Detente

Description

Pg34
Adam Collinge
Flashcards by Adam Collinge, updated more than 1 year ago
Adam Collinge
Created by Adam Collinge over 10 years ago
29
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
When was the outer space treaty and what did it mean? 1967, no missiles in outer space
When was the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and what did it mean? 1968, An agreement to stop the spread of nuclear weapons
How would the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty be put into effect? 1) Countries with nuclear weapons would not help other countries get them too 2) Countries without nuclear weapons would not try to get them 3) Countries with nuclear weapons agreed to talk about disarmament
In 1968, which countries had nuclear wepons? USA, USSR, UK, France and China
When was SALT and what did it mean? 1972, Superpowers agreed to limit the number of nuclear weapons they had
What four actions would help ensure SALT was carried out? 1) No further production of short range missiles 2) No increase in number of intercontinental missiles 3) No new nuclear missile launchers (although new ones could replace old ones) 4) The Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty limited both sides to two ABM deployment areas
What four things were discussed at the 1975 Helsinki Conference? 1)security issues 2)co-operation 3) human rights 4)boarders
What were the limitations to the detente? The Superpowers still had thousands of nuclear weapons targeted on each other and still wanted a sphere of influence in other countries
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Weimar Revision
Tom Mitchell
Hitler and the Nazi Party (1919-23)
Adam Collinge
History of Medicine: Ancient Ideas
James McConnell
GCSE History – Social Impact of the Nazi State in 1945
Ben C
Conferences of the Cold War
Alina A
Bay of Pigs Invasion : April 1961
Alina A
The Berlin Crisis
Alina A
OCR GCSE History-Paper Two: The Liberal Reforms 1906-14 Poverty to Welfare State NEW FOR 2015!!!
I Turner
American West - Key Dates
Rachel I-J
The Rise of the Nazis
absterps18
Weimar Germany 1919: The Spartacists and the constitution
Chris Clayton