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Eastern European governments as soviet puppets
the president during the fall of the iron curtain was sudam hosaine
The military enforced separation of the states occupied by Russia after WW2 from the democratic world as exemplified by the Berlin wall. The wall, fences and military guards holding the occupied people in was described by him as an "iron curtain".
the phrase of "an iron curtain has come down" was first coined by sir Winston Churchill
The iron curtain was just a term used to symbolize the wall between the east and western countries. It was not a real curtain.
The term iron curtain was used by Winston Churchill to describe the border between communist western Europe and democratic eastern Europe.
The Iron Curtain
Eastern European governments as soviet puppets
The Iron Curtain is the term Churchill used to describe the division of Europe. Winston Churchill served as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
The Iron Curtain. He used the term in a speech in Fulton Missouri in 1946.
the president during the fall of the iron curtain was sudam hosaine
Winston Churchill first coined the term "Iron Curtain" in his 'Sinews of Peace' address to Westminster College in Fulton , Missouri . ~ See related link below to further information regarding the Iron Curtain .
The military enforced separation of the states occupied by Russia after WW2 from the democratic world as exemplified by the Berlin wall. The wall, fences and military guards holding the occupied people in was described by him as an "iron curtain".
l don't know - sorry Rebecca DeKalb
The imaginary wall that used to separate the US and Russia.The term 'Iron Curtain' refers to tanks, guns and as well as physical barriers. The term 'Iron Curtain' was said by Winston Churchill in 1946 in USA. The Iron Curtain was an imaginary line. It divided Europe into two blocks.
Coined by Sir Winston Churchill in an address to Westminster College, March 1946. He stated that 'an Iron Curtain had descended across Europe.....we are all subject in one form or another, not only to Soviet influence but to increasing measures of control from Moscow'
a term used to describe the boundry of the USSR from the NATO countries