History, asked by iamthegreat21, 1 year ago

Briefly describe a note of INT set up after WW2

Answers

Answered by divyagupta2
8
HII DEAR

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●●As many as 60 million dead, great cities reduced to rubble, families torn apart

●●The second world war caused unprecedented hardship, but it also accelerated change. By Margaret MacMillan


●●At the end of the first world war it had been possible to contemplate going back to business as usual.

⤵️ However, 1945 was different, so different that it has been called Year Zero.

●●⛔⛔The capacity for destruction had been so much greater than in the earlier war that much of Europe and Asia lay in ruin

●● ⛔⛔And this time civilians had been the target as much as the military.


●● ⛔⛔The figures are hard to grasp: as many as 60 million dead, 25 million of them Soviet. A new word, genocide, entered the language to deal with the murder of 6 million of Europe's Jews by the Nazis.

HOPE IT HELPS U.....!!⭐❤⭐❤⭐❤⭐

iamthegreat21: I told INT not WW2
Answered by redcatnehu
1

The Aftermath of World War II was the beginning of an era defined by the decline of all great powers except for the Soviet Union and the United States, and the simultaneous rise of two superpowers: the Soviet Union (USSR) and the United States (USA). Allies during World War II, the USA and the USSR became competitors on the world stage and engaged in the Cold War, so called because it never resulted in overt, declared hot war between the two powers but was instead characterized by espionage, political subversion and proxy wars. Western Europe and Japan were rebuilt through the American Marshall Plan whereas Central and Eastern Europe fell under the Soviet sphere of influence and eventually an "Iron Curtain". Europe was divided into a US-led Western Bloc and a Soviet-led Eastern Bloc. Internationally, alliances with the two blocs gradually shifted, with some nations trying to stay out of the Cold War through the Non-Aligned Movement. The Cold War also saw a nuclear arms race between the two superpowers; part of the reason that the Cold War never became a "hot" war was that the Soviet Union and the United States had nuclear deterrents against each other, leading to a mutually assured destruction standoff.

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