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1,418 days in hell: Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War in pictures.

May 9, 2014   ·   0 Comments

 

80% of all armored assault in WWII was absorbed by the nations of Soviet Union. Western Europe succumbed to Hitler.

Stalin was a dictator as many others at that times and was renounced by the people of the Soviet Union.

They didn’t vote for him. There is absolutely no justification for condemnation of the Russian nation.

Instead, paying tribute is a duty and appropriate. 

 

Published time: May 09, 2014 23:13

Soldiers place Soviet banners over the Brandenburg Gate. (RIA Novosti)

Soldiers place Soviet banners over the Brandenburg Gate. (RIA Novosti)

On May 9, Russia celebrates the defeat of the Nazi forces in the Great Patriotic War (WWII), which cost the country over 26 million of lives. RT looks back at the most significant events of the bloodiest war in the history of humanity.

The Great Patriotic War began at 4 am on June 22, 1941, when Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union, breaking the 1939 Non-Aggression Treaty.

 

Women crying. June 23, 1941, Kiev, Ukraine. Photo by K. Lishko. (RIA Novosti)

Women crying. June 23, 1941, Kiev, Ukraine. Photo by K. Lishko. (RIA Novosti)

On the first day of the, the Hitler Army bombed Sevastopol, Kiev, Zhitomir, Kaunas and other cities. The Soviet Union lost about 1,200 aircraft: 300 were destroyed in aerial battles and 900 were eliminated on the ground.

 

Soviet children during a Nazi air-strike on the outskirts of Minsk, Belarus. 24.06.1941. Photo by Yaroslavtsev. (RIA Novosti)

Soviet children during a Nazi air-strike on the outskirts of Minsk, Belarus. 24.06.1941. Photo by Yaroslavtsev. (RIA Novosti)

The Presidium of the Supreme Council of the USSR issued a decree on mobilization, beginning June 23, of all the enlisted citizens born between 1905 and 1918. In total, The Red Army conscripted over 34 million people during the war, with 850,000 from Moscow alone.

 

Enlisting in the Army. Recruits entering Voroshilov Barracks in Moscow. June 23, 1941. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

Enlisting in the Army. Recruits entering Voroshilov Barracks in Moscow. June 23, 1941. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

Moving further to the East, Nazi troops eliminated thousands of Soviet towns, villages, plants, factories, cultural and historic monuments. Only in Belarus, over 200 towns and 9,200 villages were burnt or destroyed.

 

A mother is sheltering her child during the shelling, Krasnaya Sloboda village, Bryansk region. Photo by Anatoly Garanin, 30.07.1941. (RIA Novosti)

A mother is sheltering her child during the shelling, Krasnaya Sloboda village, Bryansk region. Photo by Anatoly Garanin, 30.07.1941. (RIA Novosti)

The Battle for Moscow – which lasted from late autumn of 1941 to mid-spring of 1942 – marked the first major defeat of Nazi Germany in WWII. “When I am asked what event in the war impressed me most, I always say: the Battle of Moscow,” Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov wrote in his memoirs.

 

A battle on Moscow outskirts in October, 1941. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

A battle on Moscow outskirts in October, 1941. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

The Soviet victory in the fight for Moscow was of moral and strategic importance. Both sides suffered tremendous losses: the USSR lost 1.8 million people while the German Wehrmacht – over 580,000.

 

Iconic WWII photo, “The death of a soldier”, taken during the Kerch offensive. Crimea. 30.05.1942. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

Iconic WWII photo, “The death of a soldier”, taken during the Kerch offensive. Crimea. 30.05.1942. Photo by Anatoly Garanin. (RIA Novosti)

By late September 1941, Nazi troops had taken control over Smolensk, Kiev, started a siege of Leningrad and approached Crimea.

 

One of the most famous WWII photos “Battalion Commander” depicts a person who was killed seconds after the photo was taken. 12.07.1942, by Max Alpert. (RIA Novosti)

One of the most famous WWII photos “Battalion Commander” depicts a person who was killed seconds after the photo was taken. 12.07.1942, by Max Alpert. (RIA Novosti)

For Hitler, capturing the peninsula on the Black Sea, Crimea was strategically important to prevent Soviet air raids on Romanian oil fields and get access to the Caucasus region.

 

Soldiers attacking. 01.11.1941. Photo by Dmitry Baltermants. (RIA Novosti)

Soldiers attacking. 01.11.1941. Photo by Dmitry Baltermants. (RIA Novosti)

The town of Kerch, in the east of Crimea, fell to the Nazi onslaught in November 1941. The key Black Sea port city of Sevastopol was invaded following months of bloody fighting in July 1942. The peninsula was retaken by the Red Army on April 18, 1944. Sevastopol was liberated on May 9, 1944.

 

Red Army female snipers. 01.08.1943. Photo by P. Bernstien. (RIA Novosti)

Red Army female snipers. 01.08.1943. Photo by P. Bernstien. (RIA Novosti)

The epic Battle of Stalingrad became the turning point in World War II, and consequently led to the defeat of the Nazi army. The bloody confrontation lasted between August 1942 and February 2, 1943, claiming the lives of nearly 2 million people on both sides.

 

Soviet mortar men in Stalingrad (now called Volgograd). 01.10.1942. Photo by Yakov Ryumkin. (RIA Novosti)

Soviet mortar men in Stalingrad (now called Volgograd). 01.10.1942. Photo by Yakov Ryumkin. (RIA Novosti)

On January 27, 1944, the Soviet Army lifted the blockade of Leningrad that had been besieged by the Nazi forces for 872 days. The siege claimed the lives of over a million people, who died of starvation, cold and in the extensive bombing of the city.

 

Soviet troops in a battle for Leningrad, 01.11.1941. Photo by Vsevolod Tarasevich. (RIA Novosti)

Soviet troops in a battle for Leningrad, 01.11.1941. Photo by Vsevolod Tarasevich. (RIA Novosti)

On June, 6, 1944 the Western Allies landed in Normandy, opening the long-awaited “Second Front” in the fight against the Nazi Germany. On June 23, the Soviet Union launched mass-scale offensive Bagration, which resulted in the liberation of Belarus.

 

Residents of the city of Poltava, Ukraine, looking at bodies of partisans, who were burnt alive by the Nazi. 23.09.1943. Photo by Yakov Ryumkin. (RIA Novosti)

Residents of the city of Poltava, Ukraine, looking at bodies of partisans, who were burnt alive by the Nazi. 23.09.1943. Photo by Yakov Ryumkin. (RIA Novosti)

The final battles of the Great Patriotic War and of the European Theatre of the WWII took place in April-May 1945. On May 8, Germany surrendered.

 

Soviet soldiers during a battle in Budapest, Hungary. 13.02.1945. Photo by Evgeny Haldei. (RIA Novosti)

Soviet soldiers during a battle in Budapest, Hungary. 13.02.1945. Photo by Evgeny Haldei. (RIA Novosti)

On April 30, 1945, Soviet soldiers placed the red Soviet Victory Banner over the Reichstag building in Berlin, symbolizing the final collapse of Nazi Germany.

 

Victory banner over Berlin, 01.05. 1945. Photo by Evgeny Haldei. (RIA Novosti)

Victory banner over Berlin, 01.05. 1945. Photo by Evgeny Haldei. (RIA Novosti)

 RT

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