Genuine Soviet History Has Been Suppressed in the West Since 1917!

USSR: How the Soviet Red Army Stopped the Horror of the Finnish Concentration Camps! (9.8.2024)

Another objective of the operation was to liberate the population of the territories occupied by the Finns. During the occupation of the Karelo-Finnish SSR from 1941 to 1944, 14 concentration camps were established, as well as over 30 labour camps and more than 40 camps for prisoners of war. These camps held up to 30 percent of the population, primarily Russians, Belarusians, and Ukrainians. These camps were part of a larger plan to create an “ethnically pure” Greater Finland, which involved the extermination of “non-Finnish peoples.” In 1942, the mortality rate in Finnish concentration camps was higher than in German ones.

Victory Parade - Harbin!

Tatyana Breus (Татьяна Бреус) – End of WW II: Soviet Red Army Enters China & Korea – Defeating Imperial Japan! (10.5.2024)

In May 1947, September 3rd became a working day, although no one formally cancelled the holiday. And on December 23rd, May 9th also became a working day (the day off was moved to January 1st). And until 1965, there were no big celebrations on the occasion of the two days of victory in the USSR: everything was limited to fireworks and unofficial celebrations. When in 1965 – the year of the 20th Anniversary of the Victory – the country celebrated this holiday on a nationwide scale for the first time after the Great Patriotic War, they no longer remembered the second day of the Victory (Over Japan). It found itself in the shadow of the Victory Over Germany, although formally on May 9th all Veterans were honoured: both those who fought in the West and those who fought in the Far East. And over time, May 9th began to personify the Soviet Victory in World War II in general, and almost no one remembered the September date. And if, nevertheless, there was talk about Victory Over Japan, then only September 2nd was mentioned – as the day of Japanese Surrender.

Why Putin Bothers the West! (29.7.2017)

The other reason that ‘bothers’ the West is that the Communist Party of Russia remains incredibly popular throughout the country and holds around one-third of the elected seats in the State Duma – and it is not beyond the realms of possibility that Russia might well ‘elect’ a Communist Government should Putin be over-thrown.