「soviet」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)15ページ目
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However the political side of | Soviet military doctrine, Western commentators Harrie |
4-45 participated in World War II on a side of | Soviet Army. |
ater in May 1945, while defending Silesia from | Soviet attack. |
Similarly the | Soviet Union used those guns it captured from Lithuan |
Simultaneously, the | Soviet authorities replaced all communist party and a |
Since the | Soviet revolution it has been a Soviet kolhoz with fe |
orts estimate casualties in fighting since the | Soviet intervention at 20,000 Afghan and 10,000 Sovie |
ng Western music before proceeding to sing the | Soviet National Anthem. |
Italian submarines began to sink Spanish, | Soviet and other nations' ships transporting material |
Captain Teichert) tried to sink the | Soviet icebreaker Feodor Litke off Belushya Guba with |
troops of the 94th were finally slaughtered by | Soviet advancement on 29 January 1943. |
10 July - 10 September Battle of Smolensk - | Soviet 16th and 20th armies encircled. |
Given a unique opportunity to snatch a | Soviet SS-N-5 SERB nuclear missile without the knowle |
or Nogin back to the Russian Socialist Federal | Soviet Republic, following the first stage of negotia |
t in production long after the war and sold to | Soviet allies. |
eveal barbed wire, barricades, and soldiers in | Soviet Army uniforms. |
He claimed some 80 | Soviet tanks destroyed and 43,000 gross register tons |
He is the son of | Soviet mathematician Vladimir Abramovich Rokhlin. |
The river crossing was easy, but soon the | Soviet defence strengthened. |
rn group consisting of two battalions soon met | Soviet resistance. |
As a diplomat, he worked in Spain, France, | Soviet Union, United States, Brazil, Colombia, Venezu |
cles on eastern front battles to specify "free | Soviet forces"? |
In the late 1950's he was a speechwriter for | Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. |
90s, word of the island's danger was spread by | Soviet defectors, including Ken Alibek, the former he |
For the American communist and spy for | Soviet intelligence, see Floyd Miller. |
olution while Argentina, the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained from the vote. |
o none; Belgium, France, the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained. |
he also was a deputy in the Kazakh SSR Supreme | Soviet. |
with nine votes to none; the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained. |
mpts failed to advance beyond early stages, as | Soviet engineers lacked experience with this kind of |
y remains locked in military stalemate against | Soviet and Afghan troops. |
Cossacks of the Kuban (1949) became staples of | Soviet television and proved effective in showcasing |
remained unsuccessful, but after the start of | Soviet occupation, in November 1944, the Romanian Soc |
decessors was chaired by the United States and | Soviet Union. |
This occurred when the United States and | Soviet Union tested H-bombs within nine months of one |
ferences between life in the United States and | Soviet Russia. |
Your deletion of sourced material stating that | Soviet soldiers were killed is not acceptable. |
During World War II, Epstein was stationed by | Soviet intelligence in Mexico City. |
First statue of | Soviet soldier was destroyed in early 1970s. |
mphlet emphasizes Reed's short-lived status as | Soviet consul. |
For the chain of stores in | Soviet Russia, see Beryozka. |
er, best known as the authour of stories about | Soviet intelligentsia. |
August Storm - | Soviet invasion of Manchuria (1945) |
David Glantz, August Storm: The | Soviet 1945 Strategic Offensive in Manchuria, CGSC |
Bloody Streets: The | Soviet Assault on Berlin, April 1945, Helion & Co. (2 |
In 1984, he was stripped of | Soviet citizenship. |
Structure of | Soviet Wages, 1944 |
as an early leader of the Student Struggle for | Soviet Jewry, founded in 1964. |
and semi-official organizations on studies in | Soviet and other cultures. |
Many sources refer to this submarine as | Soviet submarine K-329 or K-429 |
For the submarine, see | Soviet submarine K-8. |
After the deaths of three successive elderly | Soviet leaders since 1982, the Soviet Politburo elect |
All of a sudden, a | Soviet agent begins to chase after Sasha. |
He was born in Sugdidi, Georgian | Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR, on May 20, 1937. |
ith the Finnish government over his support of | Soviet groups during the Winter War between the Sovie |
long after the war, the British supported the | Soviet claim that the Nazis had staged the Katyn Mass |
ational Secretary Laurie Aarons, supported the | Soviet Union. |
1 participated in work of the Supreme military | soviet of Zabaykal. |
n September 21 Langner formally surrendered to | Soviet troops under Marshal Semyon Timoshenko. |
Darges then found himself surrounded by | Soviet reinforcements and was forced to repel several |
ecame intrigued by the mystery surrounding the | Soviet Union. |
eam enlisted testimonies from the survivors of | Soviet prison camps. |
n and Estonian governments, ever suspicious of | Soviet intentions, decided to accept a mutual non-agg |
Sviatoslav Richter, | Soviet pianist |
The wordplay symbolizes the | Soviet Union, a vital ally of the Allied forces. |
The Tajik Autonomous | Soviet Socialist Republic (Tajik ASSR) was an autonom |
He led the peace talks with | Soviet Russia and achieved Treaty of Tartu which was |
the Executive Committee of the Tallinn Oblast | Soviet 1953, Minister of Culture 1953-1963, Deputy Ch |
The main targets were | Soviet, British, and Israeli travel agencies. |
ratus is referenced in Andrei Tarkovsky's 1979 | Soviet science fiction film Stalker. |
On 27 May 1920 the Tatar Autonomous | Soviet Socialist Republic (TASSR) of the RSFSR was de |
s born in Naberezhnye Chelny, Tatar Autonomous | Soviet Socialist Republic. |
He was born in the Tatar Autonomous | Soviet Socialist Republic. |
za Eladze on May 28, 1976 in Tbilisi, Georgian | Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union (present Geor |
Tchaikovsky - | Soviet Union |
(Not to be outdone, another WHA team selected | Soviet leader Alexei Kosygin.) |
Teodor Oizerman, | Soviet philosopher |
Terrorism: The | Soviet Connection (1985) |
Tetяis: The | Soviet Mind Game |
on gas exports to countries other than Former | Soviet Union countries. |
There were no doubts that without | Soviet assistance the Austrian communists would fail |
They cited evidence that the | Soviet Union's occupation of Eastern Europe had a def |
Nixon felt that the | Soviet Union was inciting the country. |
Pacepa alleged that the | Soviet Union tried to discredit the Papacy. |
This diary is the first book that presents | Soviet vanquishers as flesh and blood people and help |
The most common view is that the | Soviet Union was motivated by a desire to ensure Urho |
of "Pathoheterodoxy", to show the way that the | Soviet Union would have characterised Soviet dissiden |
manual and the in-game text indicate that the | Soviet facility is called V. I. Lenin Defense Station |
Skrypnyk noted that in | Soviet times the museum had a designated security gro |
He believed that the | Soviet government would find it difficult to force th |
It was not until 1989 that the | Soviet authorities rehabilitated him. |
His most prominent film role was that of | Soviet defector Boris Kusenov in Alfred Hitchcock's 1 |
turned to the United States convinced that the | Soviet system was superior to the West. |
On the same day, Molotov replied that the | Soviet government would not object to negotiations be |
In essence, the treaties provided that the | Soviet Union would come to Czechoslovakia's aid only |
, when Bogza was confronted with news that the | Soviet Union and Nazi Germany had signed a non-aggres |
The Socialist Party argues that the | Soviet Union was not socialist: "the regimes in the f |
It is also mentioned that the | Soviet station has laser cannons for defense against |
This meant that the | Soviet offensive was probably not expected along that |
trumental in breaking the barrier that stopped | Soviet players from joining the NHL. |
n Bulgaria and Romania, and concluded that the | Soviet Union was guilty. |
June, 1966, elections were held to the Supreme | Soviet of the Soviet Union. |
ruary 1946, elections were held to the Supreme | Soviet of the Soviet Union. |
mmigrated to the United States from the former | Soviet Union, while her mother came from Quebec. |
ch 16 1958, elections were held to the Supreme | Soviet of the Soviet Union. |
he oblast was created as part of the Ukrainian | Soviet Socialist Republic on September 22, 1937. |
According to legend, the classic | Soviet table-glass was designed by Mukhina. |
During the Bavarian | Soviet Republic in 1919, Levine was the organizer of |
le, it inflicted heavy losses on the attacking | Soviet 47th Army and 9th Guards Tank Corps. |
The Supreme | Soviet was made up of two chambers, each of 750 deput |
March 1950, elections were held to the Supreme | Soviet of the Soviet Union. |
The coat of arms of the Karelo-Finnish | Soviet Socialist Republic was adopted on February 10, |
The 1939 | Soviet Census record a population of 183,100 in the G |
0, he was elected as a deputy to the Ukrainian | Soviet Socialist Republic's Verkhovna Rada. |
In Moscow, Metzker trailed the great | Soviet Union swimmer Vladimir Salnikov home by some 2 |
ssible "Egypt effect" in Russia and the former | Soviet Union. |
In time he decided to flee the then | Soviet Union and ended up joining Art Blakey's "The J |
rt of the Nazis' effort to combat the enormous | Soviet partisan movement in Belarus during the war, s |
the R-16 - the first | Soviet ICBM |
of the main Yiddish publications in the early | Soviet period. |
In the last | Soviet Census, conducted in 1989, there were 207,500 |
He is an honored scientist of the former | Soviet Union. |
was responsible and accountable to the Supreme | Soviet, and in the period between sessions of the Sup |
On 1944 he fled before the advancing | Soviet troops, as did many ehtnic Hungarians in Carpa |
It played in the second-highest | Soviet First League in 1961 and 1962. |
other officers and soldiers hostile to the new | Soviet regime. |
ary, but could do little to stop the advancing | Soviet Armies. |
Typically, the official | Soviet policy regarding the Holocaust was to present |
Operation Kutuzov represents the final | Soviet seizure of the strategic initiative in the eas |
ed in combat in Manchukuo against the invading | Soviet Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Manchur |
The unmanned | Soviet Lunokhod 1 and Lunokhod 2 rovers carried small |
had been thought that Sedov was the principle | Soviet engineer behind the Sputnik project. |
After the establishment of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he demobilized. |
Money printed by the Limerick | Soviet. |
Kyrgyz was the official language of the Kyrgyz | Soviet Socialist Republic. |
at did not change the fact of the overwhelming | Soviet superiority over the Germans in the sector. |
ing Romanian troops to fight off the Hungarian | Soviet Republic. |
ear's Passover, he stood alongside the leading | Soviet Jewish scientists, writers, and fighters to no |
The Galician | Soviet Socialist Republic (Galician SSR) existed from |
annually, mainly from countries of the former | Soviet Union. |
ard-winning teacher", dedicated to the postwar | Soviet school. |
Territory controlled by the Hungarian | Soviet Republic |
He helped form the Revel | Soviet of Workers' Deputies and the Revel Union of Me |
ll-known in Russia and countries of the former | Soviet Union. |
Our countryman - the first | Soviet president. |
He was the first | Soviet World Champion in men's figure skating competi |
For the 1989 | Soviet film, see The Red Flute. |
The Jiangxi | Soviet was a communist base in the northeastern part |
997 they visited Europe, Russia and the former | Soviet republics. |
All of the major | Soviet shipyards were located in the Ukraine (Nikolay |
er of Finance, he became Deputy of the Supreme | Soviet of the Soviet Union on 1-2 and 4-5 convocation |
en by ethnic German Mennonites from the former | Soviet Union. |
rn in the village of Mankivka in the Ukrainian | Soviet Socialist Republic into a family of teachers. |
The entire | Soviet Western Front-almost completely destroyed afte |
90 (April-September) - Chairman of the Supreme | Soviet of Moldavia |
Vedenin was the first | Soviet male athlete to win an Olympic cross-country s |
Aschberg became head of Ruskombank, the first | Soviet international bank. |
n held speeches, the latter praising the great | Soviet Union and the GDR government. |
s one of the very few (and possibly the first) | Soviet bands to tour in America in 1976. |
ny Koreans living in Kazakhstan and the former | Soviet Union have married Russians and Kazakhs. |
Following his escape, the camp's | Soviet and Vietnamese soldiers are sent to look for h |
felt alone and isolated not knowing the larger | Soviet espionage operation had been compromised and t |
Because the family was critical of the new | Soviet system, they left Russia in 1921. |
Sauropods from Mongolia and the former | Soviet Union. |
The Lithuanian | Soviet Socialist Republic was established on 21 July |
There is no evidence that the new | Soviet leaders, either Lenin or Trotsky, were motivat |
the journal may have been a play on the famous | Soviet journal Ogonek (the little flame). |
in the 2nd and 4th Convocations of the Supreme | Soviet. |
It was the first | Soviet manned spaceflight in over two years, and the |
After the fall of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he emigrated to Austria. |
He played for the national | Soviet Union team in 1991. |
ion was signed by then-Chairman of the Supreme | Soviet of the RSFSR, Boris Yeltsin. |
The winner | Soviet Union qualified for the eighth FIFA World Cup |
Molniya-1 No.2, was the first | Soviet communications satellite to be launched. |
For the former | Soviet football player see Vasyl Rats |
e was Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme | Soviet 1989-1990 (head of state) and Chairman of the |
he political repressions of 1937 in the former | Soviet Georgia. |
mmunists, and, after the fall of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic in 1919, the family fled to South Ame |
iv when it became the capital of the Ukrainian | Soviet Socialist Republic. |
When the main | Soviet force had withdrawn, Mujahideen groups cut off |
For the late | Soviet Arctic explorer, see Vladimir Voronin (captain |
After the 1939 | Soviet invasion of Poland the town was annexed by the |
He was the prosecutor of the Ukrainian | Soviet Socialist Republic from 1944-1953 and Chief pr |
The Hailufeng | Soviet (i.e. |
It was important in creating the Belorussian | Soviet Republic in January 1919. |
The Karelo-Finnish | Soviet Socialist Republic (Finnish: Karjalais-suomala |
On December 5, 1936 it became the Kazakh | Soviet Socialist Republic. |
Europe, Scandinavia, East Asia, and the former | Soviet Union. |
During the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he served in the National Army. |
edinstvo and its supporters within the Supreme | Soviet argued against independence from the Soviet Un |
The 1988 | Soviet film Malenkaya Vera was the first to feature a |
season with Tamara Moskvina, winning the 1965 | Soviet Championships. |
However, the 1924 | Soviet Constitution earlier referred to Abkhazia as a |
He was elected to the Supreme | Soviet of the USSR and served as a lieutenant-general |
Renamed Bolshakovo after the 1945 | Soviet conquest, the town of Skaisgirren is situated |
Like the 1936 constitution, the 1977 | Soviet Constitution used direct election of all gover |
shein received the honor of becoming the first | Soviet tank commander in Spain following his arrival |
olarship and research on Russia and the former | Soviet states, the London School of Economics establi |
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