i believe it was called the "iron curtain" that divided eastern and western Europe
He said an "iron curtain" has descended across the continent.
The Soviet Union. After the second world war, the communist Russians slammed down the Iron Curtain on the West.
The Iron Curtain was the de facto division between communist societies and democracies during the cold war.
The Iron Curtain (completed in 1952) and the Berlin Wall (1961). The iron curtain was an analogy. It was used to describe that eastern Europe was mostly communist, whlie western Europe was mostly democratic. The Iron Curtain wasn't an actual place.
The iron curtain
The Iron Curtain no longer exists. When it did, the country it divided was Germany.
Winston Churchill
i believe it was called the "iron curtain" that divided eastern and western Europe
Nothing. The term "iron curtain" doesn't happen until after WW2 and the Berlin Wall isn't built until after WW2. Only ideological divides existed after WW1 and will fester for over 20 years until Hitler invades Poland in 1939.
The imaginary wall that used to separate the US and Russia.The term 'Iron Curtain' refers to tanks, guns and as well as physical barriers. The term 'Iron Curtain' was said by Winston Churchill in 1946 in USA. The Iron Curtain was an imaginary line. It divided Europe into two blocks.
The phrase 'Iron Curtain' was used by Churchill to describe partition of Europe because of Soviet occupation of the Eastern European countries in 1946.
"Iron Curtain" had divided the continent into two opposing camps.
Europe was divided by The Iron Curtain into a West and East.
The Iron Curtain
communist and non-communist
No, the Iron Curtain is a term that refers to the vast divide between eastern and Western Europe that developed after World War Two. Generally speaking it separated NATO powers in the West from WARSAW PACT powers in the East. There was no physical "curtain" or boundary, rather more of an metaphorical divide.