United States and Russia After the Cold War
After taking oath of office in January 1989, President George H. Bush was determined to strengthen the new found relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union. His administration reviewed the United States policy towards the countries of the Eastern bloc. In 1991, he met president Mikhail Gorbachev of Russia in Moscow to sign the Second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START II) between the two countries. The two countries agreed to ratify the treaty and developed a framework through the third Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (Miasnikov, 2000). The negotiations were initiated in 1997 by presidents Bill Clinton and Boris Yelstin in Helsinki, but ended prematurely leaving the treaty unsigned. In 2002, President Vladimir Putin and his United States counterpart George W. Bush signed the Moscow Treaty, a nuclear disarmament treaty that saw the two countries agree to reduce their deployed operational war heads between 1700 and 2000.
In 1994, the United States and Russia announced a joint mission to the space. According to Wenger & Zimmerman (2003), the first Russian aboard the United States space shuttle was Sergei Krikalev. Subsequently, they engaged in more than 10 joint space missions between 1994 and 2000.
In 2010, despite raising controversy in Russia's political scene, United States of America's soldiers took part in the Moscow Victory Day parade alongside other European at the Red Square (Loiko, 2010). This was the first time U.S. soldiers got involved in the Moscow ceremony.
Relationship between the United States and Russia
Twenty years after ceasing of the cold war, Russia and the United States of America have had favorable opportunities to renew close ties with each other. The United States of America and Russia are closely working...
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