Yugoslavia , under Tito , during the Cold War was closely aligned with the Soviets .
Yugoslavia, in 1941.
Josip Tito was the strongman president of Yugoslavia during the Cold War. He took office in 1953 and died in office 1980.
Yugoslavia's leader who kept his country independent of the Soviet Union after WW2 was Jozip Broz Tito. Tito was a nickname he adopted when living underground as Secretary of the Yugoslavian Communist Party before the WW2.
Full name of Macedonia is Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, so Macedonia was a part of Yugoslavia. Slovenia was also a part of Yugoslavia. Slovakia however was not a part of Yugoslavia, but it was a part of Czechoslovakia, both of them were communist countries after WW2.
Romania was one of the Axis Powers in WW2. Meaning, no they joined him instead.
Most countries that broke away from the former Yugoslavia are small. Slovenia lost some of their theritory after the WW2.
There was a lot of fighting that happened to the nations of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990's. All these countries were fighting for their own boundaries during this time.
Yugoslavia was once 1 country from 1945 until the 1990s.........It now comprises: Slovenia Croatia Bosnia-Herzegovina Serbia-Montenegro Kosovo & Macedonia. Before WW2 it was part of either Austria/Hungary or the Ottoman Empire.......
The Japenese were on the Japanese side in WW2
No. "Serbia" was part of a larger country called Yugoslavia which contained other countries in the area such as Bosnia-Herzegovina and Montenegro. During WW2, Germany conquered Yugoslavia and used the territory to their advantage.
Fighting on the side of the Germans and Japanese.
Probably because the Soviets were never in Yugoslavia. Yugoslva, which no longer exists, was a socialist country until 1991 but it was never a Soviet country. The Soviets had no real influence because after WW2 Yugoslavia freed itself from Nazi Germany and Italy without the need for significant Soviet (Russian) support. Because of this Yugoslavia was able to make its own way in the world without following the Soviet government's wishes.