All of it. The wars in Europe and the Pacific did not end until after he was president. It was Truman who authorized the use of the Atomic Bombs on Japan.
Whigs
Corn was essentially unknown before Europeans came to the new world. It because very popular in the colonies as well as Europe.
At the Potsdam conference in 1945, the leaders of the allied nations (Winston Churchill, Harry S. Truman and Joseph Stalin) decided how post war Europe was to be divided. They also decided how Japan was to be finished off. They agreed that Russia would not interfere with America's war with Japan until a certain date. The US "finished" Japan off before this date with the atomic bomb.
The United States had no power to be involved in the affairs of European Government. Not until after World War 1 did the United States gain any real notoriety in world politics. The U.S. was certainly not considered a superpower even until WWII. The Industrial might of the U.S. was unleashed during and after the war to the surprise of the Axis Powers in Europe as well as to our Allies. Before the 20th century the long standing powers of Europe who had been around for centuries thought little of the Americas except as colonial areas full of natural resources for their exploitation.
The Soviet Union!
Eastern Europe, until 1989.
They were militarily occupied by the USSR. Their government is dominated by Russia. this continues for many, many years until Gorbachev made sweeping changes, largely due to economic reasons. This was all part of the Cold War.
Yes, until the fall of communism in 1989
During the cold war era each European country was classified as part of either Free Western Europe, or of Communist Eastern Europe which was mostly dominated by the Soviet Union until the Soviet Union broke up.
Because the Soviet Union controlled Eastern Europe for four decades. This changed when they elected a new leader, Mikhail Horbachev, he gave Eastern Europe more freedom as one of his reforms.
The Soviet Union did not want allies, they wanted puppet states. They controlled eastern Europe until the wall came down.
No countries became independent in Eastern Europe in the 1980s. Czechoslovakia did not break up until 1990 and the USSR and Yugoslavia did not break up until 1991 (However, Lithuania gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1990). In the late 1980s, countries in Eastern Europe began to change. The Eastern Bloc was crumbling and communism was falling. Basically, countries just changed politics.
There were only 12 countries in Eastern Europe by 1990. These countries were the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece, Bulgaria, Turkey, and Cyprus, of which the Soviet Union controlled the majority of the area. Today, Eastern Europe is made up of 28 countries.
potatoestomatoescornNone of these were in Europe until after discovery of the New World
During different time periods there were different civilizations that dominated the trading world during their time. At different times, Muslims dominated spice trade, Corinth dominated trade in the west until the sixth century BC. To answer more specifically, I would need to know what time period you specifically want to know about.
No one believed the rise of communism was a greater threat than Germany during WWII. Western Europe was allied with communist Russia during WWII, so they did not wish to destroy their ally. It wasn't until after WWII that fear shifted to the rise of communism, as communism spread all over Eastern Europe and even divided Germany.