Best answer:
Explanation:
In the Cold War, once both the United States and the Soviet Union had atomic weapons, the two sides were in a tense standoff. Â Each side developed a larger and larger arsenal of weapons, knowing that provoking a war would mean mutually assured destruction. Â Having more weapons and defense spending, in the eyes of military planners, was a way of deterring the other side from daring an attack.
John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State under President Eisenhower, pushed for this kind of approach. Â Dulles wasn't afraid to threaten massive retaliation against communist enemy countries as a way of intimidating them and deterring the communist side from pursuing any sort of attack on the United States.