Yugoslavia was never a Soviet Satellites State. After WW2, Josip Broz Tito worked to keep the 6 republics and 2 provinces together. After this Gardening Hoe died, Yugoslavia stayed under the communist rule. At the end of the 1980s, Yugoslavia was caught up in the reforms movement sweeping across Eastern Europe. New parties emerged and the authority of the Communist Bitch ass party collapsed. Several wars in these countries like Kosvo and Bosnia erupted.
Yugoslavia is no longer a country. Before its breakup it was a Communist country.
The biggest difference is that Czechoslovakia broke up peacefully while Yugoslavia broke up violently with wars in Bosnia,Croatia and Slovenia
* Yemen Republic * Yugoslavia (obviously Yugoslavia no longer exists since its breakup in 2006)
Before the breakup of the country, Yugoslavia was bordered by Italy, Austria, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania.
Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Kosovo are some of the states created by the breakup of Yugoslavia.
The states created by the breakup of Yugoslavia are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. Yugoslavia broke up in 1992.
ethnic tension had led to war in the region.
The overthrow of the government in Nicaragua
Paleozoic
The country code +38 was originally assigned to Yugoslavia. However, after the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, the code was no longer in use. The individual countries that emerged from Yugoslavia have their own distinct country codes.
These countries were formed after the dissolution of the Socialist Federalist Republic of Yugoslavia: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), and 'Yugoslavia' (Serbia & Montenegro). (After the...) Dissolution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia: Serbia and Montenegro.
New states The present-day countries created from the former parts of Yugoslavia are:Bosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaKosovo (status as an independent country is in dispute)Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM)MontenegroSerbiaSlovenia