These powerful historical photos reveal the how and the why behind the fall of the Soviet Union like never before.

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Share it: Email And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts: Where Al-Qaeda Began: 48 Photos From The Soviet-Afghan War The Soviet Union Once Tested A Nuke That Was Too Big For War Life Inside The Young Pioneers: The Soviet Union's Answer To The Boy Scouts 1 of 37 West Berliners help men in East Berlin climb over the Berlin Wall.



November 12, 1989. Wikimedia Commons 2 of 37 An old woman rests her bag on the fallen symbol of the hammer and sickle.



Moscow. November 1990. Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images 3 of 37 The Baltic Way, a human chain that extended more than 400 miles across three countries, to demand freedom from the USSR.



Lithuania. August 23, 1989. Wikimedia Commons 4 of 37 A woman tries to find anything she can on the empty grocery shelves that have become the standard in Moscow.



December 20, 1990. Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS SABA/Corbis via Getty Images 5 of 37 A small child stands behind his parents, locked hand-in-hand with their neighbors in the long chain of the Baltic Way.



Vilnius, Lithuania. 1989. Wikimedia Commons 6 of 37 Pro-democracy demonstrators stand atop a barricade in front of the Kremlin, the Russian flag waving overhead.



Moscow. August 1991. Alain Nogues/Sygma/Sygma via Getty Images 7 of 37 A woman and her child look at the empty meat section of their local grocery store and wonder where they will get their food.



Moscow. 1991. Sovfoto/UIG via Getty Images 8 of 37 A man in Azerbaijan tears away an image of Vladimir Lenin, celebrating his nation's freedom from the USSR.



Baku. September 21, 1991. Anatoly Sapronenkov/AFP/Getty Images 9 of 37 Crowds in East Berlin help one another climb over the Berlin Wall and into the freedom of West Berlin.



November 1989. Wikimedia Commons 10 of 37 Women wait in line for their chance at the limited selection of toilet paper available.



Poland. Circa 1980-1989. Wikimedia Commons 11 of 37 A man takes a sledgehammer to the Berlin Wall.



July 22, 1990. Wikimedia Commons 12 of 37 Tanks on the street of Moscow are covered with flowers.



August 1991. Sovfoto/UIG via Getty Images 13 of 37 A worker tearing down a statue of Vladimir Lenin sneaks in a quick kick to its head.



Berlin, Germany. November 13, 1991. Andreas Altwein/AFP/Getty Images 14 of 37 East German border guards demolish a section of the Berlin Wall.



November 11, 1989. GERARD MALIE/AFP/Getty Images 15 of 37 A woman weeps in front of the graves of those who died during Azerbaijan's Black January of 1990, in which more than 100 anti-Soviet demonstrators were massacred.



Baku, Azerbaijan. 1992. Wikimedia Commons 16 of 37 A pro-democracy demonstrator pulls a Soviet soldier out of his tank, using force to fight against the coup d'etat by hard-line Communists.



Moscow. August 19, 1991. Dima Tanin/AFP/Getty Images 17 of 37 Protesters fill the streets of Dushanbe, Tajikistan, rebelling against the rule of the Soviets.



February 1990. Wikimedia Commons 18 of 37 Soviet tanks roll into Dushanbe, placing the city under martial law.



February 1990. Wikimedia Commons 19 of 37 Protesters in Tajikistan face off with a line of tanks.



Dushanbe. February 10, 1990. Wikimedia Commons 20 of 37 Two men walk casually through a line of tanks, getting used to the new normal of martial law in Dushanbe.



February 15, 1990. Wikimedia Commons 21 of 37 A soldier stares out the window amid the occupation of Tajikistan.



Dushanbe. February 1990. Wikimedia Commons 22 of 37 Lithuanians go out into the streets, demanding freedom from the Soviet Union.



Šiauliai, Lithuania. January 13, 1991. Wikimedia Commons 23 of 37 Supporters of Boris Yeltsin and a democratic Russia march from the Kremlin to the White House.



Moscow. August 19, 1991. Wikimedia Commons 24 of 37 Protesters march down Tverskaya Street in Moscow.



November 30, 1991. Wikimedia Commons 25 of 37 Pro-democracy protesters set up a barricade near the Moscow White House government building.



August 22, 1991. Wikimedia Commons 26 of 37 The people of Lithuania bury 13 people who were killed by Soviet troops for trying to fight for Lithuania's freedom.



Vilnius, Lithuania. January 1991. Wikimedia Commons 27 of 37 A little girl decorates the grave of her father, who died fighting for Azerbaijan's freedom.



Baku, Azerbaijani. 1993. Wikimedia Commons 28 of 37 East German ruling party spokesman Günter Schabowski announces that people can pass freely across the Berlin Wall.



Berlin. November 9, 1989. German Federal Archives 29 of 37 A line of thousands make their way toward the Berlin Wall, ready to leave East Berlin.



November 10, 1989. German Federal Archives 30 of 37 People crossing Bronholmer Road to get to West Berlin.



By the time this photo was taken, the Soviet Ministry had already given out 10 million visas for travel and 17,500 permits to permanently emigrate from East Berlin.



November 18, 1989. Wikimedia Commons 31 of 37 Border guards quickly inspect people's visas, letting them travel freely into West Berlin for the very first time.



November 10, 1989. German Federal Archives 32 of 37 At a checkpoint between East and West Berlin, guards check people's papers.



December 24, 1989. German Federal Archives 33 of 37 Crowds of people line up for their chance to take a hack at the Berlin Wall.



December 28, 1989. Wikimedia Commons 34 of 37 People help each other climbing over the Berlin Wall, near Brandenburg Gate.



The sign below them, now covered in graffiti, warns them, "Attention! You are now leaving West Berlin."



November 9, 1989. Wikimedia Commons 35 of 37 The people of Lithuania come out to vote in a referendum that will decide whether they stay a part of the USSR or break off on their own.



Novy Vilno, Lithuania. March 17, 1991. Wikimedia Commons 36 of 37 Cutting the barbwire on the Berlin Wall.



January 10, 1990. Wikimedia Commons 37 of 37 Like this gallery?

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The Fall Of The Soviet Union, In 36 Rarely-Seen Photos View Gallery

The fall of the Soviet Union didn’t happen overnight. Communism in the USSR suffered a slow and prolonged death — an entire decade of economic collapse, political revolts, and military failures that slowly ate away at one of the most powerful empires on Earth.

By the 1980s, the Soviet economy was falling apart. Food and supplies were growing so scarce that people would have to spend hours lined up outside of their local stores, patiently waiting for their turn to scavenge what little was left on its shelves before they were completely stripped bare.

Political unrest reached its peak in 1989 when revolutions started to spread like wildfire across the Eastern Bloc. Countries throughout the region started standing up and fighting to topple their Communist rulers and weaken the Soviet grip on the world.

In response, the Soviet Army rolled in on tanks and armored carriers, trying to crush the dissidents that had risen up against the Kremlin’s power. They massacred whole crowds of people for daring to rise up – but many kept fighting, no matter what Moscow threw at them.

Most of the protests were peaceful. Across the Baltic states, people protested the Soviet rule by simply holding hands; 2 million people grabbed hold of each other in a human chain that extended across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, pleading for freedom from the USSR.

Then, as winter crept into the year of revolution, the Berlin Wall came down. On a November 9, 1989 press conference, East German ruling party spokesman Günter Schabowski misread an official memo about relaxed travel restrictions and told the people of East Berlin that they could travel freely to West Berlin, effective immediately — when the party had, in fact, wanted a slower transition. Crowds of thousands then rushed across the checkpoint that very night, and, shortly after, the wall was torn down.

In a single year, six countries seceded from the Soviet Union – and soon, their troubles would come to Moscow. In the last month of 1991, the hardline Communists made their last stand, staging a coup d’état to try to take control of the nation.

The last, dying struggle of the Soviets was over in just two days. The people wouldn’t stand for their new rulers, and stood up, demanding democracy. The last leader of the Communist Party, Mikhail Gorbachev, accepted their demands. He stepped down, President Boris Yeltsin took over, and the Iron Curtain was torn down.

It was December 26, 1991, when the long, slow fall of the Soviet Union came to an end. That evening, the Soviet flag flapping above the Kremlin was taken down for the last time. In its place, the flag of Russia was raised.

After this look at the fall of the Soviet Union, check out some of the most incredible photos from the Soviet-Afghan War and the youth of the USSR in the 1960s.