Answer:
They might say something on the lines of..."fearing tranny"..
Explanation:
Warsaw Pact members in <u>1955</u> = Soviet Union and Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania.
<em>I'm assuming you meant 1955 rather than 1995, because the Warsaw Pact no longer existed by 1995. It was formally disbanded in 1991.</em>
<u>Detail</u>:
The Warsaw Pact was given that name because the agreement was signed in Warsaw, Poland. Established in 1955, the Warsaw Pact included the Soviet Union and Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania. The nations signing the treaty called on each other to defend of any member of the Pact that was threatened by enemy forces. The formation of the Warsaw Pact was in direct response to the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
In 1958, Hungary tried to withdraw from the Warsaw Pact, but Soviet troops came in and crushed the movement in Hungary and replaced the government.
Albania withdrew from the Warsaw Pact in 1968, after relations between Albania and the USSR had split beginning in 1961.
The Warsaw Pact formally dissolved in 1991, following the overthrow of communist governments in Eastern Europe and while the USSR itself was proceeding toward its own dissolution later that year.
The Cold War greatly "polarized" <span>postwar international relations in that it led to two competing spheres of influence: the US in the west with capitalism, and the USSR in the East with communism. </span>
Answer:
A number of events and uprisings in the 1980 are led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. USSR's leader, Gorbachev, had a policy of openness a called Glasnost. He wanted people to talk openly about strengths and weaknesses of USSR. Then, in 1988, in Poland, a union leader, Lech Walesa, demonstrated in support of unions and their workers. The Polish government later gave into the Union demands for Solidarity. Next, in Czechoslovakia in 19889-1989, there were mass demonstrations against communism to be soon let free from it. Havel was the leader and became first president of the new Czechoslovakia. Next in 1989, the Berlin Wall was opened and people could travel back and forth, and later Germany was reunited into one democratic not communist country. Last, in the Soviet Union, the failed August Coup in 1991 led to the end of the Communist party in USSR. All of these events led to the end of communism and the making of a democratic Russia.
Explanation:
Answer:
The basis for the US constitution was that we didn't want taxes but its the only reason the US is here.