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In October 2015, US President Barack Obama said that America would not turn Syria into
a proxy war with Russia. However, many have said that this has already happened, as the
US previously aided Syrian rebels against the Russian-supported Assad regime. Proxy
Wars between the US and Russia have been an active part of their long and turbulent history.
So, why do the US and Russia fight so many proxy wars?
The US and Russia have been at odds since the early 20th Century. The newly formed USSR
espoused a left leaning communist ideology, while the US flourished under capitalist policy.
This East vs West dichotomy led to both countries trying to sway vulnerable nations to their
side after World War II. On several occasions, the US attempted this by instituting pro-US
governments, while the USSR pushed for communist revolutions, not unlike their own.
Their first proxy war is considered the Chinese Civil War in 1945. The Soviets supported the
Communist government that would eventually overtake mainland China. Meanwhile, the US
only recognized the original Republic of China during and for a time after the war. In rapid
succession, further conflicts like the 1946 First Indochina War, saw the US quickly bolster
an effort to oppose Communist revolutions in Southeast Asia. In many cases, these were
predominantly supported, financed, and armed by the Soviet Union. The result was that guerrilla
groups and struggling governments, which had been fighting with outdated equipment, were
suddenly backed by modern weaponry, as both the US and the Soviet Union worked to overpower
the opposing side. The US’s efforts to prevent the further spread of communism around the
world was called “Containment”. However, communist revolutions in Cuba and Laos during
the 1950s showed that the USSR was powerful enough to affect ideological change from across
the globe.
One of the most important, and dirty, proxy wars occurred during the 1980s and 90s. Nicaragua’s
US-founded dictatorship was overthrown by left-leaning revolutionaries, the Sandinistas.
The new government was intrinsically aligned with the Soviet Union, and represented a very
regional threat to the United States. In an attempt to stem the tide of socialism in Central
America, the CIA funded and trained terrorist rebel groups known as the Contras, to overthrow
the Sandinistas. To fund the war, the Reagan Administration secretly sold weapons to Iran,
and assisted in the trade of cocaine. Meanwhile the Soviet Union sent a huge amount of money
and weapons to the Sandinistas to undermine the US.
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, Russia aligned itself with a number of Arab
states. Although a brief period of time in the 1940s saw the USSR support Israel, as
the Jewish state grew closer to the US, Russia quickly reversed course. By the end of the
Cold War, not only were most Arab states supported by Russia, but the Soviet Union itself was
rife with institutional anti-semitism.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia and the US have come closer in geopolitical
goals. However, in an effort to establish themselves as world superpowers, each has
continued bolstering allies to their own interests. Although the conflict in Syria may not yet
be considered a proxy war, the two countries’ indirect rivalry has already destabilized
much of the world.
The recent increase in tensions between Russia and the United States has many asking if they
might be on the brink of a new Cold War. To learn more, check out this video. Thanks for
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