It is worth noting that the US was the main beneficiary in World War I economically as most of the countries turned to it for trade, but this time round was more concerned with the political and economic control of the Soviet Union and military domination throughout the world (Friedman 2007). The US was interested in containing the authority of the Soviet Union in Europe, which at the time was perceived as the most strategic territory in the world according to Frei (1984). It is generally agreed that the Soviet Union was developing at a parallel rate to the US and hence, was a seen as a threat to US rising hegemony globally. In order to do this, the US had to form an alliance with likeminded countries such as the UK and France a situation that eventually led to the rise of Cold War which continued for the other half a century. The US was also interested in establishing military domination after World War II, a strategy that required an international US military presence, for example, in Korea (50-53) and Vietnam (57-75) (Kim 2016). But while this was happening, this was also the era synonymous with a wave of revolutions in South America, the Cuban revolution being notable, McCarthyism, decolonization of Asia and Africa as well as heightened class struggle and political turmoil around the
It is worth noting that the US was the main beneficiary in World War I economically as most of the countries turned to it for trade, but this time round was more concerned with the political and economic control of the Soviet Union and military domination throughout the world (Friedman 2007). The US was interested in containing the authority of the Soviet Union in Europe, which at the time was perceived as the most strategic territory in the world according to Frei (1984). It is generally agreed that the Soviet Union was developing at a parallel rate to the US and hence, was a seen as a threat to US rising hegemony globally. In order to do this, the US had to form an alliance with likeminded countries such as the UK and France a situation that eventually led to the rise of Cold War which continued for the other half a century. The US was also interested in establishing military domination after World War II, a strategy that required an international US military presence, for example, in Korea (50-53) and Vietnam (57-75) (Kim 2016). But while this was happening, this was also the era synonymous with a wave of revolutions in South America, the Cuban revolution being notable, McCarthyism, decolonization of Asia and Africa as well as heightened class struggle and political turmoil around the