Germany was the country that was split in two by the Iron Curtain. After World War II, it was divided into East Germany (German Democratic Republic) and West Germany (Federal Republic of Germany) in 1949. This division symbolized the broader ideological conflict between the communist Eastern bloc and the democratic Western nations during the Cold War. The split lasted until Germany was reunified in 1990.
The Iron Curtain no longer exists. When it did, the country it divided was Germany.
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.
In Fulton, Missouri, Churchill made a famous speech in which he referred to the world as having been split into two parts. The sphere of the old Western countries and the sphere of the Soviet's. After the WWII, the territory that had been liberated from the Nazis in the eastern part of Europe got under Soviet influence, controlled from Moscow (and building communism). He said: ...an iron curtain has descended across the continent." And a Cold War started.
The Berlin Wall and the Iron curtain. :)
The term "Iron Curtain" was popularized by Winston Churchill in a speech in 1946 to describe the division between Western democracies and Eastern communist countries in Europe after World War II. It symbolized the ideological and physical barrier that separated the Soviet-controlled Eastern Bloc from the West. The "curtain" metaphor emphasized the lack of transparency and communication between these two regions, highlighting the tensions of the Cold War era.
Germany (by the Iron curtain).
split europe in to two parts.
The Iron Curtain no longer exists. When it did, the country it divided was Germany.
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia were two countries that were once behind the Iron Curtain but no longer exist in their original forms. Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, while the former republics of Yugoslavia fragmented into several independent countries during the 1990s.
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.
The 'iron curtain' was taken from a speech by Winston Churchill at Fulton Missouri in 1946. He was talking about the spread of communism in Eastern Europe and said that 'from Stettin on the Baltic to Trieste on the Adriatic, an Iron Curtain has descended over Europe'. He meant that Europe was now split into two zones - East and West. This didn't change until the fall of communism in 1991.
The baltic and the adriatic
The Berlin Wall and the Iron curtain, its right. :)
The phrase 'Iron Curtain' was used by Churchill to describe partition of Europe because of Soviet occupation of the Eastern European countries in 1946.
The imaginary wall between the U.S. anad Russia.
The two NATO member nations that lie east of the Iron Curtain are Poland and the Czech Republic. These countries were part of the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War but later joined NATO in 1999, following the dissolution of the Iron Curtain and the end of Soviet influence in Eastern Europe.
The direct answer is two, Western and Eastern Europe as defined by the imposition of what Churchill coined for us as "The Iron Curtain". the free democratically based west vis-a-vis the U.S.S.R. and Soviet Bloc east.