In the years following World War II, the Soviet Union and the United States were separated by stark ideological differences: the Soviet Union promoted communism and state control over the economy, while the U.S. championed capitalism and individual freedoms. Geopolitically, the two nations engaged in a Cold War characterized by arms races, espionage, and competing spheres of influence. Additionally, their contrasting approaches to international relations—such as the U.S. policy of containment versus the Soviet aim of expanding communism—further deepened the divide between the two superpowers.
The United States had a capitalist economy; the Soviet Union had a command economy.
The United States had a capitalist economy; the Soviet Union had a command economy.
Soviet Union was communist.
The U.S. is a republic that has nukes and the Soviet Union is a communist nation that had nukes
Nikita Khrushchev.
The United States had a capitalist economy; the Soviet Union had a command economy.
The United States had a capitalist economy; the Soviet Union had a command economy.
The United States had a capitalist economy; the Soviet Union had a command economy.
The Soviet Union
Soviet Union was communist.
Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Yugoslavia separated the Soviet Union from Western Europe.
The U.S. is a republic that has nukes and the Soviet Union is a communist nation that had nukes
They are separated by the Bering Strait.The Bering Strait.
The Bering Strait.
Nikita Khrushchev.
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Kazakhistan, Azerbaijan,Belarus, Lithuania and russia