During the Cold War, much of the policy and the infrastructure of the Western world and the
Eastern Bloc had revolved around the
capitalist and
communist ideologies, respectively, and the possibility of a
nuclear warfare. The end of the Cold War and the fall of the
Soviet Union caused profound changes in nearly every society in the world. It enabled renewed attention to be paid to matters that were ignored during the Cold War and has paved the way for greater international cooperation,
international organizations, and nationalist movements. This new world order is referred to as "liberal hegemony" in international relations theory. Using the
peace dividend, the
United States Armed Forces were able to cut much of its expenditure, but the level rose again to comparable heights after the
September 11 attacks and the initiation of the
war on terror in 2001. Accompanying
NATO expansion,
Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) systems were installed in Eastern Europe. However, from a relatively-weak
developing country, China appeared as a fledgling
emerging superpower that would challenge the U.S. and liberal democracy, creating new potential for worldwide conflict. Starting from the 2020s onward, the perceived threat of global terrorism in the post-9/11 era has expanded beyond Middle Eastern jihadist groups, culminating in the United States and Canada designating several
drug cartels and
transnational criminal organizations as terrorist organizations in the context of
narcoterrorism and the
war on drugs.
Government, economic, and military institutions casting his vote in the
1994 South African electionsThe end of the Cold War also coincided with the end of
apartheid in South Africa. Declining Cold War tensions in the later years of the 1980s meant that the apartheid regime was no longer supported by the West because of its
anticommunism, but it was now condemned with an
embargo. In 1990,
Nelson Mandela was freed from prison and the regime began steps to end apartheid. This culminated in the first democratic elections
in 1994, which resulted in Mandela being elected as
President of South Africa.
Socialist and communist parties around the world saw drops in membership after the
Berlin Wall fell, and the public felt that
free-market ideology had won.
Libertarian,
neoliberal,
nationalist Scandinavian nations are often now seen as
social democrat (see
Nordic model). It has been posited by some scholars that the end of
communism as a global force in the post–Cold War era allowed neoliberal capitalism to become the dominant global system, which has resulted in rising
economic inequality. The People's Republic of China, which had
started to move towards capitalism in the late 1970s and faced public anger after the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre in Beijing, moved even more quickly towards
free-market economics in the 1990s, framing this
mixed economy as "
socialism with Chinese characteristics".
McDonald's and
Pizza Hut both entered the country in the second half of 1990, the first American chains in China (aside from
Kentucky Fried Chicken, which had entered in 1987). Stock markets were established in
Shenzhen and Shanghai in late 1990 as well. Restrictions on car ownership were loosened in the early 1990s and caused the bicycle to decline as a form of transport by 2000. The move to capitalism has increased the economic prosperity of China, but many people still live in poor conditions and work for companies for very low wages and in dangerous and poor conditions. Many other
Third World countries had seen involvement from the United States and/or the
Soviet Union, but solved their political conflicts because of the removal of the ideological interests of those superpowers. As a result of the apparent victory of democracy and capitalism in the Cold War, many more countries adapted these systems, which also allowed them access to the benefits of
global trade, as economic power became more prominent than military power in the international arena.
Technology The end of the Cold War allowed many technologies that had been off limits to the public to be
declassified. The most important of these is the Internet, which was created as
ARPANET as a system to keep in touch after an impending nuclear war. The last restrictions on commercial enterprise online were lifted in 1995. The commercialization of the Internet and the growth of the mobile phone system increased
globalization (as well as
nationalism and
populism in reaction). In the years since then, the Internet's population and usefulness have grown immensely. Only about 20 million people (less than 0.5 percent of the world's population at the time) were online in 1995, mostly in the United States and several other Western countries. By the mid-2010s, more than a third of the world's population was online. Further research continued into other Cold War technologies with the declassification of the Internet. While
Ronald Reagan's
Strategic Defense Initiative proved untenable in its original form, the system lives on in a redesigned state as the
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMDS). Countermeasures such as BMDS continue to be explored and improved upon post–Cold War, but are often criticized for being unable to effectively stop a full nuclear attack. Despite advances in their efficacy,
anti-ballistic missiles are often viewed as an additional piece to modern day diplomacy where concepts such as
mutual assured destruction and treaties such as that between Ronald Reagan and
Mikhail Gorbachev following their
Reykjavík Summit. Alongside continued research defensive countermeasures there has been a
proliferation of nuclear weapons around the world. Many nations have acquired technology required to produce
nuclear weapons since the end of the
Cold War.
India tested its first nuclear weapon with
Operation Smiling Buddha in 1974. It was followed by
Pakistan's
nuclear program acquiring
centrifuges capable of
enriching uranium in the 80's and in 1998 was able to conduct several underground tests. Today the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, and China all possess nuclear weapons and have signed the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in an attempt to curb the spread of nuclear weapons. India, Pakistan,
Israel and
North Korea are also in possession of
nuclear technology but have not signed the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The
Cold War brought with it increased research into
radio technology as well as nuclear weapons. The success of
Sputnik 1 lead to an increase funding for
radio telescopes such as
Jodrell Bank Observatory for use in tracking Sputnik and possible nuclear launches by the
Soviet Union. Jodrell Bank and other observatories like it have since been used to track
space probes as well as investigate
quasars,
pulsars, and
meteoroids.
Satellites such as the
Vela that were originally launched to detect nuclear detonation following the
Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty have been used since then to discover and further investigate
gamma-ray bursts. ==See also==