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Encyclopedia > Communist bloc
This article is part of the
Communism series. edit (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Template:Communism&action=edit)

Schools of Communism


Marxism
Leninism
Trotskyism
Stalinism
Maoism
Left communism
Council communism
Anarcho-Communism
Eurocommunism
Juche


Communist states


Afghanistan (1978-1992)
Albania (1945-1991)
Angola (1975-1991)
Benin (1975-1990)
Bulgaria (1946-1989)
Cambodia (1975-1991)
Congo (1969-1991)
China (1949-present)
Cuba (1959-present)
Czechoslovakia (1948-1989)
East Germany (1949-1989)
Ethiopia (1974-1991)
Grenada (1979-1983)
Hungary (1947-1989)
Laos (1975-present)
Mongolia (1921-1992)
Mozambique (1975-1990)
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North Korea (1948-present)
Poland (1945-1989)
Romania (1947-1989)
Somalia (1969-1991)
South Yemen (1969-1990)
Soviet Union (1917-1991)
Vietnam (1954/75-present)
Yugoslavia (1945-1992)


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Communist Party
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Communist bloc
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Anti-Communism


During the Cold War, the Eastern Bloc (or Soviet Bloc) comprised the following Central and Eastern European countries: Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, East Germany, Poland, Albania (until the early 1960s, see below), the Soviet Union, and Czechoslovakia. The Eastern Bloc is also often equated with the Warsaw Pact. Another organization encompassing the countries of the Eastern bloc was the Comecon.


Yugoslavia was never part of the Eastern Bloc or Warsaw Pact. Although it was a communist state, its leader, Marshall Tito, came to power through his efforts as a partisan resistance leader during World War II, and thus he was not installed by the Soviet Red Army, and he owed the Soviet leadership no allegiance. The Yugoslav government established itself as a neutral state during the Cold War, and the country was one of the founders of the Non-Aligned Movement.


Similarly, the Stalinist Albanian government also came to power independently of the Red Army as a consequence of World War II. Albania broke with the Soviet Union in the early 1960s and aligned itself instead with the People's Republic of China.


Nations within the Eastern Bloc were often held in the Soviet sphere of influence through military force. Hungary was invaded by the Red Army in 1956 after it had overthrown its pro-Soviet government; Czechoslovakia was similarly invaded in 1968 after a period of liberalization known as the Prague Spring. The latter invasion was codified in formal Soviet policy as the Brezhnev Doctrine.


The Eastern bloc came to an end with the collapse of the pro-Soviet regimes in Eastern Europe in 1989.


Today, the term former Eastern Bloc may be perceived as a politically-correct reference, instead of Eastern Europe, to countries formerly dominated by the Soviet Union.


See also: Western world, NATO


  Results from FactBites:
 
Creation of communist bloc (382 words)
In almost each country, "liberated" by The Red Army, the first communist changes took place before the war was ended.
Although it corresponded to the anti- fascist attitudes of local people the repression was accepted and initiated by the communists.
Under auspices of the fight with fascism, the wave of terror also aimed at the opponents of communism.
Communist Bloc Expansion in the Early Cold War: Challenging Realism, Refuting Revisionism (13334 words)
The Chinese communists closely followed Stalin's advice by responding to a Nationalist offer for peace negotiations with terms that they knew would be unacceptable.(57) These tactics were quite similar to those used by the Soviets in their "peace offensive" in Europe and elsewhere in 1949.
In their new role as bloc leader in the region, the Chinese began a large-scale effort in Indochina to support the Viet Minh under the leadership of Ho Chi Minh, as well as to help the Vietnamese reorganize the Cambodian and Laotian communists who had been members of the Indochinese Communist Party in the 1930s.
The effects of bloc members' local successes on the willingness of the Soviet Union as bloc leader to interpret capitalism as in general crisis and to take risks elsewhere are also either ignored or poorly understood.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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