Austria was capitalist throughout the Cold War. It was on the USA's side of the Cold War.
Nonalignment, that is, not allied to either side in the Cold War. India, which blended a democratic government with a socialist economy, was a leader in the nonaligned movement.
The Cold War in the Middle East was very complex. On the one hand, there was Israel, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the Emirates on the side of the US. On the other hand, there was Syria and Afghanistan as part of the Soviet blocks. This was essential in order for the Cold War to perservere: each side had its own allies.
China is a communist country. The cold war was between the western countries and the communist countries. China supported the communist countries.
The cold war itself was just that - a cold war. No men died. The two competing super powers, Soviet Union, and the United States, had nuclear weapons. Neither of them fought directly to avoid destroying the Earth. Instead they fought through proxy wars. Or wars were either side would support one side and then the reverse. These two proxy wars were the Vietnam war and the Korean War. 50,000 men died in the Vietnam War and 33,000 died in the Korean war.
republican. and its democratic not demicratic
Austria was capitalist throughout the Cold War. It was on the USA's side of the Cold War.
Military spending was drastically cut as a side effect of the cold War. World affairs are still influenced today from the Cold War.
the warm side
They were simply fodder for the cold war; each side trying to "win" them over to their side.
it is not either it is monarchy
Winston Churchill was on the West's side of the Cold War. France, Britain, the US, the Free West was on the freedom side of this war. He was against the USSR and Stalin's communism.
The Cold War was most nations on Earth either on the American side or the Soviet side.
No. It was called the cold war because there was no overt action on either side.
He was the leader of the USSR
they did'nt want to start another war
Nonalignment, that is, not allied to either side in the Cold War. India, which blended a democratic government with a socialist economy, was a leader in the nonaligned movement.