Wednesday 27th of November 2024

ungrateful germany hypocritically supports the nazis in kiev against russia…..

RUSSIA MADE SOME MIGHTY SACRIFICES TO ELIMINATE HITLER. RUSSIA MADE SOME MIGHTY SACRIFICES TO DISMANTLE ITS COMMUNIST USSR AND RETURN THE INTEGRITY OF GERMANY AS A MASSIVE GIFT. ALL RUSSIA GOT IN RETURN SO FAR, 77 YEARS AND 30 YEARS RESPECTIVELY LATER IS THE PRESENT GERMAN SUPPORT FOR THE NAZI GOVERNMENT IN KIEV. NOT A GOOD LOOK AND A TOTAL LACK OF GRATITUDE. FOR THIS OF COURSE ONE HAS TO THANK THE US EMPIRE, WHICH FOR ALL ITS CLAIM OF FREEDOM HAS BEEN A FASCIST TOTALITARIAN INVADER/DESTRUCTOR OF MANY COUNTRIES. THE US EMPIRE POLLUTES THE SPIRIT OF FREEDOM AND FAIRNESS WITH A STATED EXCEPTIONALISM AND A DECEITFUL HOLLYWOODIAN NARRATIVE.

 

IT IS TO BE NOTED THAT THE LARGER PART OF UKRAINE — GALICA — HATING RUSSIA AND FULL OF NAZIS, FOUGHT AGAINST MOSCOW ALONGSIDE THE GERMANS BACK THEN DURING WW2. AS WELL, THIS PORTION OF UKRAINE COMMITTED GENOCIDE AGAINST THE JEWISH POPULATION. THAT THE PRESENT DUPLICITOUS "PRESIDENT" OF UKRAINE BE JEWISH, IS A TRICK OF CONFIDENCE BY THE UKRAINIANS.

THE FOUR DONBASS REGIONS AND CRIMEA TAKEN BACK FROM "UKRAINE" BY RUSSIA, WERE RUSSIAN PRIOR TO 1922 AND 1954 RESPECTIVELY. IT IS TO BELIEVE THAT THE COMMUNIST REGIME OF THE USSR DID NOT TRUST THE GALICIANS AND HAD ADDED THE PROVINCES TO UKRAINE AS A WAY TO CONTROL "UKRAINIANS" (GALICIANS). THESE REGIONS OF THE DONBASS ARE POPULATED BY RUSSIAN PEOPLE AND LATELY VOTED OVERWHELMINGLY TO RETURN TO THE "MOTHERLAND", WHICH IS A EUPHEMISM FOR BEING PART OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ONCE MORE. IT'S LIKE EAST GERMANY BEING REUNITED WITH WEST GERMANY. YES, THE GERMAN GOVERNMENT OF OLAF IS A SELFISH UNGRATEFUL HYPOCRITE NASTY NAZI OUTFIT.

 

[more than] three quarters of a century ago, the most famous battle of the Second World War began. More than four million combatants fought in the gargantuan struggle at Stalingrad between the Nazi and Soviet armies. Over 1.8 million became casualties. More Soviet soldiers died in the five-month battle than Americans in the entire war. But by February 2, 1943, when the Germans trapped in the city surrendered, it was clear that the momentum on the Eastern Front had shifted. The Germans would never fully recover.

Fourteen months before Stalingrad began, Hitler had launched Operation Barbarossa, the largest military offensive in human history. After two years of decisive victories over France, Poland and others, Hitler and the German High Command (Oberkommando des Heeres, or OKH), were confident that the Soviet Union would fall within six weeks. At first, their prediction seemed correct: the attack in June 1941 caught Stalin unawares, and the Red Army unprepared. By December, the Red Army had suffered nearly five million casualties.

But despite enduring staggering losses, the Red Army continued to resist. In August 1941, senior members of the Wehrmacht began growing increasingly uneasy. The Chief of the OKH staff, General Franz Halder, noted in his diary that ““It is becoming ever more apparent that the Russian colossus…. Has been underestimated by us…. At the start of the war we reckoned with about 200 enemy divisions. Now we have already counted 360… When a dozen have been smashed, then the Russian puts up another dozen.”

In October, the Wehrmacht launched Operation Typhoon, the effort to take Moscow and end the war by Christmas. But as the weather grew bitterly cold, the German offensive ground to a halt, and was then pushed back by a Soviet counteroffensive. The front line froze in place some two hundred kilometers west of Moscow – and 1400 kilometers east of Berlin.

During the bitter winter months, the OKH began planning for a renewed counteroffensive in the spring, hoping to achieve the decisive victory that had evaded them in 1941. Thus was born Operation Blue, an attack to seize the oil fields of the Caucasus, and then drive on to the Volga. Launched in June 1942, it caught the Red Army off-guard, as they had expected a renewed push towards Moscow. Within two weeks, the Wehrmacht advanced more than 300 miles.

Hitler, increasingly directing military operations in Berlin, decided to shift his offensive in early August. For both symbolic and strategic reasons, he ordered the Sixth Army under General Friedrich von Paulus to advance towards the city of Stalingrad. By August 23, the Germans were in the suburbs, where fighting turned ferocious. Bombed into rubble by German aircraft and artillery, the city became impassable to tanks and ideal terrain for defenders.

As the Germans approached Stalingrad, Stalin issued Order No. 227, with its famous command: “Ni Shagu Nazad!” [Not One Step Backwards!]. This meant a horrific price for the Soviet defenders within the city of Stalingrad. Outnumbered and without air cover, the 62ndand 64th Soviet Armies suffered enormous losses: the 13th Guards Division, entering the battle with over 10,000 men, virtually ceased to exist; it suffered 80% casualties in its first week in the city alone.

In September, Stalin sent General Vasily Chuikov to take command of the embattled survivors of the 62nd Army in the city itself. They were tenaciously clinging to rubble on the west bank of the Volga, with only a few hundred meters between its front lines and the river to its back.

Chuikov recalled the grim moment: “When I got to army headquarters I was in a vile mood. Three of my deputies had fled… But the main thing was that we had no dependable combat units, and we needed to hold out for three or four days…We immediately began to take the harshest possible actions against cowardice. On the 14th I shot the commander and commissar of one regiment, and a short while later, I shot two brigade commanders and their commissars. This caught everyone off guard. We made sure news of this got to the men.”

Despite his brutality, Chuikov earned the respect of his soldiers, taking the same risks they did. He was buried alive twice by German bombardments, and kept his headquarters in the city, less than two hundred meters from the German front line.

The Germans poured more and more men into the battle at Hitler’s command. By November, the OKH had committed 1.2 million men, or about a third of its strength, to the southern front.

As the fighting reached its fevered peak in the city itself, Generals Alexander Vasilevsky and Georgy Zhukov at Stavka (the Red Army High Command) came up with a master stroke to counter the enormous pressure on the city. They proposed a massive double encirclement of the entire German Sixth Army. Stalin approved their plan – Operation Uranus – on November 13.

On the snowy, foggy morning of November 19, the Soviets struck. 1.2 million Soviet soldiers drove into the weakly guarded flanks of the German Sixth Army. Within four days, they had encircled 300,000 Axis soldiers, trapped in a frozen wasteland in and around Stalingrad. German attempts to break into the pocket failed. Over the next three months, the Red Army began to squeeze the life out of them. Efforts at supplying the kessel (cauldron) via air proved beyond the Luftwaffe’s declining capabilities.

By December, when German airlifts ceased, life in the kessel became a living hell. As one German soldier recalled: “We were so weak and exhausted and there were so many dead lying around in the open frozen stiff, that we could not bury our own comrades.”

As rations reached zero, sentries froze to death on guard duty. A typhus epidemic ravaged the survivors. Medical treatment proved impossible; the badly wounded or sick were left outside to freeze to death, as a “mercy” to the longer death from starvation or infection. Rumors of cannibalism grew increasingly frequent.

As conditions became unbearable, Hitler ordered his men to fight to the last. In an effort to encourage his commanding general, he made Paulus a field marshal on January 30; as no German field marshal had ever surrendered, Hitler hoped Paulus would kill himself rather than be captured. Instead, on January 31, 1943, Paulus surrendered the 91,000 skeletal German soldiers still left under his command; some would fight on until February 2. Only 6 percent would survive Soviet captivity.

The Germans would launch one more major offensive – Kursk – in July 1943, but it failed. Stalingrad marked the shift of initiative to the Red Army on the Eastern Front. There were no more decisive victories for the Wehrmacht in the east. Despite the importance of the battles of Moscow, Kursk, and Operation Bagration, it was Stalingrad that would be immortalized around the world for turning the tide for the Allies in World War II.

 

READ MORE:

https://origins.osu.edu/milestones/august-2017-stalingrad-75-turning-point-world-war-ii-europe?language_content_entity=en

 

IT WOULD BE FAIR FOR GERMANY TO FORCE ZELENSKYY TO AGREE TO THE RUSSIAN CONDITIONS FOR PEACE. 

 

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not-at-war confusion…..

Washington and London are the most likely culprits behind last week’s attacks on the Nord Stream pipelines, former Pentagon advisor and retired US Army Colonel Douglas Macgregor has claimed.

He argued that the sabotage ploy would help ensure that Germany can’t back away from arming Ukrainian forces against Russia.

Speaking in an interview with podcast host Andrew Napolitano, Macgregor dismissed suggestions that Russia was responsible for the explosions that sprung leaks in the Nord Stream conduits, which carry natural gas across the Baltic Sea to Germany. “The Russians did not do this,” he said, noting that Russia’s economy is heavily dependent on energy exports. “The notion that they did, I think, is absurd.”

Macgregor, a special advisor to the secretary of defense under then-President Donald Trump, pointed out that explosives equivalent to thousands of pounds of TNT had to have been used to breach the pipelines. “You have several inches of concrete around various metal alloys to move the natural gas, so it’s not something that you could simply drop a grenade down at the end of a fish line and disrupt.”

Considering the level of sophistication required to pull off such an attack, Macgregor said, “You have to look at who are the state actors that have the capability to do this, and that means the Royal Navy, the United States Navy, special operations.” He noted that former Polish foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski reacted to the Nord Stream attacks by saying, “Thank you, USA.”

The pipeline blasts came at a time when German leaders were “beginning to give the impression that they were no longer going to go along with this proxy war in Ukraine,” Macgregor said. He added, “It’s very clear that we have foreclosed Berlin’s options. Berlin was drifting away from this alliance. [Chancellor] Olaf Scholz said ‘I’m not sending any more equipment. I won’t send any tanks.’”

 

READ MORE:

https://www.rt.com/news/563996-ex-pentagon-advisor-suggests-us-attacked-nord-stream/

 

Two federal ministers in the German government have offered mutually exclusive assessments over whether Germany is at war with Russia. The difference of opinion became obvious after health minister Karl Lauterbach claimed Berlin was a belligerent nation pitted against Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

On Saturday, Lauterbach took to Twitter, inquiring: “Seriously: What on earth should kneeling before Putin bring now?”  

“We are at war with Putin and not his psychotherapists,” the official went on. 

He insisted that Germany’s focus should be on ensuring Ukraine’s victory on the battlefield.

According to Lauterbach, “whether Putin’s psyche can handle that is irrelevant.”

The tweet came in response to a suggestion made earlier by philosopher David Precht, who argued that individual NATO member states should give Russia guarantees that Ukraine will not join the military alliance. Precht suggested this would open the door to peace talks between Moscow and Kiev.

Defense minister Christine Lambrecht, however, was quick to qualify her colleague’s remark.

She reiterated that “it is completely clear – both for the German federal government and for the whole of NATO – we won’t become a war party.”

 

READ MORE:

https://www.rt.com/news/564054-ministers-disagree-russia-germany-war/

 

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wait for the russian bill…...

Berlin refuses to pay Poland any more World War II reparations and considers the matter “closed” at the governmental level, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told her Polish counterpart on Tuesday.

Speaking at a news conference following a meeting with Poland’s Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau in Warsaw, Baerbock said she understands that “this topic interests many people” in Poland, but stressed that although Germany “feels responsible,” the issue of reparations from the point of view of the German government is “a closed issue.”

Her comments come after Rau signed a diplomatic note to Berlin on Monday, officially demanding over $1.2 trillion in reparations for material and other damages and losses Poland claims to have suffered at the hands of Nazi Germany between 1939 and 1945.

The Polish diplomat has insisted that the two countries should take “immediate steps towards a permanent, comprehensive and final legal and material settlement on the issue,” in order to help improve bilateral relations.

After his meeting with Baerbock, Rau reiterated that “Polish society is still traumatized by the German invasion of 1939, which limits and inhibits the possibilities of further development and deepening Polish-German relations.”

 

READ MORE:

https://www.rt.com/news/564063-germany-poland-reparations-demand/

 

 

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