How and why did the goals of United States foreign policy change from the end of the First World War
(1918) to the end of the Korean War (1953)?
Answers
Answered by
0
The Bolshevik revolutionaries who seized power in 1917 were nominally "antinationalists" and "antipatriots". The newborn Soviet republic under Vladimir Leninproclaimed internationalism as its official ideology using the Russian language—which was also the language of their party and government.[5] Since Russian patriotism served as a legitimizing prop of old order, Bolshevik leaders were anxious to suppress its manifestations and ensure its eventual extinction. They officially discouraged Russian nationalism and remnants of Imperial patriotism, such as the wearing of military awards received before Civil War. Some their followers were unlike minded; in non-Russian territories Bolshevik power was often regarded as renewed Russian imperialism during 1919 to 1921. After 1923 a policy ofnativization, which provided government support for non-Russian culture and languages within the non-Russian republics, was adopted.[6]
MARK ME ON BRAINLIEST
MARK ME ON BRAINLIEST
Similar questions