Yes.
yes, because the ussr stands for the united soviet socialists republics
Yes. The USSR stands for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. It no longer exists, as the countries that were in it are now all independent. It was dissolved in 1991.
They were on our side during World War 2.
There is the argument that Reagan's military spending pushed the Soviet Union into bankruptcy or that the forcefulness of his character forced the Soviet Union to collapse. However, this is mainly based on the idea that charisma and outward strength force an enemy to capitulate rather than an actual analysis of the internal issues of the Soviet Union. Any US president in the same position as Reagan would have presided over the fall of the Soviet Union since the issues were domestic upheaval, economic stagnation, increasing agitation over having a poor life, and Gorbachev's domestic reforms which allowed the rage over these issues to boil over into the public space.
They are the same. 3 names for one country. Actually, today it is Russia again (with a little smaller territory than before. )
A soviet republic was a territory of the union (much like states today). USSR (soviet union) stands for "Union of Socialist Soviet Republics"
Soviets are people from the Soviet Union, it's like Americans and America
The USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) and the Soviet Union are different names for the same thing. It's like how another name for the United States of America is USA.
The Soviet Union also invaded Poland around the same time. Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939 from the West, and the Soviet Union invaded Poland on September 17th of the same year from the East.
Different countries in the same part of the world.
The Soviet Union or Soviet Empire. They are the same.
They had the same enemy; Nazi Germany.
yes, because the ussr stands for the united soviet socialists republics
Yes. The USSR stands for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. It no longer exists, as the countries that were in it are now all independent. It was dissolved in 1991.
No, it isn't. At the time the Soviet Union was still in existence, "Russia" was one part of the Soviet Union, although by far the largest and most dominant. In December 1922, Russia, then known as the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, joined with Ukraine, Belorussia and the Transcaucasus Federation to form the Soviet Union. After that over time, the Soviet Union annexed or took under its control many other nearby republics, such as Uzbekistan, Khazakstan and others.
This may be nit-picking, but it probably would not be for natives of the several former Soviet Socialist Republics. Russia and the Soviet Union were actually never "the same". It's a little like asking 'During what years were England and Great Britain the same?' The term 'Russia' was often used as a commonly understood but not entirely accurate way of refering to the Soviet Union, in much the same way that the term 'America' is widely but inaccurately used to refer to the US. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics existed from about 1918 until 1991. See link for more details.
It originated in the Soviet Union by Vladimir Lennin, Karl Marx and Fredrich Engel. Although people such as Jesus Christ had the same Ideas the Soviet Union technically originated it.