I think Germany was the last nation to surrender to Allied Forces in 1918.
No nation dropped an atomic weapon during the cold war. The cold war is not the same as World War 2. Two atomic bombs were dropped on Japan by the US at the end of World War 2. The cold war is called 'cold' because it was not an actual armed conflict. It was a period marked by a conflict of ideologies, propaganda and fear.
World War 2 was ended when Japan finally surrendered to the Allied Forces after the US dropped the only atom bombs ever used against a nation. The story of the atom bombs dropped on Nagasaki Japan and Hiroshima Japan are on the link below.
Atomic bombs were dropped in WWII
Germany
Russia
I think Germany was the last nation to surrender to Allied Forces in 1918.
Japan
The Girth of a Nation - 1918 was released on: USA: April 1918
The war began in 1914, but not every country joined in at the same time, and some countries dropped out before the war ended in 1918.
Japan was bombed at Hiroshima and at Nagasaki.
No nation dropped an atomic weapon during the cold war. The cold war is not the same as World War 2. Two atomic bombs were dropped on Japan by the US at the end of World War 2. The cold war is called 'cold' because it was not an actual armed conflict. It was a period marked by a conflict of ideologies, propaganda and fear.
K. Ottenheym has written: 'Nation im Kampf' -- subject(s): World War, 1914-1918
Russia, revolutionary-later Communist. The Communist movement in Russia began ostensibly as an anti-war movement not too different from that opposing the Vietnam conflict in the sixties and seventies. it then, well got out of hand, escalated into political violence and the St.Petersburg massacre, et al. Russia was out of the European theatre of war by l9l7, the American Heritage Landmark book of World War I clearlty begins the chapter heading- Exit Russia.
War Gardens - 1918 I was released on: USA: 26 August 1918
Winning the War - 1918 was released on: USA: 1 December 1918
The war between 1914 to 1918 is known as World War I.