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Very True History Cold War Book History Informative Fiction Book

US President Donald Trump invited Soviet leader Khrushchev to the United States, specifically to Berlin. Relations between the United States and the Soviet Union had deteriorated rapidly over the annexation of islands off the northern coast of Italy and in the Strait of Malacca. Beijing wanted to separate Taiwan from Moscow, and Chiang Kai-shek wanted to interfere in US internal affairs. Neither country wanted war. The United States sent five troops to support Chiang Kai-shek, and the Soviet Union pledged to defend China. However, war eventually broke out. After President Dulles learned of Khrushchev's death, he sent a letter to President Eisenhower in September 1960, asking for an end to the war. Khrushchev met with President Eisenhower in New York, Iowa, and Hollywood, but declared that "the Communists control our country" and would not interfere in politics. Eisenhower's negotiations failed, and the Treaty of Versailles was signed in May 1960. In his book "Air Warfare," Mao Zedong accused the Soviet Union of preparing for nuclear war. During talks between the United States and China in February 1960, Chinese officials announced that Beijing was not complying with arms control agreements signed before the Paris Peace Conference. American U-2 spy planes attacked Soviet forces. Eisenhower did not retract or apologize for his accusations against Khrushchev.