The truth about the 1941 2 war. The beginning of the Great Patriotic War: myths and truth. From the dossier "mk"

Ordered to die

Penal battalions during the Great Patriotic War called suicide battalions. The surviving fighters of these units were considered the favorites of Fortune. There are few such “favorites” even after the war, and even now they can be counted on one hand ... And the more important is this story of a soldier from the 15th Separate Penal Battalion Mikhail Aller. The story is scary and honest.

Alas, Aller himself did not live to see this publication. However, shortly before his death, he not only “confessed” to MK reporters, but also handed over his diaries for publication. They contain the whole truth about the war through the eyes of the doomed.

Mikhail Aller is second from the left.

The penal battalion ... Not only those who were serving their sentences received before the war for robberies and murders got here. Even those who had a crystal clear biography "before" and fought heroically "during" were here. This happened to Mikhail Abramovich Aller. In 1942, he stormed Zaitsev Gora, was wounded, fought off the regiment. Then there was a meeting with Smersh fighters, interrogations, a tribunal. The verdict is 10 years in prison. The punishment was replaced by 3 months of a penal battalion (there usually no one survived anymore).

FROM THE DOSIER "MK"

The average monthly losses of the personnel of the penal units amounted to approximately 15 thousand people (with a number of 27 thousand). This is 3-6 times more than the total average monthly loss of personnel in conventional troops in the same offensive operations.

And now from the very beginning. We leaf through Aller's diary, which tells how he ended up in the penal battalion.

"Our 58th rifle division military trains arrived at the Dabuzha station of the Mosalsky district Smolensk region April 7, 1942. On the way to combat positions in the forest, the enemy opened artillery and mortar fire. It was a terrible first baptism of fire. Moans and cries for help were heard throughout the forest. Having not yet taken up combat positions, our regiment on the first day suffered heavy losses in killed and wounded.


German six-barreled mortar "Nebelwerfer 41", nicknamed "Smelly" by our soldiers.

Early spring made its own adjustments to the offensive plans of the Soviet troops. Mud-broken roads disrupted rear communications with forward units, leaving them without food and ammunition.

“Hunger has come. We began to eat dead and dead horses. It was terribly disgusting to eat this horse meat without salt. They drank swamp water and water from puddles of melted snow, where corpses often lay. We had test tubes with chlorine tablets, but drinking water with chlorine was even more disgusting. Therefore, I drank water without bleach, with a marsh-cadaverous smell. A person gets used to everything sooner or later, one could also get used to this. Many developed bloody diarrhea. I had hepatitis on my legs, the soldiers noticed that I turned yellow. Feet swollen from hunger. You could endure everything: the shelling from enemy guns, and the howling of the Junkers above your head that pierces the human soul, and any physical pain from the injuries you received, and even the death that followed you on your heels, but hunger ... He was endured impossible".

Neither horse-drawn vehicles nor tracked vehicles were able to overcome impassable mud. Thousands of fighters were removed from the front line and sent to the rear for ammunition and food. On their shoulders they delivered shells and mines, boxes of ammunition and grenades to the front line. In canvas bags, which were tied with a tight knot and thrown over the shoulder, there was buckwheat porridge. The 30-kilometer stretch of Smolensk land from Zaitseva Gora to the Dabuzh station was in those days for the 50th Army a kind of "Dear Life".

“After several such attacks, we occupied the village of Fomino-1. Enemy aircraft methodically, square by square, processed not only our "front", but also the second echelon and rear communications. Junkers-87 dive bombers were especially raging. German pilots at low altitude hung over our heads and at low level, shot us almost point-blank. Once a plane flew over me so low that I could see the smile on the face of the German pilot and the color of his hair - they were red. In addition, the German pilot shook his fist at me from the cockpit.

There, near Fomin, I first saw the famous "carousel" - this is a kind of bombing and assault attack. At an altitude of about 1000 meters, the Junkers lined up in a circle for bombing and alternately dived at the target with the siren turned on, then, having “worked out”, one came out of the dive, the other followed. The spectacle, on the one hand, is bewitching, on the other - creepy, if not ominous. A person at this moment becomes so helpless and unprotected that, even being in shelter, he cannot feel safe. Who at least once in his life fell under such a "carousel", he will not forget about it until the end of his life.

The entire evacuation of the wounded took place only at night, and any attempts to reach them during the day were doomed. For this reason, many died without waiting for help. Aimed fire did not allow the soldiers to stick their heads out of the trenches.

The first of May has arrived. In honor of significant date at night, a food package was delivered to the front line of the fighters: vodka, Krakow sausage (a whole circle), crackers and canned food. After the biscuits and pea concentrate soaked with swamp moisture, such food seemed to the fighters some kind of wonderful gift.

“In a large high-explosive bomb crater near the front line of defense, I and several soldiers gathered to share food, while talking loudly. Maybe we were heard by the Germans. Suddenly, an unusual roar was heard from the German positions. Following this, the ground caught fire, some of the soldiers' clothes caught fire. Immediately, the Germans attacked us in full growth and fired non-targeted automatic fire. Shooting back on the run, I gave the order to retreat closer to the forest in a hollow...

When I woke up from a sharp pain, I felt that my left leg had been torn off. The mortar fire continued, and I really wanted another one to finish me off. I was lying five or seven dozen meters from the German front line, from which German speech and the playing of harmonicas could be heard. I tried to use all my remaining strength to look at the severed leg. To my surprise, I found that it was intact, but for some reason became shorter. As it turned out later, I received a closed fracture of the left thigh and numerous shrapnel wounds.


Mikhail Aller was saved from death by his colleague, assistant platoon commander Sergeant Ivanov, as it turned out, a former criminal. Thanks to his assertive character and machine gun (!) He managed to get orderlies assigned to him to evacuate a wounded comrade.

“In the Ulyanovsk hospital, it turned out that the bones of the thigh had grown together incorrectly during the time that I was being transported. Ether anesthesia (there were no other anesthesia at that time) had no effect on me. tormented with me, chief surgeon I decided to drill my leg to install the spokes without anesthesia. Even the nurse had tears in her eyes. Final year student medical institute named Masha tried to alleviate my suffering and injected me with morphine to make me sleep. Once, when Masha felt that I had begun to get used to morphine, she gave me half a glass of medical alcohol to drink. Masha smoked Belomorkanal cigarettes. She shoved a cigarette into my mouth. One puff was enough to make my head spin and I fell asleep.

Mikhail was given a certificate of a disabled veteran of the Patriotic War of the 3rd degree. Despite this, he did not lose hope at the first opportunity to return to duty. Throughout the autumn of 1943, Mikhail Aller knocked on the thresholds of the district military registration and enlistment office, begging him to be sent to the front. Finally, in mid-January 1944, he was called to the VTEC commission. Chief Physician medical commission asked him to take a few steps without "outside help". Mikhail succeeded, despite the fact that the knee joint had not yet been fully developed. However, the doctors were not very worried about this flaw: “Good!” At that moment, Mikhail Aller did not yet understand that he would soon have to cruelly and unfairly pay for this momentary success. So he ended up in the 310th Guards rifle regiment 110th Guards Rifle Division of the 2nd Ukrainian Front as commander of a communications platoon of a rifle battalion. Mikhail understood perfectly well that sooner or later a severe leg injury would make itself felt. But it was necessary to make sure that no one would ever know about it.

“I coped with my position while offensive-defensive battles were going on near Kirovograd. But during hiking, especially during a long transition, it was unbearably hard. Feet bogged down in the black earth. I often lagged behind, at the end of the column I climbed into a wagon with cable reels and telephone equipment, and caught up at halts. Increasingly, I began to worry about aching pain in the knee joint and hip. But I didn't tell anyone about it."

On the heels of the advancing troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front, Smersh moved, combing the liberated cities and villages, as well as clearing the army's rear and communications not only from traitors and deserters, but also from the soldiers of the Red Army who had lagged behind their columns. Michael left too. He felt that with a bad leg he could not catch up with his regiment. Knowing perfectly well how all this could end for him, Mikhail decided to come to the headquarters of any division and tell what had happened to him. Wandering in the front line, he wandered into one empty, dilapidated village. Having collected cigarette butts in the first house that came across, Mikhail sat down on a bench to calmly consider how to behave during interrogation. In his naivety, he hoped that they would understand him and send him to the location of his unit. Not having time to bring the lit match to the cigarette butt, Mikhail felt a sharp poke from the attached machine gun under the left shoulder blade of his back and someone's quiet, but quite confident voice: "Hands." At the headquarters where he was taken by the convoy, the head of Smersh tried to prove Mikhail's involvement in German, and later Romanian intelligence. But, not having obtained “truthful testimony” from the detainee, Mikhail was put under arrest.

“At the last interrogation, having lost all hope of leniency, in my last word, which is usually given before the execution of the sentence, I said:“ A simple Jew cannot be a German or Romanian spy, and you know why! To which they answered that if I touched on the national question, then I would be attracted under the 58th political article. Under this article, they were sent to forced labor camps for long periods. I feared this more than death. In July 1944, an open meeting of the military tribunal of the 252nd Infantry Division was held. At such a demonstration meeting, I thought that I was in danger of being shot. In his last word I asked to be given the opportunity to atone for my guilt with blood.

The military tribunal of the 252nd rifle division, Mikhail Aller, was sentenced to 10 years in prison with a term to be served in a forced labor camp and deprived of military rank"Ensign". And almost immediately the term was replaced by three months of a penal battalion.

FROM THE DOSIER "MK"

In total, in 1944, the Red Army had 11 separate penal battalions of 226 people each and 243 separate penal companies of 102 people each.

Oddly enough, Aller was glad of this turn of events. I thought that it would be better to die in battle than to freeze to death somewhere at a logging site or be torn to pieces by a bunch of prisoners in a camp barracks. After the trial, Mikhail was released from custody and sent alone, without an escort with a cover letter, to the front line in the 15th separate penal battalion. In August 1944, the battalion was transferred from the combat area of ​​the city of Botoshany to the area of ​​the city of Iasi. There was almost 40-degree heat.

“I again had a difficult test - with a crippled leg in such heat, make a daily march with full gear. In addition, from nerves and dirt, my buttocks were covered with boils. They gave me more pain. During the march, I was given calcium chloride and had a blood transfusion during the halts. My nervous system and physical capabilities were mobilized to the limit to overcome difficulties. I was terrified of falling behind again.”

On the night of August 20, 1944, the penal battalion took up its starting position for the attack. The penitentiaries were given one hundred grams of vodka. Michael felt a fresh surge of strength and energy. After a powerful and lengthy artillery preparation, in which the famous Katyushas also took part, the penalists rushed to the attack. They had to crack the powerful defense of the elite units of the SS.

“We, the penalists, went to the German positions at full height, despite the explosions of shells and mines, without bowing to the bullets. Only the dead and wounded fell around. In my hands I had a cable reel and a machine gun. Following the penalty box, units of some unknown rifle division rushed into the attack. To my surprise, no detachment behind our backs. I thought: it means that no one will shoot at our backs. This discovery has added strength.


So the fighters of the penal battalion had to change positions.

Breaking forward, unnoticed by all, he found himself in the enemy's trench. Bayonets, sapper shovels, and fists were used. In that battle, he destroyed four SS men, one of whom was an officer. This fact later played an important role in his fate.

“Usually there was a hand-to-hand fight. The SS men resisted desperately, not wanting to surrender. But nothing could stop our fighters: an avalanche of attackers quickly filled everything. Most often, it was the sapper shovel that was used as a weapon. Penal boxes did not give any chance to the SS. Those from one kind of screaming men with shoulder blades were lost and did not have time to pull the trigger. We frightened the Nazis with our madness. They could not understand how one could not be afraid of death like that. They did not understand what a penal battalion was ... "

“Soon, the 15th separate penal battalion received an order from the commander of the 2nd Ukrainian Front, Malinovsky, on the early release without injury of those who particularly distinguished themselves. I also got into their number. I was offered to stay in the penal battalion in the full-time post of commander of a communications platoon.

Mikhail Abramovich survived, no matter what. And got rehab. In the Central Archive of the Ministry of Defense, we found the definition of military tribunal No. 398.

“On September 13, 1944, in an open court hearing, the petition of the commander of the 15th Separate Penal Battalion dated September 9, 1944 was considered. Lieutenant Aller Mikhail Abramovich.

As part of the 15th Separate Penal Battalion, ALLER in battles against the German invaders showed stamina and courage, repeatedly restored the communication damaged by the enemy under enemy fire, which ensured the continuity of its work, brave and stable in battle.

The tribunal determined: to release Aller Mikhail Abramovich from the punishment imposed on him and to consider him without a criminal record.”

What images arise in a Russian citizen who is told about the beginning of the Great Patriotic War? Most likely - downcast columns of prisoners, wandering under the protection of German machine gunners, Soviet tanks broken and stuck in the mud on the roadsides and in the field, planes burned at airfields ... The series can be continued.

Most of these images came from photographs taken in the summer of 1941. Almost all of these photos, and even the documentary chronicle, were taken after the battles, when days and weeks had passed. There are relatively few pictures taken in battle, not before. In addition, most of the pictures were taken on busy highways, where huge masses of Nazis walked and drove back and forth. But not all battles, the battles took place along the main roads, a significant number of equipment knocked out in battle could be found near thousands of villages, villages, in copses, on country roads.


Therefore, there was the myth of the small-scale mechanization of the Red Army, parts of which allegedly moved only on foot or with the help of horses, and the Wehrmacht only by car. Although if we compare the states of the infantry division of the Wehrmacht and the motorized rifle division of the Red Army, then there is no lag, the mechanization is almost equal. The Red Army had plenty of mechanized corps and tank brigades.

Against the background of such a picture was created the myth of the unwillingness of Soviet soldiers to fight for the Bolsheviks, Stalin. Although even in Soviet time enough materials were published that tell about the difficult battles of the initial stage of the war, mass heroism, the exploits of border guards, pilots, tankmen, gunners, and infantry.

These myths and other similar conjectures are born due to a lack of understanding of the real picture of the life of the country in the pre-war period and at the beginning of the war, or, even worse, they are created consciously, leading information war against our country and people. It must be understood that even the richest state cannot keep a multimillion-strong army under arms in a period when there is no war, tearing off millions of healthy men from real production. In the borderlands there are troops that will become the basis of the grouping for the first operation of the war, only with the declaration of war is the gigantic mechanism of mobilization launched. But even potential military personnel, who are mobilized in the first place, do not gather in peacetime in a zone of 50-300 km from the enemy, they are mobilized where they live and work. Even the current conscription and officers may not be on the border with the enemy, but in the Caucasus, Siberia, Far East. That is, there are very limited troops on the border, far from the entire payroll of the peacetime army. Only in the case of mobilization, the troops are increased to wartime states, huge masses of people and equipment are being transported to the front, perhaps only still potential.

Mobilization can be launched even before the start of hostilities, but this requires very important reasons, a political decision by the country's leadership. At this point created the myth that "intelligence reported", but the tyrant was stupid ... The beginning of mobilization is not just an internal event, but a step of great political importance, causing a huge resonance in the world. It is almost impossible to conduct it covertly, a potential enemy can use it as a pretext for war. Therefore, in order to actually start a war, very weighty, reinforced concrete grounds are needed. Starting a war, from a political and military point of view, was unreasonable, the main plans for defense construction were to be completed in 1942. The basis for such a decision could be intelligence or analysis of the political situation. But, despite the widespread opinion about the power of Soviet intelligence, the actual intelligence was highly inconsistent. crumbs important and useful information simply drowned in a mass of gossip, outright disinformation.

From a political point of view, relations between the Reich and the Union were quite normal, there was no threat: financial and economic cooperation, the absence of territorial disputes, a non-aggression pact, delimitation of spheres of influence. Moreover, which also had essential role in assessing the date of the start of the war, the Kremlin understood that it was very likely in the short term, the Third Reich was associated with a war with England. Until the issue with Britain is resolved, fight with Soviet Union was an extremely adventurous step, outside of normal logic. Berlin did not send any diplomatic signals that usually start a war - territorial claims (as to Czechoslovakia, Poland), demands, ultimatums.

When Berlin did not react in any way to the TASS message of June 14 (it said that reports published abroad about the impending war between the USSR and Germany had no basis), Stalin began mobilization processes, but without announcing it: they advanced to the border from the depths of the border military districts of the division, the promotion began along railway unmobilized troops from the internal districts to the border of the rivers Western Dvina and Dnieper. There were other events that completely reject the speculation on the topic: "Stalin did not believe."

The Red Army actually entered the war without completing the mobilization, so at the beginning of the war it had 5.4 million people, and according to the mobilization plan of February 1941 (MP-41) in wartime states, it was supposed to be 8 .68 million people. That is why in the border divisions, when they entered the battle, there were approximately 10 thousand people, instead of the prescribed St. 14 thousand. Even worse was the situation in the rear units. The troops of the border and internal military districts were divided into three operationally unrelated parts - units directly at the border, units at a depth of about 100 km from the border, and troops about 300 km from the border. The Wehrmacht got the opportunity to take advantage of the number of personnel, the number of pieces of equipment and destroy Soviet troops parts.

By June 22, 1941, the Wehrmacht was completely mobilized, its number was increased to 7.2 million people. Strike groups were concentrated on the border and crushed the Soviet border divisions before the Red Army could change the balance of power. Only in the process of the battle for Moscow could the situation be changed.

The myth of the superiority of defense over attack, on the new western border The USSR in 1940-1941 built a line of fortifications, fortified areas (URs), they are also called the "Molotov line". By the war, many structures were unfinished, uncamouflaged, without communications, and so on. But, most importantly, there were not enough forces on the border to hold back the blow of the German army, even relying on the URs. The defense could not hold back the onslaught of the Wehrmacht, the German troops had vast experience in breaking the lines of defense since the First World War, applying it in 1940 on the border with France. For a breakthrough, assault groups with sappers, explosives, flamethrowers, aircraft, and artillery were used. For example: on the 22nd, near the city of Taurage in the Baltic States, the 125th Infantry Division took up defensive positions, but the Wehrmacht broke through it in less than a day. The divisions and units covering the border could not provide the necessary density of defense. They were sparse over a vast area, so the German strike groups quickly broke into the defenses, though not at the pace they expected.

The only way to stop the enemy's breakthrough was counterattacks with their own mechanized corps. The border districts had mechanized corps, where new types of tanks, the T-34 and KV, were sent in the first place. On June 1, 1941, the Red Army had 25,932 tanks, self-propelled guns and tankettes (although some of them were in combat readiness (as at the present time, there are a certain number of units in the parks, and 60 percent ready to go into battle immediately), in western special districts had 13 981. The mechanized corps were "hostages" of the general unfavorable situation, due to the collapse of the defense in several directions at once, they were forced to scatter between several targets. In addition, the mechanized corps were inferior in the organizational part, the German tank groups numbered 150-200 thousand .people from several motorized corps, reinforced by artillery, motorized infantry and other units.The Soviet mechanized corps numbered about 30 thousand people.Wehrmacht tank units, having fewer tanks than the Red Army, reinforced them with more powerful motorized infantry and artillery, including anti-tank.

The general strategy of the leadership of the Red Army was absolutely correct - operational counterattacks, only they could stop the enemy strike groups (there was no tactical atomic yet). Unlike France, the Red Army, with its fierce counterattacks, was able to buy time, inflict heavy losses on the enemy, which ultimately led to the failure of the "blitzkrieg" plan, and hence the entire war. Yes, and the leadership of the Wehrmacht drew conclusions, became more cautious (not Poland and France), began to pay more attention to the defense of the flanks, slowing down the pace of the offensive even more. It is clear that the organization of the counterattacks was not up to par (but it is not for us to judge, the current cabinet prosecutors could not organize their similarities), the concentration was weak, there was not enough air cover, units rushed into battle from the march, units. The mechanized corps were forced to go on the attack without suppressing the enemy's defenses with artillery, it was not enough, and the one that was behind. There was not enough of their own infantry to support the tank attack. This led to heavy losses of armored vehicles, the Germans quite easily burned old types of tanks. Tanks of new types were more effective, but they could not replace a full-fledged attack with the support of aviation, artillery and infantry. The myth of the invulnerability of tanks T-34, KV for the Wehrmacht just another guess. Like, if Stalin had ordered them to be “riveted” in sufficient quantities, then the enemy would have been stopped at the border. The Wehrmacht had 50 mm PAK-38 anti-tank guns that could penetrate even KV armor using sub-caliber shells. In addition, the Wehrmacht had anti-aircraft guns and heavy field guns, which also pierced the armor of the latest Soviet tanks. These tanks still required fine-tuning, were technically unreliable, for example, the V-2 diesel engine, in 1941, its passport resource did not exceed 100 engine hours on the stand and an average of 45–70 hours in the tank. This led to the frequent failure of new tanks on marches for technical reasons.


PAK-38

But it was the mechanized corps that saved the infantry from complete annihilation. They delayed the movement of the enemy, saved Leningrad from being captured on the move, and held back the advance of the German tank group E. von Kleist in the South-West direction.

The myth about the decrease in the combat capability of the command corps due to repression does not stand up to criticism. The percentage of those repressed from the general command staff is very small, the decline in the quality of training of command personnel is associated with the rapid growth of the armed forces of the USSR in the pre-war period. If in August 1939 the Red Army numbered 1.7 million people, then in June 1941 - 5.4 million people. In the high command, a number of commanders came to the top, who later became the best generals Second World War. A significant role was also played by the lack of combat experience among a significant part of the Red Army, and the Wehrmacht was already an army that “tasted blood” and won a number of victories, the French army, for example, was then considered the best in Europe.

We must also understand the fact that the huge columns of prisoners of war, which are often shown on TV, may not be military personnel at all. The Wehrmacht in cities and other villages drove to the camps all those liable for military service from the age of 18. In addition, one must understand that not all front-line fighters are in the division - about half of them. The rest are artillerymen, signalmen, there were many builders (before the war, large-scale work was carried out to strengthen the border), military rear services. Getting into the environment, the units fought, tried to break through, while there was fuel, ammunition, food. The operational summary of Army Group Center for June 30 stated: “A lot of trophies, various weapons (mainly artillery guns), a large number of various equipment and a lot of horses were captured. The Russians are suffering huge losses in the dead, there are few prisoners. The "rear guards" were less trained, their mental training was also worse than that of the front line fighters, who mostly died with weapons in their hands. Or were injured. An impressive newsreel column of grooms, signalers and builders could easily be recruited from one corps, and entire armies were surrounded.

The Wehrmacht crushed the border divisions, the so-called "deep" corps 100-150 km from the border, they could not stop the enemy, the "weight categories" were too different, but they did the maximum - they won time and forced the enemy to throw into battle the units that they planned to introduce into fight in the second stage of the "blitzkrieg". A huge minus was the fact that the retreating Soviet units had to abandon a huge amount of equipment that ran out of fuel and which could, under other conditions, be restored. The mechanized corps burned down in the fire of war, and so far there was nothing to restore them - if in June and early July 1941 the Soviet command had mechanized corps in the hands, then by August - October they were gone. This was one of the causes of other disasters in the first year of the war: the Kyiv "boiler" in September 1941, the Vyazemsky, Bryansk and Melitopol "boilers" in October 1941.

German soldiers inspect the damaged and burnt-out T-20 Komsomolets artillery tractor. A burnt driver is seen, killed while trying to get out of the car. 1941

Sources:
Isaev A.V. Antisuvorov. Ten myths of World War II. M., 2004.
Isaev A.V., Drabkin A.V. June 22. Black day of the calendar. M., 2008.
Isaev A. V. Dubno 1941. The greatest tank battle World War II. M., 2009.
Isaev A.V. "Boilers" of the 41st. WWII, which we did not know. M., 2005.
Isaev A.V. Unknown 1941. Stopped blitzkrieg. M., 2010.
Pykhalov I. The Great Slandered War. M., 2005.
Pykhalov I., Dyukov A. et al. Great slanderous war-2. We have nothing to repent of! M., 2008.

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"Those who lie about the past war bring the future war closer."

"We won this war only because we filled the Germans with corpses." Viktor Astafiev.

It is no secret that in the USSR, and now in Russia, it is customary to glorify the Second World War and distort the facts about it. Few people know that 2,000,000 people died near Stalingrad. These are the soldiers Soviet army, civilians and fascists with allies. At school, we were taught to think that it was such and such a turning point, a convenient location of troops, and so on. But in fact, they simply threw a lot of people to their deaths, just because behind them was a city called Stalingrad. They surrendered Kyiv, but they did not surrender another city so valuable for the Soviet ideology with the name of the leader - Leningrad, they simply allowed people to starve to death. Communist idols were above everything.

There are several videos in this post. They shed light on the true events of the war and pre-war times. In the first video, the Russian writer talks about how the Soviets treated their soldiers, in fact, they kept them like cattle.

You bastards are proud of such a "Victory"


Here the veteran tells in brutal detail about the rapes and murders of German women. Not so long ago, a film shot on this topic was not even close to the truth.

Veteran of the 2nd World War about how our soldiers raped German women. Bitter truth


A Russian war veteran tells how he was driving through Western Ukraine and how his documents were checked by "Bandera". Arrived checked documents Soviet soldier and left. It turns out there was.

Russian veteran about Bandera


Here, a resident of Lvov tells how she was tortured by the NKVD officers. They destroyed so many people in the USSR that their number can probably be compared with the population of a small country, several million. For all the years of repression, according to various historians, from 23 to 40 million people were destroyed. It is probably not surprising that the Galicians, who survived the famine and repression, did not fall in love with the Soviet regime.

Lvov 1939 The interrogations NKVD torture women


I liked the comment under one of the videos, "some Russians will soon agree that they won in the Second World War only thanks to Putin."

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