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They were afraid of losing control of eastern Europe.
They were afraid of losing control of eastern Europe.
The Soviets feared that moves toward independence or self-government would weaken their hold on the other satellite countries in eastern Europe. By acting decisively against Hungary, they sought to intimidate the other countries within the Soviet bloc. The strength of the USSR depended on controlling the populace and the economies of the Warsaw Pact countries.
The Soviets withdrew their missiles from Cuba at the threat of war.
Well it was a war....
He was concerned as any american was.
Czechoslovakia and Hungary
well you would have to look it up. but i think after the wold war 2 the soviets and Americans split Korea into territories.the territories were suposed to merge but the soviets made the noth commusist and the Americans made the south democratic.after the soviets and Americans withdrew the north began invasionplans:) hope that helped:)
"Because the Soviets never occupied Yugoslavia. Yugoslav partisans expelled the Axis from Serbia in 1944 and the rest of Yugoslavia in 1945. The Soviets and British Commonwealth forces linked up with them near the end of the war, but withdrew after Germany surrendered." (Bob Yahoo Answers)
The Soviet Red Army liberated Hungary from the Nazis and afterwards the Soviets started to influence the domestic politics and from 1948, Hungary was forced to build Socialism as a transitionary period before Communism. When in 1956 the Hungarian Revolution broke out against the Soviet rule, the Soviets sent troops and tanks to destroy the revolution. They wanted to keep Hungary on their side, i.e. among the Communist countries. The Soviets were afraid that similar revolution would break out in the other Communist countries: Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, German Democratic Republic, and Poland.
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