Darkness of Victory: The Communist Factor in World War II

Darkness of Victory: The Communist Factor in World War II
A German and a Soviet officer shaking hands at the end of the Invasion of Poland. The Nazi and communist regimes divided the country in two and visited great suffering upon the inhabitants. Unknown war correspondent/TASS/Public Domain
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In April 1945, the Third Reich was on its last legs. Triumphant armies from multiple countries were advancing on German soil from all directions. Among the proudest were none other than the troops of the Soviet Union as they captured Adolf Hitler’s lair, Berlin.

Nearly four years earlier, in 1941, the Führer had launched an invasion of the USSR in an attempt to exterminate its people and plunder its territory. Twenty-six million Russians and victims of other Soviet ethnicities did not survive.

Leo Timm
Leo Timm
Author
Leo Timm is a freelance contributor to The Epoch Times. He covers Chinese politics, society, and current affairs.