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groups and struggling governments, which had been fighting with outdated equipment, were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