|
|
|
|
|
by Emma_Goldman
2643 days ago
|
|
It has been the historical norm for great power's to exert control over a sphere of influence. That is exactly what the United States did in the 19th century in the Western hemisphere through the Monroe Doctrine. The cases you raise fall into that category. In fact there is an obvious parallel between the USSR's attempt to gain access to the Turkish Straits and the United State's repeated interventions to build and control the Panama Canal. The only difference is that while the United States was able to dominate its sphere of influence, the Soviet Union's attempt to intimidate Turkey failed. Instead of gaining access to a vital strategic waterway, it led to the Truman Doctrine. Don't forget that one of the pivotal events of the Cold War - the Cuban missile crisis - was based on the same asymmetry. The United States had Jupiter missiles in Italy and Turkey, but would not accept Soviet missiles in Cuba, a country that it had tried and failed to invade. Before the end of the Second World War the United States had set its sights on something far more ambitious than a regional sphere of interest: global primacy. The Soviet Union never had the capability to do that, or considered it a realistic goal. It was bunkered in a traditional land empire. When I say that the Soviet Union was on the 'defensive', I mean that in the context of its bipolar confrontation with the United States, not that it never engaged in aggression. Obviously it did, often brutally. |
|