Warsaw Pact

Warsaw Pact Organisation
Warsaw Treaty Organisation
Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance
Emblem
Anthem: 
Песня Oбъединённых Aрмий
"Song of the United Armies"
  Warsaw Pact member states in 1989
   Albania withdrew in 1968
HeadquartersMoscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Recognised national languagesRussian, German, Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, Romanian, Albanian, Bulgarian, Polish
TypeCollective security military alliance
Membership
Leaders
Establishment
• Treaty signed
14 May 1955 (1955-05-14)
• Pact disbanded
25 February 1991 (1991-02-25)
• Treaty disestablished
1 July 1991 (1991-07-01)
Today part ofCollective Security Treaty Organization, NATO

The Warsaw Pact (WP), formally the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance (TFCMA), was a collective defense treaty signed in Warsaw, Poland, between the Soviet Union and seven other Eastern Bloc socialist republics in Central and Eastern Europe in May 1955, during the Cold War. The term "Warsaw Pact" commonly refers to both the treaty itself and its resultant military alliance, the Warsaw Pact Organisation (WPO; also known as the Warsaw Treaty Organization, WTO). The Warsaw Pact was the military complement to the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon), the economic organization for the Eastern Bloc states.

Dominated by the Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact was established as a balance of power or counterweight to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the Western Bloc. There was no direct military confrontation between the two organizations; instead, the conflict was fought on an ideological basis and through proxy wars. Both NATO and the Warsaw Pact led to the expansion of military forces and their integration into the respective blocs. The Warsaw Pact's largest military engagement was the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, one of its own member states, in August 1968. All member states participated except for Albania and Romania, resulting in Albania's withdrawal from the pact less than one month later. The pact began to unravel with the spread of the Revolutions of 1989 through the Eastern Bloc, beginning with the Solidarity movement in Poland, its electoral success in June 1989 and the Pan-European Picnic in August 1989.

East Germany withdrew from the pact following German reunification in 1990. On 25 February 1991, at a meeting in Hungary, the pact ceased to exist via joint declaration by the defense and foreign ministers of the six remaining member states. The USSR itself was dissolved in December 1991, although most of the former Soviet republics formed the Collective Security Treaty Organization shortly thereafter. In the following 20 years, the Warsaw Pact countries outside the USSR each joined NATO (East Germany through its reunification with West Germany; and the Czech Republic and Slovakia as separate countries), as did the Baltic states.