Posted on 05/03/2015 3:27:19 AM PDT by WhiskeyX
As May 9th, Victory Day in many post-Soviet states, approaches, decency demands that we celebrate the defeat of Adolf Hitlers Germany and honor the millions of soldiers and civilians who gave their lives to rid the world of the scourge of Nazism.
At the same time, if we truly want to honor the dead, we must take heed of the historical lies that the Kremlin, both in its Soviet and post-Soviet hypostases, promotes about the USSRs relationship with Nazi Germany.
For starters, the Moscow-controlled Communist International, and its sidekick, the Communist Party of Germany, made Hitlers rise to power possible, if not indeed inevitable, by tarring the German Social Democrats as social fascists who threatened to split the proletariat and were, thus, a greater evil than the Nazis. Had the German left remained united against the real threatNazismHitler might not have come to power. (Many leftists make a similar mistake today, preferring Vladimir Putins fascism to American capitalism and thereby promoting war in Europe.)
(Excerpt) Read more at worldaffairsjournal.org ...
Stalin wanted the war in the West, to bleed the British, French and German armies dry, making all of Europe easy pickings for the Red Army.
The one thing Stalin didn’t count on was France falling so soon, which may have turned out in the end to be a blessing in disguise.
The worst part of it was their non-aggression treaty with Japan; they wouldn’t help in the east while Americans were dying in the Pacific.
“The one thing Stalin didnt count on was France falling so soon, which may have turned out in the end to be a blessing in disguise.”
Stalin also did not count on Hitler failing to attempt the invasion of the British Isles, which would have tied up a substantial part of the Wehrmacht for an extended period of time. Of course, Stalin also failed to recognize the Red Army was a broken reed in 1941 in the aftermath of the purges, so the Red Army would have failed in its offensive against Germany in Poland and along the frontier of the Third Reich in 1941 just as they actually did fail in the defensive campaign and previously in Finland.
Stalin was counting on being ready by 1943, so he was anxious to try to avoid doing anything to rouse the suspicions of the Germans before then, which explains why he chose to ignore the intelligence reports saying that a German invasion was imminent.
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