「soviet」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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The | Soviet A-20s were often fitted out with turrets of in |
It was developed for the | Soviet ABM early-warning network. |
Members of the GRU, the | Soviet Academy of Sciences, and several other bodies |
8, 1983, eight years after his election to the | Soviet Academy of Sciences, the most prestigious acad |
He was the President of the | Soviet Academy of Sciences in 1951-1961. |
He was a corresponding member of the | Soviet Academy of Sciences since 1946 and a full memb |
Anatoly Aleksandrov, President of | Soviet Academy of Sciences |
her, Lifshitz served as an executive member of | Soviet Academy of Sciences from 1975. |
In 1958 Bakulev was elected as a member of the | Soviet Academy of Sciences. |
s a Russian astronomer who was a member of the | Soviet Academy of Sciences. |
ed as part of the philosophy department at the | Soviet Academy of Sciences between 1957 and 1958. |
A classic case was the | Soviet accusation that the 1968 Prague Spring, and th |
Soviet Aces of World War 2, Hugh Morgan, ISBN 1855326 | |
This | Soviet action stopped the offensive near Bicske, less |
However, he was critical of the | Soviet action in Hungary in 1956 and thereafter. |
In this account, the | Soviet actions in Courland were defensive blockading |
ommunist-dominated WSG did not condemn similar | Soviet actions in Hungary, Afghanistan or elsewhere." |
Grigori Abrikosov (1932-1993), | Soviet actor, son of Andrei Abrikosov |
The | Soviet adaptation features sequences of fighting and |
Bratya Karamazovy, a 1969 | Soviet adaptation of the same novel |
But as the | Soviet advance halted and international opinion ralli |
defeat of the Germans and the beginning of the | Soviet advance on Germany. |
was a major Finnish defensive line against the | Soviet advance. |
troops of the 94th were finally slaughtered by | Soviet advancement on 29 January 1943. |
Sovsem propashchiy) is a 1973 | Soviet adventure comedy directed by Georgi Daneliya b |
Priklyucheniya Elektronika) is a 1980 | Soviet adventure TV miniseries directed by Konstantin |
British writer, translator and commentator on | Soviet affairs. |
The village expanded during | Soviet age when its name was Lielupe. |
ICOR worked closely with the Komzet, the | Soviet agency facilitating Jewish settlement, and its |
Gold became a formally recruited | Soviet agent at this time, and was assigned the coden |
All of a sudden, a | Soviet agent begins to chase after Sasha. |
In 1961 he was exposed as a | Soviet agent by Polish defector Michael Goleniewski. |
(Berenkov is a | Soviet agent who gets captured and interviewed by Muf |
Meanwhile, Sasha was being monitored by a | Soviet agent, who was sitting in a car at a distance. |
was a fully recruited and undoubtedly witting | Soviet agent. |
I am not, and never have been, a | Soviet agent." |
ndized before their release in 1949, to act as | Soviet agents. |
tely shown to be right about the problems with | Soviet agricultural planning. |
The role of state farms in | Soviet agriculture grew steadily during the Soviet er |
ysenkoism was advanced primarily in service to | Soviet agriculture, always resulting in dismal failur |
ked on a five-year plan for the development of | Soviet agriculture. |
Desperately in need of | Soviet aid, Mao relented to Stalin's opinion and show |
Until 1943, few Americans objected to | Soviet aid. |
The revolt was crushed with | Soviet aid; the exact number of fatalities is unknown |
Kluczewo Airfield, a former | Soviet air base |
It remains in service with former | Soviet air forces and various air forces to which it |
he married her first husband, Anatoli Serov, a | Soviet Air Force general, a test and fighter pilot. |
They were soon discovered by | Soviet air reconnaissance and surrounded by the NKVD. |
The incident was a major embarrassment to the | Soviet air defense forces because the jetliner had pe |
as a test pilot and lieutenant general in the | Soviet Air Force. |
ar, the airfield was rebuilt and was used as a | Soviet Air Defence Forces base. |
Soviet Air Force | |
The | Soviet Air Force was the only operator of the Kh-20. |
tine Cold War operations; it was believed that | Soviet air defenses had caught up to the ability of t |
He died March 9, 1944 during World War II | Soviet Air Force bombing in Tallinn. |
his aerial success with victories against the | Soviet Air Force. |
me Lieutenant Colonel (or Podpolkovnik) of the | Soviet Air Force on 12 June 1962 and on 6 November 19 |
but six of his victories were claimed over the | Soviet Air Forces in over 700 combat missions. |
1938 г.) was 76.2 mm (3 inch) | Soviet air defense gun, created by the famous Soviet |
s the first woman to become a navigator in the | Soviet Air Force in 1933. |
It later served as a | Soviet Air Force station during the 1970s and 1980s. |
ool in 1975; and served as a test pilot in the | Soviet Air Force. |
In 1946, the | Soviet Air Force established a permanent presence at |
Lt. Gen. of | Soviet Air Force. |
Sarafanov graduated from the | Soviet Air Force academy and held the rank of Colonel |
All his victories were claimed over the | Soviet Air Forces in 332 combat missions. |
ined a doctoral degree in engineering from the | Soviet Air Force Engineering Academy and the rank of |
t three of his victories were claimed over the | Soviet Air Forces in about 600 combat missions. |
In 1947 Bugaev left the | Soviet Air Forces and worked in civil aviation. |
rienburg, Germany, became Malbork, Poland; and | Soviet Air force units were based there for a few yea |
was an SA-2 fire control radar operator of the | Soviet Air Defence Forces. |
He commanded the first | Soviet air raid on Berlin on August 10/11, 1941. |
In a | soviet air-raid during the Second World War, the towe |
ara convinces Shah to help Bond by attacking a | Soviet airbase. |
In Area 88, there is a converted | Soviet aircraft carrier placed atop converted Crawler |
The History of | Soviet Aircraft from 1918. |
For the aircraft carrier, see | Soviet aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov. |
on of steaming the Med while being shadowed by | Soviet aircraft and ships. |
ов, November 18, 1899 - August 11, 1980) was a | Soviet aircraft pilot, one of the first Heroes of the |
Two passengers were killed when | Soviet aircraft opened fire on the aircraft. |
On 5 July, Grasser destroyed six | Soviet aircraft, including three Ilyushin Il-2 ground |
It destroyed over 150 | Soviet aircraft, about 200 tanks, dozens of bridges a |
He flew over 400 flights and shot down 44 | Soviet aircraft. |
forced to withdraw, under heavy airstrikes by | Soviet aircraft. |
tion Barbarossa scoring four victories against | Soviet aircraft. |
Ivan Chisov, | Soviet Airforce Lieutenant who survived falling from |
Lieutenant Chisov was a | Soviet Airforce Lieutenant on an Ilyushin Il-4 bomber |
2 crash accidents with Yugoslavian and | Soviet airplanes happen during providing the aid. |
The town was mistakenly bombed by | Soviet airplanes during the Finnish Winter War, in th |
Soviet Airpower in World War 2. Hinckley, England: Mi | |
Soviet Airpower in World War 2. Hinckley, England: Mi | |
, 1978, near Murmansk, USSR, after it violated | Soviet airspace and allegedly failed to respond to So |
American bombers also flew directly towards | Soviet airspace, peeling off at the last moment, occa |
Unlike the majority of | Soviet airwomen, Marina - that later should inspire t |
Twelve | Soviet Albemarles served for about two years; at leas |
of eight merchant ships (four British and four | Soviet) all of which arrived safely. |
An eight-time | Soviet all-star, Vasiliev was captain of the national |
While the | Soviet allies supported the invasion, other members o |
Thirteen | Soviet allies joined the boycott, giving a total of f |
Some | Soviet allies (Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechoslova |
t in production long after the war and sold to | Soviet allies. |
nd Champion, European Allround Champion twice, | Soviet Allround Champion four times, and Soviet Sprin |
week earlier, she had finished seventh at the | Soviet Allround Championships. |
1979, which allowed China to attack Vietnam, a | Soviet ally, in the Third Indochina War as a response |
Aleksandr Vasilyevich Zhirov (1958-1983), | Soviet alpine skier |
Other armies (including German and | Soviet) also fielded and extensively used elite horse |
The flash point was a disagreement with the | Soviet ambassador in Valencia, for whom he was workin |
Soviet ambassador Jacob Malik insisted the Warsaw Pac | |
фанович Замятин) (born March 1922) is a former | Soviet ambassador and diplomat. |
Finally, the | Soviet ambassador was recalled. |
Oleg Vidov as Valerian Zorin, | Soviet Ambassador to the United Nations. |
He was the | Soviet ambassador to England from 1929-32. |
In 1965-1971, Zorin served as the | Soviet ambassador to France. |
Stashevsky and the | Soviet ambassador to Spain, Rosemberg, were executed |
Correspondence between Theodore Rothstein the | Soviet ambassador in Tehran and Mirza Koochak Khan cl |
In 1986, he was appointed the | Soviet ambassador to the United Kingdom. |
In the book he describes his tour to | Soviet, America, China, Africa etc. and about his dra |
For | Soviet amphibious jet, see Beriev A-40. |
Inalishvili (born 3 October, 1966) is a former | Soviet and Georgian footballer. |
y remains locked in military stalemate against | Soviet and Afghan troops. |
For | Soviet and Russian soccer player, see Valeri Shmarov |
Later Vishnevsky was awarded several | Soviet and foreign awards and prizes. |
was responsible and accountable to the Supreme | Soviet, and in the period between sessions of the Sup |
Pyotr Zinchenko (1903-1969), | Soviet and Ukrainian psychologist, a member of the Kh |
adeusz Chciuk took active part in fighting the | Soviet and German occupiers. |
ikhail Yuryevich Biryukov (born 1958), retired | Soviet and Russian football player |
Roza Kuanyshevna Rymbayeva (born 1957) is a | Soviet and Kazakh singer, the national artist of the |
Following his escape, the camp's | Soviet and Vietnamese soldiers are sent to look for h |
954 in Sylva, Sverdlovsk, Russia) is a retired | Soviet and Russian basketball player. |
евич Шмарко) (born 12 March 1969) is a retired | Soviet and Russian football player. |
ian: Игорь Ойстрах) (born April 27, 1931) is a | Soviet and Russian violinist. |
Черных) (October 6, 1931 - May 26, 2004) was a | Soviet and Russian astronomer. |
The | Soviet and Tudeh press echoed Kavtaradze's words. |
e Bolsheviks were clearly outvoted in the Baku | Soviet and were forced out of power. |
1963), | Soviet and Russian actor, son of Oleg Yefremov |
t and published extensively on many aspects of | Soviet and Russian music. |
ted as Belyavsky, born December 17, 1953) is a | Soviet and Slovenian chess grandmaster. |
and semi-official organizations on studies in | Soviet and other cultures. |
н) (18 September 1942 - 1 December 2001) was a | Soviet and Russian footballer and manager. |
Людмила Георгиевна Карачкина) (born 1948) is a | Soviet and Ukrainian astronomer. |
Soviet and German troops fought there until 8 August | |
The partisan groups were formed by the | Soviet and Communist bodies on the German occupied te |
Нейман; born September 25, 1967) is a retired | Soviet and Russian professional footballer. |
1937), | Soviet and Russian footballer and coach who managed F |
He "remained a poster boy for | Soviet and Russian radiation medicine". |
According to Fyodor Morgun, a politician of | Soviet and Ukrainian descent, Kulakov seemed worried |
March 20, 1933 in Leningrad) is a well-known | Soviet and Russian bard and poet. |
Survey: A Journal of | Soviet and East European Studies, № 62, January 1967, |
ears, the Volkswerft produced trawlers for the | Soviet and other fleets. |
te for the independence and unification of the | Soviet and Chinese-controlled parts of Central Asia. |
As a result of large-scale operations by | Soviet and Afghan forces, Kandahar, in the south, als |
Italian submarines began to sink Spanish, | Soviet and other nations' ships transporting material |
so known as Tsiklon-3, GRAU index 11K68, was a | Soviet, and subsequently Ukrainian orbital carrier ro |
Leo Mazel (1907-2000), a | Soviet and Russian musicologist |
In the scenario, | Soviet and allied forces enter Yugoslavia in May 1952 |
Four train ferries two | Soviet and two Bulgarian ones, named "Hero of Odessa" |
For | Soviet and Ukrainian footballer born in 1963, see Ser |
The | Soviet and Polish forces held the bridgehead, and Ger |
Kukuruza (Russian: Кукуруза - "maize") is a | Soviet and later Russian country rock group that was |
охорович Лосюков), born 15 November 1943, is a | Soviet and Russian diplomat. |
For | Soviet and Russian football player and coach, see Ser |
Lyudmila Alexeyeva - | Soviet and Russian human rights activist |
anal served as a defensive barrier between the | Soviet and German armies. |
nded planetary probe is based on evidence from | Soviet and non-Soviet sources and historical document |
He became a member of the Petrograd | Soviet and the Moscow Soviet. |
Most | Soviet and subsequently Russian military satellites w |
nstrations demanding the right to emigrate for | Soviet and Syrian Jews. |
The Blue Bird (Russian: Синяя птица) is a 1970 | Soviet animated feature film based upon the play by M |
Button (Russian: Пуговица) is a | Soviet animated film directed by Vladimir Tarasov and |
Like the earlier | Soviet animated feature Adventures of Mowgli, the fil |
After World War II, upon | Soviet annexation to the Ukrainian SSR, most Poles we |
These fears were minimized by the | Soviet announcement that troops were going to be with |
He led the Third | Soviet Antarctic Expedition and one of the first mann |
He was a leader of the Fourth | Soviet Antarctic Expedition and the Seventh Soviet An |
man dive bombers would silently glide in below | Soviet anti-aircraft fire, drop their bombs, and fly |
The RGD-5 hand grenade is a post World War II | Soviet anti-personnel fragmentation grenade. |
nd destroyed Kosmos 1375 as a demonstration of | Soviet anti-satellite capability. |
The TM-35 was a rectangular metal cased | Soviet anti-tank mine used during the Second World Wa |
The TMD-40 was a wooden-cased | Soviet anti-tank blast mine used during the Second Wo |
Soviet Apprehensions about Sino-American Relations, 1 | |
On Internal War: American and | Soviet Approaches to Third World Clients and Insurgen |
nd Encirclement Campaign against Shaanxi-Gansu | Soviet, April 1935 to July, 1935 |
Second Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi | Soviet, April 1, 1931 to May 31, 1931 |
ncirclement Campaign against Hubei-Henan-Anhui | Soviet, April 1931 to July 1931 |
It was built to the design of the | Soviet architect Yakov Belopolsky to commemorate 5,00 |
mation newly available to the public, from the | Soviet archives, following the dissolution of the Sov |
Vassiliev's, The Haunted Wood, a book based on | Soviet archives.. |
tion to extract intelligence from an abandoned | Soviet Arctic research station. |
For the late | Soviet Arctic explorer, see Vladimir Voronin (captain |
edinstvo and its supporters within the Supreme | Soviet argued against independence from the Soviet Un |
"THE | SOVIET ARK" |
44 emphasis was placed on an all-out attack on | Soviet armaments and power plants but by March 1945 t |
All along the front, the | Soviet armed forces suffered a crushing defeat. |
Kolodin then became an officer in the | Soviet Armed Forces until his selection as a cosmonau |
This remained the westernmost point the | Soviet Armed Forces reached in Northeast Estonia unti |
After the service in the | Soviet Armed Forces (1988-1990) he worked at a resear |
ny case by the effective breakup of the former | Soviet Armed Forces among the former republics of the |
His career as a professional soldier in the | Soviet armed forces began during the Russian Civil Wa |
arck Tower built in 1901 and demolished by the | Soviet Armed Forces in 1981. |
velling through areas occupied by the crumbled | Soviet armed forces. |
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