Some reality on the US-USSR/Russia relations
US-Soviet Dartmouth Conferences - founded 1961
Celebrating 50 years
https://www.kettering.org/sites/default/files/product-downloads/Dartmouth_50_Years.pdf
US-USSR Trade and Economic Council – founded in 1973
The Council for American–Soviet Trade was a proposal conceived and authored by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)’s international economic affairs department (IEA) to regularize commercial development between US corporation leaders and Soviet industrial and state-controlled trade organizations. It became the forerunning blueprint for the eventual US-USSR Trade and Economic Council which was formally established in October 1973.
U.S.-Russia Business Council est 1993
Established in 1993, the U.S.-Russia Business Council is "a Washington-based trade association, that represents interests of nearly 300 member companies operating in the Russian market. The Council's mission is to expand and enhance the U.S.-Russian commercial relationship. Guided by member interests, the Council promotes an economic environment in which businesses can succeed in a challenging Russian market."
"The Council utilizes strong relationships with influential members of both houses of the Russian Federal Assembly, to impact critical legislation pertaining to foreign investment and commercial taxation. The Council also conducts Capitol Hill and U.S. executive branch lobbying campaigns to voice member concerns, advance the U.S.-Russian commercial agenda and promote a more balanced discussion on Russia policy.
"In addition, the Council plays a vital role in forging a public-private dialogue that makes tangible contributions to U.S.-Russian commercial relations, which includes helping to structure the trade and investment portion of presidential summits in the United States and Russia. The Council has provided commercial input for each of the Bush-Putin Summits to date, and delivered a presentation to Presidents George Walker Bush and Vladimir V. Putin at the May 2002 Summit in Moscow. In early 2001, the Council and the AmCham submitted a transition paper to the Bush Administration consisting of an update on commercial and investment issues, as well as conceptual guidelines and specific recommendations for U.S. policy toward Russia."[1]
https://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/U.S.-Russia_Business_Council
But how much did the US really help USSR/Russia? See pictures to get an idea, check out the book to get more
The Best Enemy Money Can Buy - Antony C. Sutton 2014
With mountains of documentation, mostly from government and corporate sources, Sutton shows that Soviet military technology is heavily dependent on U.S. and allied gifts, "peaceful trade" and exchange programs. We've built for, sold or traded, or given outright to the Communists everything from copper wiring and military trucks to tank technology, missile guidance technology, computers - even the Space Shuttle. Peaceful trade is a myth … to the Soviets all trade is strategic. The paradox is that we spend $300 billion a year on a defense against an enemy we created and continue to keep in business.
https://ia802302.us.archive.org/0/items/pdfy-Iqz3ytYcb3wWYJ0c/Antony%20Sutton%20-%20The%20Best%20Enemy%20Money%20Can%20Buy.pdf … …
(Pictures related)
Then there is U1, of course
How the Clintons Sold Out U.S. National Interests to the Putin Regime
By DEROY MURDOCK April 7, 2017 8:00 AM
https://www.nationalreview.com/2017/04/clinton-russia-ties-bill-hillary-sold-out-us-interests-putin-regime/ …
And so……..The anti-Russia screaming is just a propaganda campaign and fear tactic to distract the people of all nations from the continuous big business deals that were/are profitable for both the USA and the USSR/Russia