Why the west likes neither Molotov, nor Ribbentrop 18 страница




 

347


Who made Hitler attack Stalin

 

in Europe should be opened. But under specious excuses England and the USA did not do it. Only when it became quite clear that the USSR would be able to cope with the Reich alone, they arranged the Normandy landings…

 

So did the Soviet Union lose the Second World War, as Suvorov-Rezun and his adherents claim? Not at all! This war had been cooked inLondon and Berlin to destroy us, and we were supposed to become its main collective victim. But the Soviet Union held out and won. Can the defeated country — Russia (the USSR) that was supposed to disappear from the world map — have triumphantly finished the war in Berlin? We won, and there is no stealing our victory!

 

But there are questions than cannot be answered so far. Now we know who made Hitler attack Stalin. But this does not exhaust the list of uncer-tainties.

 

Why was Hitler so sure of his victory, as he prepared to attack the SovietUnion?

 

Why didn’t the German industry turn over from manufacturing pithhelmets and shorts to warm overcoats and sheepskin jackets, as Hitler prepared to attack the Soviet Union?

 

Why was Operation “Barbarossa” based on the assumption that the RedArmy would be passively waiting at the border to give the opponent a chance to have done away with it before letting it retreat inland?

 

Why wasn’t Stalin worried, with irrefutable evidence of deployment ofthe German army at the border?

 

Why did the German divisions concentrate at our border, if the Sovietleader was absolutely quiet and “did not believe” the possibility of a Ger-man invasion?

 

What did the pilot of a German “Junkers-52” tell Stalin following theviolation of the Soviet airspace and landing in Moscow near the “Dy-namo” stadium on May 15, 1941?

 

Answers to all these questions are available. There is more to come…


 

 

List of references

 

Bezymenskiy, L. A. Hitler and Stalin bore the fight. — M.: Veche, 2000.

 

Bezymenskiy, L. The Special file “Barbarossa”. — M.: APN, 1972.

 

Bullock, A. Hitler and Stalin. — Smolensk: Rusich, 1994.

 

Chernov, V. M. Before the storm. Memoirs. — Minsk: Harvest, 2004.

 

Churchill, W. The Second World War. — Boston, 1985.

 

Chuyev, S. The cursed soldiers: the traitors on the side of the Third Reich. — M.:

 

Yauza, 2004.

 

Documents and Materials on the eve of World War II. 1937–1939. — M.:

 

Politizdat, 1981.

 

Dцnitz, K. The Reich’s submarine Force. — Smolensk: Rusich, 1999.

 

Falin, V. The second front. The anti-Hitler coalition: conflict of interests. — M.:

 

Centerpoligraph, 2003.

 

Gaulle, Ch. de. The War Memoirs. The Call-up of 1940–1942. — M.: AST, 2003.

 

Gorlov, S. A. Top Secret. The Moscow-Berlin Alliance: 1920–1933. — M.: Olma-Press, 2001.

 

Halder, F. The military diary. The daily notes of the Chief of General Staff ofground forces. 1939–1942. — M., 1971. P. 147.

 

Isserson, G. S. The new forms of fighting. — M.: Voyengiz, 1940.

 

Kershaw, I. Hitler. — Rostov n/D: Phoenix, 1997.

 

Khorikoshi, D., Okumiya, M., Kaidin, M. Zero! The Japanese aviation in theSecond World War. — M.: AST, 2003. P. 394–395.

 

Kormilitsin, S. V., Lisev, A. V. A lie from the Soviet information bureau. — SPb.:

 

Neva, 2005.

 

Kuznetsov, N. On the eve. — M.: AST, 2003.

 

Mackenzie, W. The secret history of SOE: Special Operations Executive, 1940–1945. — London, 2002.

 

Martirosyan, A. The tragedy of June 22: blitzkrieg or treachery. — M.: Yauza, 2006.

 

Martirosyan, A. Who brought the war to the USSR? — M.: Yauza, 2007.

 

Melnikov, D., Chernaya, N. Criminal number one. — M.: APN, 1982.


 

349


Who made Hitler attack Stalin

 

Meltyukhov, M. Stalin’s lost chance. — M.: Veche, 2000.

 

Meltyukhov, M. I. The Soviet-Polish wars. The political and military oppositionin 1918–1939. — M.: Veche, 2001.

 

Nimitz, Ch., Potter A. War on the sea in 1939–1945. — Smolensk: Rusich, 1999.

 

Ovsyany, I. D. The secret of the war trigger assembly. — M.: Politizdat, 1971.

 

Padfield, P. Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s associate. — Smolensk: Rusich, 1998.

 

Preparata, G. D. Hitler Inc. How Britain and the USA made the Third Reich. —

 

M.: Pokoleniye, 2007.

 

Proektor, D. M. The blitzkrieg in Europe: The war in the West. — M.: AST, 2004.

 

Pulman, K. Arc Royal. The first volleys of the British Navy. — M., 2004.

 

Ribbentrop, J. von. Memoirs of the Nazi Diplomat. — Smolensk: Rusich, 1998.

 

Sarkisyants, M. The British roots of the German fascism. — SPb., 2003.

 

Schellenberg, W. Memoirs (Labyrinth). — Minsk: Rodiola-Plus, 1998.

 

Shirer, W. The rise and fall of the Third Reich. — M.: Voyenizdat, 1991.

 

Sipols, V. Y. The diplomatic struggle on the eve of World War II. — M.: Mezh-dunarodniye otnosheniya, 1979.

 

Speer, A. Recollections (Inside the Third Reich). — M.: Rusich, 1998.

 

Stalin, J. V. The problems of Leninism. 2nded. — M.: Gospolitizdat, 1946.

 

Stalin, J. V. Works. — M.: GIPZ, 1953.

 

Sudoplatov, P. A. Special operations. Lubyanka and the Kremlin in 1930–1950. —

 

M.: Olma-Press, 1997.

 

Sudoplatov, P. A. Covert warfare and diplomacy. 1941. — M.: Olma-Press, 2001.

 

Riss, K. Total espionage. — M.: Voyenizdat NKO USSR, 1945.

 

Taylor, A. The Second World War: Two approaches. — M.: Mysl, 1995.

 

The Crisis Year of 1938–1939 // Documents and materials. — M.: Politizdat, 1990.

 

The Nuremberg Trials. — M., 1955.

 

The USSR in its struggle on the eve of World War II (September 1938 — August 1939) // Documents and materials. — M., 1971.

 

The protracted blitzkrieg: German generals on the war in Russia. — M.: Yauza, 2006.

 

The Soviet-British relations during the Great Patriotic War of 1941–1945. —

 

M.: IPL, 1983.

 

To be made public: The USSR — Germany in 1939–1941. — M.: Moskovskiy rabochiy, 1991.

 

Trotsky, L. Works. — M.–L., 1926.

 

Volkov, F. D. Behind the scenes of World War II. — M.: Mysl, 1985.

 

Volkov, F. D. Nothing is secret that shall not be made manifest. — M.: IPL, 1989.

 

Westphal, S. Between two crucial battles // Fatal Decisions. — M., 1958.

 

Yakobsen, G. A. 1939–1945. The second world war// World War II: Two Ap-

 

proaches. — M.: Mysl, 1995.


 

 

Nikolay V. Starikov

 


Дата добавления: 2019-07-17; просмотров: 183; Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!

Поделиться с друзьями:






Мы поможем в написании ваших работ!