Author Topic: Day of Victory  (Read 1381 times)

Stalin killed as much innocent lives too :o

Didn't the Soviet Union start World War 2 with a treaty with Germany, and invaded Poland and Finland.
WW1 ended with The Treaty of Versailles inside a stationed railcar. It was an insult to Germany. Eventually the war created a great depression. Riddler used this to create large armies.
Later when France fell he got the same railcar and made the French sign another thing as the ultimate insult.

They had a cease fire treaty yes, but the Soviets did not March into Poland.

Also they didn't Stalin kill millions of his own citizens for pointless reasons and at work camps?

 Yes.

Too lazy to read the other two pages, but Day of Victory doesn't represent the end of the war, it represented the victory of the USSR over the national socialist's who had been invading Russia. I believe the tactic they used was drawing the national socialist's far into Russia and then leaving no food along the way, starving/freezing the german's who weren't used to the harsh Russian winters.

Too lazy to read the other two pages, but Day of Victory doesn't represent the end of the war, it represented the victory of the USSR over the national socialist's who had been invading Russia. I believe the tactic they used was drawing the national socialist's far into Russia and then leaving no food along the way, starving/freezing the german's who weren't used to the harsh Russian winters.

 Mother winter.
That's what happened to Napoleon too.



They had a cease fire treaty yes, but the Soviets did not March into Poland.
 


I could of swore that the USSR and Germany both invaded Poland together, actually I'm pretty sure that's what http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_invasion_of_Poland is.

And why exactly did the soviets find it necessary to invade Finland?

Sure many people from the Soviet Union died but by no means were they fighting out of good will but just because they disliked national socialist's more then the allies

 Huh, never knew they invaded Poland.