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         Cold War:     more books (100)
  1. Battleground Berlin: CIA vs. KGB in the Cold War by David E. Murphy, Sergei A. Kondrashev, et all 1999-04-10
  2. Ending the Cold War: Interpretations, Causation, and the Study of International Relations (New Visions in Security)
  3. Who Paid the Piper?: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War by Frances Stonor Saunders, 1999-01
  4. The Arab Cold War: Gamal 'Abd Al-Nasir and His Rivals, 1958-1970 (Galaxy Books) by Malcolm H. Kerr, 1971-08
  5. The Cold War: The Essential Readings (Blackwell Essential Readings in History)
  6. Beyond the Cold War: Soviet and American Media Images
  7. Universities and Empire: Money and Politics in the Social Sciences during the Cold War
  8. Military Intervention after the Cold War: The Evolution of Theory and Practice (Ohio RIS Global Series) by Andrea Kathryn Talentino, 2006-02-15
  9. The New Cold War?Religious Nationalism Confronts the Secular State (Comparative Studies in Religion and Society, No 5) by Mark Juergensmeyer, 1994-02-23
  10. Cold War in the Working Class: The Rise and Decline of the United Electrical Workers (Suny Series in American Labor History) by Ronald L. Filippelli, Mark McColloch, 1995-01
  11. Predator: Cold War (Dark Horse Collection.) by Mark Verheiden, Ron Randall, et all 1993-05
  12. Cold War: The Amazing Canada-Soviet Hockey Series of 1972 by Roy MacSkimming, 1997-09
  13. Cold War on the Campus: Academic Freedom at the University of Washington, 1946-64 by Jane Sanders, 1979-06
  14. Cold War on Campus: A Study of the Politics of Organizational Control by Lionel Lewis, 1989-01-01

101. Cold War Through Desert Storm
NARA ALIC Military Resources The cold war and the Marshall Plan For more on the Atomic bomb and the cold war, drop by my 20th Century America page.
http://www.teacheroz.com/coldwar.htm
COLD WAR - KOREA - VIETNAM - GULF WAR - OPERATION ENDURING FREEDOM - WAR IN IRAQ (Operation Iraqi Freedom) Updated March 12, 2004 COLD WAR
TIMELINE: Cold War

TIMELINE: Cold War Spies and Espionage

TIMELINE: Nuclear Age

TIMELINE: NUCLEAR WEAPONS
...
Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb Folders
- from the Truman Presidential Library. For more on Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and the Manhattan Project, check out my page.
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS: Nuclear Weapons

PRIMARY DOCUMENTS: Bay of Pigs Invasion and the Cuban Missile Crisis

PRIMARY SOURCES: The U-2 Incident 1960

National Security Archive: COLD WAR: Documents
...
Operation Peter Pan Wasn't Political
And, the resulting Cuba Campaign: History of the U.S. Blockade of Cuba . For more info, visit the John F. Kennedy sites on my Presidents page. Cold War Links on the Internet Civil Defense: You Duck and I'll Cover VIDEO: "Duck and Cover" Kipp Teague's RetroWeb - Civil Defense ... BiW: The Berlin Wall - For more info on the Berlin Wall, check out the section on Germany on my Western Civilization page. Cold War! Cool Jet Fighters and Perrin Air Force Base!

102. Cold War: Cuban Missile Crisis
According to Nikita Khrushchev's memoirs, in May 1962 he conceived the idea of placing intermediaterange nuclear missiles in Cuba as a means of countering an emerging lead of the United States in developing and deploying strategic missiles.
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/archives/colc.html
Revelations from the Russian Archives
COLD WAR: CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS
According to Nikita Khrushchev's memoirs, in May 1962 he conceived the idea of placing intermediate-range nuclear missiles in Cuba as a means of countering an emerging lead of the United States in developing and deploying strategic missiles. He also presented the scheme as a means of protecting Cuba from another United States-sponsored invasion, such as the failed attempt at the Bay of Pigs in 1961. After obtaining Fidel Castro's approval, the Soviet Union worked quickly and secretly to build missile installations in Cuba. On October 16, President John Kennedy was shown reconnaissance photographs of Soviet missile installations under construction in Cuba. After seven days of guarded and intense debate in the United States administration, during which Soviet diplomats denied that installations for offensive missiles were being built in Cuba, President Kennedy, in a televised address on October 22, announced the discovery of the installations and proclaimed that any nuclear missile attack from Cuba would be regarded as an attack by the Soviet Union and would be responded to accordingly. He also imposed a naval quarantine on Cuba to prevent further Soviet shipments of offensive military weapons from arriving there. Kruschev letter to President Kennedy Translation of letter Go to the Next Section of the Soviet Archives exhibit Return to the Table of contents for the Soviet Archives exhibit Go to the Library of Congress Home Page Library of Congress

103. IngentaConnect Publication: Journal Of Cold War Studies
Italy and the cold war; Number 2, 31 March 2002 Number 1, 25 January 2002 Culture, the Soviet Union, and the cold war; Volume 3; Number 3, 1 November 2001
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/1520-3972

104. Korea-Cold War Families Of The Missing
Family organization for Koreancold war Prisoners of War and Missing in Action.
http://www.koreacoldwar.org/
Families United in a Search for Truth, Dignity, Acknowledgment and Closure
We are the families... sisters, brothers, nieces, nephews, sons and daughters. Of the men who went to war and have yet to return, or be accounted-for... Prisoners of War and Missing In Action. We represent those who served in the Forgotten War - Korea, and the Unacknowledged War - Cold War Era. We are united as one in a search for answers, truth, acknowledgment and closure.
We invite you to join us, learn about the issue and about us and what you can do to help us resolve the issue called 'the highest national priority.'
FAMILY OUTREACH REMINDER: 2005 Schedule
JUNE 5th, 2005
NK Hits Back Over Troop Remains - Will "Totally Dismantle" Recovery Effort

SEOUL, South Korea (CNN) North Korea has said it will "totally dismantle" efforts to recover the remains of U.S. troops missing since the 1950-53 Korean War.
The decision comes one week after Washington said it would temporarily halt the missions.
"The rude action taken by the present U.S. administration has totally blocked the way of confirming the identification of more than 8,000 U.S. soldiers reported missing in action during the Korean war," a statement from a spokesman of the Korean People's Army in the border city of Panmunjom said.
The statement accused Washington of unilaterally reneging on the bilateral arrangement, and added "the U.S. remains buried in Korea can never be recovered but are bound to be reduced to earth with the flow of time."

105. WebQuest Cold War
The cold war is defined as tensions between the United States and Soviet Union The cold war put the world close to the brink of extinction on more than
http://coe.west.asu.edu/students/bmorris/webquestcoldwar.htm
Home Track Student Use Policy ... Parents Info
WebQuest for World History
WebQuest Cold War Introduction to Cold War The Cold War is defined as tensions between the United States and Soviet Union from 1947 - 1990 Definition of Task You and your group members will be assigned one of the topics below to research. As a group you will: - Produce a multimedia presentation for the class. - Produce a Newspaper Process Establish roles for each member - Your group (writer, illustrator, editor, researcher). - You may combine and share roles if necessary. What years each team will cover. Which specific years your team will report on. Research the Internet and resources for information related to the Cold War - Use the provided links, to gather information PROJECT EVALUATION 1. Did you cover the major events of your assigned time period? 2. Is your project written clearly and concisely? 3. Is your work supported by accurate research? 4. Does your project have illustrations? 5. Does your multimedia project follow the project criteria? Evaluation - Multimedia Rubric Research Rubric Conclusion The Cold War put the world close to the brink of extinction on more than one occasion. People around the world knew that it all could come to an end with a blinding flash of light. Hundreds of thousands of lives were lost trying to protect national interests, even though the two sides did not "directly" fight.

106. Eisenhower: The Cold War--U.S. History Lesson Plan (grades 9-12)--DiscoverySchoo
Students learn that press conferences with politicians can be adversarial. Reporters may skew the news by playing up certain parts of a news conference and
http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/eisenhower-coldwar/
postionList = "compscreen,hedthick,admedia,tower,nuiad,interstitial"; OAS_RICH("interstitial"); OAS_RICH("admedia");
Grades K-5
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Astronomy/Space
... Health History
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U.S. History World History Life Science Animals Ecology Human Body The Microscopic World ... Weather
9-12 > U.S. History Grade level: 9-12 Subject: U.S. History Duration: Two class periods
Objectives
Materials Procedures Adaptations ... Credit
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Find a video description, video clip, and discussion questions.
Eisenhower: The Cold War

Use our free online Teaching Tools to create custom worksheets, puzzles and quizzes on this topic!
Students will understand the following: Press conferences with politicians can be adversarial. Reporters may skew the news by playing up certain parts of a news conference and playing down other parts. Materials For this lesson, you will need: Access to reference materials about the United States during the Eisenhower years Computer with Internet access Procedures Most of the students will act as reporters from a wide variety of newspapers and magazines or journals that were published in the 1950s, but assign some students to the following roles:
  • President Dwight D. Eisenhower

107. 26) Nike Missiles At Fort Tilden
An important coastal defence facility during two world wars, Fort Tilden became home to Nike Ajax and Hercules air defense missiles during the cold war.
http://www.geocities.com/fort_tilden/nike.html
26) Nike Missiles at Fort Tilden
Updated: October 23, 2000 Fort Tilden was the home of both Nike Ajax, and later, Nike Hercules missiles.
Nike Ajax:
Nike Ajax Missile
(US Army Photo)

The first operational Nike Ajax unit was the 36th Anti-Aircraft Artillery (AAA) Missile Battalion at Fort Meade, MD, in December of 1953.
The Nike missile site at Fort Tilden was designated NY-49. The site was shown to the media, and on the following day, March 1,1956, the New York Herald Tribune reported that Brig. General Charles B. Duff was the commander of the 52nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade, in charge of the anti-aircraft defense of the New York-New Jersey area. The tour of the Nike facility at Fort Tilden was conducted by Lt. Col. Mathew E. Chotas of the 505th AAA Missile Battalion.
The numerous Nike sites were coordinated by an Army Air Defense Command Post (AADCP) operating the "Missile Master" or "Battery Integration and Radar Display Equipment" (BIRDIE) system to ensure that only one battery engaged a target and that friendly aircraft were not targeted. Missile Master could up to 24 batteries, while BIRDIE could handle up to 16 batteries.
On July 4, 1960, the New York area Missile Master was activated and manned by personnel from the 52nd Air Defense Artillery Brigade (formerly stationed at Fort Wadsworth in Staten Island, NY). This Missile Master facility was located at the Highlands Air Force Station along with the U.S. Air Force 646th Radar Squadron. The 646th was a component of the

108. Cold War
cold war, term used to describe the shifting struggle for power and prestige cold war HISTORIOGRAPHY NEW EVIDENCE BEHIND TRADITIONAL TYPOGRAPHIES.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0812840.html
in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Daily Almanac for
Sep 20, 2005

109. USS Robert E. Lee (SSBN-601)
Nuclear powered Polaris submarine of the cold war era.
http://www.ssbn601.com/
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

110. Lecture 14: The Origins Of The Cold War
A fulltext lecture that discusses the origins of the cold war in the years immediately following World War Two.
http://www.historyguide.org/europe/lecture14.html
Lecture 14
The Origins of the Cold War
There are now two great nations in the world, which starting from different points, seem to be advancing toward the same goal: the Russians and the Anglo-Americans. . . . Each seems called by some secret design of Providence one day to hold in its hands the destinies of half the world. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America THEY made it, of course; they drew the iron curtain across the middle of Europe, partly to stop us looking in, partly to stop their own poor wretches looking out enviously at the boundless goods and comforts on our side. Behind the iron curtain were the hapless peoples held captive by the grim-faced Russians and their stooges in office in the satellites; in front of it were ourselves, expressing sympathy for the captives but apologetically remaining very thoroughly armed, in however subdued a way. Fred Inglis, The Cruel Peace: Everyday Life and the Cold War The origins of the cold war are not really that difficult to uncover. Nor are these origins that complex. Here in the west we have the tendency not unusual, I suppose to place the entire responsibility of the cold war upon the shoulders of the Soviet Union. And so, there have been a few events which have shaped this response. For instance, when Mother Russia overthrew its tsar, made a revolution , became the Soviet Union, unified itself under Lenin and created an ideological structure called communism, the United States could only react with fear and trepidation. The government could not accept the simple fact that a country could exist with economic and political principles so critically opposed to democracy and industrial capitalism.

111. CNN.com - US - Missile Silo Implosion Buries Icon Of The Cold War - July 5, 2000
CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/07/05/silo.implosion.01/index.html
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TOP STORIES Thousands dead in India; quake toll rapidly rising Davos protesters confront police California readies for weekend of power scrounging Capriati upsets Hingis to win Australian Open ... MORE MARKETS 4:30pm ET, 4/16 DJIA NAS SPORTS Jordan says farewell for the third time ... LOCAL EDITIONS: CNN.com Europe change default edition MULTIMEDIA: video video archive audio multimedia showcase ... more services E-MAIL: Subscribe to one of our news e-mail lists Enter your address: DISCUSSION: chat feedback CNN WEB SITES: CNNfyi.com CNN.com Europe AsiaNow Spanish ... Korean Headlines TIME INC. SITES: Go To ... Time.com People Money Fortune EW CNN NETWORKS: CNN anchors transcripts Turner distribution SITE INFO: help contents search ad info ... jobs WEB SERVICES:
Missile silo implosion buries icon of the Cold War
Munitions experts ignited a blast Wednesday that took only seconds to destroy the missile silo July 5, 2000

112. H102 Lecture 23: The Coils Of Cold War
This lecture traces how the cold war transformed antiCommunism from a right-wing to So important that we named Lecture 24 The cold war and the 1950s.
http://us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/lectures/lecture23.html
Stanley K. Schultz, Professor of History
William P. Tishler, Producer
Lecture 23
The Coils of Cold War
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the United States took a turn to the economic and political right. Nothing demonstrated this shift more than the Second Red Scare. The trials, denouncements, black lists, and paranoia about Communism in the Second Red Scare showed the domestic face of the Cold Warthe international struggle between the Soviet Union and the United States for world dominance. This lecture traces how the Cold War transformed anti-Communism from a right-wing to a mainstream ideology. Some questions to keep in mind:
  • Compare and contrast the development of political ideologies in the post-WWII era to those of the Depression era, concentrating on the attitudes of Americans toward Communism. Compare the events, justifications, and results of the Second Red Scare to those of the First Red Scare. Who supported Joe McCarthy and why? Compare the competing American and Soviet visions for the post-war world in 1945. How did these opposing ideas lead to a "cold war?" Compare the foreign policy goals of the Truman administration with those of Woodrow Wilson's administration.
  • 113. Cold War Culture: The Nuclear Fear Of The 1950s And 1960s - Conflict And War - C
    With superpowers in the east and west testing powerful new weapons, the Canadian race for selfpreservation took off in the early 1950s.
    http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-71-274/conflict_war/cold_war/
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    With superpowers in the east and west testing powerful new weapons, the Canadian race for self-preservation took off in the early 1950s. The rising of the Iron Curtain intensified the threat of mass destruction, as communication between the Americans and Soviets came to a screeching halt. In this volatile new world, Canadians fretted about fallout shelters and the government prepared to go underground.
    Educational activities about

    Cold War Culture: The Nuclear Fear of the 1950s and 1960s
    From Einstein to the A-bomb: Early Milestones Calgary evacuates: Operation Lifesaver ... Bomb shelters for sale
    The air raid sirens hum loudly, shelters are erected, and the general public is busy learning the art of "duck and cover." (TV; runs 7:27)
    At 10:50 a.m., Calgary's mayor throws the switch to evacuate the city. Preparation and planning is the key to survival. (TV; runs 10:15)
    Wanna buy a bomb shelter? People start shopping for their own personal refuges. (Radio; runs 4:57)

    114. Strategic Forum No. 181
    A study about the required postcold war military transformation which takes into account the changing nature of war and the experiences of past conflicts. By Anthony C. Zinni, Strategic Forum, US National Defense University, July 2001.
    http://www.ndu.edu/inss/strforum/SF181/sf181.htm
    A Military for the 21st Century: Lessons from the Recent Past Anthony C. Zinni Key Points The post-Cold War world environment has complicated rather than simplified the missions, strategy, and organization of the Armed Forces. Rapid downsizing after the fall of the Soviet Union and the Allied victory in the Persian Gulf War left a military lacking strategic direction, a thoughtful force structure, and a logical threat upon which to base future force structure. This environment will not permit the luxury of a strategic pause. Allowing the new world order to arrange itself could present the Nation with an unforeseen threat that it cannot handle. To prevent such an eventuality, the military must address several challenges: the number of nontraditional threats, financing a military capable of meeting all the potential challenges it may face, the need to reform itself to handle rapid developments in technology, and interagency reform in coordination with military reform so that the full weight of national power can be brought to bear against adversaries. A deliberate process of military transformation must account for the need for public support, which is essential for such a process to succeed. Transformation would encompass several areas: developing a realistic strategic direction; reviewing personnel recruitment and retention; understanding the implications of joint and combined warfare for organization, structure, core competencies, and operational concepts; revamping national security advisory and decisionmaking processes; and assessing the effects of technological and social changes on the military.

    115. WWW-VL: History: United States: US Cold War History: Soviet Union, China, Korea
    cold war Bibliography part of the cold war Science and Technology Studies Program cold war International History Project (CWIHP) (at the Woodrow Wilson
    http://gpweb.us/VLColdWarIndex.htm
    WWW-VL HISTORY: THE COLD WAR HISTORY 1945-1991
    Click here for
    The World-Wide Web Virtual Library (WWW-VL) Central Catalogue WWW-VL: History: W3 Search Engines: http://vlib.iue.it/history/search/index.html RETURN TO WWW-VL: HISTORY: UNITED STATES INDEX GO TO: Bi bli ograph y ...
    Topics
    Go to the year: 1990's

    116. Cold War: Postwar Estrangement
    Joseph Stalin deepened the estrangement between the United States and the Soviet Union when he asserted in 1946 that World War II was an unavoidable and inevitable consequence of capitalist imperialism and implied that such a war might reoccur.
    http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/archives/colp.html
    Revelations from the Russian Archives
    COLD WAR: POSTWAR ESTRANGEMENT
    The Western democracies and the Soviet Union discussed the progress of World War II and the nature of the postwar settlement at conferences in Tehran (1943), Yalta (February 1945), and Potsdam (July-August 1945). Stalin at Potsdam Joseph Stalin (right center, rear in white uniform) listens in on the discussions at the Potsdam Conference in 1945 following the German surrender. The conference was to determine the four-power partition of Germany and the future of Eastern Europe. To Stalin's right is the Soviet foreign minister, Vyachevslav Molotov. After the war, disputes between the Soviet Union and the Western democracies, particularly over the Soviet takeover of East European states, led Winston Churchill to warn in 1946 that an "iron curtain" was descending through the middle of Europe. For his part, Joseph Stalin deepened the estrangement between the United States and the Soviet Union when he asserted in 1946 that World War II was an unavoidable and inevitable consequence of "capitalist imperialism" and implied that such a war might reoccur. The Cold War was a period of East-West competition, tension, and conflict short of full-scale war, characterized by mutual perceptions of hostile intention between military-political alliances or blocs. There were real wars, sometimes called "proxy wars" because they were fought by Soviet allies rather than the USSR itself along with competition for influence in the Third World, and a major superpower arms race.

    117. DreamCatcher Games
    cold war follows the story of a freelance journalist who finds himself in the midst of an international conspiracy that aims to control the USSR Twelve
    http://www.dreamcatchergames.com/dci/cold_war/
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    COLD WAR
    ESRB Rating / Requirements: To Be Announced
    Description: Cold War follows the story of a freelance journalist who finds himself in the midst of an international conspiracy that aims to control the U.S.S.R. Twelve hours after arriving in Moscow for a routine story, he has been stripped of all possessions, beaten unconscious and thrown into the KGB's political prison. Using only recovered weapons and improvised gadgets, he must now evade or overcome elite Soviet forces and defeat the conspiracy before he is sent to a Siberian prison camp or killed. Also available for More Information Features:
    • Powerful and widely-recognized setting - mid-1980's U.S.S.R.

    118. Ac.acusd.edu/History/20th/coldwar0.html
    cold war (Xbox)cold war for Xbox. cold war Xbox Reviews, cold war Xbox Cheats, cold war Xbox Movies, cold war Xbox Screenshots, cold war Xbox Downloads, cold war Xbox News
    http://ac.acusd.edu/History/20th/coldwar0.html

    119. Site SF-88
    Volunteers restore a former Nike missile site and create a public museum on the role of the rocket during the cold war. Includes photos, videos, and related links.
    http://www.nikemissile.org/
    THE NIKE HISTORICAL SOCIETY PRESENTS NIKEMISSILE.ORG THE NIKE MISSILE SYSTEM 2005 Reunion/Picnic THE NIKE HISTORICAL SOCIETY SIGN OUR GUESTBOOK NIKE AJAX ... 2nd BATTALION. 52ND ARTY IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN HAVING YOUR WEB SITE ADDED AS A LINK, PLEASE CONTACT THE WEBMASTER.
    Click on "Links" to see our newest Nike partner.
    Please send your Nike Site web page info to webmaster@nikemissile.org to add your site.
    The Nike Historical Society Needs YOU! BECOME A MEMBER Send your TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATIONS to: Nike Historical Society
    879 Walnut Street
    Alameda, CA
    Proceeds go to fund restoration projects at Nike Site Museums across the good ole' U.S. of A.. Please send your questions about the Nike System to the Site historian at:
    historian@nikemissile.org Number of visitors since January, 1997
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    Contact the WEBMASTER

    120. US Military Operations
    cold war Era Operations. Locale. Dates. US Forces cold war, Worldwide, 28 Feb 1946, 25 Dec 1991. Chinese Civil War, China, 1945, 1947
    http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/coldwar-ops.htm
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    Military
    Cold War Era Operations
    Locale
    Dates
    US Forces
    Classic Resolve Philippines Nov 1989 Dec 1989 Hawkeye St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands 20 Sep 1989 17 Nov 1989 Nimrod Dancer
    JUST CAUSE

    Promote Liberty
    Panama May 1989
    20 Dec 1989
    31 Jan 1990 20 Dec 1989
    31 Jan 1990
    ERNEST WILL

    PRAYING MANTIS
    Persian Gulf 24 Jul 1987
    17 Apr 1988 02 Aug 1990
    19 Apr 1988 Blast Furnace Bolivia Jul 1986 Nov 1986 EL DORADO CANYON Libya 12 Apr 1986 17 Apr 1986 Attain Document Libya 26 Jan 1986 29 Mar 1986 Achille Lauro Mediteranean 07 Oct 1985 11 Oct 1985 Intense Look Red Sea / Gulf of Suez Jul 1984 Jul 1984 URGENT FURY Grenada 23 Oct 1983 21 Nov 1983 Arid Farmer Chad / Sudan Aug 1983 Aug 1983 Early Call Egypt / Sudan 18 Mar 1983 Aug 1983 US Multinational Force [USMNF] Lebanon 25 Aug 1982 01 Dec 1987 Bright Star Egypt 06 Oct 1981 Nov 1981 Gulf of Sidra Libya / Mediterranean 18 Aug 1981 18 Aug 1981 RMT (Rocky Mountain Transfer) Colorado Aug 1981 Sep 1981 Central America El Salvador / Nicaragua 01 Jan 1981 01 Feb 1992 Creek Sentry Poland Dec 1980 SETCON II Colorado May 1980 Jun 1980 EAGLE CLAW / Evening Light / Desert One Iran 25 Apr 1980 Mariel Boatlift Cuba 15 Apr 1980 31 Oct 1980 ROK Park Succession Crisis Korea 26 Oct 1979 28 Jun 1980 Elf One Saudi Arabia Mar 1979 15 Apr 1989

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