Search results

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Page title matches

  • ...of its history it was governed exclusively by the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]] (CPSU). Although at first formed of four [[Soviet Socialist Republics]], Although the exact borders of the Soviet Union varied, by the end of the [[Second World War]] in 1945 it covered the vast
    5 KB (708 words) - 19:53, 25 July 2021
  • 2 KB (136 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 19:29, 14 November 2007
  • 219 bytes (30 words) - 13:37, 21 December 2008
  • 120 bytes (14 words) - 10:58, 3 September 2008
  • Through much of its existence, there were extensive [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] extrajudicial detention processes, or detention as the result of s ...al domestic detentions were under the rubric of [[Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric|punitive psychiatry, or the medicalization of dissent]].
    794 bytes (114 words) - 01:54, 27 June 2009
  • 388 bytes (48 words) - 19:02, 26 February 2024
  • {{main|Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union}} | title = Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union
    2 KB (218 words) - 01:45, 27 June 2009
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric}}
    523 bytes (64 words) - 16:27, 11 January 2010

Page text matches

  • Leader of the [[Russian Liberation Movement]], [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] soldiers supporting [[Germany]] during [[World War II]].
    163 bytes (19 words) - 16:17, 7 December 2008
  • A famous [[video game]] originally designed and programmed by [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] national [[Alexey Pajitnov]] in 1986.
    159 bytes (19 words) - 12:51, 6 March 2010
  • ...oximately 1975, to Iraq, and continuing through the [[Iran-Iraq War]]; the Soviet Union and [[French support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war|France]] were the le
    343 bytes (46 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...[novel]]ist who promoted "[[Socialist Realism]]", the official school of [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[literature]] and [[art]].
    184 bytes (22 words) - 11:34, 8 August 2009
  • ...e for the two countries; effectively abrogated by the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union by Germany
    258 bytes (36 words) - 13:29, 5 June 2010
  • ...y execution, of Soviet political officers captured by German forces in the Soviet Union
    179 bytes (26 words) - 04:33, 24 February 2009
  • Through much of its existence, there were extensive [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] extrajudicial detention processes, or detention as the result of s ...al domestic detentions were under the rubric of [[Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric|punitive psychiatry, or the medicalization of dissent]].
    794 bytes (114 words) - 01:54, 27 June 2009
  • #REDIRECT [[Soviet Union]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 13:37, 21 December 2008
  • A Soviet emigre to Israel who was active in [[human rights]] in the Soviet Union, and became active in Israeli politics; the new head of the [[Jewish Agency
    194 bytes (31 words) - 12:55, 24 August 2009
  • Probably the closest the U.S. and Soviet Union came to nuclear war, a confrontation, in October 1962, when Soviet missiles
    263 bytes (39 words) - 21:16, 11 September 2009
  • [[U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union]], 1987-1991; director for European and Soviet affairs, [[National Security
    279 bytes (34 words) - 10:35, 31 August 2009
  • ...he was part of the [[Refusenik (Soviet Union)|refusenik]] movement in the Soviet Union and was only able to emigrate to Israel in 1991, where he is now a professo
    752 bytes (107 words) - 10:50, 15 October 2012
  • (1931—) Last leader of the Soviet Union, appointed in 1985.
    97 bytes (11 words) - 07:52, 3 December 2008
  • Military intelligence agency of the [[Soviet Union]] and then [[Russian Federation]]
    120 bytes (14 words) - 01:55, 28 March 2009
  • * SS-3 (Soviet Union) * SS-4 (Soviet Union)
    377 bytes (45 words) - 16:21, 21 May 2008
  • ...nation(s). During the [[cold war]], the [[United States of America]] and [[Soviet Union]] were recognized superpowers. Since the breakup of the Soviet empire, some
    350 bytes (52 words) - 10:09, 28 February 2024
  • The system of forced labor camps of the [[Soviet Union]], often considered a state within a state; acronym for the Soviet bureaucr
    284 bytes (37 words) - 06:50, 19 October 2010
  • A competition of space exploration between the United States and Soviet Union, which lasted roughly from 1957 to 1975.
    154 bytes (20 words) - 09:35, 16 June 2008
  • The German invasion of the Soviet Union, beginning on June 22, 1941
    103 bytes (13 words) - 04:36, 24 February 2009
  • ...</noinclude>A mountainous country in the Middle East, formerly part of the Soviet Union.
    111 bytes (16 words) - 05:05, 22 October 2010
  • ...rica | American]], [[United Kingdom | British]], [[France | French]] and [[Soviet Union | Soviet]] sectors established after the defeat of the [[Nazi Germany]] in
    516 bytes (66 words) - 07:36, 9 June 2009
  • A landlocked central Asian nation, formerly part of the Soviet Union, bordered by China, Kyrgyzstan, [[Russia]], Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan
    176 bytes (22 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • Series of robotic spacecraft missions sent to the Moon by the Soviet Union between 1959 and 1976.
    134 bytes (18 words) - 10:04, 11 September 2009
  • Last all-gun [[light cruiser]]s to be built; Soviet Union had unclear doctrine but ships were excellent for showing the flag
    160 bytes (24 words) - 14:28, 16 April 2011
  • A landlocked central Asian nation, formerly part of the Soviet Union; after a coup, it successfully held democratic elections
    161 bytes (22 words) - 18:06, 20 October 2010
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric}}
    523 bytes (64 words) - 16:27, 11 January 2010
  • ...]. As [[World War II]] neared its end in 1944 and the Nazis retreated, the Soviet Union reoccupied Lithuania. On 11 March 1990, Lithuania became the first Soviet r
    1 KB (158 words) - 14:01, 26 July 2017
  • ...predominantly [[Muslim]], nation of [[Central Asia]], formerly part of the Soviet Union
    200 bytes (24 words) - 18:41, 3 March 2024
  • ...to space, on 12th April 1961; former fighter pilot in the air force of the Soviet Union.
    155 bytes (24 words) - 13:05, 4 November 2013
  • ...onal Security Council|NSC]] document describing the strategy to oppose the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
    157 bytes (21 words) - 10:16, 25 May 2008
  • Previously part of the Soviet Union, a landlocked, predominantly [[Muslim]] nation of [[Central Asia]], with A
    227 bytes (26 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • The period, from June 24, 1948 to May 11, 1949, when the Soviet Union cut all land routes to Berlin
    135 bytes (19 words) - 20:26, 12 September 2009
  • [[File:Ленин в январе 2013.JPG | thumb | The [[Soviet Union]]'s [[Lenin (icebreaker)|''Lenin'']] was the world's first nuclear powered ...t nuclear powered [[icebreaker]].<ref name=nytimes1959-09-16/> So far the Soviet Union, and its successor state, modern [[Russia]], are the only countries to oper
    3 KB (294 words) - 11:47, 4 August 2022
  • ...sed on the newly independent, predominantly Muslim republics of the former Soviet Union
    181 bytes (25 words) - 04:30, 14 February 2009
  • (1931–1945) global war killing 53 million people, with the "Allies" (UK, US, Soviet Union) eventually halting aggressive expansion by the "Axis" ([[Nazi Germany]] an
    176 bytes (23 words) - 10:42, 12 February 2024
  • ...gic, economic and ideological struggle from about 1947 to 1991 between the Soviet Union and the United States and their allies.
    172 bytes (22 words) - 21:30, 13 May 2008
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    225 bytes (30 words) - 11:44, 6 March 2014
  • Marshal of the Soviet Union and armored warfare theorist, purged and shot by Stalin for treason, which
    187 bytes (27 words) - 19:14, 3 September 2009
  • ...n March 2, 1931) became Secretary General of the Communist Party of the [[Soviet Union]] on March 11, 1985 and the ''de facto'' leader of the USSR. His rise to le
    2 KB (232 words) - 11:47, 19 March 2024
  • ...53) The head of Russia's Communist ("Bolshevik") party and dictator of the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death.
    160 bytes (21 words) - 04:47, 24 February 2009
  • ...bentrop Pact''', executed by the Foreign Ministers of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] and [[Vyacheslav Molotov]], was signed in Mosco ...'de facto'' abrogated by the [[Operation Barbarossa]] Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941.
    2 KB (242 words) - 01:11, 29 December 2010
  • ...were not prosecuted in exchange for information, such information on the [[Soviet Union]]
    235 bytes (33 words) - 14:18, 14 September 2009
  • Once a constituent part of the Soviet Union, now an independent [[Central Asia|Central Asian]] nation neighboring Afgha
    200 bytes (29 words) - 18:42, 3 March 2024
  • ...ation in Russia, which became independent of the [[KGB]] at the end of the Soviet Union, but now has been absorbed back into the [[FSB]]
    242 bytes (34 words) - 21:21, 22 May 2010
  • [[U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union]], 1981-87; [[U.S. Ambassador to France]], 1977-1981; [[Diplomats and Milit
    183 bytes (23 words) - 10:32, 31 August 2009
  • ...Federalnaya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti or FSB). Its immediate ancestor under the Soviet Union was the [[Committee for State Security]] ([[KGB]]) (Russian: Комитет
    612 bytes (67 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • Collectively, the armed services of the [[Soviet Union]], not limited to land forces but including its [[navy]], [[ballistic missi
    247 bytes (32 words) - 13:11, 3 September 2009
  • ...aggressive tactician who developed forward-operating doctrines against the Soviet Union
    260 bytes (36 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • ...the [[Empire of Japan]], not specifically of mutual defense against the [[Soviet Union]], but of the ostensibly independent [[Comintern|Communist International (C
    251 bytes (31 words) - 23:24, 15 September 2010
  • Series of robotic spacecraft missions launched by the Soviet Union, the first of these, Sputnik 1, launched the first human-made object to orb
    228 bytes (32 words) - 07:46, 12 September 2009
  • ...the [[United Kingdom]], and the former states of [[Yugoslavia]] and the [[Soviet Union]] have been described as constituent countries.<ref>[http://www.oecd.org/da
    908 bytes (133 words) - 01:16, 18 February 2009
  • ...ther means of strategic arms control verification, principally because the Soviet Union did not want its public to know that they could not prevent Western observa
    283 bytes (39 words) - 22:11, 28 December 2008
  • {{main|Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union}} | title = Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union
    2 KB (218 words) - 01:45, 27 June 2009
  • A civil war in Afghanistan that matched the Soviet Union and its Afghan allies against a coalition of anti-Communist groups called t
    259 bytes (38 words) - 06:23, 4 March 2024
  • ...y 1960, an American [[U-2]] reconnaissance aircraft was shot down over the Soviet Union. This led to an international furor, in which President [[Dwight D. Eisenho
    327 bytes (42 words) - 12:06, 25 May 2008
  • ...a three-year sentence for crimes against civilians in the invasion of the Soviet Union.
    232 bytes (35 words) - 16:44, 28 November 2010
  • '''Turkmenistan''', formerly a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, occupies 488,100 sq km in [[Central Asia]]. It has borders with Afghanist ...re]], but it was annexed by Russia in the 19th Century and was part of the Soviet Union until the 1990s. [[Ashgabat]], also called Ashkhabad, is its capital. Its c
    899 bytes (138 words) - 18:41, 3 March 2024
  • ...a top of 7.5 million. This disaster was part of the larger famine in the [[Soviet Union]], which also affected [[Kazakhstan]], the lower [[Volga]] region, and nort ...ommitted as part of [[Joseph Stalin]]'s collectivization program under the Soviet Union. [[Russia]]n historians often maintain that the famine was a natural conseq
    1 KB (186 words) - 11:33, 6 March 2014
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    485 bytes (64 words) - 20:30, 11 January 2010
  • ===Soviet Union=== ===Soviet Union===
    2 KB (292 words) - 10:48, 8 April 2024
  • ...e Upravlenie]] ([[GRU]]), the national military organization of both the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Russian Federation]], roughly comparable in mission (but not method
    338 bytes (44 words) - 10:12, 12 September 2009
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    116 bytes (13 words) - 11:43, 4 August 2022
  • ...d the [[United States of America]] (U.S.). It preceded the breakup of the Soviet Union. In many respects, it was the political model that created a relatively fa ...p of the [[Sino-Soviet Bloc]] and the border tension between China and the Soviet Union, had to include the PRC. In detente, the five-power model that characterize
    2 KB (270 words) - 10:16, 28 February 2024
  • ...titution]]: specialist on [[arms control]], the [[Cold War]], the former [[Soviet Union]] and [[NATO]]; former [[U.S. Ambassador to Bulgaria]] and has also advised
    350 bytes (46 words) - 05:38, 28 November 2009
  • ...Анато́льевич Медве́дев; born 14th September 1965 in [[Leningrad]] of the [[Soviet Union]]) is the current president of [[Russia]]. He succeeded [[Vladimir Putin]]
    349 bytes (37 words) - 18:47, 17 September 2008
  • ...se strategies for expansion beyond China and Mongolia, striking into the [[Soviet Union]] in search of resources; supporters included the [[Imperial Way Faction]],
    330 bytes (45 words) - 21:01, 28 August 2010
  • ...the cryptanalysis of messages sent by several intelligence agencies of the Soviet Union.
    256 bytes (34 words) - 20:39, 4 September 2009
  • ...45, in conformance with agreements made at the [[Yalta Conference]], the [[Soviet Union]] attacked the [[Empire of Japan]], using 1.5 million troops on a 2730 mile
    1 KB (218 words) - 12:39, 14 December 2010
  • With the fall of the [[Soviet Union]], its former constituent republics were faced with multiple diplomatic, ec The end of the Soviet Union resulted in the eruption of multiple boundary and sovereignty disputes, inc
    3 KB (373 words) - 03:51, 8 April 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    450 bytes (71 words) - 06:56, 4 April 2024
  • ...t Union]] on 4 October 1957. This triggered the [[Space Race]] between the Soviet Union and the [[United States of America]].
    1 KB (125 words) - 14:12, 2 February 2023
  • ...r headed Aktion 1005 (1942-1944) to destroy evidence in mass graves in the Soviet Union; hanged by verdict of the [[Einsatzgruppen Case (NMT)]]
    310 bytes (43 words) - 04:43, 17 November 2010
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    613 bytes (81 words) - 16:24, 11 January 2010
  • ...975, to Iraq, and continuing through the [[Iran-Iraq War]]; France and the Soviet Union were the leading military suppliers to Iraq
    286 bytes (37 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ==Soviet Union== Japan and the Soviet Union fought a large-scale border war in Manchukuo in 1939, resulting in a major
    3 KB (458 words) - 07:15, 31 March 2024
  • ...of its history it was governed exclusively by the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]] (CPSU). Although at first formed of four [[Soviet Socialist Republics]], Although the exact borders of the Soviet Union varied, by the end of the [[Second World War]] in 1945 it covered the vast
    5 KB (708 words) - 19:53, 25 July 2021
  • ...was governed by a balance among three elements: the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the Red Army and the Organs of State Security. Each maintained a division
    1 KB (197 words) - 07:33, 18 March 2024
  • ...[[Second World War]]. After the war, he served as [[Ambassador]] to the [[Soviet Union]], [[Director of Central Intelligence]] and Undersecretary of State.
    354 bytes (52 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    796 bytes (107 words) - 18:08, 11 January 2010
  • ...h his wife, [[Mildred Harnack]], spied for [[Red Orchestra]] ring of the [[Soviet Union]] in the interest of ending the war; arrested September 1942 and executed i
    360 bytes (52 words) - 16:00, 22 November 2010
  • ...Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon withdrew from participating in the 1956 games. The Soviet Union's presence in Hungary resulted in the withdrawal of the Netherlands, Spain
    725 bytes (113 words) - 10:55, 20 April 2021
  • ...n the Agenda] &mdash; a 1985 article on the history of internet use in the Soviet Union
    518 bytes (83 words) - 06:51, 22 October 2010
  • Usually known as the [[KGB]], one of [[Organs of State Security]] of the [[Soviet Union]], with extensive responsibilities in [[intelligence (information gathering
    387 bytes (49 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • Early in [[World War II]] [[Germany]] made arrangements with the [[Soviet Union]] for the [[German auxiliary cruiser Komet|German auxiliary cruiser ''Komet
    1 KB (190 words) - 22:16, 10 October 2023
  • ...ecoy would be dropped from its host aircraft shortly before entering the [[Soviet Union]]'s airspace.<ref name=pimaairAdm20c/> ...52 bomber just before it attempted to penetrate the aerial defenses of the Soviet Union.
    3 KB (392 words) - 13:57, 16 January 2024
  • ...a ''war-fighting and war-winning'' doctrine, which was confirmed after the Soviet Union's collapse." <ref name=NYT2003-06-21>{{citation
    3 KB (414 words) - 07:35, 18 March 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    699 bytes (91 words) - 06:25, 4 March 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    286 bytes (41 words) - 22:06, 13 August 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    302 bytes (39 words) - 16:00, 1 April 2024
  • ...History of the Soviet Union (1953-1985)|de-stalinization]] in the former [[Soviet Union]] 1956.
    1 KB (214 words) - 09:04, 3 August 2011
  • ...man, the last summit conference of the Second World War, with Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States represented; dealt with the [[Occupation of Germany]
    360 bytes (55 words) - 21:42, 20 September 2010
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    101 bytes (13 words) - 08:42, 25 March 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    265 bytes (37 words) - 10:54, 30 July 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    834 bytes (112 words) - 18:00, 11 January 2010
  • The Soviet Union invaded it in 1945.
    331 bytes (50 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    220 bytes (25 words) - 11:47, 6 March 2014
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    171 bytes (21 words) - 17:32, 13 February 2024
  • From 1918 &ndash; 1946, the combined military forces of the [[Soviet Union]] were collectively called the '''Red Army''', even when specialized high-t
    892 bytes (126 words) - 13:44, 3 September 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    205 bytes (26 words) - 16:50, 1 April 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    299 bytes (40 words) - 13:34, 21 December 2008
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    343 bytes (44 words) - 23:35, 15 September 2010
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    190 bytes (23 words) - 11:49, 20 February 2009
  • *[[Operation Uranus]]: Soviet Union vs. Germany at Stalingrad; Soviet victory
    1 KB (220 words) - 14:01, 17 May 2008
  • ...nown for his contributions to the post-WWII containment policy towards the Soviet Union, which became, although often misinterpreted, one of the basic doctrines of | title = (Telegram) The Charge in the Soviet Union (Kennan) to the Secretary of State
    3 KB (379 words) - 15:48, 1 April 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    294 bytes (39 words) - 06:08, 9 May 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    283 bytes (35 words) - 02:12, 10 March 2014
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    804 bytes (118 words) - 03:11, 29 March 2010
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    144 bytes (15 words) - 10:04, 26 September 2020
  • ...came part of the [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic]] in the [[Soviet Union]], together with the northern part of East Prussia. The German population w After the disintegration of the [[Soviet Union]] Kaliningrad Oblast became a Russian exclave, separated from the rest of R
    2 KB (360 words) - 19:41, 16 February 2008
  • ...promoted [[realism (foreign policy)]] and [[détente]] with China and the [[Soviet Union]]; shared 1973 [[Nobel Peace Prize]] for ending the [[Vietnam War]]; Direct
    471 bytes (60 words) - 08:34, 21 March 2024
  • {{r|U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union}}
    412 bytes (61 words) - 08:58, 23 April 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    420 bytes (52 words) - 15:49, 29 July 2009
  • Under the [[Soviet Union]], aircraft and missiles were developed by organizations called '''design b
    1 KB (151 words) - 20:40, 30 September 2009
  • ...th | first = Samantha | coauthors = Smith, Arthur | title = Journey to the Soviet Union | edition = 1st | year = 1985 | publisher = Little Brown and Co. | locatio
    443 bytes (58 words) - 18:15, 14 November 2013
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    585 bytes (70 words) - 13:33, 26 September 2020
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    421 bytes (56 words) - 09:59, 15 February 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    359 bytes (42 words) - 10:54, 12 April 2024
  • ...Spain, south-east Europe, and parts of Africa, South Asia, and the former Soviet Union for subjects of relevance to Middle Eastern civilization.
    483 bytes (70 words) - 16:13, 2 October 2009
  • ...Ministers' Conference in October 1943, Stalin had been suggesting that the Soviet Union abrogate its nonaggression treaty with Japan and attack, principally as a m ...nference had demonstrated the "unity of Britain, the United States and the Soviet Union." <ref>{{citation
    5 KB (792 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    558 bytes (72 words) - 13:31, 22 February 2024
  • ...ajikistan''' is a land-locked Central [[Asia]]n nation, formerly part of [[Soviet Union]], with the capital [[Dushanbe]].<ref name=CiaFactbook> The country went through a long civil war, when the Soviet Union collapsed. During this time, according to Robert Baer, government officials
    2 KB (307 words) - 12:10, 20 February 2024
  • ...ussian citizens, most older Tatars grew up as [[atheism|atheists]] under [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] rule.
    1 KB (185 words) - 14:53, 6 February 2009
  • ...ry|chemist]] who answered an advertisement to go into space as part of a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] mission to the [[Mir Space Station]], co-funded by UK companies. A
    1 KB (169 words) - 16:19, 16 December 2015
  • Founded in the U.S. in response to the fall of the Soviet Union, an international Christian legal group that "puts in practice the strategy
    586 bytes (92 words) - 09:58, 16 January 2010
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    496 bytes (62 words) - 15:15, 9 March 2024
  • ...the world. It was also the largest [[Soviet republic]] within the former [[Soviet Union]]. ...r, "Autopsy On An Empire: Understanding Mortality in Russia and the Former Soviet Union." ''Journal Of Economic Perspectives'' 2005 19(1): 107-130. Issn: 0895-3309
    2 KB (274 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...People's Republic (1918–19), Belarus became a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, the [[Byelorussian SSR]]. ...sovereignty of Belarus on July 27, 1990, and following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Belarus declared independence on August 25, 1991. [[ Alexander Lukashenko]
    3 KB (384 words) - 17:10, 26 May 2016
  • ...rcraft artillery]] (AAA) were the division-level air-defense system of the Soviet Union, before being replaced by SA-6 GAINFUL/[[2K12]] [[surface-to-air missile]]s
    1 KB (163 words) - 18:47, 3 April 2024
  • ...aders of the three countries signed an agreement on the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the creation of CIS as a successor entity to the USSR. On December 21,
    3 KB (487 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • {{r|Extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric}}
    601 bytes (75 words) - 14:03, 1 April 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    579 bytes (76 words) - 18:35, 11 January 2010
  • ...krainian area of [[Galicia]] was added to it after the Germans invaded the Soviet Union.
    1 KB (200 words) - 13:49, 31 December 2010
  • ===Soviet Union===
    1,001 bytes (143 words) - 16:55, 13 December 2010
  • ====Soviet Union====
    3 KB (435 words) - 15:45, 30 June 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    592 bytes (78 words) - 20:50, 11 January 2010
  • ...nce''' was the last conference of the Second World War, with Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States represented. While [[Joseph Stalin]] had been involv
    637 bytes (94 words) - 21:44, 20 September 2010
  • ...status in [[Russia]], [[Ukraine]] and some other countries of the former [[Soviet Union]]. Urban-type settlement is thus located in a niche between rural settlemen
    674 bytes (85 words) - 17:48, 5 April 2008
  • ...istan is a secular, predominantly Muslim state, a former republic of the [[Soviet Union]]. There are significant Uzbek minorities in Afghanistan and China; they a
    702 bytes (103 words) - 08:07, 29 February 2024
  • * Galeotti, Mark. ''Afghanistan, The Soviet Union's Last War'' (1995), shows highly negative impact in Russia * Sarin, Oleg, and Lev Dvoretsky. ''The Afghan Syndrome: The Soviet Union's Vietnam.'' (1993). 240 pp.
    7 KB (928 words) - 06:23, 4 March 2024
  • ...came the capital of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, part of the [[Soviet Union]]. Around 1990, as the Soviet Union crumbled, Ukrainians agitated for independence, ultimately leading to the p
    5 KB (673 words) - 10:40, 6 March 2014
  • ...founded the Defense and Space business and led Bechtel's work in "Former Soviet Union (FSU) Demilitarization"; specializing in nuclear weapons and nonproliferati
    704 bytes (96 words) - 11:07, 15 September 2009
  • ...the south, and to the west by Iran and [[Turkey]]. Formerly part of the [[Soviet Union]], Armenia declared independence in 1991, with Independence Day celebrated
    2 KB (221 words) - 18:41, 3 March 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    683 bytes (92 words) - 18:36, 11 January 2010
  • ...d the region eventually came under Chinese rule in the 17th century. The [[Soviet Union]] helped it break free of China in 1924, but installed a Communist governme
    631 bytes (93 words) - 23:11, 22 May 2009
  • ...e of power in 1917 and their attempts to build socialism in Russia and the Soviet Union, particularly because of their suppression of their opponents, including th In 1924 Kautsky moved to Vienna, and continued to write books on the Soviet Union and on Marxism.
    2 KB (330 words) - 12:10, 8 October 2009
  • * Jones, Robert Huhn. ''The Roads to Russia: United States Lend-lease to the Soviet Union'' (1969), adds little original ...Harriman-Beaverbrook Mission and the Debate over Unconditional Aid for the Soviet Union, 1941." ''Journal of Contemporary History'' 14, no. 3 ( July 1979): 463-82.
    4 KB (522 words) - 23:35, 30 December 2007
  • The '''GOST cipher''' was a standard [[block cipher]] in the [[Soviet Union]]. GOST was a Soviet national standards body. There was also a related GOST
    1 KB (228 words) - 05:49, 8 April 2024
  • Under the [[Soviet Union]], the '''Committee for State Security''' (Russian: Комитет госу
    2 KB (317 words) - 23:12, 8 August 2010
  • ...aya, while the Imperial Way backed [[Strike-North]] into Manchuria and the Soviet Union. The [[February 26 Incident]] of 1936, a coup attempt by young officers as
    866 bytes (123 words) - 19:32, 21 August 2010
  • ...ecution, of Soviet [[political officer]]s captured by German forces in the Soviet Union. It was treated as a [[war crime]] by the [[Nuremberg Trials]], since unifo
    2 KB (227 words) - 16:44, 31 December 2010
  • ...e a civil or ceremonial rank. It may have a suffix such as Marshal of the Soviet Union.
    792 bytes (126 words) - 04:13, 7 June 2009
  • ...u/bio Vladimir Putin]'. Undated. Accessed October 16, 2014.</ref> In the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] era he was a member of the [[KGB]] (1975-1990), and in the 1990s w
    2 KB (236 words) - 08:45, 16 October 2014
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    814 bytes (103 words) - 15:32, 7 September 2009
  • ...n 1934 in [[Bukhara]] in present-day's Uzbekistan, then belonging to the [[Soviet Union]]) is a [[musician]] specialized in [[Central Asia]]n traditional music, pa In 1991, when Uzbekistan declared its independence as the Soviet Union was about to be dissolved, Ari Babakhanov founded at the Bukhara Philharmon
    3 KB (406 words) - 08:06, 29 February 2024
  • ...rs are on the increase; he also pointed to previous entities such as the [[Soviet Union|Soviet republics]] as further examples of pseudostates - those with the app
    2 KB (270 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • [[File:Ленин в январе 2013.JPG | thumb | The [[Soviet Union]]'s [[Lenin (icebreaker)|''Lenin'']] was the world's first nuclear powered ...ebreakers, with engines capable of generating over 50,000 horsepower. The Soviet Union's [[Lenin (icebreaker)|''Lenin'']] was the world's first nuclear powered ic
    4 KB (549 words) - 11:10, 4 August 2022
  • ..., an intelligence organization made up of former German specialists on the Soviet Union, and became its chief of security. In that role, he had extensive access to
    3 KB (454 words) - 07:29, 18 March 2024
  • ====Soviet Union====
    867 bytes (112 words) - 07:53, 19 September 2013
  • The [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] '''''Kirov'' class guided-missile cruiser''' is the largest [[wars
    2 KB (323 words) - 00:58, 15 April 2010
  • ...HFcQ This YouTube video] demonstrates a game of ''Tetris'' played on the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-made DVK-2 computer (successor of the Elektronika 60 computer, usi
    2 KB (334 words) - 17:43, 31 May 2010
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    806 bytes (113 words) - 09:52, 28 July 2023
  • ...> Variants are spoken from [[Finland]] and across [[Russia]] and former [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] republics. There are three dialects: Western, Central, and Easter
    2 KB (315 words) - 12:54, 20 September 2013
  • | title = (Telegram) The Charge in the Soviet Union (Kennan) to the Secretary of State The fall of the Soviet Union had immense geopolitical ramifications.
    4 KB (511 words) - 20:02, 2 March 2011
  • ...the Soviets, in the Secret Intelligence Service. Philby later moved to the Soviet Union.
    2 KB (352 words) - 04:31, 21 March 2024
  • * Lee, Stephen J. ''Stalin and the Soviet Union'' (1999) [http://www.questia.com/read/108215209?title=Stalin%20and%20the%20 * De Jonge, Alex. ''Stalin and the Shaping of the Soviet Union'' (1986)
    7 KB (1,004 words) - 00:59, 11 February 2010
  • ...der of the [[Russian Liberation Movement]], a group of soldiers from the [[Soviet Union]] supporting Germany during [[World War II]] and claiming an ideological ba ...s later decisions, the autobiography of the later general secretary of the Soviet Union [[Nikita Khrushchev]] makes mention of Vlasov's abilities as a military com
    8 KB (1,348 words) - 03:50, 10 January 2011
  • ...apable of delivering a nuclear warhead principally to be targeted at the [[Soviet Union]]'s 'main adversary' the [[United States of America]]. ...nth after Sputnik 1 in time for the 40th anniversary of the birth of the [[Soviet Union]]. Unfortunately it is thought the dog died from heat and stress a few hour
    3 KB (489 words) - 19:13, 15 October 2013
  • ...nd America Department. He served as minister to Holland, ambassador to the Soviet Union, and in other diplomatic posts.<ref>{{citation While Ambassador to the Soviet Union, in September, he was receiving proposals for a nonaggression pact while hi
    4 KB (651 words) - 23:40, 8 September 2010
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    949 bytes (150 words) - 05:18, 31 July 2009
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    990 bytes (155 words) - 06:05, 9 May 2009
  • ...ce]]. A former [[jet fighter|fighter]] pilot in the [[air force]] of the [[Soviet Union]], Gagarin later trained as a [[cosmonaut]]. He launched in [[Vostok 1]] on
    3 KB (474 words) - 13:01, 4 November 2013
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    769 bytes (113 words) - 11:39, 2 February 2023
  • Retaining the same name and initials under both the [[Soviet Union]] and the [[Russian Federation]], the '''Main Intelligence Administration o
    1 KB (166 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • It regained its independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Note that it has a signficant border and separatist issue with Arm
    1 KB (151 words) - 01:30, 27 March 2024
  • After the war, he served as [[Ambassador]] to the [[Soviet Union]], [[Director of Central Intelligence]] and Undersecretary of State.
    971 bytes (143 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • ...constitutional monarchies]] and some nations like [[Israel]] and the old [[Soviet Union]], the Head of State's role is limited to ceremonial duties such as ribbon
    1 KB (164 words) - 18:35, 10 February 2024
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    1 KB (165 words) - 15:58, 3 December 2008
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    1 KB (167 words) - 06:03, 9 May 2009
  • During the dissolution of the [[Soviet Union]], certain well-placed individuals were able to leverage their knowledge an
    1 KB (145 words) - 02:13, 10 March 2014
  • ...h eventually won the allegiance of all labor federations save those of the Soviet Union and its satellites. The AFL hailed the [[Harry S. Truman|Truman]] administr
    5 KB (745 words) - 15:16, 4 April 2024
  • ...is father, the late Mustafa Barzani, founded the party, was exiled to the Soviet Union while he stayed in Iraq with his mother.
    2 KB (294 words) - 07:30, 18 March 2024
  • In the early fifties, the Soviet Union built 13 Sverdlovsk-class with twelve 6-inch/152mm guns in triple turrets.
    3 KB (452 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • ...and was appointed Ambassador to Germany, and then became Ambassador to the Soviet Union in the following year.
    3 KB (443 words) - 03:04, 5 October 2013
  • '''Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD)''' was a strategy shared between the [[Soviet Union]] and [[United States of America]] that analysts widely believed prevented
    1 KB (182 words) - 17:07, 22 March 2024
  • The [[Katyusha rocket launcher]] was an early missile truck used by the [[Soviet Union]] during World War II. In turn, the [[United States of America|U.S.]] pro In the former Soviet Union and now in Russia, missile trucks with their missiles on display drove thro
    6 KB (839 words) - 08:39, 11 September 2023
  • ...in's influence on the Navy. Prior to [[World War II]], the Army saw the [[Soviet Union]] as its expected final opponent, although Army units, operating autonomous
    1 KB (164 words) - 14:24, 28 August 2010
  • ...arian fashion from top down. The most important Communist states were the Soviet Union (1918-1991), its satellites in Eastern Europe (1945-1989), as well as China ...ower after a power struggle in the top ranks of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Stalin wrote further theoretical works, and as a part of his [[cult of per
    11 KB (1,738 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...or in a noncombat situation. While some Soviet awards of the [[Hero of the Soviet Union]] medals were political, legitimate military Hero medals (and now [[Hero of
    2 KB (324 words) - 07:48, 31 July 2009
  • ...eld Marshal for service in [[Operation Barbarossa]], the invasion of the [[Soviet Union]] in which he commanded Army group North. He received a minimal sentence of ...in 1937, ''Die Abweht'' where he argued that Germany could not defeat the Soviet Union in a two-front war.
    3 KB (454 words) - 05:26, 29 December 2010
  • ...ce strategy apparently succeeded in preventing nuclear warfare between the Soviet Union and the United States. Mutual assured destruction, with the rather appropri
    1 KB (175 words) - 07:29, 18 March 2024
  • ...to]] and the bulk of the high command. Some of its advocates targeted the Soviet Union due to especially strong concerns about Communism. Others simply saw it as ...not do well. Japan had been counting on German aid and distraction of the Soviet Union as a result of the [[Tripartite Pact]], but was shocked, and set back, by t
    6 KB (857 words) - 21:31, 3 October 2010
  • ...ring the Iran-Iraq War|covert direct and satellite support for Iran by the Soviet Union, with the apparent strategic goal of damaging the United States by proxy. I ...ns it made, as well as acting as a conduit for shipments directly from the Soviet Union and the PRC, even though China was a rival of the Soviets for Middle East i
    8 KB (1,156 words) - 07:31, 18 March 2024
  • ...Camp David Accords]] between Israel and Egypt, the end of détente with the Soviet Union after its invasion of Afghanistan, the boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics,
    1 KB (186 words) - 14:48, 24 February 2023
  • {{r|Soviet Union}}
    979 bytes (147 words) - 06:57, 11 March 2024
  • ...en failure of the German Army to prepare for post-combat operations in the Soviet Union, and is a substantive history of the staff thinking during the [[Operation
    1 KB (195 words) - 15:37, 8 April 2024
  • ...igence Agency employee, William Kampiles, sold the technical manual to the Soviet Union in 1978.
    1 KB (208 words) - 07:29, 18 March 2024
  • During [[World War II]], before [[Germany]] attacked the [[Soviet Union]], Germany hired Soviet icebreakers to escort a [[merchant raider]] across
    4 KB (443 words) - 10:50, 23 February 2024
  • ...into two states following [[World War II]], since when the North has had [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-inspired government, first under [[Kim Il-sung]] and then under hi
    3 KB (378 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...long-term U.S. [[communications intelligence]] project directed against [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[diplomacy|diplomatic]] [[clandestine human-source intelligence|e
    5 KB (731 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • An extremely powerful [[anti-shipping missile]] developed by the Soviet Union and continuing in service on Russian Federation vessels, the '''P-700 3M-45
    1 KB (204 words) - 22:36, 23 June 2009
  • ...ate organizations to avoid having too much power in one place, just as the Soviet Union would mix Party, Army, and Organs of State Security. Moscow, for example, h
    1 KB (225 words) - 07:36, 18 March 2024
  • ==Soviet Union== ...nyone in the West to continue closing their eyes to the real nature of the Soviet Union."<ref name=WeeklyStandard>{{citation
    8 KB (1,254 words) - 15:33, 4 April 2024
  • ...iving full attention to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
    2 KB (241 words) - 03:04, 21 January 2009
  • ...a, Asia and the South Pacific, the "Allies" (led mainly by the UK, US, and Soviet Union) eventually stopped the aggressively expanding "Axis" (mainly Germany and J ...ld dominated by two [[Superpowers|superpowers]], the United States and the Soviet Union. The war also broke the ability of the remaining colonial powers (mainly G
    4 KB (677 words) - 13:20, 31 March 2024
  • ...plies that the control mechanism is the dominant aspect of government. The Soviet Union, for example, had, as a major part of its government, the [[Organs of State
    2 KB (222 words) - 12:06, 14 February 2024
  • ...s were developed in response to experience from the German invasion of the Soviet Union. In the initial Il-2M, the engine was upgraded to give adequate performance
    2 KB (379 words) - 23:53, 18 December 2009
  • Japan and the Soviet Union fought a large-scale border war in Manchukuo in 1939, resulting in a major ...uary 1945, President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] secretly agreed to give the Soviet Union Japan's sphere of interest in Manchuria in return for Soviet intervention i
    6 KB (801 words) - 07:15, 31 March 2024
  • Most definitions do focus on countries created by the breakup of the [[Soviet Union]], but do not limit it to those former Soviet Republics.
    5 KB (649 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • The 'greater' Turkestan was subdivided into West (former [[Soviet Union]] countries) and East Turkestan (administered as the Xinjiang Uighur Autono
    1 KB (208 words) - 16:46, 1 April 2024
  • * '''Xth IAU General Assembly''' (1958): [[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]]
    2 KB (230 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...lvement with World War II Nazi war criminals|U.S. intelligence against the Soviet Union]], before German trial and imprisonment in 1951.
    1 KB (221 words) - 14:15, 2 January 2011
  • ...cabinet the "Mitsubishi government", and, indeed, he signed a treaty with Soviet Union, which obtained oil concessions, in northern Sakhalin, for the [[zabaitsu]]
    3 KB (392 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...e in many ways, such as jointly operating one of the best sources on the [[Soviet Union]], [[Oleg Penkovsky]].
    2 KB (225 words) - 14:20, 22 March 2024
  • * Payne, Stanley G. ''The Spanish Civil War, the Soviet Union, and Communism.'' (2004). 377 pp. * Radosh, Ronald et al., eds. ''Spain Betrayed: The Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War.'' (2001). 525 pp.
    5 KB (676 words) - 06:29, 17 October 2010
  • ...ayev]], from whom she was later [[divorce]]d. She became a member of the [[Soviet Union]]'s [[Supreme Sovie|national parliament]]<ref>''About.com'': '[http://space
    3 KB (466 words) - 13:17, 5 November 2013
  • In the attack against the Soviet Union, he led [[Army Group Center (Russian Front)]]], whose principal objective w
    2 KB (402 words) - 01:48, 10 January 2011
  • After the [[Socialist Republic of Vietnam]] was formed, the [[Soviet Union]] operated a large [[signals intelligence]] facility here, which was shut d
    1 KB (205 words) - 22:22, 6 July 2010
  • ...e trolleybuses, trolleybuses are very popular in Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union.
    2 KB (249 words) - 07:52, 7 February 2010
  • ...rdinator for nonproliferation and nuclear safety initiatives in the former Soviet Union and as Deputy Executive Chairman of the UN Special Commission overseeing th
    2 KB (248 words) - 16:58, 22 March 2024
  • ...of America|U.S. President]] [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] and [[Premier of the Soviet Union|Soviet Premier]] [[Nikita Khruschev|Nikita Khrushchev]] each asked the [[Un
    8 KB (1,291 words) - 14:49, 24 February 2023
  • *[[Operation Barbarossa|Soviet Union]] (June 1941)
    2 KB (212 words) - 14:06, 5 January 2011
  • With the breakup of the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact, several countries need MiG-29s to be interoperable with NA
    3 KB (490 words) - 16:24, 30 March 2024
  • ...on to support his foundations in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Those foundations were established, starting in 1984, to help countries ma
    3 KB (430 words) - 11:01, 15 April 2024
  • ...ccessmonthday = April 25 |accessyear = 2006}}</ref> after her visit to the Soviet Union, she wrote a book and co-starred in a [[television series]] before her deat ...deploy [[cruise missile]]s and the [[Pershing II]] missile in Europe. The Soviet Union had been [[Soviet invasion of Afghanistan|involved in a war in Afghanistan]
    15 KB (2,376 words) - 10:28, 27 June 2023
  • ...s the worst day of his life, he said: "Just as Stalin industrialized the Soviet Union, so on a different scale Saddam plotted Iraq's Great Leap Forward." When Br
    5 KB (690 words) - 07:30, 18 March 2024
  • ...dence from Soviet physicist Peter Kapitza, that he became aware that the [[Soviet Union]] knew of the advances the British and American scientists had made on the
    3 KB (472 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...[[Harry S. Truman]] in 1950 that laid out the basic strategy to oppose the Soviet Union in fighting the [[Cold War]]. It called for tripling the defense budget, an :within the next four or five years the Soviet Union will possess the military capability of delivering a surprise atomic attack
    11 KB (1,593 words) - 10:39, 28 February 2024
  • ...power in a [[coup]]. In 1968, as the country's economy liberalised, the [[Soviet Union]] invaded, which brought a halt to reforms. [[Communism|Communist]] governm
    2 KB (275 words) - 04:33, 25 October 2014
  • ...ed, it continued operations, to the concern of various nations outside the Soviet Union. National parties increasingly condemned Nazi Germany while pushing for int ...o that request. No commission of the Second International ever visited the Soviet Union.
    12 KB (1,738 words) - 04:25, 21 March 2024
  • Russia and the Soviet Union have deployed the 240mm SM-240 (2S4) Tyul’pan mortar carrier since 1975;
    3 KB (543 words) - 09:52, 30 July 2010
  • The Soviet Union continues to field the [[OTR-21 Tochka]], [[DIA]]/[[NATO]] designation [[SS
    2 KB (264 words) - 17:07, 22 March 2024
  • ...any where in the world. The program was designed to gather imagery of the Soviet Union, with an emphasis on the Soviet ballistic missile program. While the [[U-2
    5 KB (677 words) - 10:29, 8 April 2024
  • The Soviet Union often went from division to army; a Soviet army was often the size of a Wes
    3 KB (535 words) - 16:21, 30 March 2024
  • ...provided arms to the Nationalist forces in the Spanish Civil War, with the Soviet Union providing aid to the Republican cause, while Britain, Framce and the U.S. r The effect on Europe's other major powers, France, Britain, and the Soviet Union, was the realization thaty [[appeasement]] policies had failed. While thei
    10 KB (1,567 words) - 22:16, 16 January 2011
  • ...de''' refers to the period, from June 24, 1948 to May 11, 1949, when the [[Soviet Union]] cut all land routes to [[Berlin]]. Berlin, deep inside the Soviet Zone of ...-liners, wanted to continue the war in Europe with the new enemy being the Soviet Union. Statements like these caused GEN [[George Patton|George S. Patton Jr.]] to
    10 KB (1,596 words) - 18:39, 17 February 2010
  • :1991: Collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] and the beginning of the [[Yugoslav Wars]]
    9 KB (1,249 words) - 05:40, 19 September 2013
  • ...apan's [[Unit 731]], in the U.K. and U.S. circa 1942, and certainly in the Soviet Union, although the dates are less clear. There is relatively little evidence tha The Soviet Union may have continued offensive work in secret, under the cover of an organiza
    5 KB (790 words) - 10:43, 8 April 2024
  • ...not the SS) had no rank of [[brigadier general]]. In both Germany and the Soviet Union, the "Generalmajor" rank was equivalent to the "one-star" rank, and all the
    3 KB (347 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • ...'' (1893-1937), sometimes called the "Red Bonaparte", was a Marshal of the Soviet Union when he was purged and shot. At the time, he was Commander of the Volga Mil
    8 KB (1,175 words) - 07:24, 9 February 2011
  • '''''Tetris''''' is a [[video game]] originally designed and programmed by [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] national [[Alexey Pajitnov]] in 1986. The game soared to global fa
    4 KB (633 words) - 11:46, 25 January 2024
  • ...considered a Nazi. He had run the Army intelligence branch directed at the Soviet Union. Germany took control in 1956.
    2 KB (322 words) - 20:59, 8 August 2010
  • ...is brother, Bobby. Nothing was ever proven. John Seigenthaler moved to the Soviet Union in 1971, and returned to the United States in 1984," Wikipedia said. "He st
    2 KB (348 words) - 11:35, 19 March 2024
  • ...nance disposal. Hero of the Russian Federation and the earlier Hero of the Soviet Union were usually presented for high valor, although some were given to high com
    2 KB (357 words) - 07:33, 18 March 2024
  • ...istan''' is a land-locked Central [[Asia]]n nation, formerly part of the [[Soviet Union]].<ref name=CiaFactbook>
    2 KB (317 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • ...nomic warfare]] against China.<blockquote>Because of the activities of the Soviet Union and the situation prevailing in China, Japan is going to start operations i
    3 KB (364 words) - 03:30, 7 September 2010
  • ...eagan was running for President. The welfare system has been reformed. The Soviet Union obviously no longer exists. And so the GOP has sort of run out of things to
    2 KB (362 words) - 16:45, 25 March 2024
  • ...ly those activities following the [[Operation Barbarossa]] invasion of the Soviet Union.
    3 KB (321 words) - 20:22, 28 December 2010
  • ...ary 23]], 1938 - [[December 8]], 1986) was an influential and well-known [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[dissident]], [[author]], and [[human rights]] campaigner. He was ...it was released in the West in 1969, after limited circulation inside the Soviet Union as ''[[samizdat]]''. It brought home to readers around the world, including
    15 KB (2,493 words) - 18:42, 3 March 2024
  • ...nto common use in the context of the [[Operation Barbarossa]] invading the Soviet Union, but the function started with the invasion of Poland, killing political un Note that the actual invasion of the Soviet Union began on 22 June 1941. Earlier incarnations were brutal but not genocidal.
    9 KB (1,266 words) - 12:05, 18 May 2023
  • ...he Cold War Superpowers, specials on crises in China, Iran, and the former Soviet Union. And would oversee specials, including a town hall meeting between America
    4 KB (601 words) - 21:07, 19 September 2013
  • ...Reagan Administration's Secret Strategy that Hastened the Collapse of the Soviet Union'' (1994)
    4 KB (514 words) - 10:13, 15 May 2009
  • .... In 1942 he successfully infiltrated the "[[Red Orchestra]]" network of [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] spies and used it to feed false information to the Soviet intellig ...During 1941 he dispatched Eichmann on tours of inspection of the occupied Soviet Union, and received detailed reports on the work of the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'', w
    15 KB (2,544 words) - 12:47, 2 April 2024
  • ...lities for ideology, it was not in the same sense of the Ideologist of the Soviet Union, who vetted all serious decisions. Philosophy is more general and perhaps m
    3 KB (382 words) - 09:58, 21 September 2013
  • ...h wind with snow. It is said that the World War II German invasion of the Soviet Union underestimated the three best generals: General Snow, General Mud, and Gene
    3 KB (378 words) - 04:39, 5 April 2024
  • ...to develop a high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft that could overfly the Soviet Union. Dulles was not enthusiastic. ...ere made from this location; all missions were IMINT and SIGINT. While the Soviet Union was the primary target, overflights were also made over Egypt, Iran, Iraq,
    10 KB (1,592 words) - 06:04, 8 April 2024
  • ...local identities (owing to the successive policies of imperial Russia, the Soviet Union, and Communist China). ...ral years later that the term took its place beside other ethnonyms in the Soviet Union, provoking debate and opposition in the Soviet Uighur press. In the late 20
    7 KB (1,106 words) - 16:49, 1 April 2024
  • ...mps cooperated with the repatriation of former Soviet citizens back to the Soviet Union, although this was resisted by many of them. Registration and assessment o In the summer of 1945 the Soviet Union sent NKVD liaison officers to the DP camps to encourage Soviet citizens to
    9 KB (1,368 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...n guided missile cruisers, and ignore the last of these gun cruisers. The Soviet Union did build a larger number of postwar [[Sverdlovsk-class]] light cruisers.
    3 KB (407 words) - 15:42, 8 April 2024
  • ...a certificate in music and politics from the University of Yerevan in the Soviet Union, and a doctorate in international relations from Oxford University as a Mar
    3 KB (404 words) - 07:32, 18 March 2024
  • ...ain weapon systems of the Cold War, with a maximum of 400+ by the U.S. and Soviet Union/Russia, and in the tens by China. Modern U.S. and Russian SLBMs carried atm
    4 KB (648 words) - 16:24, 30 March 2024
  • ...stems of the Cold War, with between 2000 and 3000 deployed by the U.S. and Soviet Union, and in the tens by China. ...arms control agreements between the U.S. and Russia. States of the former Soviet Union that had ICBM bases have shut them down. France and the United Kingdom have
    11 KB (1,605 words) - 09:12, 22 April 2024
  • ...red by the German [[Wehrmacht]] in the early days of the invasion of the [[Soviet Union]] in the [[Second World War]], achieved neither German goals nor its own an Relations between the Soviet Union and Germany, prior to the German invasion and during the first years of fig
    16 KB (2,568 words) - 03:54, 10 January 2011
  • ...non-Slavonic languages, primarily those used primarily within the former [[Soviet Union]], including [[Tatar language|Tatar]], [[Turkmen language|Turkmen]], [[Chec
    2 KB (284 words) - 06:27, 25 June 2010
  • ...llion, and the sixth undeclared war on the Manchurian border between the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Japan]].<ref name=nytimes1945-07-04/> He covered other important in
    5 KB (694 words) - 12:49, 1 May 2024
  • ...e translated and published them, and was barred for several years from the Soviet Union.
    3 KB (355 words) - 12:00, 19 March 2024
  • ...Third World. Reagan's foreign policy could be summed up by his view of the Soviet Union as the "Evil Empire" -- that is am illegitimate state. He rejected the [[de ...Reagan Administration's Secret Strategy that Hastened the Collapse of the Soviet Union'' (1994) </ref> Reagan's opponents downplay his role and emphasize the int
    14 KB (2,066 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...nd, Carlucci and Yazov discussed the Soviet minister's contention that the Soviet Union was changing its military doctrine, putting more emphasis on defense. Carl ...interests of securing a new arms control agreement, to negotiate with the Soviet Union some limits on SDI testing without compromising the SDI program. Carlucci c
    12 KB (1,891 words) - 08:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...iving full attention to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
    3 KB (402 words) - 04:36, 17 August 2008
  • ...) was a former [[world chess champion]]. Due to [[Russification]] in the [[Soviet Union]] he is also known as '''Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian''' ([[Russian languag ...his childhood in the city of [[Tbilisi]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], [[Soviet Union|USSR]]. Most of his life he lived in the [[Russia]]n capital, [[Moscow]].
    7 KB (959 words) - 11:15, 20 April 2021
  • ...5-6 years, participation was limited to countries in East Europe (and the Soviet Union). By 1970, many West European countries, including [[France]], [[Italy]] an
    7 KB (1,063 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...olf Hitler]]. Similar parallel state and party structures existed in the [[Soviet Union]] under [[Josef Stalin]].
    3 KB (472 words) - 19:59, 28 December 2010
  • ...uld have been the principal organization to deliver nuclear weapons to the Soviet Union. Until 1959, SAC essentially drew up its war plans without civilian policy ...mmunications and information systems, to say nothing of the breakup of the Soviet Union, the Cold War model of massive nuclear force in the Triad began to change.
    6 KB (893 words) - 16:23, 30 March 2024
  • As late as 1945 Acheson sought détente with the Soviet Union. What changed his thinking was Stalin's blatant grab for regional hegemony ...the creation of the [[Marshall Plan]]. After 1946, his attitude toward the Soviet Union had changed from one of conciliation to one of containment. As secretary, h
    7 KB (1,024 words) - 10:42, 8 July 2023
  • In the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq was the major client of the Soviet Union. Nevertheless, the Soviets hoped not to lose all influence. As a 1980 CIA ...much better relations after the war ended in 1988. While the fall of the Soviet Union was not foreseen, Gorbachev took a long-term view of Soviet-Iranian relatio
    27 KB (4,125 words) - 07:02, 4 April 2024
  • .... Before working on Iraq, he had worked on analysing information about the Soviet Union's capacity to perform biochemical attacks and had visited Russia as part of
    4 KB (694 words) - 09:58, 25 September 2010
  • ...Her dissertation was on the Czechoslovak Army and its relationship to the Soviet Union.
    6 KB (849 words) - 08:41, 4 May 2024
  • In the years 1919–1991 Vitebsk was part of the Soviet Union. During World War II, the city was under German occupation (1941-44). Up to
    3 KB (441 words) - 09:04, 8 June 2009
  • ...Union, 1987–89; Deputy Negotiator, Geneva Defense and Space Talks with the Soviet Union, 1985–87
    10 KB (1,331 words) - 10:15, 6 May 2024
  • {{r|Arnold Beichman}} International relations, political events in the former Soviet Union {{r|Michael Bernstam}} Economy of the former Soviet Union, transition to markets, general economic demography, economic systems
    7 KB (939 words) - 09:42, 2 April 2024
  • ...went to Europe and then worked 1933-35 in an auto plant at Gorky in the [[Soviet Union]]. While he collaborated very closely with the Communists, Reuther called h
    7 KB (1,133 words) - 15:14, 4 April 2024
  • ...f a second in the [[200 metres|200&nbsp;m]] by [[Lyudmila Kondratyeva]] ([[Soviet Union]]). ...ics|Olympic Games]] Göhr's main opposition was [[Lyudmila Kondratyeva]] ([[Soviet Union]]) who had beaten Göhr in the 200&nbsp;m at the [[1978 European Championsh
    7 KB (1,166 words) - 07:19, 28 March 2023
  • In the absence of a Franco-Algerian rupture, the Soviet Union is unlikely to play a major role in Algeria. If relations with France deter ...have international repercussions, and ultimately enhance its ties with the Soviet Union. We do not estimate this to be the probable sequence of events; we do regar
    12 KB (1,927 words) - 13:39, 12 September 2009
  • ...24/2003156782 China's possible rethink on Taiwan] Sushil Seth </ref> The [[Soviet Union]]'s ruling class, the "nomenklatura", was in nature oligarchical. Multinati
    3 KB (469 words) - 10:09, 28 February 2024
  • Dong traveled to the Soviet Union, in November 1964, to request help in building up the North Vietnamese [[in
    3 KB (415 words) - 02:42, 5 October 2013
  • In the 1940 presidential campaign, left-wing supporters of the Soviet Union forced him to repudiate Roosevelt's foreign policy, and he supported Republ
    9 KB (1,435 words) - 14:03, 24 September 2013
  • ..., French, German, and Russian and he was widely praised and popular in the Soviet Union for his proletarian and revolutionary sympathies.
    5 KB (808 words) - 09:28, 6 July 2023
  • Only Russia and the former [[Soviet Union]] had built nuclear-powered icebreakers. China's previous two ice-breakers
    5 KB (521 words) - 14:04, 27 February 2022
  • ...e Soviet sphere. The Doctrine shifted American foreign policy toward the [[Soviet Union]] from [[Détente]] to, as [[George F. Kennan]] phrased it, a policy of [[c ...sions with Greece. It was an early response to political aggression by the Soviet Union in Europe and the Middle East, illustrated through the Communist movements
    11 KB (1,626 words) - 07:00, 15 November 2007
  • ...uthorities. It was stockpiled as a [[biological weapon]] by, at least, the Soviet Union and United States and is in [[CDC Bioterrorism Agents-Disease list]] Catego A vaccine, using live, attenuated organisms, was first introduced in the Soviet Union in the 1930s. A different live, attenuated vaccine is being evaluated in th
    10 KB (1,405 words) - 04:47, 26 October 2013
  • ...for an end to the [[Cold War]] and for friendly relations with both the [[Soviet Union]] and China. ===Détente with Soviet Union and China===
    16 KB (2,425 words) - 08:36, 21 March 2024
  • As with many post-[[Soviet Union|Soviet]] independent states, the change in [[writing system]], and the deba ...ystem in 1927 {{ref|keller2001}}. The Latin script was introduced by the [[Soviet Union]] as part of an effort to increase literacy and distance the, at that time,
    16 KB (2,088 words) - 12:25, 24 March 2024
  • ...uthorities. It was stockpiled as a [[biological weapon]] by, at least, the Soviet Union and United States and is in [[CDC Bioterrorism Agents-Disease list]] Catego ...een examined in biowarfare agent studies both in the United States and the Soviet Union.<ref name=AMA-FT-BW />
    7 KB (964 words) - 11:38, 3 December 2010
  • ...which came from a BORAX-III reactor. Soon, other countries such as the [[Soviet Union]] became involved in nuclear plant work.
    4 KB (551 words) - 14:10, 2 February 2023
  • The Soviet Union began deployments as early as 1955, using a modified land-based missile. Th
    3 KB (486 words) - 09:10, 22 April 2024
  • ...5. In 1980, he became Foreign Minister, but apparently lost power when the Soviet Union, which he had supported internally, collapsed, making relations with China
    3 KB (535 words) - 20:05, 6 July 2010
  • ...ar itself, the greatest amount of military equipment came to Iraq from the Soviet Union, but France was probably second, and generally provided higher-technology e ...Western sources of military supply, to avoid becoming too dependent on the Soviet Union. In issues including the Syrian role in Lebanon, the Arab-Israeli conflict
    12 KB (1,802 words) - 18:47, 3 April 2024
  • ...ns. Hoepner issued an order to his troops, <blockquote>The war against the Soviet Union is the old struggle of the Germans against the Slavs, the warding off of th
    3 KB (509 words) - 09:17, 5 April 2024
  • Founded in the U.S. in response to the fall of the Soviet Union,'''Advocates International''' is an international Christian legal group tha
    3 KB (461 words) - 10:29, 16 January 2010
  • ...lebrity, but the long-term accomplishments were limited. He confronted the Soviet Union over Berlin, and watched in dismay as the Berlin Wall was built; he confron ...all the invaders captured or killed; Kennedy ransomed them. In 1962 the [[Soviet Union]] secretly installed missiles, causing the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]], which
    10 KB (1,553 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • A strategic surprise to [[Joseph Stalin]] and the [[Soviet Union]], '''Operation Barbarossa''' was the German code name for its invasion of ...years. Indeed, there was considerable cooperation between Germany and the Soviet Union, the latter providing training for the [[Black Reichswehr]] while Germany w
    20 KB (2,977 words) - 09:17, 5 April 2024
  • ...as no repayment required. $31 billion went to Britain, $11 billion to the Soviet Union, $3 billion to France, and $1.6 billion to China. In addition, Canada opera ...Europe. Making it worse, [[Hitler]]'s Germany was allied with [[Stalin]]'s Soviet Union until June 1941. Britain in the summer of 1940 stood alone, facing invasion
    9 KB (1,510 words) - 07:15, 31 March 2024
  • ...was one of the first Americans to seek business with the relatively new [[Soviet Union]]. He then became a diplomat to the USSR in 1941, first as minister and the
    5 KB (787 words) - 08:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...l</td><td>64</td><td>256</td><td>32</td><td>8 4*4</td><td>rotation</td><td>Soviet Union</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
    7 KB (1,292 words) - 12:20, 27 July 2010
  • ...1 (2005) 97-134 in [[Project Muse]], a controversial article that says the Soviet Union's reaction caused it to repress Eastern Europe
    8 KB (1,106 words) - 21:53, 22 February 2009
  • ...om the dual-use aspects, an enormous difference from reactors outside the Soviet Union is that the RBMK, while it has shielding, lacks a massive containment build ...ask was performed by recruiting liquidators (200,000) all throughout the [[Soviet Union]] to assist in cleaning up the radioactivity at the site, which took course
    12 KB (1,844 words) - 10:43, 8 April 2024
  • ...ament of Germany in the [[Black Reichswehr]]; he was a negotiator with the Soviet Union in obtaining training. [[William Shirer]] called him a "gifted manipulator
    4 KB (564 words) - 09:47, 28 September 2013
  • ...st and West Germany, and indeed of Western nations and satellites of the [[Soviet Union]]. As a republic, Germany was formed from the [[German Empire]] following i
    9 KB (1,216 words) - 11:04, 23 May 2023
  • | date = March 2001}}</ref> With the breakup of the Soviet Union, and the availability of precision-guided munitions, there is still a nucle ...ns, there was a fundamental change around 1960, when the United States and Soviet Union began to deploy intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM) and submarine-la
    8 KB (1,218 words) - 05:21, 31 March 2024
  • ...ague]]. While they later moved to the aerosol methods used by Britain, the Soviet Union, and United States, they did not abandon the approach.
    4 KB (514 words) - 18:54, 26 September 2010
  • ...as to implement the Nunn-Lugar program to assist the nations of the former Soviet Union in reducing their weapons of mass destruction subject to international arms
    4 KB (511 words) - 12:16, 31 March 2024
  • ...78–1992 Afghanistan War''' was a civil war in Afghanistan that matched the Soviet Union and its Afghan allies against a coalition of anti–Communist groups called The Soviet Union had never lost a war, and they never dreamed that Afghanistan would be as d
    27 KB (3,934 words) - 11:58, 4 March 2024
  • *[[May 1]], 1960: Francis Gary Powers is shot down in a U-2 over the Soviet Union.
    3 KB (399 words) - 02:02, 21 March 2024
  • ..., he was stunned when Hitler invaded in June 1941 and nearly conquered the Soviet Union. Stalin rallied his forces, formed alliances with the United States and Br ...ians. In the midst of this turmoil during the the winter of 1946–1947 the Soviet Union experienced the worst natural famine in the 20th century.<ref> Yoram Gorliz
    18 KB (2,731 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...ased the [[Great Terror]] on various groups conspiring against him and the Soviet Union. Stalin did have enemies, but not as organized millions.
    8 KB (1,179 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • In the [[Soviet Union]], however, Romanian-speaking communities were forced to use a new, russifi
    8 KB (1,260 words) - 11:32, 19 August 2022
  • ...t strategy]] against the Soviet bloc, which was principally focused on the Soviet Union itself, on China to a lesser extent, and essentially ignoring small bloc st ...viets controlled North Korean decision making. The Washington focus on the Soviet Union as “the” Communist state had become the accepted perception within US G
    18 KB (2,764 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • ...harbor, both because it was the main place where heavy shipments from the Soviet Union entered North Vietnam, but also where an attack that cause a direct U.S.-U.
    4 KB (529 words) - 05:20, 31 March 2024
  • ...ication, states were only allowed to join the five nations, China, France, Soviet Union/Russia, United Kingdom, and United States of America|United States that wer
    4 KB (633 words) - 17:42, 21 March 2024
  • - [[Soviet Union]] -
    9 KB (1,506 words) - 08:22, 28 April 2024
  • ...cultural influence is strong but its political influence is declining. The Soviet Union benefits from Nigerian appreciation of its help during the war, but is not
    6 KB (939 words) - 02:59, 21 March 2024
  • | id = 861.00/2 - 2246: Telegram [from] The Charge in the Soviet Union (Kennan) to the Secretary of State | volume - Foreign Relations of the United States: Eastern Europe; the Soviet Union, vol. VI
    15 KB (2,157 words) - 12:49, 2 April 2024
  • ...l, David, and Ran Edelist. ''Western Intelligence and the Collapse of the Soviet Union, 1980-1990: Ten Years That Did Not Shake the World'' (2003) [http://www.que
    9 KB (1,232 words) - 13:17, 19 February 2009
  • He was a military attache to the Soviet Union in 1932-1934. In Japan, as opposed to other countries, the post of military
    4 KB (602 words) - 10:30, 28 September 2010
  • ...to be putting more emphasis on the KGB as the CIA's adversary than on the Soviet Union as the United States' enemy." <ref>William Colby, ''Honorable Men: My Life
    10 KB (1,349 words) - 17:08, 1 April 2024
  • {{rpl|Soviet Union}}
    4 KB (592 words) - 12:21, 3 August 2020
  • ...olf Hitler]]. Similar parallel state and party structures existed in the [[Soviet Union]] under [[Josef Stalin]].
    7 KB (1,030 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • ...nited States and therefore to somehow to make more even the ability of the Soviet Union to strike the United States with nuclear weapons. I think another reason th
    9 KB (1,494 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • ...e moves toward helicopter bombing, but have not put it into practice. The Soviet Union qualified both the Mil Mi-8 and Mil Mi-24 to use members of the FAB general ...ions have different design approaches for military helicopters. Russia/the Soviet Union did not emphasize attack helicopters, but their troop-carrying armed helico
    13 KB (2,080 words) - 04:39, 5 April 2024
  • ...th the expected decline of oil production from the republics of the former Soviet Union, combined with the stagnating output in other debt-ridden and geologically
    9 KB (1,346 words) - 07:51, 26 March 2024
  • ...eapon that had a TNT equivalent energy yield of 15 megatons (Mt) and the [[Soviet Union]] tested a nuclear weapon with a TNT equivalent energy yield of 50 megatons
    4 KB (673 words) - 09:01, 4 May 2024
  • ...th his appointments. In foreign affairs he rejected [[détente]] with the [[Soviet Union]], but not with China. His massive defense buildup forced the Soviets to c ...by his predecessors Nixon, Ford, and Carter. Under the assumption that the Soviet Union could not then outspend the US government in a renewed [[arms race]], he ac
    22 KB (3,346 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...amed Zircon. Proposed in 1983 to be in a [[geosynchronous]] orbit over the Soviet Union, it was cancelled, principally on grounds of cost, in 1987. Urban stated th
    12 KB (1,726 words) - 18:15, 10 February 2010
  • ...reign policy was friendship with the Soviet Union. Good relations with the Soviet Union guaranteed Turkey's continued security on its northeastern frontier and in
    12 KB (1,785 words) - 09:42, 26 March 2024
  • The first surface-to-air missile (SAM) system deployed by the Soviet Union, the S-75 Dvina (NATO identifier SA-2, designation name GUIDELINE) had, in
    12 KB (1,953 words) - 06:56, 4 April 2024
  • * Crockatt Richard. ''The Fifty Years War: The United States and the Soviet Union in World Politics, 1941-1991.'' 1995. [http://www.amazon.com/Fifty-Years-Wa * Gaddis, John Lewis. ''Russia, the Soviet Union and the United States. An Interpretative History'' 2nd ed. (1990)
    38 KB (5,175 words) - 21:33, 11 September 2009
  • ...tion]] of space exploration between the [[United States of America]] and [[Soviet Union]], which lasted roughly from 1957 to 1975. It involved the efforts to [[exp ..., technological, and ideological rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union during the [[Cold War]]. Space technology became a particularly important
    37 KB (5,685 words) - 17:13, 22 March 2024
  • ...he group Helsinki Watch which publicly named governments (specifically the Soviet Union) and specific people within them who violated the Helsinki Accords and othe
    5 KB (726 words) - 02:18, 7 April 2024
  • ...on Lady|U-2 high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft that were overflying the Soviet Union. Both radar absorbing material, and a system of wires on the fuselage, to a
    8 KB (1,164 words) - 02:18, 7 April 2024
  • ...ring greater expansion, the [[Strike-North Faction|Strike-North]] into the Soviet Union and [[Strike-South Faction|Strike-South]] into Southeast Asia. Ishiwara urg
    5 KB (712 words) - 21:59, 29 August 2010
  • ...he original effort involved 819 [[SS-1 SCUD]] missiles purchased from the Soviet Union, which initially were adapted to increase range. They were used in combat i
    5 KB (712 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • |country = Soviet Union '''N1''' or '''N-1''' was the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[rocket]] intended to send Soviet [[cosmonaut]]s to the [[Moon]],
    18 KB (2,946 words) - 11:47, 2 February 2023
  • ===Soviet Union===
    18 KB (2,744 words) - 04:39, 5 April 2024
  • ...cing the Emperor, and concern about the lack of positive response from the Soviet Union.
    5 KB (753 words) - 19:28, 12 September 2010
  • ...s new from ground up. Magnitogorsk, still a major industrial center in the Soviet Union's Ural region of Siberia, was one of them. She also designed kindergarten p
    7 KB (1,021 words) - 06:52, 9 June 2009
  • In 1944 delegates from China, the [[Soviet Union]], the [[United Kingdom]] and the United States met in [[Washington, D.C.]]
    5 KB (650 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...efforts to end the [[Cold War]] by, as she put it, "doing business" with [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] leader [[Mikhail Gorbachev]].
    11 KB (1,518 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...uted invasion to consolidate his power and strengthen Cuba's ties with the Soviet Union.
    12 KB (1,829 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • *Lecture Tour of the Soviet Union on Nuclear Weapons and International Law for the Lawyers' Committee on Nucl
    7 KB (1,033 words) - 08:41, 23 February 2024
  • One controversial approach, pioneered by the Soviet Union with the World War II Il-2 Shturmovik, is to build a dedicated, extremely s
    5 KB (718 words) - 16:22, 30 March 2024
  • *1939 [[World War II]] War between the Allies (most notably the UK, US and Soviet Union) and the Axis (principally Germany and Japan) 1939–1945
    5 KB (722 words) - 10:50, 23 February 2024
  • ...Party member who had been accused of subversive activities. He toured the Soviet Union and Germany in 1932.
    4 KB (658 words) - 23:51, 19 October 2013
  • ...supported Iraq during the war included United Kingdom|Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and Germany. ...Soviet Union|Soviet troop movements on the border of Iran by informing the Soviet Union that the US would defend Iran in the event of Soviet Invasion. The US also
    19 KB (2,954 words) - 18:47, 3 April 2024
  • During the '''Iran-Iraq War''', the '''Soviet Union''' sold or gave the greatest amount of military equipment and supplies to ' At the start of the Iran-Iraq War, the Soviet Union stopped overt, and most covert, arms shipments to Iraq while Iraq was on th
    38 KB (5,854 words) - 07:02, 4 April 2024
  • ...y thought." As head of the CIA, Bush was skeptical of assessments that the Soviet Union supported [[detente]]. He commissioned the famous Team B report of hard-lin ...mid-1990 it was going into recession. However, improved relations with the Soviet Union and his assertive use of U.S. military power sustained Bush's standing in p
    17 KB (2,603 words) - 05:11, 31 March 2024
  • ...86, Kuwait formally petitioned foreign powers to protect its shipping. The Soviet Union agreed to charter tankers starting in 1987, and the United States offered t
    5 KB (747 words) - 18:47, 3 April 2024
  • ...much better relations after the war ended in 1988. While the fall of the Soviet Union was not foreseen, Gorbachev took a long-term view of Soviet-Iranian relatio ...ng the Iran-Iraq War|covert direct and satellite support]] for Iran by the Soviet Union, with the apparent strategic goal of damaging the United States by proxy. I
    26 KB (4,099 words) - 12:25, 24 March 2024
  • | author = Carey Sublette}}</ref> ''Layer Cake'' or ''sloika'' in the Soviet Union, emphasizing its multiple concentric shells, and ''tamper boosting'' in the | title = "Teller-Ulam" Summary}}</ref> Andrei Sakharov, in the Soviet Union, appears to have independently come up with a similar concept, which he cal
    20 KB (3,072 words) - 10:33, 18 March 2024
  • ...ewed events there in the context of the growing Cold War struggle with the Soviet Union and feared Guatemala could become a client state from which the Soviets cou
    12 KB (1,773 words) - 17:03, 14 December 2009
  • ...bureaucratic warfare, as well as engineering. The U.S., as opposed to the Soviet Union, always assumed a ballistic missile submarine would be nuclear-propelled. T
    5 KB (782 words) - 15:42, 8 April 2024
  • ...[[Newly Independent States]] that emerged following the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] and of [[Yugoslavia]] have since been brought into membership of the Eur ...us Mountains]] and Turkey's eastern frontier with the former states of the Soviet Union. (The part of Russia that lies west of the Urals is included under that de
    38 KB (5,651 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...e end of the war, and offered his files and staff on the Eastern Front and Soviet Union. Gehlen himself was not considered to be a war criminal, but some of his st ...f the United States in the 1940s and early 1950s for information about the Soviet Union, its forces in Europe, and the communist regimes east of the Elbe. The Unit
    27 KB (4,118 words) - 19:36, 21 February 2010
  • ...coolant to carry away the heat produced. [[RBMK reactor]]s of formerly [[Soviet Union]] countries used carbon as the moderator.
    10 KB (1,554 words) - 14:19, 24 January 2023
  • *[[Ghilem Qamay|Ğilem Qamay]] (1901&ndash;1970), [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] chemist *[[Sabir Yunusov]] (1909&ndash;1995), [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] chemist ([[alkaloids]])
    14 KB (1,549 words) - 05:42, 6 March 2024
  • ...of such grotesque excess as we witnessed between the United States and the Soviet Union over the period of the 50 years of the Cold War, was as much a product of f
    5 KB (808 words) - 17:43, 22 March 2024
  • ...encouraged change was the elimination of large-scale foreign aid from the Soviet Union, and the continuing need to repair damage from the many [[Vietnam wars]].
    8 KB (1,218 words) - 17:34, 14 March 2024
  • After the war, it was stockpiled by the Soviet Union, United States, and other countries, although banned by the 1972 [[Chemical
    6 KB (853 words) - 08:51, 5 May 2024
  • | title = The Soviet Union And The Six-Day War: Revelations From The Polish Archives
    6 KB (956 words) - 17:08, 1 April 2024
  • ...to direct massive military and economic aid to Britain, the China and the Soviet Union. ...of Democracy" supporting Britain, France, China and (after June 1941), the Soviet Union. As Roosevelt took a firmer stance against the [[Axis Powers]], American is
    32 KB (4,880 words) - 07:15, 31 March 2024
  • ...on was managed at the highest command levels by the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. The London Controlling Staff (LCS) was the chief British organization, whi
    10 KB (1,449 words) - 07:30, 18 March 2024
  • ...n, his first priority was replacing the [[containment policy]] against the Soviet Union and Chinea with [[détente]], or a "lessening of tensions". Detente tends
    6 KB (854 words) - 06:03, 10 May 2011
  • ...ins great. On winning a 1984 election, the Sandanistas affiliated with the Soviet Union and Cuba. <ref name=BBC>{{citation
    6 KB (781 words) - 18:21, 9 March 2010
  • ...t would connect all the major cities. These paved roads were funded by the Soviet Union (in the North), the United States (in the South) and by Germany (within the
    11 KB (1,666 words) - 16:25, 24 March 2024
  • ...negotiated, between the largest nuclear powers, the United States and the Soviet Union and its successor Russian Federation.
    6 KB (852 words) - 16:11, 19 April 2024
  • ...operational use. Previously, submarine-launched missiles, for the U.S. and Soviet Union, were an early equivalent of cruise missiles. The submarine had to surface
    5 KB (783 words) - 07:21, 25 March 2024
  • ...licies in exchange for Pakistani help in Afghanistan. With the fall of the Soviet Union, the balance changed, even though India had been the first of the two count
    10 KB (1,427 words) - 08:41, 4 May 2024
  • ...s name to several protests against the imprisonment of scientists in the [[Soviet Union]].
    6 KB (889 words) - 10:16, 8 April 2023
  • To help force that breach, the Soviet Union formed division-sized artillery formations, called "breakthrough artillery
    6 KB (923 words) - 16:22, 30 March 2024
  • ===Soviet Union=== The whole of the Soviet Union become dedicated to the war effort. Conditions were severe. In Leningrad, u
    24 KB (3,777 words) - 07:33, 20 April 2024
  • After the May 1960 shootdown of a [[U-2]] reconnaissance aircraft over the Soviet Union, a program which, under the code name AQUATONE, had provided immensely valu ...ets were made aware of it as part of [[arms control]] negotiations. [The] "Soviet Union could be particularly disturbed by public recognition of this capability [s
    16 KB (2,303 words) - 06:04, 8 April 2024
  • ...orld and intensified the era of mutual distrust and antagonism between the Soviet Union and the United States that became known as the [[Cold War]], which lasted u ...an does a pure fission bomb. In January 1950, faced with the fact that the Soviet Union had successfully detonated an atomic bomb, President Truman announced that
    19 KB (2,853 words) - 09:20, 22 April 2024
  • ...ort of the reconnaissance pod; where the U.S. continued to specialize, the Soviet Union built even more Tu-95 and [[Tu-142 BEAR]] variants as [[maritime patrol air ...el, whose changes reflected the new tactic of low-level penetration of the Soviet Union, their high-altitude defenses having become too formidable. Soviet air defe
    22 KB (3,413 words) - 15:53, 4 April 2024
  • While the March 1982 Congress restated Vietnam's alignment with the Soviet Union but revealed a breach in party unity and indecision on economic policy. Six
    6 KB (925 words) - 02:42, 7 February 2010
  • *Apollo-Soyuz (Soviet Union partnership)
    6 KB (725 words) - 12:06, 9 March 2021
  • The Soviet Union also was active in this period, and it was expected much of the Cold War wo
    23 KB (3,544 words) - 10:05, 10 February 2023
  • ...added so that the images were of industrial powers such as Germany or the Soviet Union, and North Vietnam. The DRV did not have huge logistical facilities, and, w
    12 KB (1,776 words) - 06:56, 4 April 2024
  • ...ved in individualism, self-reliance, and thrift and stood fast against the Soviet Union and communism. These old guard Republicans believed Nixon shared these view
    16 KB (2,180 words) - 14:20, 27 November 2010
  • ===Soviet Union=== Hughes (2004) has detailed how the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 1930s enthusiastically embraced Fordism and Taylorism, imp
    21 KB (3,091 words) - 12:55, 26 September 2007
  • ...singly an issue for '''[[Europe]]'''. The primary concern is no longer the Soviet Union, but Iran and possibly other Middle Eastern actors. While [[Russia]] theore
    6 KB (776 words) - 11:52, 19 March 2024
  • ...Voice of America broadcast a description of the Fifth Avenue parade to the Soviet Union, the idea being to show the economic inferiority of the Soviet system. In 1
    10 KB (1,516 words) - 10:16, 8 April 2023
  • ...ernd Bonwetsch (Eds). ''The People's War: Responses to World War II in the Soviet Union'' (2000)
    15 KB (2,153 words) - 01:20, 9 May 2008
  • During Lt. Commander McCain's 23rd bombing mission on October 26, 1967, a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-built missile struck his A-4 Skyhawk fighter-bomber and forced him
    10 KB (1,459 words) - 09:45, 26 March 2024
  • ===Soviet Union===
    20 KB (3,110 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...ad Congressional staffer on opposition to arms control agreements with the Soviet Union.<ref name=Mann>{{citation ...of brothers" that moved U.S. policy from detente to confrontation with the Soviet Union. The group included Frank Gaffney, Jr., Elliott Abrams, Douglas Feith, R. J
    23 KB (3,573 words) - 07:35, 18 March 2024
  • ...n down a clear chance to wean Grenada away from dependence on Cuba and the Soviet Union?"''
    9 KB (1,235 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • ...he minutes of the Wannsee Conference estimate the Jewish population of the Soviet Union as five million, including nearly three million in Ukraine and 900,000 in B ...ountries to labour camps, either in occupied Poland or further east in the Soviet Union, which it was assumed would soon be completely conquered. There, those unab
    32 KB (5,144 words) - 00:49, 24 October 2013
  • ...e of East European and Soviet Communism in 1989. The disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the final end of the conflict. Consistent allies of the Soviet Union during the Cold War period were [[East Germany]] [[Poland]], [[Czechoslovak
    45 KB (6,965 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...eapon should war between the countries have broken out. At the fall of the Soviet Union it was rumored that certain weaponized stockpiles of the smallpox virus wen ...his idea was retracted with the information of the massive effort that the Soviet Union had put towards their bio-weapons program and the lack of funding they had
    19 KB (3,021 words) - 01:43, 6 February 2010
  • ...(1993). The authoritarian personality in the United States and the former Soviet Union: Comparative studies. In W. F. Stone, G. Lederer, & R. Christie (Eds.). ''S
    15 KB (2,114 words) - 09:38, 26 March 2024
  • ...ights, and market economies. Within it, relations with the [[NIS]] (former Soviet Union) countries of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia and U
    39 KB (5,841 words) - 05:10, 3 July 2023
  • ...peed than battleships, to shadow capital ships and coordinate strikes. The Soviet Union assigned some of its cruisers, in the fifties and sixties, a similar role a In the early fifties, the Soviet Union built 13 Sverdlovsk-class with twelve 6-inch/152mm guns in triple turrets.
    34 KB (5,338 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • ...bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to force Japan's surrender. Angered at the Soviet Union's seizure of eastern Europe, he moved away from détente to a policy of con ...by the new prime minister [[Clement Attlee]]) and [[Joseph Stalin]] of the Soviet Union.
    29 KB (4,536 words) - 10:15, 16 August 2023
  • ...were the first aircraft assigned to a nuclear delivery role against the [[Soviet Union]].
    6 KB (898 words) - 17:36, 6 March 2024
  • ...oader political considerations, both U.S. domestic and in dealing with the Soviet Union. ...sue for peace quickly, before what he regarded as the greatest threat, the Soviet Union and Communism. He saw that the Emperor and Kid were indirectly encouraging
    35 KB (5,450 words) - 07:15, 31 March 2024
  • While many think of the changes in authoritarianism in terms of the Soviet Union, he points to events fifteen years before, in Southern Europe: By the end of the 1980s, China, the Soviet Union, and Eastern Europe accepted the economic logic of advanced industrializati
    18 KB (2,686 words) - 15:46, 8 February 2011
  • ...at is to say, the implementaion of ''"marxism"'' by the governments of the Soviet Union and other communist contemporary coutries bear little relation to the syste
    16 KB (2,569 words) - 23:15, 7 March 2024
  • ...singled out China and the United States as allies, but did not mention the Soviet Union.<ref>Patti, p. 151</ref>
    10 KB (1,541 words) - 14:17, 6 April 2024
  • After the fall of the Soviet Union, however, there was no need for an anti-Soviet asset.
    21 KB (3,472 words) - 15:46, 24 March 2024
  • ...force in the successful negotiations leading to Britain, the US, and the [[Soviet Union]] signing the [[Partial Test Ban Treaty]] in 1962. His previous attempt to
    6 KB (978 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...uction. Critics said they were primarily interested in the survival of the Soviet Union, not the welfare of American workers. The CIO, and in particular the UAW, s
    42 KB (6,613 words) - 15:15, 4 April 2024
  • ...uction. Critics said they were primarily interested in the survival of the Soviet Union, not the welfare of American workers. The CIO, and in particular the UAW, s
    42 KB (6,682 words) - 15:14, 4 April 2024
  • ...s began in 1941, when Hitler broke with his Russian allies and invaded the Soviet Union, but was stopped at the gates of Moscow. Hitler had a loose pact with Japan ===War with Soviet Union, 1941===
    30 KB (4,610 words) - 06:55, 17 September 2013
  • ...[[Nazi]] Germany and fascist Italy supported Franco while the Communist [[Soviet Union]] supported the Republicans. Britain, France and the U.S. remained neutral, ...icans received about 1,000 aircraft and a similar number of tanks from the Soviet Union. Stalin's goal was to maintain the Soviet leadership of the international p
    32 KB (4,937 words) - 09:15, 5 April 2024
  • Just before the collapse of the Soviet Union, he observed that "The gap in power between the leading nation and all the
    8 KB (1,164 words) - 10:38, 6 May 2024
  • ...anner, Nixon opened high-level contact with China. U.S. relations with the Soviet Union and China were seen as far more important than the fate of South Vietnam, w ...ll combat troops. Politically, this let Nixon negotiate with China and the Soviet Union without the suggestion he was compromising U.S. soldiers in the field. <ref
    24 KB (3,782 words) - 01:05, 8 April 2024
  • ..., and has reduced its army from one million soldiers after the fall of the Soviet Union to around 300,000 soldiers. ...er two years; by 1921, however, most of Ukraine had been taken over by the Soviet Union, while Galicia and Volhynia were incorporated into independent Poland.
    38 KB (5,632 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...hey may need to work together in specific situations, such as NATO and the Soviet Union, have proposed to establish interoperable communications between their airb
    8 KB (1,196 words) - 16:22, 30 March 2024
  • ...ogram]] during 1973–1974 and the joint [[United States of America|U.S.]]−[[Soviet Union|Soviet]] mission ([[Apollo−Soyuz Test Project]]) in 1975. Therefore, thos ...that promised [[United States of America|American]] superiority over the [[Soviet Union]] in the fields of space exploration and missile defense. Using space explo
    31 KB (4,868 words) - 10:47, 9 September 2023
  • ...rt. He speculates this was an incorrect extrapolation from the fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of democratic government in Eastern Europe. Rather than regime
    7 KB (1,124 words) - 07:31, 18 March 2024
  • When [[Joseph Stalin]], the Communist dictator of the Soviet Union, refused to participate or allow any of his satellites in eastern Europe to ...reeding ground of pestilence and hate." Conditions were even worse in the Soviet Union, but Stalin’s army and secret police were everywhere, and he used the vac
    34 KB (5,164 words) - 01:13, 9 February 2024
  • ...]] in the European states rendered newly independent in the breakup of the Soviet Union and the Soviet empire, and the transcendence of democracy over military dic ...n all of the former Soviet [[satellite states]] following collapse of the Soviet Union. Restoration of civil society was a consistent factor in the wave of [[revo
    24 KB (3,639 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • ...revolutions, and their (partial) adoption as the official ideology of the Soviet Union was followed by a surge of post-war influence. In the 1920s, the Frankfurt ...also been a major factor in the adoption of forms of communism by the Soviet Union, and subsequently by the governments of North Korea, China, Nepal, Alban
    18 KB (2,749 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...]] in the European states rendered newly independent in the breakup of the Soviet Union and the Soviet empire, and the transcendence of democracy over military dic ...n all of the former Soviet [[satellite states]] following collapse of the Soviet Union. Restoration of civil society was a consistent factor in the wave of [[revo
    25 KB (3,699 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • ...iding, immediately after that war, to prepare the Army for combat with the Soviet Union, rather than a less understood counterinsurgency. "If Abrams had chosen oth
    8 KB (1,149 words) - 08:46, 4 May 2024
  • ...oviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979/1980. International tension with the Soviet Union seemed to reaffirm conservative claims of inevitable conflict and the neces
    11 KB (1,576 words) - 11:08, 23 February 2024
  • That changed with [[Operation Barbarossa]], the invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. The Einsatzgruppe followed the armies, but with much more ...ohemia and Moravia, generally considered part of Czechoslovakia, after the Soviet Union was invaded. Hitler, displeased with the lack of security provided by Reich
    15 KB (2,329 words) - 06:10, 15 September 2013
  • ...if it was more important to get the support of Hitler, or to alienate the Soviet Union. He told Marquis Kido that it was the most fateful of his reign. If he mad ...D. Roosevelt]], as he simultaneously tried to aid Britain, China, and the Soviet Union, while mobilizing the United States, wanted to contain Japan but not trigge
    20 KB (3,122 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • ...") all military shipments to Cuba, and the US would immediately attack the Soviet Union (presumably with nuclear weapons) if any of the missiles were launched from
    26 KB (3,915 words) - 07:37, 10 April 2024
  • * 1933 - Diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union. ...n European strategy. Unconditional Surrender of Axis countries demanded, [[Soviet Union|USSR]] aid and participation, invasion of Sicily and Italy planned.
    30 KB (4,428 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • ...trongly supported the war effort after June 1941 (when Germany invaded the Soviet Union). Left-wing activists crushed wildcat strikes. Nonetheless, Lewis realized
    34 KB (5,207 words) - 15:14, 4 April 2024
  • ...ustify their totalitarian rule. They controlled the Communist party in the Soviet Union in the name of the proletariat (which had no voice.) Marx and Engels believ
    8 KB (1,189 words) - 07:41, 30 March 2012
  • ...ific, as opposed to the [[Strike-North Faction]] goal of moving into the [[Soviet Union]]. Strike-South advocates recognized that their action would bring them int
    8 KB (1,237 words) - 14:09, 2 February 2023
  • ...r, or even by extensive preparations for war, so he did not see Stalin's [[Soviet Union]] as a major threat to American values. Nor did he pay much attention to i
    13 KB (1,934 words) - 18:59, 7 April 2008
  • In 1948 Steinbeck again toured the [[Soviet Union]], together with renowned photographer [[Robert Capa]]. In the same year he
    15 KB (2,448 words) - 00:06, 9 March 2023
  • ...nia as the Turkish army withdrew from the region; it was taken over by the Soviet Union in 1920.
    20 KB (2,949 words) - 15:04, 15 April 2024
  • ...iving full attention to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
    8 KB (1,123 words) - 02:51, 21 January 2009
  • • “Evil Empire” for the Soviet Union
    7 KB (1,158 words) - 10:03, 13 April 2024
  • In 1958 Clark visited the [[Soviet Union]] for three weeks as a guest of the [[Creative unions in the USSR|Soviet Wr ...re. On the other hand he was scathing about the cultural dreariness of the Soviet Union and about the greed and philistinism of the Soviet bureaucracy. Although he
    51 KB (8,074 words) - 06:08, 3 October 2013
  • ...1 as a means of avoiding a recurrence of dangerous border clashes with the Soviet Union. He strongly opposed joining Germany in its war against the Soviets in June ...rscoring the urgency, but Hirohito supported a quixotic effort to have the Soviet Union mediate a peace, unaware that it planned to declare war on Japan. The issue
    21 KB (3,222 words) - 01:04, 3 September 2010
  • ...iddle East as Roosevelt's personal representative, and in 1942 visited the Soviet Union and China in the same capacity. In 1943, Willkie wrote ''One World]]'', a b
    11 KB (1,651 words) - 16:40, 22 March 2023
  • ...with a large increase in cases in Eastern Europe and parts of Asia. In the Soviet Union (1918–1992), public health, including sexually transmitted disease (STD)
    14 KB (2,103 words) - 14:08, 2 February 2023
  • ...r his opposition to the [[First World War]], openly opposed Hitler and the Soviet Union when it was not fashionable to do so, and criticized [[Vietnam War|U.S. inv
    12 KB (1,964 words) - 11:47, 2 February 2023
  • ...in the detonation sequence had not closed. As a consequence, the U.S. and Soviet Union apparently cooperated in developing additional safety procedures as part of
    9 KB (1,330 words) - 08:51, 5 May 2024
  • Between 1925 and 1926, Mendelsohn traveled three times to the Soviet Union after a commission for a textile factory in Leningrad. Mendelsohn’s main contact in the Soviet Union was El Lissitzky, whom he had also met at the 1923 Bauhaus exhibition.
    25 KB (3,967 words) - 19:42, 6 March 2024
  • ...the game were American, German and "Russian" (depicting all armies of the Soviet Union).
    8 KB (1,273 words) - 00:40, 21 February 2010
  • Trains in the former [[Soviet Union]] and several other use a larger [[broad gauge]].
    9 KB (1,366 words) - 17:50, 5 March 2024
  • ...devev's ''A Question of Madness''; there could be extrajudicial detention, Soviet Union, psychiatric. ...Pal Maleter, as a result of the 1956 Hungarian revolution. Internally, the Soviet Union made arrests both by the Organs of State Security, and in the context of #p
    27 KB (4,133 words) - 07:30, 18 March 2024
  • ...conducted under the pressure of the competition between the USA and the [[Soviet Union]] (the [[Space Race]]) that existed during the [[Cold War]]. The [[Mercury Having lost the moon race, the [[Soviet Union]] had, along with the USA, changed its approach to match the new spirit of
    22 KB (3,282 words) - 12:00, 9 March 2021
  • ...System]] (BMEWS), went into service in 1960, it soon reported a massive [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] missile attack on the U.S., which proved to be due to unexpected r
    18 KB (2,922 words) - 20:46, 2 April 2024
  • ...alued in traditional medicine. The problem increased after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1987 due to the breakdown of the economy and more porous borders enablin
    8 KB (1,390 words) - 14:45, 28 November 2009
  • ...ed much of Europe and a few months before he ordered the invasion of the [[Soviet Union]], the Tellers became US citizens. ...ch time in the 1960s to his crusade to keep the United States ahead of the Soviet Union in nuclear arms. He opposed the 1963 [[Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty]], which ban
    28 KB (4,424 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...ion was clandestine [[imagery intelligence]] over denied areas such as the Soviet Union. It was subsequently provided with [[signals intelligence]] and [[measurem ===Actions leading to collapse of Soviet Union and abuses of CIA authority, 1972-1991===
    54 KB (7,778 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • ...decreased. The PAVN, however, had been getting abundant resources from the Soviet Union and China. Due to a lack of spare parts, 30 to 40 percent of ARVN equipment ...Communist world, no longer unified, Vietnam was principally backed by the Soviet Union, the Khmer Rouge was supported by China. The Third Indochina War escalated
    20 KB (3,239 words) - 01:00, 8 April 2024
  • ...' (1949). </ref> In addition, Japan honored its neutrality treaty with the Soviet Union, and ignored U.S. freighters shipping millions of tons of war supplies from
    9 KB (1,305 words) - 05:33, 31 May 2009
  • ...although Gentile recognizes the conventional enemy is not the mass of the Soviet Union.
    9 KB (1,326 words) - 08:46, 4 May 2024
  • After the [[dissolution of the Soviet Union]] in 1991, the [[Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic|Cheche ...ainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus]]), and [[Collectivization in the Soviet Union|Collectivization]]. Under Soviet rule, Chechnya was combined with [[Ingushe
    46 KB (6,323 words) - 04:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...53 to 1961, which relies extensively on her work in archives of the former Soviet Union and East Germany. Prof. Harrison took leave for the 2000-2001 academic yea
    21 KB (3,127 words) - 17:17, 25 December 2009
  • ...uld be establishing air and radar bases to protect the supply route to the Soviet Union, and to block German breakouts from the Baltic sea. This could be done with
    10 KB (1,575 words) - 04:58, 10 March 2024
  • ...directed U.S. assistance to the new independent states (NIS) of the former Soviet Union.
    10 KB (1,468 words) - 15:14, 29 March 2024
  • While it no longer exists, the Soviet Union clearly qualified as a civilization, in conflict with many others, especial ...ilization, exemplified, in older civilization, with the Western Allies and Soviet Union versus the mixed-model Axis. The Iran-Iraq War is a conflict within Islamic
    34 KB (5,070 words) - 15:49, 1 April 2024
  • In 1925 the Soviet Union allowed the German government set up the top-secret Lipetsk Aviation School On the first day of the Nazi attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, the Soviet air force (VVS) lost 336 aircraft in aerial combat to o
    35 KB (5,382 words) - 13:16, 6 April 2024
  • ...ormer Governor of Nebraska Val Peterson headed the Administration, and the Soviet Union tested its first thermonuclear weapon. Peterson was vocal that the previou
    16 KB (2,376 words) - 10:42, 8 April 2024
  • ...iving full attention to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
    10 KB (1,451 words) - 10:49, 23 February 2024
  • ...o the late 1950s and reflect the rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union for influence throughout the Third World. The growing strength of the Chil
    20 KB (2,975 words) - 23:12, 14 March 2010
  • ...markable Days: the 1972 Summit Series of Ice Hockey Between Canada and the Soviet Union." ''Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions'' 2004 5(2): 271-280. IS
    34 KB (5,037 words) - 17:32, 11 March 2024
  • ...all American forces had been removed. He promoted [[détente]] with the [[Soviet Union]], incurring the wrath of the conservatives, led by [[Ronald Reagan]]. He n
    19 KB (2,833 words) - 08:11, 9 July 2023
  • ...s. To strengthen the party's position, it accepted aid and support for the Soviet Union and its Comintern. The fledgling Communist Party of China was encouraged to
    10 KB (1,534 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • *Soviet Union
    11 KB (1,766 words) - 09:26, 31 October 2015
  • ===Soviet Union=== The [[Soviet Union]] began offering 30-line electromechanical test broadcasts in Moscow on Oct
    40 KB (5,986 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • While the Soviet Union hopes for an eventual Communist victory in South Vietnam, but it is more co
    27 KB (4,104 words) - 00:59, 8 April 2024
  • ...aintext, can provide a break into the messages and even the system, as the Soviet Union learned when VENONA was revealed. <ref name=NSA-Venona>{{citation
    12 KB (1,744 words) - 05:48, 8 April 2024
  • ...Moon. During the [[twentieth century]], that dream became a reality. The [[Soviet Union]] was the first nation to send a space craft to the Moon. ''[[Luna 2]]'' im
    18 KB (2,977 words) - 10:50, 22 February 2023
  • ...ed to pressure the Soviets. He sought a tilt to China as a pressure on the Soviet Union, and, if that annoyed the Vietnamese, whom he saw as Soviet puppets, it was
    20 KB (3,098 words) - 12:48, 2 April 2024
  • ...ed as industry manufactured military materiel for Canada, Britain, and the Soviet Union. Despite another Conscription Crisis in Quebec, Canada finished the war wit
    18 KB (2,571 words) - 14:46, 3 March 2024
  • ...omber aircraft|bombers. At first, the phrase reflected a concern that the "Soviet Union could be particularly disturbed by public recognition of this capability [s
    21 KB (3,064 words) - 05:12, 31 March 2024
  • ...e strategic to Western interests, and, both to strengthen it vis-a-vis the Soviet Union and Western Union, and against the perceived threat of Ho and the Chinese C ...i, "Keep in mind Ho's record as clear agent international communism." The Soviet Union, however, was not to recognize the DRV for several years. <ref>Patti, p. 38
    45 KB (7,116 words) - 08:11, 4 May 2024
  • ...i, "Keep in mind Ho's record as clear agent international communism." The Soviet Union, however, was not to recognize the DRV for several years. <ref>Patti, p. 38 ...f an agreement with France, and obtained recognition of the DRV from the [[Soviet Union]] and China. [[U.S. Secretary of State]] [[Dean Acheson]] said the Soviet r
    54 KB (8,442 words) - 12:48, 2 April 2024
  • ...Hérelle, and George Eliava (left to right), at the Eliava Institute in the Soviet Union.<BR><SMALL>Photo courtesy of Alexander Sulakvelidze, [[Intralytix, Inc.]]</
    20 KB (3,247 words) - 13:19, 2 February 2023
  • ...i-Soviet surface-to-air missile project, which yielded intelligence on the Soviet Union's ballistic missile program.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gibson|first=Bryan R.|tit
    42 KB (6,527 words) - 07:38, 18 March 2024
  • ...Herelle, and George Eliava (left to right), at the Eliava Institute in the Soviet Union.<BR><SMALL>Photo courtesy of Alexander Sulakvelidze, [[Intralytix, Inc.]]</
    20 KB (3,200 words) - 13:16, 2 February 2023
  • ...non-national radicals, or potential subversives affiliated with the new [[Soviet Union]].
    18 KB (2,586 words) - 17:04, 21 March 2024
  • ...by the State Department as state-sponsors of terrorism. Nicaragua and the Soviet Union were reportedly also on the list."<ref name=CDI />
    17 KB (2,605 words) - 16:12, 19 April 2024
  • ...37-38] (1998), David Stone's ''Hammer and Rifle: The Militarization of the Soviet Union, 1926-1933'' (2000), and numerous other works. The 1990s witnessed a modest
    34 KB (4,994 words) - 07:03, 10 February 2011
  • The [[Soviet Union|Soviets]], after losing several million men in the two world wars and the r
    12 KB (1,786 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...nd Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were convinced that China and the Soviet Union saw Vietnam as the starting point for the Communist conquest of Southeast A In December 1957, the Soviet Union and China agreed to proposals to seat both the North and South, as independ
    31 KB (4,831 words) - 00:57, 8 April 2024
  • ...ent had received help from Communist China, Nationalist China, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States, he felt the greatest spiritual ...d the U.S. military opinion that China was not going to be a puppet of the Soviet Union. While there eventually was a [[Sino-Soviet split]], this was not obvious i
    52 KB (8,258 words) - 10:42, 12 April 2024
  • ...s thoroughly and permanently disillusioned with the Communist Party, the [[Soviet Union]], and Marxism itself. He did not, however, change his opposition to [[ca
    12 KB (1,737 words) - 10:18, 8 April 2023
  • ...tographic equipment. Morse code is still used by military forces of former Soviet Union countries.
    12 KB (1,821 words) - 06:04, 8 April 2024
  • ...the state apparatus in the way the [[Bolshevik]] regime had done in the [[Soviet Union]]. Institutions such as the Foreign Office, the intelligence services and, ...t the risk of war with [[United Kingdom|Britain]], [[France]] and/or the [[Soviet Union]]. The Army Chief of Staff, General [[Ludwig Beck]], regarded this as not o
    69 KB (11,160 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...iorities; in the [[Sino-Soviet conflict]]; and after the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]]. Each caused internal Vietnamese factions to gain or lose influence. ...rs, especially France and the U.S.A., and to a lesser extent China and the Soviet Union. In the south, the Diem government was unpopular, but there was no obvious
    64 KB (9,843 words) - 10:44, 12 April 2024
  • ...activity. Based on a book, [[The Terror Network]], Casey believed that the Soviet Union was the source of most terrorist activity in the world, in spite of C.I.A.
    41 KB (6,055 words) - 16:57, 29 March 2024
  • Drops in production had been severe after the breakup of the Soviet Union in December 1991, but by mid-1995, production began to recover and exports After independence from the former Soviet Union, President Askar Akaev established an authoritarian government, but was def
    29 KB (4,431 words) - 16:46, 1 April 2024
  • * Paarlberg, Robert L. ''Food Trade and Foreign Policy: India, the Soviet Union, and the United States.'' Cornell U. Press, 1985. 266 pp.
    14 KB (2,026 words) - 11:31, 27 January 2011
  • ...am War]], but the tilt to the Soviets angered the Chinese. The fall of the Soviet Union also was unexpected, causing a reassessment of relations with China. #China and the Soviet Union, allies and suppliers, did not want a resumption of fighting
    37 KB (5,894 words) - 08:05, 28 April 2024
  • ...he League of Nations. In 1932, a nonaggression pact was concluded with the Soviet Union and . Colonel [[Józef Beck]] became Poland's foreign minister. ...gotiations, aimed at checking Germany's expansions, started in Moscow. The Soviet Union secretly demanded the right to occupy eastern Poland and simultaneously ent
    91 KB (13,963 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...untries also took part, especially forces from other British colonies. The Soviet Union fought two short, undeclared border conflicts with Japan in 1938 and 1939, ...ater exploitation of China, [[Strike-North Faction|Strike-North]] into the Soviet Union and Siberia, and [[Strike-South Faction|Strike-South]] into [[Southeast Asi
    53 KB (8,195 words) - 13:42, 6 April 2024
  • ...he Japanese race was in Siberia, and most likely in the Baikal area of the Soviet Union. This kind of genetic marker research is fairly typical of racial studies i
    15 KB (2,394 words) - 12:02, 18 May 2023
  • ...1988 to 1993, she worked on aid programs for Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union at the [[U.S. Department of State]] and at the [[Agency for International D
    13 KB (1,920 words) - 10:03, 2 April 2024
  • ...hat it has survived and in some ways prospered while others, such as the [[Soviet Union]], have not. ...e United States in the bloody [[Korean War]] (1950-53), and broke with the Soviet Union over the issue of who best represented the Marxist orthodoxy. Mao's regime
    24 KB (3,781 words) - 14:04, 1 April 2024
  • ...w. A Soviet agent first reported that Hitler planned to declare war on the Soviet Union in March 1941, and refined the estimate, by February 28, to May 20. ...otsumi Ozaki which transmitted highly secret information from Tokyo to the Soviet Union between 1933 and 1941. On April 17 a Prague informant predicted a German in
    60 KB (8,909 words) - 18:47, 3 April 2024
  • ...s on internal [[treason]] by charging in 1950 that Roosevelt had allowed [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] spies (such as [[Alger Hiss]]) into the U.S. government, and that ...ational defense. The American nuclear arsenal could already obliterate the Soviet Union many times over and so there was no need to poison the atmosphere with nucl
    47 KB (7,042 words) - 10:12, 28 February 2024
View (previous 500 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)