What I have known for 40 years is confirmed two generations later – by lamestream media too.
Stalin 'planned to send a million troops to stop Hitler if Britain and France agreed pact'
Stalin was 'prepared to move more than a million Soviet troops to the German border to deter Hitler's aggression just before the Second World War'
18 October, 2008
Papers which were kept
secret for almost 70 years show that the Soviet Union proposed
sending a powerful military force in an effort to entice Britain and
France into an anti-Nazi alliance.
Such an agreement could
have changed the course of 20th century history, preventing Hitler's
pact with Stalin which gave him free rein to go to war with Germany's
other neighbours.
The offer of a military
force to help contain Hitler was made by a senior Soviet military
delegation at a Kremlin meeting with senior British and French
officers, two weeks before war broke out in 1939.
The new documents, copies
of which have been seen by The Sunday Telegraph, show the vast
numbers of infantry, artillery and airborne forces which Stalin's
generals said could be dispatched, if Polish objections to the Red
Army crossing its territory could first be overcome.
But the British and
French side - briefed by their governments to talk, but not
authorised to commit to binding deals - did not respond to the Soviet
offer, made on August 15, 1939. Instead, Stalin turned to Germany,
signing the notorious non-aggression treaty with Hitler barely a week
later
Papers which were kept
secret for almost 70 years show that the Soviet Union proposed
sending a powerful military force in an effort to entice Britain and
France into an anti-Nazi alliance.
Such an agreement could
have changed the course of 20th century history, preventing Hitler's
pact with Stalin which gave him free rein to go to war with Germany's
other neighbours.
The offer of a military
force to help contain Hitler was made by a senior Soviet military
delegation at a Kremlin meeting with senior British and French
officers, two weeks before war broke out in 1939.
The new documents, copies
of which have been seen by The Sunday Telegraph, show the vast
numbers of infantry, artillery and airborne forces which Stalin's
generals said could be dispatched, if Polish objections to the Red
Army crossing its territory could first be overcome.
But the British and
French side - briefed by their governments to talk, but not
authorised to commit to binding deals - did not respond to the Soviet
offer, made on August 15, 1939. Instead, Stalin turned to Germany,
signing the notorious non-aggression treaty with Hitler barely a week
later
Instead, this was the real agenda
The Americans who funded Hitler, Nazis, German economic miracle, and World War II
Seventy years ago the
greatest massacre in history began - with the financing from the Bank
of England and the Federal Reserve System of the United States.
A recent resolution by
the parliamentary assembly of the OSCE declared that the Soviet Union
and Nazi Germany held equal roles in unleashing WWII. Furthermore,
the resolution has the purely pragmatic goal of pumping Russian money
into a few bankrupt economies while seeking to demonize Russia as the
successor to the Soviet Union and prepare the legal groundwork for
depriving Moscow from opposing this revisionist view the war. But if
we are to debate the culpability for the war's outbreak, then we need
to begin by answering this key question: who accommodated the Nazis'
rise to power, who directed them towards global catastrophe?
Germany's entire prewar history shows that the "necessary"
policies were all provided for by guided financial turmoil - the same
situation, by the way, that the world finds itself in today.
The key structures of the
West's post-war strategy were the central financial institutions of
the United States and Great Britain - the Bank of England and the
Federal Reserve System - coupled with financial-industrial
organizations, who set out to establish absolute control over the
financial system in Germany to manage the politics of Central Europe.
The implementation of this strategy included the following steps:
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