Did USSR ever ally with Nazi Germany? How Russians don’t know their own history



by SLAVAUA2022

9 comments
  1. Not only they did, Russia helped to train the German army and Germany sold a modern warship to Russia.

  2. Most of them are uneducated sheep it seems with no interest at all in reality.

    One quick look at even Russia’s historians you’d know of the Molotov Ribbentrop pact and the invasion and sharing of Poland.

    I give credit to the couple that knew at least something aha.

  3. That is why I never understood… both Nazi Germany and Russia invaded Poland, but England and France declared war on Nazi Germany……

  4. Hence the bloody cocktail…Molotov, after the pact, invented by the Finn’s in the Winter War with the Soviets

  5. Russia pretty much jointly started World War 2 with Germany.

  6. Russia has been aggressively white-washing their part in WW2 history ever since Putin came to power.
    “Katyn massacre? That never happened”
    “Finnish war crimes against the USSR during WW2 need to be re-investigated until proven true!”

  7. Damn moronic traitors.

    Even early french resistance was mostly a hodgepodge of nationalists. There was not a single communist until Barbarossa….

  8. So proud to have defeated the nazis…only to have been the nazis themselves, both then and now.

  9. Basis Nord (“Base North”) was a secret naval base of Nazi Germany’s Kriegsmarine in Zapadnaya Litsa, west of Murmansk provided by the Soviet Union. The base was part of a partnership that developed between Germany and the Soviet Union following German-Soviet Non-Aggression treaty of 1939, along with a broad economic agreement of 1940.
    In 1939, the Soviet Union agreed to supply the base location to Germany for the purpose of supporting U-boats and commerce raiding.[1] Germany sent supply ships that were anchored in the bay, but the base was never used by Kriegsmarine fighting vessels.[2] Germany’s April 1940 invasion of Norway thereafter rendered the base unnecessary.[3]
    In 2008, Basis Nord featured in a prominent BBC–PBS investigative history series, World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West, and a book of the same name by Laurence Rees in 2009.[4]

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