Saturday, April 16, 2016

How A U.S.-Soviet World War Would Have Played Out In Asia

Image: University of Texas

Robert Farley, National Interest: If World War III Erupted in Asia

How a U.S.-Soviet clash would have played out, based on Washington's war games.

Nearly every analyst during the Cold War agreed that, if Moscow and Washington could keep the nukes from flying, the Central Front in Europe would prove decisive in war between the United States and the Soviet Union. The NATO alliance protected the Western European allies of the United States from Soviet aggression, while the Warsaw Pact provided the USSR with its own buffer against Germany.

But when the Cold War really went hot, the fighting took place in Asia. In Korea and Vietnam, the Soviet Union waged proxy struggles against the United States, and both sides used every tool available to control the destiny of China. However, while few believed that the Pacific theater would determine the victor of World War III, both the United States and Soviet Union needed to prepare for the eventuality of war there.

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WNU Editor: An interesting perspective on a history that fortunately never came to past.

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