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American Eagle vs Russian Bear: The Inevitable Conflict
Indigo
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American Eagle vs Russian Bear: The Inevitable Conflict
By None
Current price: $13.56


By None
American Eagle vs Russian Bear: The Inevitable Conflict
Current price: $13.56
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
For most of the Cold War, a direct war between America and Russia belonged to war rooms and nightmare scenarios, held back by the knowledge that both sides could end the world. This book begins where that restraint starts to fail, tracing how an unlikely friendship hardened into a century of suspicion, broken expectations, and strategic hostility. What follows feels less like abstract theory than a slow march toward the point where history and force collide.
The story reaches far beyond the familiar Cold War set pieces. It digs into forgotten clashes, private calculations, and unresolved grievances that shaped how Washington and Moscow learned to read each other in the worst possible light. Old bargains, buried resentments, and post-Soviet ambitions return with new force, giving the present crisis a longer and more dangerous backstory than most readers realize.
Then the focus shifts from memory to mechanics. Doctrine, logistics, geography, space, cyberwarfare, and political nerve matter as much as missiles, and every scenario carries the risk that one bad decision could outrun the people making it. The deeper the analysis goes, the clearer it becomes that modern war is not just fought on maps but in systems, nerves, and seconds.
What emerges is larger than a duel between two states. A conflict on this scale would rip through trade, energy, finance, and food, leaving no safe distance and no true spectators. This is history written at the edge of catastrophe, where the past is still alive and peace looks far more fragile than it did a generation ago.
For most of the Cold War, a direct war between America and Russia belonged to war rooms and nightmare scenarios, held back by the knowledge that both sides could end the world. This book begins where that restraint starts to fail, tracing how an unlikely friendship hardened into a century of suspicion, broken expectations, and strategic hostility. What follows feels less like abstract theory than a slow march toward the point where history and force collide.
The story reaches far beyond the familiar Cold War set pieces. It digs into forgotten clashes, private calculations, and unresolved grievances that shaped how Washington and Moscow learned to read each other in the worst possible light. Old bargains, buried resentments, and post-Soviet ambitions return with new force, giving the present crisis a longer and more dangerous backstory than most readers realize.
Then the focus shifts from memory to mechanics. Doctrine, logistics, geography, space, cyberwarfare, and political nerve matter as much as missiles, and every scenario carries the risk that one bad decision could outrun the people making it. The deeper the analysis goes, the clearer it becomes that modern war is not just fought on maps but in systems, nerves, and seconds.
What emerges is larger than a duel between two states. A conflict on this scale would rip through trade, energy, finance, and food, leaving no safe distance and no true spectators. This is history written at the edge of catastrophe, where the past is still alive and peace looks far more fragile than it did a generation ago.


















