country c
Germany
Most democratic countries feared that if communist nations had nuclear power, they would have the power to overthrow any democratic government and create a new one world communist government.
Russia was the only country to become communist during World War 1.
The Soviet Union, France Britain and America divided Berlin into four sections after world War II. However, when France Britain and America combined their sections into one and formed a democratic government, people began emigrating from the Soviet Union side, where there was a communist government, to the democratic side. The Soviet Union was losing populations so they built the Berlin wall cutting straight through Germany.
Germany .
country c
berlin.
Germany
The USSR was communist. Germany is divided into 4 sections and 3 of the 4 sections are democratic and 1 of the 4 are communist in the communist section there is a section of Berlin that is democratic and we supply that section so it would not become communist.
East Germany, the former German Democratic Republic, was Communist when it was under Russian control following the end of World War II.
No. There are many democratic countries around the world.
Japan is a little of both because it has parliament and an emperor who is head of state but stays out of politics, a bit like the UK
After world war two, Germany was seperated into the communist East Germany and the democratic West Germany. The greatest symbol of this division was the Berlin wall.
Germany is a single country now. After World War Two and up through the late 1980's Germany was divided between the free democratic West Germany (FRG-Federal Republic of Germany) and the communist dictatorship run East Germany (DDR).
Yes, India is a democratic country and the largest democracy of the world.
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.