Today, all European countries are non-communist.
However, during the Cold War, the Non-Communist countries in Europe included:
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Portugal
- Spain
- Andorra
- France
- Monaco
- Malta
- Vatican City
- San Marino
- Italy
- Austria
- Switzerland
- Luxembourg
- Belgium
- Netherlands
- Denmark
- Norway
- Sweden
- Finland
- Greece
- Turkey
- Cyprus
The Iron Curtain
If you're referring to the barrier that separated communist countries in Europe from non-communist countries, the answer is the Berlin Wall.
All European countries are non-communist, so you merely need to list four Western European countries. Germany, Italy, France, and Ireland are such four.
Yes, the term "iron curtain" was coined during the cold war to describe the division between the Communist Soviet Union and the rest of Europe.
The Iron Curtain was the line drawn between Western and Eastern Europe, or Communistic and Non-Communistic Europe.
No. There are no communist countries in Europe anymore.
Answer this question… It undermined communist ideology in communist countries.
It refers to the division of Communist Eastern Europe and Non-communist Western Europe.
All countries in Europe expect USSR, Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, Albania, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and East Germany were NOT communist.
Communist countries between Russia and Western Europe acted as a buffer between the countries.
Communist NORTH Korea's enemies are mostly non-communist countries.
United States