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  1. The final step in the establishment of Communist regimes in Eastern Europe came with the seizure of power by the Communist party of Czechoslovakia in February 1948. From that point on, “People’s Democracies” allied with the Soviet Union were in place all over Eastern Europe. The Soviet power in the region was now firmly entrenched.

  2. The AXIS powers (Germany, Japan, & Italy) and the Soviet Union goals shifted throughout. The strategic goals of these 4 countries changed substantially over the course of the conflict. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the USSR's primary was simply survival. But as the war went on fortunes changed - so did their goals.

  3. Nov 24, 2021 · The horrors of World War II resulted in several political changes across the West, with the goal of preventing such a future conflict. Unfortunately, the resulting Cold War kept tensions high between the democratic, pro-capitalist North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the socialist Warsaw Pact, of which the Soviet Union was the dominant ...

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  4. The United Nations was created after World War II to ensure international peace and stability. In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles, which ended World War I, established a global IGO called the League of Nations. The purpose of the League was to facilitate good relations among countries of the world and to punish aggression.

  5. Eastern Bloc politics followed the Red Army's occupation of much of Central and Eastern Europe at the end of World War II and the Soviet Union's installation of Soviet-controlled Marxist–Leninist governments in the region that would be later called the Eastern Bloc through a process of bloc politics and repression.

  6. 20th-century international relations - Origins, WW2, 1929-39: The 1930s were a decade of unmitigated crisis culminating in the outbreak of a second total war. The treaties and settlements of the first postwar era collapsed with shocking suddenness under the impact of the Great Depression and the aggressive revisionism of Japan, Italy, and Germany. By 1933 hardly one stone stood on another of ...

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  8. Nov 23, 2011 · Even before the start of World War II in 1939, Stalin’s principle foreign policy objectives were clear, he pursued consistently a geopolitical policy, which sought to quench his relentless desire for security by expanding the Soviet borders outwards, making Russia the dominant power on the Eurasian landmass with buffer states to her West.

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