ethnicity politics
religion
A serious cause of division among the nations of Eastern Europe includes all of the options: A) Ethnicity, B) Politics, C) Religion, and D) Economics. Ethnic tensions have historically led to conflicts, while political ideologies and alignments have created divisions, especially during and after the Cold War. Religious differences have also played a role in shaping national identities and conflicts, and economic disparities have further exacerbated tensions among these nations.
Eastern Europe is a region in Europe composing of many nations. No country produced Eastern Europe.
The Soviet Union wanted control of eastern Europe. The United States wanted independent nations in eastern Europe
It refers to the division of Communist Eastern Europe and Non-communist Western Europe.
The goat
The Soviet Union.
The Warsaw Pact was eastern Europe's response to NATO
The division of Eastern and Western Europe has not disappeared and is still present for geographical and political reasons. I assume you're referring to the Iron Curtain, which divided the democratic Western Europe from the communist Eastern Europe. This dissolved in the late 1980s/early 1990s, during the fall of communism. However, the Iron Curtain borders are still typically used to differentiate between Eastern and Western Europe.
The Satellites of the Soviet Union. :)
the emergence of the US and the USSR as the dominant world powers, supplanting the UK and the other nations of Europe; the division of Germany into East and West; Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe; the end of fascism is a significant political force; (indirectly) the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine
The political and economic division between Eastern and Western European countries after World War II was often referred to as the "Iron Curtain." This term symbolized the ideological conflict and physical boundary separating the Soviet-dominated Eastern Bloc from the capitalist Western nations. The division was characterized by differing political systems, with Eastern Europe under communist influence and Western Europe embracing democracy and free-market economies. This division shaped international relations and conflicts throughout the Cold War era.
At the conclusion of WW 2, the Western allies sought democratic governments for Eastern Europe and basically for all of Europe. The Soviets under Joseph Stalin had other ideas. Their armies essentially occupied the Eastern nations where they had driven out the Nazi armies. The Soviets had an expansionist ideology and installed communist governments in the nations of Eastern Europe. This included East Germany.