An apparent increase in his overall power, because the aggressive rivals of his of the Axis powers. All he wanted was absolute power.
His political view was communsim
As dictators, responsible for mass-murder; both of them. Although Hitler's Holocaust has much more caught the public's imagination, Stalin throughout his career very probably was ultimately responsible for a much larger loss of life.
Kill everybody who wasn't a badass russian like him.
First person point of view
it's from a Norman point of view
His political view was communsim
Stalin had no view on the Berlin Wall as he died more than 8 years before it was built.
It would be difficult to justify anything positive about the Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin. If for nothing else, historians and even Russian leaders have called his regime as one of terror and killing. As evidence of this from the old Soviet point of view, Stalin's body was removed from its place next to Lenin's in Moscow's Red Square.
Swettie. Nobody can no what in the world your question means. Please explain it in a good manner thank you.
in an anti communist view he was infamous like stalin but ina pro communist he was famous so it changes by view point
Stalin welcomed D-Day because it relieved some pressure on his armies.
The point of view is that technology helps the world connect which is Globalisation
It is the point of view of an individual or group. (how someone sees the world)
A point of view is the point of view from each individual person. You have a point of view from your perspective. Your mother, your father, your brother, your sister, your teacher, they all have their own point of view. Everyone has their own point of view. Their own particular way of looking at the world from their experience, and thoughts, beliefs, and way of thinking. Everyones' point of view is different.
Your point of view is how you see things in the world - your perspective on things. You use it whenever you want to.
the Cold War stated when Stalin broke the Yalta agreement by forcing communism upon Eastern European Nations.
"The World on the Turtle's Back" is told in third person point of view. This traditional Iroquois creation story narrates the tale of how the world came to be according to the Iroquois people.