THIS DAY IN HISTORY - 3 DEC
1989
Bush and Gorbachev suggest Cold War is coming to an end
Meeting off the coast of Malta, President George Bush and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev issue statements strongly suggesting
that the long-standing animosities at the core of the Cold War might be
coming to an end. Commentators in both the United States and Russia
went farther and declared that the Cold War was over.
The talks
were part of the first-ever summit held between the two leaders. Bush
and his advisers were cautiously optimistic about the summit, eager to
follow up on the steps toward arms control taken by the preceding Reagan
administration. Gorbachev was quite vocal about his desire for better
relations with the United States so that he could pursue his domestic
reform agenda and was more effusive in his declarations that the talks
marked an important first step toward ending the Cold War. The Russian
leader stated, “The characteristics of the Cold War should be
abandoned.” He went on to suggest that, “The arms race, mistrust,
psychological and ideological struggle, all those should be things of
the past.” Bush was somewhat more restrained in his statement: “With
reform underway in the Soviet Union, we stand at the threshold of a
brand-new era of U.S.-Soviet relations. It is within our grasp to
contribute each in our own way to overcoming the division of Europe and
ending the military confrontation there.”
Despite the positive spin of the rhetoric, though, little of
substance was accomplished during the summit. Both sides agreed to work
toward a treaty dealing with long-range nuclear weapons and
conventional arms in 1990. Gorbachev and Bush also agreed that another
summit would take place in June 1990, in Washington, D.C.
No comments:
Post a Comment