Soviet Union Vs. Individualistic Civil Liberties

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The United States and Soviet Union at the end of the war were ambiguous allies. During World Wart 2 there was a need for cooperation to fight the common enemy of the Nazis, but that objective was the only thing these two nations had in common. After the war and after the devastation of Europe these two nations also ended up being the defined major super powers of global influence. The Soviet Union prided itself in being a communist country, fighting the oppression of capitalism and, the United Stat4es after the war became the liberator spewing freedom and civil liberties across the world. The first sign of tension was the power struggle in Eastern Europe as Soviet Union wanted a sphere of influence where they would have influence in the politics of those nations; the United State wanted those nations to have independent election. …show more content…

From the beginning of the conclusion of World War 2 the Soviet Union and the United States bickered on philosophical differences in the way a country should be governed, the collective state control of the soviet Union, vs the individualistic civil Liberties of the United States did not unite well ideologically. As the cold war started to shiver on the world, the suspicion between the two countries became much more aggressive and the disagreements developed into

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