Yugoslavia was not a part of the Warsaw Pact and thus had no obligation to the Soviet Union. In fact, Yugoslavia went against BOTH the Soviet Union and the United States with its military prepared to take on an invasion by either country. It's a militant neutral nation despite its communist government.
Yugoslavia and Albania were the cracks in the iron curtain.
Yugoslavia and Albania were the cracks in the iron curtain.
Norway
THe countries "behind the iron curtain" were: GDR (German Democratic Republic), Poland,Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania. Of course it was not a curtain, but Churchill referred to the dividedness of Europe with this word: the capitalist and the communist part of it.
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia were two countries that were once behind the Iron Curtain but no longer exist in their original forms. Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, while the former republics of Yugoslavia fragmented into several independent countries during the 1990s.
Answer: The term "Iron Curtain" is used to describe a "wall" between Western Europe and Eastern Europe. During the Cold War, Eastern European nations (with the exception of Yugoslavia) were sort of the Soviet Union's puppets. This "wall" divided East Germany and West Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia, and Italy and Yugoslavia.
The conflict began in 1991 when Croatia and Slovenia seceded from the Republic of Yugoslavia. This was followed by the war in Bosnia that took place in 1992 and the war in Kosovo in 1998. Even though the time line was consistent with the fall of the Soviet Union, none of these things were directly related to the fall of the Iron Curtain.
The Iron Curtain.
No. It was like invisible, there were only military forces. The term "iron curtain" was just a metaphor.
Gorbachev is given credit for ending the Iron Curtain.
the iron curtain speaks is a symbol of?
iron curtain