A Quote by Winston Churchill

An iron curtain has descended over Europe. — © Winston Churchill
An iron curtain has descended over Europe.
From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent.
From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Atlantic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent. Behind the line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe... All these famous cities and the populations around them lie in what I must call the Soviet sphere, and all are subject in one form or another, not only to Soviet influence but to a very high and, in many cases, increasing measure of control from Moscow.
Should the German people lay down their arms, the Soviets... would occupy all eastern and south-eastern Europe, together with the greater part of the [German] Reich. All over this territory, which would be of an enormous extent, an iron curtain would at once descend.
If the German people lay down their arms the whole of Eastern and Southern Europe, together with the Reich, will come under Russian occupation. Behind an iron curtain mass butcheries of people would begin.
History has often showed us the strength of the forces that are unleashed by the yearning for freedom. It moved people to overcome their fears and openly confront dictators such as in East Germany and Eastern Europe about 22 years ago... The yearning for freedom cannot be contained by walls for long. It was this yearning that brought down the Iron Curtain that divided Germany and Europe, and indeed the world, into two blocs.
Before 1994, many South Africans used theater as a voice of protest against the government. But with the end of apartheid, like the artists who watched the fall of the Iron Curtain in Europe, theater had to find new voices and search for new issues.
With a rumble and a roar, an iron curtain is descending on Russian history.
Just as that little opening in the Iron Curtain that Hungary created caused a flood of people out, and ultimately the beginning of the end of communism in Europe, if you could get refugee flows coming out of North Korea, while there'd be a very difficult humanitarian problem in the short run, both for China and South Korea, in the long run it would lead to reunification.
This was 1990, the year that communism died in Europe and it seemed strange to me that in all the words that were written about the fall of the iron curtain, nobody anywhere lamented that it was the end of a noble experiment. I know that communism never worked and I would have disliked living under it myself but none the less it seems that there was a kind of sadness in the thought that the only economic system that appeared to work was one based on self interest and greed.
I spent a lot of time behind the Iron Curtain, and their cars were abysmal.
The Iron Curtain may be a thing of the past, but Mother Russia is as mysterious as ever.
I was an immigrant. I came here at 12. We were caught behind the Iron Curtain until I was 10.
It's bleak behind the Iron Curtain, although they do have the strongest vodka I've ever had in my life.
I am one of those people who believes that the solution to the world's problems is to be found behind the Iron Curtain.
Take it from someone who fled the Iron Curtain: I know what happens when you give the Russians a green light.
Americans have always risen to the moment, from defeating the scourge of fascism to bringing down the Iron Curtain.
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