you don't know shit about russian history
that is up to me to decide.
you don't know shit about russian history
Did your wife service any of the Russian men as well? Or was it all one sided?
What Polish Jews, there were none left free, the Jews who welcomed the Russian Army were the survivors of the Vernichtungslager, Todeslager,... Auschwitz II (Auschwitz-Birkenau), Chełmno, Bełżec, Majdanek, Sobibór, Treblinka
Or the Konzentrationslager,.... Kraków-Płaszów, Soldau, Stutthof, Gross-Rosen, Budzyń, Janowska, Poniatowa, Skarżysko-Kamienna, Starachowice, Trawniki.
The Germans built these camps, and the Russian made it possable.
With the war over, and to tumultuous applause, a thousand delegates of the Polish Peasants Party actually passed a resolution thanking Hitler for annihilating Polish Jewry and urging that those he’d missed be expelled. Indeed, the mopping up soon began. Returning to their villages and towns, Jews were routinely greeted with remarks like “So, ____? You are still alive.” Their efforts to retrieve property were futile — and, sometimes, fatal. Some Jews met their end on trains — not cattle cars this time, but passenger trains, from which they were thrown off. If the trains weren’t moving fast enough, they were beaten to death.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/23/b..._r=2&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
The Germans built these camps, and the Russian made it possable.
Russians did not make it possible for Germans to make concentration camps. Russians had their territory to think about and protect first, before the *newly found allies*
And Poland isnt that small yet it fell to Nazis like a burning machstick.
Russia would have loved to maintain a position of no-war just like the wish of Russians for no-war in WorldWarI which was the main reason of Russian defeat than. The same thing with the growing WorldWarII, Russia by all means wanted to keep the war out of its territory. But Nazis thought otherwise, well here you go Berlin...burn to the ground.
poland finally fell because it was stabbed in the back by russia
Oh please...it fell before Russians even came there.
that is up to me to decide.
fianally surrendered in october. after the russians invaded.
No it's not, history is history and it not up to you to decide what to believe, Russia signed a non-aggression pact with the Nazi's became their allies, and then, Invaded Poland from the East as the Nazis invaded from the West, a typical Hammer and Anvil operation, left the Pole's no were to regroup.
Soviet Bastards, started WWII with the Nazis as Allies.
if it did not do such than Germany would have allied with Poland (which of course would be useless...but heh...more time for war)
taking the tactic of *I am innocent bunny*?
nope no way in hell poland was going to ally with germany they had broken enigma early on and knew hitler had plans to invade poland.
the germans or the polesFine...what would they do than? Just sit there doing nothing?
Russians did not make it possible for Germans to make concentration camps. Russians had their territory to think about and protect first, before the *newly found allies*
And Poland isnt that small yet it fell to Nazis like a burning machstick.
Russia would have loved to maintain a position of no-war just like the wish of Russians for no-war in WorldWarI which was the main reason of Russian defeat than. The same thing with the growing WorldWarII, Russia by all means wanted to keep the war out of its territory. But Nazis thought otherwise, well here you go Berlin...burn to the ground.
? this makes even less sense than the nonsense you usually spout
On 1 September, the Germans invaded Poland from the west,.....Russia invades Poland, Sep 17, from the east,.......Sep. 27, Warsaw surrenders,........The last remaining Polish forces surrender, Oct.6 1939.
September 17, 1939
Soviet Union invades Poland
On this day in 1939, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov declares that the Polish government has ceased to exist, as the U.S.S.R. exercises the "fine print" of the Hitler-Stalin Non-aggression pact-the invasion and occupation of eastern Poland.
Hitler's troops were already wreaking havoc in Poland, having invaded on the first of the month. The Polish army began retreating and regrouping east, near Lvov, in eastern Galicia, attempting to escape relentless German land and air offensives. But Polish troops had jumped from the frying pan into the fire-as Soviet troops began occupying eastern Poland. The Ribbentrop-Molotov Non-aggression Pact, signed in August, had eliminated any hope Poland had of a Russian ally in a war against Germany. Little did Poles know that a secret clause of that pact, the details of which would not become public until 1990, gave the U.S.S.R. the right to mark off for itself a chunk of Poland's eastern region. The "reason" given was that Russia had to come to the aid of its "blood brothers," the Ukrainians and Byelorussians, who were trapped in territory that had been illegally annexed by Poland. Now Poland was squeezed from West and East-trapped between two behemoths. Its forces overwhelmed by the mechanized modern German army, Poland had nothing left with which to fight the Soviets.
As Soviet troops broke into Poland, they unexpectedly met up with German troops who had fought their way that far east in a little more than two weeks. The Germans receded when confronted by the Soviets, handing over their Polish prisoners of war. Thousands of Polish troops were taken into captivity; some Poles simply surrendered to the Soviets to avoid being captured by the Germans.
The Soviet Union would wind up with about three-fifths of Poland and 13 million of its people as a result of the invasion.
more sense = my explanations side with your explanations
less sense = my explanations do not side with your explanations
more sense = my explanations side with your explanations
less sense = my explanations do not side with your explanations
fake and made up