this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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chapotraphouse
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Overall, it's astonishing how little militarized violence occurred at the end of the Eastern Bloc. Nearly all of the violence (aside from shelling the government building to prevent the people from trying to go back to communism) was caused by austerity (not that this was a small amount of violence by any means, given that at least six million people died from it).
The Revolutions of 1848 would fit the bill if not for the violent counterrevolutions that occurred in 1849.
Well,barring Yugoslavia
And all of the other wars.
I thought about that, but I think that that's in a different category than the USSR's dissolution.
Yeah definitely Yugoslavia was in the Balkens not Eastern Europe, and non aligned movement not Warsaw Pact. It's more like if China broke apart and there was a restoration of "liberal democracy" and oligarchs etc, then Vietnam broke out in a Civil War due to US meddling economically, politically and covertly.
And Romania
In Romania, while direct political violence did happen, it was hardly a blip as far as violent revolutions go.
And the Chechen war
And the civil war in Tajikistan. And wars in Transnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh. And the war in Donbass and so on.
both of them
Fair point
It was a coup d'etat,not a true revolution
So much for the power-hungry militaristic communists and the unwavering state structure huh?
The Gang of Eight called their coup against Gorbachev off after three civilians died. Three! Three million civilian deaths wouldn't even make the average American politician flinch.
There was war in Moldavia and between Armenia and Azerbaijan. So not entirely peaceful.