How did Ronald Reagan’s foreign policy affect the Cold War?

> CHRONOLOGY

1983
  • Terrorist bomb kills 241 U.S. Marines in Beruit, Lebanon.

1986
  • Iran-Contra scandal uncovered.

1987
  • Intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) agreement signed.

Reagan accelerated Carter’s arms buildup and harshly censured the Soviet Union, calling it “an evil empire.” Yet despite the new aggressiveness—or, as some argued, because of it—Reagan presided over the most impressive thaw in superpower conflict since the Cold War had begun. On the periphery of the Cold War, Reagan practiced militant anticommunism, assisting anti-leftist movements in Asia, Africa, and Central America and dispatching troops to the Middle East and the Caribbean.