There was NO iron curtain. There was NO wall built of iron. That was simply a "Name" that was symbolic in nature, to refer to people living in the Communist Nations; mostly behind the imaginary line and/or actual barbed wire fence line which divided East and West Germany. The results of this "dividing line" was two separate worlds. One free and one communist.
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The Iron Curtain was the figurative barrier between the West and the Soviet Union during the cold war. The effect of this was that culture was repressed from either side.
Because Russia invaded China and the Japanese helped China by bombing Russia. After Russia surrendered, the Berlin Wall was torn down, signifying the end of the Iron curtain.
No. It was like invisible, there were only military forces. The term "iron curtain" was just a metaphor.
Yugoslavia and Albania were the cracks in the iron curtain.
Russia was on the other side of the iron curtain-and the main reason why it was created.
The iron curtain was just a term used to symbolize the wall between the east and western countries. It was not a real curtain.
There was no such thing as an "Iron Curtain" (a curtain made of iron). The name was simply a symbolic term representing communist countries, with the USSR primarily being the center focus. Consequently, the term "behind the iron curtain" meant being in a communist nation (primarily meaning the USSR).