Yes. East Germany was separated from West Germany by the Berlin Wall during the era of communism there. East Germany was part of the Soviet Communist Bloc and West Germany was the non-communist portion.
East was ruled by communist russia while west was ruled by the allies (america, france and Britain), Berlin was in the eastern side but it was also split up like the whole of Germany was, into four sectors, each one ruled by the corresponding ally.
There were two manor conflicts in East Asia which were part of the Cold War, those being the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Korea remains divided into North and South Korea to this day, but Vietnam became a unified communist nation (and remains one of the last communist nations on Earth). Other than that, various Cold War alliances affected all the politics of the region.
A figurative iron curtain divided Europe into the Democratic West and Communist East. It cut Germany clean in half. Europe was constantly on its toes, each fearing the other side would strike either on them or at America, catching them in the middle.
Germany
It was called the Domino Theory. This theory said, if a country becomes communist all its neighbors will eventually fall to communism like dominoes. The reality is, countries don't become communist unless they're forced to. People like owning things. They like being able to go to the store and buy bananas if they want. And it's hard to do those things in a country where the state owns everything and foods are rationed.
during the cold war, EG (East Germany) was communist while WG (West Germany) was captialist
Germany was split in half; Communist East Germany and Free West Germany.
1989 saw the collapse of communist rule in East Germany and talks started immediately on the reunification of Germany which happened in 1990.
During the cold war era each European country was classified as part of either Free Western Europe, or of Communist Eastern Europe which was mostly dominated by the Soviet Union until the Soviet Union broke up.
The Berlin Wall separating Communist East Germany and Democratic West Germany.
Germany
Germany
The Berlin Wall was the important Cold War symbol that was destroyed in Germany in 1989. It was a physical barrier that separated East Berlin from West Berlin and symbolized the division between the democratic and communist worlds during the Cold War. Its demolition marked the reunification of East and West Germany and the end of the Cold War era.
U.S.S.R Cuba China North Korea Poland Czechoskovakia Albania Bulgaria Romania East Germany Hungary and Yugoslavia -(note Yug was communist country but not a WARSAW pact member and closer to the west and the USA)
East and West Germany; North and South Korea; North and South Vietnam.
The successful D-Day operation created a EAST and WEST Germany during the cold war. Had D-Day NOT been successful, there might have been only one communist controlled Germany during the cold war.
The Berlin Wall as a structure to prevent East Germans from escaping to the West was an indication of how life was in communist East Germany. People risked their lives to escape communism. This was all part of the Cold War.