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Between the end of the Second World War and the dissolution of the USSR in 1991 the Cold War never reached flashpoint, but the struggle between the communist and capitalist superpowers dominated military thinking and pervaded civilian life. Norman Friedman presents an illustrated narrative of those 46 years, from the Berlin Airlift to the collapse of Communism, while facsimiles of propaganda, secret memoranda and other documents evoke the realities of living in what John F Kennedy called 'the thermonuclear age'.
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