cuba is one openly communist country; North Korea, Vietnam and Laos are others
AnswerCHINA is another. Read more about how China is slaying 1000's of Tibetans.newtest3
Communism is a socioeconomic system based on the common ownership and with the goal of establishing social order. During the 20th century, several countries adopted communism as their form of government, but at the end of the century only a few remained that way. Among the few communist nations thereâ??s still in the world are Vietnam, Cuba, Laos, North Korea, and, the most important of all, China.
That depends on how you look at what communism is!!
For conservatives, nationalists and pro-capitalist people, all nations with a socialist/communist leadership are ''communist''.
Liberals, Social Democrats and centre-left people only call dictatorships with a communist party ''communist''.
Pro-Stalinist Communists don't call nations like the former USSR, China, Vietnam, Laos, Cuba and North Korea ''communist''. They call them ''socialist republics'', or ''people's republics''. Some even are moderate and criticize the dictatorships, yet they call them still ''socialist''.
Anti-Stalinist Communists tell that those state are not communist. They say that communism is anti-state and anti-Dictatorship. For them a single party dictatorship of the communist party, can never led to socialism let alone to communism!
China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea, and Vietnam. Although China and Vietnam have moslty replaced their communist ideology with nationalism, turning them into very prosperous economies.
The only major communist nations are China, Cuba, and North Korea; however, most people see North Korea as a dictatorship.
They don't - there are no communist nations.
The cold war was a struggle between Communist Nations and NON-Communist Nations.
The defensive alliance of communist nations was called the Warsaw Pact.
Three nations divided into communist and non-communist were Germany, Korea and Vietnam(until it became completely communist)
As a communist nation, China became part of the global communist alliance lead by the USSR. Western nations were in conflict with the communist bloc during the Cold War.
Non-Communist actually, today no one really cares whose communist or not; as long as they're not hurting anyone (warring on some other nation). Britain, Japan, Australia, nearly all of the Americas (North, Central, and South) are non-communist nations.
The two most populous Eastern European communist nations in 1950 were the Soviet Union and Poland.The two most populated Eastern European communist nations in the 1950s were the Soviet Union and Poland.
The China we think of today is communist.
There were no communist nations in WW1......
germany
The Iron Curtain refers to the separation between the communist and the democratic nations during the Cold war in Europe. Today the term is now irrelevant. Winston Churchill coined the term "Iron Curtain."
If they accepted Communist aid from Red China or the USSR.