History, asked by tejanubhav, 1 year ago

What were the problems faced by the new independent nations after the Second World War ?

Answers

Answered by Reyansh05
3
hey mate.........


The security challenges faced by the newly-independent countries of Asia and Africa
after the Second World War were different from Europe in two ways:
i) These new countries faced the prospect of military conflict with neighbouring
countries.
ii) These countries also had to worry about their internal military conflicts. These
countries faced threats not only from outside their boundaries but also from
within.
iii) They had disputes and differences over borders and territories or control of
people and populations or all of these simultaneously.
iv) Within their boundaries, the new states were anxious and troubled about
threats from separatist movements which were determined to have
independent countries. Sometimes, internal and external threats came together.
v) There could be a neighbour which might assist or provoke an internal
separatist movement leading to tensions between the two neighbouring
countries.
vi) This resulted in more than 95% of all armed conflicts fought anywhere in the
world to be internal conflicts. There was a twelve-fold rise in the number of civil
wars between 1946 and 1991.

pls mark brainlist answer
Similar questions