The claim that the USSR’s collapse "dismantled the very structure that made those conflicts possible" is partially true but oversimplified. The Soviet Union’s dissolution ended the bipolar world order, removing the primary counterweight to U.S. power and altering global geopolitics. However, the "structure" of Cold War conflicts—ideological rivalry, nuclear deterrence, and proxy wars—didn’t entirely vanish. The U.S. maintained its dominance, and new tensions emerged, such as with Russia under Putin or regional conflicts in the post-Soviet space. The Cold War’s end was more a shift than a complete dismantling. Sources like Wikipedia and Britannica confirm the collapse marked the Cold War’s end, but they also note lingering complexities. The "reset" metaphor is catchy, but the game’s rules evolved, not vanished. Source? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissolution_of_the_Soviet_Union https://www.britannica.com/story/why-did-the-soviet-union-collapse

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