Because he does
The term iron curtain was used by Winston Churchill to describe the border between communist western Europe and democratic eastern Europe.
i believe it was called the "iron curtain" that divided eastern and western Europe
It is a metaphor coined by Winston Churchill in the years after WW 2, when the Soviet-dominated Communist countries in eastern Europe closed their borders to Western Europe to their own citizens. It was as though the Communist countries were behind a curtain, an iron curtain.
The Warsaw Pact was eastern Europe's response to NATO
The iron curtain
The Iron Curtain: It is an appropriate description because it was very difficult to see behind it into eastern europe. The USSR was , from a western perspective at least, very difficult in terms of diplomatic communication.
The Iron Curtain.
In the years following World War II, the countries of communist Eastern Europe were often referred to as being "behind the iron curtain." These countries were perceived as a single region based on.... Economic and political characteristics.
Iron Curtain. An Iron Curtain has descended from.....
technology, economy and military, Western Europe is more advanced in all of these.
The Iron Curtain primarily divided Eastern and Western Europe during the Cold War, with countries behind the Iron Curtain including the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria. These nations were under communist influence and were part of the Eastern Bloc, aligned with the Soviet Union. In contrast, Western Europe consisted of democratic nations such as West Germany, France, and the United Kingdom. The Iron Curtain symbolized the ideological divide between capitalism and communism.