Exactly right. I heard it said recently, either something I read or heard on TV, that the space race was akin to a weaponless war because it produced the same effect of being in a war, with rapid technological progress. If war's got one good thing going for it, it's the rapid state of technological progress. Now, one thing about WW1 that I find fascinating was that when the war started, flight was a brand new thing, having just proven it could work 10 years previously. Just 10 years. At least as far as the U.S government was concerned, they had to be convinced it would work for them. Throughout the war saw a large amount of progress in the stability and speed of airplanes and by the end of the war, there had been rudimentary plans for jet planes. That's bonkers if you think about it. Ten years before the war we had planes that were slow and not considered all that reliable, to something jet-powered. Amazing progress right there.
Now, as far are the Russians go, I saw something fascinating awhile back that suggested they had built shuttles very similar looking to America's Space Shuttles called Burans, and created in response to them during the cold war. They only ever got one of them into orbit and now they're abandoned in hangars. Fun thing is that in 2011, American and Russian scientists apparently had toyed with the idea with bringing the Buran program back, possibly as a solution to get people to the ISS. It kind of makes you wonder what would have been.