fascist leaders- Mussolini, Hitler, and Stalin. all three had totalitarian views.
Joseph Stalin, who was in power from 1924 until his death in 1953, was the soviet leader who stayed in power the longest.
Joseph Stalin was the Soviet leader responsible.
The Soviet leaders probably viewed the Marshall Plan and NATO as direct threats to Soviet security. Soviet leaders felt the United States was using its wealth to buy influence and power in Europe. They feared that strong, rebuilt Western European nations would be a threat to its satellite nations in Eastern Europe.
Communist leaders came to power without the backing of the Soviet Union in China. The Chinese Communist Party, led by Mao Zedong, established control after a prolonged civil war, culminating in the victory of the communists in 1949. This success was largely due to a combination of popular support, effective guerrilla warfare, and the weaknesses of the Nationalist government. While the Soviet Union later provided support, the initial rise to power was primarily a domestic achievement.
Before World War II, Italy saw the rise of Benito Mussolini, a fascist leader who promoted authoritarianism and nationalism. In Germany, Adolf Hitler ascended to power as the head of the Nazi Party, advocating for totalitarianism, militarism, and anti-Semitism. The Soviet Union was led by Joseph Stalin, who established a totalitarian regime characterized by state control over all aspects of life and widespread purges against perceived enemies. Each of these leaders implemented aggressive policies that contributed to the tensions leading up to the war.
ItalyGermany Spain
Germany, Soviet Union, and Spain.
Joseph Stalin, who was in power from 1924 until his death in 1953, was the soviet leader who stayed in power the longest.
Joseph Stalin was the Soviet leader responsible.
The Soviet leaders probably viewed the Marshall Plan and NATO as direct threats to Soviet security. Soviet leaders felt the United States was using its wealth to buy influence and power in Europe. They feared that strong, rebuilt Western European nations would be a threat to its satellite nations in Eastern Europe.
Basically the Soviet Union collapsed. Many of its leaders retained power in the new states that arose from its ashes. Still, the old organization able to exert its power from Moscow no longer exists.
Fascist totalitarian leaders did not gain power during WWII. They came to power before the war. It was largely their actions once in power that resulted in that war.
Communist leaders came to power without the backing of the Soviet Union in China. The Chinese Communist Party, led by Mao Zedong, established control after a prolonged civil war, culminating in the victory of the communists in 1949. This success was largely due to a combination of popular support, effective guerrilla warfare, and the weaknesses of the Nationalist government. While the Soviet Union later provided support, the initial rise to power was primarily a domestic achievement.
Before World War II, Italy saw the rise of Benito Mussolini, a fascist leader who promoted authoritarianism and nationalism. In Germany, Adolf Hitler ascended to power as the head of the Nazi Party, advocating for totalitarianism, militarism, and anti-Semitism. The Soviet Union was led by Joseph Stalin, who established a totalitarian regime characterized by state control over all aspects of life and widespread purges against perceived enemies. Each of these leaders implemented aggressive policies that contributed to the tensions leading up to the war.
spread of comunism ideology to the world and gaining more power in the world, economic progress and controling world powerful states to improve their power, containment of united state and capitalist or democratic idea from the world. these were the bassic points in Russian and soviet union forign policy before fall of the soviet union.
In Communist Russia the leaders - with the exeption of Josef Stalin - cannot really be called 'dictators'. Although they had considerable executive powers, they were answerable to the Politbureau of the Soviet Union, which had the very real power to appoint them, control them and fire them. The postwar Soviet leaders were succesively: Josef Stalin, Georgy Malenkov (very briefly); Nikita Krushchev, Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov, Konstantin Chernenko and Mikhail Gorbachev.
do government leaders in china gain power