On paper, the Warsaw Pact was a defensive alliance, the Soviet Union's answer to NATO. In reality, it was a legal framework for an empire, designed not to defend its members, but to control them. This book tells the complete story of the Pact, from its revolutionary origins to its violent, modern-day epilogue. Trace the Red Army's "liberation" of Eastern Europe as it transitioned into a brutal occupation, with Moscow installing puppet regimes in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and East Germany. Explore the early revolts, from the 1953 East German uprising to the full-scale 1956 Hungarian Revolution, which were crushed by the very "allies" who had sworn to protect them. Learn about the erection of the Berlin Wall, the ultimate symbol of an alliance built to keep its own citizens imprisoned. Go behind the façade of détente to a world of economic rot and pervasive secret police, a system that traded freedom for a stagnant, state-controlled security. Witness the rise of Poland's Solidarity movement, the one-two punch of Gorbachev's reforms and the Sinatra Doctrine, and the miraculous, revolutionary wave of 1989 that toppled the entire system in six months. Follow the story as the pact formally dissolves, followed by the stunning collapse of the Soviet Union itself. The fall of the Pact, however, did not end the imperial mindset that created it. This definitive history charts the difficult return to Europe for those who escaped and the fate of those who were left in Russia's sphere of influence. Discover how the unresolved trauma of this lost empire directly fuels the 21st-century conflicts in Georgia and Ukraine.