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  1. The Soviet Union used a four-level open numbering plan. The long-distance prefix was 8. One could call a local number without the code. Local numbers usually consisted of 5-7 digits, with seven-digit numbers only occurring in Moscow (since 1968), Leningrad (since 1976) and Kiev (since 1981).

  2. The telephone numbering plan of the USSR was a set of telephone area codes, numbers and dialing rules, which operated in the Soviet Union until the 1990s. After the collapse of the USSR, many newly independent republics implemented their own numbering plans.

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  4. Historically, country code 7 was used as the country calling code for all of the Soviet Union. Following the Soviet break-up, all of its former republics, save for Russia and Kazakhstan, switched to new country codes.

  5. Soviet sources explain the poor state of the telephone system after the revolution solely as a result of the Civil War, during which PTT (post, telegraph and telephone) stations were frequently attacked and destroyed.

  6. Sep 23, 2016 · The Washington-Moscow hotline was first proposed in the 1950s, but the idea didn’t gain traction until 1962’s Cuban Missile Crisis, when the Americans and Soviets found that their diplomatic...

  7. The phone number format for Russia, CIS member states and Baltic countries is as follows: XXX-XX-XX. Many former Soviet republics adopted the American format (XXX-XXXX), forgetting all about its cultural, historical and semantic implications.

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › +7+7 - Wikipedia

    +7 is an ITU country code for telephone numbering. It was originally assigned to the Soviet Union. After the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union, the code continued to be used by the fifteen successor states, the majority of whom switched to own country codes from the +3xx and +9xx ranges between 1993 and 1998.

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