The formation of the Warsaw Pact led to two opposing alliances in Europe separated by the Iron Curtain, both planning for military action against the other, including the use of nuclear and conventional weapons.
The Warsaw Pact was a collective defence treaty involving the Soviet Union, Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Albania and Bulgaria, set up on 14 May 1955 following West Germany’s entry into NATO on 9 May 1955.
After Stalin died, Soviet leader Khrushchev indicated Soviet control would relax, but when Hungary started to move away from Soviet influence, the Soviet Union tightened its control for fear that if Hungary left the Warsaw Pact, other countries would follow.
Hungary suffered a lot under Stalin’s control, with food and industrial products being shipped off to Russia, and any opposition being ruthlessly wiped out.
Destalinisation led to the Soviet Union no longer seeing itself as a dictatorship, instead it became a one-party state, governed by the Politburo with Khrushchev as its leader.
Many Hungarians mistakenly believed that the end of Stalin’s rule would bring an end to communism in Hungary, especially as Soviet troops had already withdrawn.
Nagy wanted to leave the Warsaw Pact and become a neutral country, hold free elections leading to no more single-party communist government, and have UN protection from the Soviet Union.
In October 1956, poor harvests and bread shortages led to Hungarians starting to demonstrate against communist control, with statues of Stalin pulled down and local communists attacked.
Kadar’s policies were more moderate than those of other Soviet satellite states and resulted in Hungary having better living standards than other East European states.
Khrushchev claimed that communists were being slaughtered in Hungary, but a number of Hungarian communists had been killed and members of the state security forces, the AVH, attacked in the violence of October 1956, which took place in Budapest and other Hungarian towns and cities.