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#1 |
Navy Seal
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We all know how much of a good guy Stalin was, right?
Wrong ofc: Order 270 of the USSR killed the children of any Russian who surrendered to the Germans. In August of 1941, so many Russians were defecting to the Axis nations Germany, Finland, Romania, Hungary, to escape the concentration camps of Communism that the USSR enacted the notorious "Order 270" which punished and killed the family, which included even children of every Russian who defected to the West. Actual text of Order 270: "To bind each soldier, independent of his official position, to rebuff the enemy to the death, rather than to be taken and held captive, the family of the captured Red Army men to be deprived of welfare payment and of aid." Order 270 of the U.S.S.R. August 16, 1941 1941, Source: [RGVA], f. 4, pub. 12, d. 98, l. 617-622. Certified copy. Published in Military History Periodical. 1988. ***8470; 9. s. 26-28. I Orders of the People's Commissariat of the Defense of the USSR. June 22, 1941. - 1942 g. - M. Published: 1997. - Vol. 13 (2-2). - S. 58-60. - 448 s. - (Russian archive: Great Domestic). ISBN 5-85255-708-0 When Order 270 states that all aid to the families of soliders who are captured alive will be cut off, it means all food, water, shelter during the -20 degree Russian winter, a death sentence. When people were denied housing, they became technically vagrants in the USSR, and by law all vagrants were rounded up and sent to die in the Gulags. Which in a state system means the family freezes out in the cold and starves, until they are rounded up as a vagrants and sentenced to the Gulags for the rest of their lives, which in a Gulag was about 3 years. Being deprived to shelter from the winter, deprived of food and water, condemned to vagrancy and arrest to be sent to the Gulags which was a death sentence for 60 million people. Source: Roberts, Geoffrey. Stalin's Wars: From World War to Cold War, 1939***8211;1953. New Heaven, CT; London: Yale University Press, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 0300112041), page 98 http://yalepress.yale.edu/book.asp?isbn=9780300112047 |
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#2 | ||
Silent Hunter
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Who said he was a good guy?
![]() Interesting the book you linked in the intro it states: Quote:
Quote:
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#3 |
Eternal Patrol
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Ive watched a few documentaries of Stalin sometimes I don't know who was more insane Hitler or Stalin.
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#4 | |
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#5 | |
Rear Admiral
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*In all actuality id say Stalin was abit more crazy, Paranoid man he was.
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#6 | |
Navy Seal
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He knew that Stalin would break the treaty. It was either Hitler invade or Stalin invade. |
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#7 |
Lucky Jack
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This is a myth, Stalin up the raw goods to Germany after the fall of France. Oil, wheat, iron and so on, so why attack Germany's eastern border when your on to a good thing.
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#8 |
Navy Seal
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i was attempting to be sarcastic.
It didn't pay off. |
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#9 | ||
Navy Seal
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Here's this, also from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_No._270 and: THIS i quote from link: Quote:
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#10 |
Silent Hunter
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Look I don't have time for detailed discussion right now-it does seems my point about Roberts was missed-I will try to do some futher inquiries on my own. It does seem astonishing that Russian soldiers fought as hard as they did if there was no sense of patriotism or hatred for the invader. Fear of one's own government will only go so far. I would like hard numbers at the very least.
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#11 | |
Ocean Warrior
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There was great sense of duty and patriotism but that wasn't very obvious from the start of campaign. Ruthlessness and crude force was needed to overcome sense defeatism and to gain any results in slowing German forces. Only the determination of Stalin and his generals saved Russia from similar fate to France. |
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#12 |
Navy Seal
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I agree with MH Stalin was a very rotten person but it was his persona or the fear of it that helped them win the war.In the end it is the lesser of two
evils I suppose be under the control of your ruthless dictator or be enslaved by foreign dictator I think most peoples would not pick the last one.From a few books I have read written by ex Red Army soldiers it seems that many Russians felt that after winning the war that things would become better at home of course that never came to pass but it was better than the alternate by a long shot. |
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#13 | |
Sea Lord
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As the threat from outside increased, it was simple enough to channel the patriotism for militaristic purposes. Films were especially important in this whole process, music too. By reading the lyrics of songs from 1935 onwards, you will inevitably notice that the omnipresent enemy is more and more outside of the borders instead of inside. This song (can be listened ) is a prime example and it was made for a film of the same name already in 1938. And as for films, another example is this well known allegory. How much the ordinary Red Army soldier believed in these is anyone's guess. But there hadn't been lack of effort already long before the war. And seeing how efficient the Soviet propaganda machine was, I'd estimate it did achieve some results as well.
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