Interwar period When the
Mongolian Revolution of 1921 broke out, Mongolian revolutionaries expelled the Russian
White Guards (during the
Russian Civil War of 1917–1923 following the
October Revolution of 1917) from Mongolia, with the assistance of the Soviet
Red Army. The revolution also officially ended Manchurian sovereignty over Mongolia, which had existed since 1691. Although the
theocratic Bogd Khanate of Mongolia still nominally continued, with successive series of violent struggles, Soviet influence grew stronger. In 1924, after the
Bogd Khan died of
laryngeal cancer or, as some sources suggest, at the hands of Soviet spies, the
Mongolian People's Republic was proclaimed on November 26, 1924. A nominally independent and sovereign country, it has been described as being a satellite state of the Soviet Union in the years from 1924
until 1990. This is supported by the fact that the Mongolian PR collapsed less than two months after the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. During the Russian Civil War, Red Army troops occupied
Tuva in January 1920, which had also been part of the
Qing Empire of China and a
protectorate of
Imperial Russia. The
Tuvan People's Republic was proclaimed a nominally independent state in 1921, although it was tightly controlled by Moscow and is considered a satellite state of the Soviet Union until 1944, when the USSR annexed it into the
Russian SFSR. and along with the Soviet Union made up what is called the
Soviet empire. Soviet forces remained in these countries after the war's end. Through a series of coalition governments including
communist parties, and then a forced liquidation of coalition members opposed by the Soviets,
Stalinist systems were established in each country. •
People's Republic of Albania (1946–1961) •
Polish People's Republic (1947–1989) •
People's Republic of Bulgaria (1946–1990) •
Romanian People's Republic (1947–1965) •
Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (1948–1989) •
German Democratic Republic (1949–1990) •
Hungarian People's Republic (1949–1989) •
Mongolian People's Republic (1924–1990) •
Democratic People's Republic of Korea (1948–1956) •
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (1978–1991) Albania and Romania ceased to be satellites before the
revolutions of 1989. The
People's Socialist Republic of Albania, under the leadership of
Enver Hoxha, broke ties with the Soviet Union in the
Albanian–Soviet split following the Soviet
de-Stalinisation process, and removed itself from Soviet influence in 1961. with serious economic disagreements with Moscow resulting in a final rejection of Soviet hegemony in 1964. From 1945 to 1948
North Korea was under
Soviet Civil Administration, following this provisional governments were established under the
Provisional People's Committee of North Korea and
People's Committee of North Korea resulting in the establishment of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in 1948. Some scholars consider North Korea a satellite state under the Soviet Union from 1948 until the 1958
August faction incident. The short-lived
East Turkestan Republic (1944–1949) was a Soviet satellite until
it was absorbed into the
People's Republic of China. Between 1945 and the
Iran crisis of 1946 the
Azerbaijan People's Government and
Republic of Mahabad existed as satellite states in Soviet-occupied Iran. The
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was a satellite regime of the Soviet Union from 1978 to 1991. Between 1979 and 1989, Afghanistan was also under
Soviet military occupation. ==Post-Cold War usage of the term==