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Examples

  • Sino-Soviet balance; the SALT II arms control treaty, which, though never ratified by the Senate, did slow the arms race for several years; and deregulation of major industries such as airlines and trucking, which had far-reaching results in making our economy more efficient and competitive.

    The Good Fight Walter F. Mondale 2010

  • Sino-Soviet balance; the SALT II arms control treaty, which, though never ratified by the Senate, did slow the arms race for several years; and deregulation of major industries such as airlines and trucking, which had far-reaching results in making our economy more efficient and competitive.

    The Good Fight Walter F. Mondale 2010

  • Sino-Soviet balance; the SALT II arms control treaty, which, though never ratified by the Senate, did slow the arms race for several years; and deregulation of major industries such as airlines and trucking, which had far-reaching results in making our economy more efficient and competitive.

    The Good Fight Walter F. Mondale 2010

  • Harkening back to the grand old days of Sino-Soviet diplomatic chicanery, Moscow and Beijing yesterday jointly vetoed a watered-down United Nations Security Council resolution condemning Syria for its escalating brutality against democracy protestors.

    Amb. Marc Ginsberg: Syria's Double Diplomatic Muscle Amb. Marc Ginsberg 2011

  • Mao Zedong, who led Communist forces to victory in 1949, oversaw the rapprochement between China and the U.S. that stemmed from the Sino-Soviet split, and famously shook hands with President Nixon when he visited Beijing in 1972.

    Beijing Hails Start of a New Era Jeremy Page 2011

  • All had been built in the days of Sino-Soviet friendship and reflected the heavy Stalinist style of the period.

    The China Challenge Henry Kissinger 2011

  • Moreover, truly successful sanctions—difficult to implement—would result in “almost complete Egyptian economic dependence on the Sino-Soviet Bloc.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • It was also from these bases that the United States could observe the Sino-Soviet ideological split and their occasional military hostilities, until the dissolution of the Soviet Union altered the situation in East Asia.

    Between War and Peace Col. Matthew Moten 2011

  • Moreover, truly successful sanctions—difficult to implement—would result in “almost complete Egyptian economic dependence on the Sino-Soviet Bloc.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • While this worldwide archipelago of bases may have been necessary when we confronted a Sino-Soviet bloc spanning Eurasia from the Elbe to East China Sea, armed with thousands of nuclear weapons and driven by imperial ambition and ideological hatred of us, that is history now.

    Matthew Yglesias » A Piece of the Action 2010

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