henry Kissinger moved toward detente with the Soviet Union in the early 1970s They hoped in return for Soviets to help the U S extricate or remove itself from Vietnam People then started to notice the consciousness with which US politicians started to act 17 Strategic Arms Limitations Talks edit nbsp Gerald Ford and Leonid Brezhnev signing a joint communique on the SALT I treaty during the Vladivostok Summit in 1974Nixon and Brezhnev signed an ABM treaty in Moscow on 26 May 1972 as well as SALT I the Interim Agreement which temporarily capped the number of strategic arms MIRVs SLBMs and ICBMs That was a show of detente militarily since an expansion of nuclear ballistic arms had started to occur 18 The goal of Nixon and Kissinger was to use arms control to promote a much broader policy of detente which could then allow the resolution of other urgent problems through what Nixon called linkage David Tal argued 19 The linkage between strategic arms limitations and outstanding issues such as the Middle East Berlin and foremost Vietnam thus became central to Nixon s and Kissinger s policy of detente Through employment of linkage they hoped to change the nature and course of U S foreign policy including U S nuclear disarmament and arms control policy and to separate them from those practiced by Nixon s predecessors They also intended through linkage to make U S arms control policy part of detente His policy of linkage had in fact failed It failed mainly because it was based on flawed assumptions and false premises the foremost of which was that the Soviet Union wanted strategic arms limitation agreement much more than the United States did Apollo Soyuz handshake edit nbsp The Apollo Soyuz crew in 1975A significant example of an event contributing to detente was the handshake that took place in space In July 1975 the first Soviet American joint space flight was conducted the ASTP 20 Its primary goal was the creation of an international docking system which would allow two different spacecraft to join in orbit That would allow both crews on board to collaborate on space exploration 21 The project marked the end of the Space Race which had started in 1957 with the launch of Sputnik 1 and allowed tensions between the Americans and the Soviets to decrease significantly 22 Concurrent conflicts edit As direct relations thawed increased tensions continued between both superpowers through their proxies especially in the Third World Conflicts in South Asia and the Middle East in 1973 saw the Soviet Union and the U S backing their respective surrogates such as in Afghanistan with war material and diplomatic posturing In Latin America the U S continued to block any left wing electoral shifts in the region by supporting unpopular right wing military coups and military dictatorships Meanwhile there were also many communist or left wing guerrillas around the region which were militarily and economically backed by the Soviet Union China and Cuba citation needed During much of the early detente period the Vietnam War continued to rage Both sides still mistrusted each other and the potential for nuclear war remained constant notably during the 1973 Yom Kippur War when the U S raised its alert level to DEFCON 3 the highest since the Cuban Missile Crisis 23 Both sides continued aiming thousands of nuclear warheads atop intercontinental ballistic missiles ICBMs at each other s cities maintaining submarines with long range nuclear weapon capability submarine launched ballistic missiles or SLBMs in the world s oceans keeping hundreds of nuclear armed aircraft on constant alert and guarding contentious borders in Korea and Europe with large ground forces Espionage efforts remained a high priority and defectors reconnaissance satellites and signal intercepts measured each other s intentions to try to gain a strategic advantage citation needed Reignited tensions and the end of the first detente edit See also Team B nbsp Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan carried out in an attempt to shore up a struggling pro Soviet regime led to harsh international criticisms and a boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics held in Moscow U S president Jimmy Carter boosted the budget of the U S Department of Defense and began financial aid to the office of Pakistan president Muhammad Zia ul Haq who in turn subsidized the anti Soviet radical Islamist group of Afghan mujahideen fighters 24 Another contributing factor in the decline in the popularity of detente as a desirable U S policy was the interservice rivalry between the U S State Department and Department of Defense From 1973 to 1977 there were three secretaries worth mentioning Elliot Richardson James Schlesinger and Donald Rumsfeld Schlesinger s tenure as secretary of defense was plagued by notably poor relations with Kissinger one of the most prominent advocates of detente in the U S 25 Their poor working relationship bled into their professional relationship and policy clashes would increasingly occur They ultimately resulted in Schlesinger s dismissal in 1975 However his replacement Rumsfeld had similar issues with Kissinger although their disagreements stemmed more from domestic resistance to detente 26 As a result clashes on policy continued between the State and the Defense Departments Rumsfeld thought that Kissinger was too complacent about the growing Soviet strength Although Rumsfeld largely agreed with Kissinger s stance that the U S held military superiority over the Soviet Union he argued that Kissinger s public optimism would prevent Congress from allowing the Defense Department the funds that Rumsfeld believed were required to maintain the favorable gap between the US and the Soviets Rumsfeld responded by regularly presenting a more alarmist view of the superior strength of the Soviets citation needed In response to the stranglehold of influence by Kissinger in the Nixon and Ford administrations and the later decline in influence over foreign policy by the Department of Defense Richardson Schlesinger and Rumsfeld all used the growing antipathy in the U S for the Soviet Union to undermine Kissinger s attempts to achieve a comprehensive arms reduction treaty That helped to portray the entire notion of detente as an untenable policy 27 The 1980 U S presidential election saw Reagan elected on a platform opposed to the concessions of detente Negotiations on SALT II were abandoned as a result However during the later years of his presidency Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Gorbachev pursued a policy that was considered to be detente 28 29 However the Reagan administration talked about a winnable nuclear war and led to the creation of the Strategic Defense Initiative and the Third World policy of funding irregular and paramilitary death squads in Central America sub Saharan Africa Cambodia and Afghanistan 3 Cuban thaw editFurther information Cuban thaw nbsp Barack Obama and Raul Castro at a press conference in Havana in 2016On 17 December 2014 U S president Barack Obama and Cuba president Raul Castro resolved to restore diplomatic relations between Cuba and the U S The restoration agreement had been negotiated in secret in the preceding months The negotiations were facilitated by Pope Francis and hosted mostly by the Canadian government which had warmer relations with Cuba at that time Meetings were held in both Canada and the Vatican City 30 The agreement would see some U S travel restrictions lifted fewer restrictions on remittances greater access to the Cuban financial system for U S banks and the reopening of the U S embassy in Havana and the Cuban embassy in Washington which both closed in 1961 after the breakup of diplomatic relations as a result of Cuba s alliance with the Soviet Union 31 On 14 April 2015 the Obama administration announced the removal of Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism list 32 Cuba was officially removed from the list on 29 May 2015 On 20 July 2015 the Cuban and U S interest sections in Washington and Havana were upgraded to embassies On 20 March 2016 Obama became the first U S president to visit Cuba since Calvin Coolidge visited in 1928 33 In 2017 Donald Trump Obama s successor stated that he was canceling the Obama administration s deals with Cuba while also expressing that a new deal could be negotiated between the Cuban and U S governments 34 See also edit nbsp Look up detente in Wiktionary the free dictionary Appeasement Containment Entente alliance Peaceful coexistence Rollback Russian resetReferences edit detente traduction Dictionnaire Francais Anglais WordReference com in French Keiger 1983 pp 69 70 a b Hunt 2015 pp 269 274 The Rise and Fall of Detente Professor Branislav L Slantchev Department of Political Science University of California San Diego 2014 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 October 2014 Retrieved 22 July 2014 Nuti 2008 p 53 Ronald Reagan radio broadcast on August 7th 1978 PDF Retrieved 22 July 2014 Ronald Reagan January 29 1981 press conference Presidency ucsb edu 29 January 1981 Retrieved 22 July 2014 Detente Wanes as Soviets Quarantine Satellites from Polish Fever Washington Post 19 October 1980 Simes 1980 p page needed Cannon Lou 29 May 1988 Reagan Gorbachev Two Paths to Detente Washington Post The Cold War Heats up New Documents Reveal the Able Archer War Scare of 1983 Military History Now 20 May 2013 Grynaviski 2014 p 49 Limited or Partial Test Ban Treaty LTBT PTBT Nuclear Museum Retrieved 4 May 2023 Lapennal 1977 p 1 a b c Lapennal 1977 pp 14 15 Kissinger 1995 p page needed Rhodes 2008 p 61 Rhodes 2008 p 112 Tal 2013 pp 1091 1092 NASA Handshake in Space Nasa gov 1 March 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2018 Morgan Kellie 15 July 2015 Celebrating historic handshake in space 40 years later CNN Retrieved 30 September 2018 Samuels 2005 p 669 The Long Arm of the October War History News Network 12 September 2013 Garthoff 1985 p page needed Poole 2015 p viii Poole 2015 p 23 Poole 2015 Reagan Gorbachev two paths of Detente Washington Post Washington Post 29 May 1988 29 May 1988 Norman Podhoretz January 1984 The First Term The Reagan Road to Detente Foreign Affairs America and the World 1984 Nadeau Barbie Latza 17 December 2014 The Pope s Diplomatic Miracle Ending the U S Cuba Cold War The Daily Beast Retrieved 27 February 2023 Schwartz Felicia 20 July 2015 As Embassies Open a Further Thaw in Cuban U S ties Faces Hurdles in Congress WSJ Retrieved 27 February 2023 FACT SHEET Charting a New Course on Cuba whitehouse gov 17 December 2014 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Michaels Allison 21 March 2016 The Last Time a President Visited Cuba Was 1928 It Was a Very Big Deal Back Then Too The Washington Post Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2023 Trump rolls back parts of what he calls terrible Obama Cuba policy Reuters 16 June 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Works cited editGarthoff Raymond L 1985 Detente and Confrontation American Soviet Relations From Nixon to Reagan The Brookings Institution ISBN 978 0 8157 3044 6 Grynaviski Eric 2014 Constructive Illusions Misperceiving the Origins of International Cooperation Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 5206 2 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt1287f2s Hunt Michael 2015 The World Transformed 1945 to the Present A Documentary Reader New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 937103 7 OCLC 870439207 Keiger John F V 1983 France and the Origins of the First World War ISBN 9781349172092 Kissinger Henry 1995 Diplomacy ISBN 0 671 51099 1 OCLC 32350622 Lapennal Ivo 1977 Human Rights Soviet Theory and Practice Helsinki and International Law Eastern Press Nuti Leopoldo 2008 The Crisis of Detente in Europe Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780203887165 Poole Walter S 2015 The Decline of Detente Elliot Richardson James Schlesinger and Donald Rumsfeld 1973 1977 PDF Cold War Foreign Policy Series Special Study 7 Historical Office Office of the Secretary of Defense Rhodes Richard 2008 Arsenals of Folly The Making of the Nuclear Arms Race Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 375 71394 1 Samuels Richard J ed 2005 Encyclopedia of United States National Security Vol 1 SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 7619 2927 7 Simes Dimitri K 1980 The Death of Detente International Security 5 1 3 25 doi 10 2307 2538471 JSTOR 2538471 S2CID 154098316 Tal David 2013 Absolutes and Stages in the Making and Application of Nixon s SALT Policy Diplomatic History 37 5 1090 1116 Further reading editBell Coral 1977 The Diplomacy of Detente The Kissinger Era St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 21122 6 Bowker Mike Williams Phil 1988 Superpower Detente A Reappraisal SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 8039 8041 9 Daigle Craig 2012 The Limits of Detente The United States the Soviet Union and the Arab Israeli Conflict 1969 1973 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18334 4 Gaddis John Lewis 2006 The Cold War A New History Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 303827 6 Garthoff Raymond L 1994 Detente and Confrontation American Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan revised ed Washington D C Brookings Institution Press ISBN 0 8157 3041 1 Hanhimaki Jussi 2013 The Rise and Fall of Detente American Foreign Policy and the Transformation of the Cold War Washington D C Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 59797 076 1 Jackson Galen 2020 Who Killed Detente The Superpowers and the Cold War in the Middle East 1969 77 International Security MIT Press Journals 44 3 129 162 doi 10 1162 isec a 00369 ISSN 0162 2889 S2CID 209892087 Litwak Robert S 1986 Detente and the Nixon Doctrine American Foreign Policy and the Pursuit of Stability 1969 1976 CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 33834 9 McAdams A James 19 December 1985 East Germany and Detente Building Authority After the Wall Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26835 6 Suri Jeremi 2003 Power and Protest Global Revolution and the Rise of Detente Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01031 4 Sarotte M E 2001 Dealing with the Devil East Germany Detente and Ostpolitik 1969 1973 Univ of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4915 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Detente amp oldid 1207297987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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