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More stunning photos at link.
1 posted on 08/31/2019 2:10:21 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

These are great! In the metro there is a plaque for soviet paradise that I saw in person but have been unable to find online. Has parents happy to send their son to war, huge vegetables, etc. All ridiculous. Some russian friends took me to see it. I keep forgetting more about it.


2 posted on 08/31/2019 2:23:31 PM PDT by MarMema (breeding tauntauns in northern Michigan - soon to be for sale!)
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

KV-2?


3 posted on 08/31/2019 2:43:26 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Cool pic of a captured KV-2 tank.

What a monster.


4 posted on 08/31/2019 2:44:36 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with islamic terrorists - they want to die for allah and we want to kill them.)
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Interesting!

In the late 1990s I visited the “World War II Through Russian Eyes” traveling museum exhibition at San Diego’s Balboa Park.

Though both Germany and the USSR started WWII with their pact to invade and carve up Poland, they soon became hated enemies and rivals towards each other once Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa.

It would be even more interesting to have both of these highly propagandistic museum displays exhibited together, at the same time, one alongside the other.

See: https://www.rferl.org/a/1089247.html


6 posted on 08/31/2019 4:42:39 PM PDT by DogByte6RER ("Loose lips sink ships")
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

The Soviet anti-tank mine dog program was fraught with problems. They trained them on stationary (and noiseless) diesel-powered Russian tanks, then employed them against moving gasoline-powered German tanks that made frightening noises. And most of the dogs couldn’t make the adjustment.

Dogs that returned with their bombs still attached were supposed to be shot by their trainers. And trainers who had had to kill their own dog showed a strong dislike for having to train its replacement.

But dogs that returned to Soviet lines without deploying their bombs or being killed by their trainers sometimes exploded in the midst of Russian troops, with predictable consequences.

The Soviets claimed the dogs had damaged some 300 German tanks but the historical record only documents a few dozen “successes.” By 1941 the Germans had figured out that it was in their best interest to shoot every dog they came across on the battlefield, which made an already shaky weapons program dramatically less effective. And they used it as an anti-Russian propaganda campaign, claiming that the Soviets were too cowardly so they were sending their dogs to do their fighting for them.

The program wasn’t active for very long, probably because the Russians feared the dogs as much or more than the Germans did.


10 posted on 09/01/2019 6:57:57 AM PDT by Paal Gulli
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