• Home
  • AeroFacts
  • Forum
  • Photos
  • Archive
  • About
  • Disclaimer
  • Copyright
Subscribe: Posts | Comments | E-mail
  • ComputersOur overlords
  • DefenseThe Russians are coming
  • EconomyWhy you don't have money
  • PersonalThings you don't wanna know
  • PoliticsOur fantasy world
  • SocietyYou and your mother-in-law

Let Me Tell You…

Posted on August 21, 2009 - by Venik

Russia declassifies secret documents on Nazi-Soviet pact

News from Britain

Russia has declassified top-secret surveillance documents in an attempt to justify its occupation of Eastern Europe under the Nazi-Soviet pact, signed 70 years ago on Sunday.

The hidden protocols of the pact, in which Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler agreed to carve up Poland and other sovereign states, were denounced by the Soviet parliament in 1989, shortly after they were revealed for the first time.

But the pact, which lasted until Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, is now being rehabilitated to chime with Kremlin ideology that claims a Russian sphere of interest in the “near abroad” former Soviet republics.

Hundreds of formerly secret spy documents have been published in a compendium by Lev Sotskov, a retired KGB major general working under the auspices of the SVR, Russia’s foreign intelligence service. The SVR said the files demonstrated the Soviet Union was left with no choice but to agree a non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany in August 1939 after Britain and France signed the Munich agreement appeasing Hitler’s partition of Czechoslovakia the previous year.

The pact – signed by foreign ministers Vyacheslav Molotov and Joachim von Ribbentrop – bought time for the Kremlin after the west had betrayed Stalin, Sotskov told reporters in Moscow. Declassified documents collected by the NKVD showed London and Paris wanted to “direct Hitler’s aggression to the east” and were indifferent to the fate of the Baltics, he said, adding: “Now the thinking behind English politics is revealed: let Germany start a war with the USSR and then we’ll see what happens.”

Most contentious is likely to be Sotskov’s claim that Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania willingly acquiesced to Soviet domination. “There was no occupation,” Sotskov said. Historians and politicians in those countries vehemently deny such claims, saying tens of thousands of people were killed or sent to the Gulag and puppet authorities installed to enable annexation.

Russia’s president, Dmitry Medvedev, stressed after the war with Georgia last year that Russia has a “zone of privileged interests” in its “near abroad”. Earlier this year he set up a commission to battle “falsification of history”, saying neighbouring states were trying to distort Russia’s past for political gains.

Pavel Felgenhauer, a military expert at the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, claimed Moscow was praising the Nazi-Soviet pact’s secret protocol outlining a sphere of influence in Europe because “the Kremlin clearly wishes to re-enact it.”

“In his understanding of realpolitik, [prime minister] Vladimir Putin does not diverge from the line set by Josef Stalin,” military analyst Alexander Golts wrote in the online Yezhednevny Zhurnal. “Military force decides everything, and if there is an opportunity to grab a piece of someone else’s territory, it should be taken.”

Latvia’s ex-president Vaira Vike-Freiberga said in a radio interview that Russia was “incapable of understanding the tragedy of our occupation”. “We will have to battle to preserve our independence until the end of our days,” she said.

  • Russia
  • Second world war
  • Joseph Stalin
  • Adolf Hitler
Tom Parfitt

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Original article

Popularity: 1% [?]

  • bebo Share on bebo
  • blogger Blog this!
  • delicious Bookmark on Delicious
  • digg Digg this post
  • facebook Recommend on Facebook
  • linkedin Share on Linkedin
  • myspace Share via MySpace
  • reddit share via Reddit
  • stumble Share with Stumblers
  • twitter Tweet about it
  • rss Subscribe to the comments on this post

Related posts:

  1. The fatal fact of the Nazi-Soviet pact | Timothy Snyder
  2. A dangerous Nazi-Soviet equivalence | Efraim Zuroff
  3. Russia posts Katyn massacre documents online
  4. Shell and Gazprom sign ‘global co-operation’ pact
  5. From the archive, 2 August 1950: Stalin and the Soviet state

This entry was posted on Friday, August 21st, 2009 at 4:40 pm and is filed under News from Britain. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

0 Comments

We'd love to hear yours!



Leave a Comment

Here's your chance to speak.

  1. Name

    Mail

    Website

    Message

Click to cancel reply
  • Grozny in 2010

    Photos of Grozny in 2010 by photographer Ilya Varlamov
  • Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.
  • Grozny Today

    Over the past decade Russia spent billions rebuilding Grozny following the two wars against Chechen separatists. Today the city looks far better than it did at any time in its troubled past.
  • Latest News

    • China believes Syria needs a peaceful solution | Liu Xiaoming
    • Gorbachev: Putin has exhausted himself as Russian leader
    • Syria: live from the frontline in Homs
    • Russia’s posthumous trial of lawyer shows corruption is still rife | Ruth Collins
    • Syria: UN offers help as Homs assault continues – live updates
    • Syria: Assad pledges reform as siege of Homs continues – Wednesday 8 February
    • Bashar al-Assad’s Syria offers Iran a springboard into the Arab Middle East
    • Astroturfing: what is it and why does it matter? | Adam Bienkov
    • The siege of Homs: scores killed in fifth day of shelling
    • Intervention in Syria will escalate not stop the killing | Seumas Milne
    • Syria: Assad pledges reform as siege of Homs continues – live updates
    • Intervention in Syria will escalate, not stop the killing | Seumas Milne
  • Recent Comments

    • kvs: A couple of demonstrations drawing 30,000 people are not “mass demonstrations”. This is a drop in...
    • kvs: What’s there to smear? This street thug got six months of training in the US at Yale. Imagine US...
    • kvs: From her first line this bimbo establishes herself as a tin foil hat schizo. Why quote such drivel? Because it...
    • kvs: Navalny is a street hoodlum. There are plenty of youtube videos of this punk and his rants. And the west expects...
    • kvs: Simply incredible. In a country of 142 million people we have the western media monkeys jumping up and down,...
  • Abkhazia assange Black Sea Bush Defense department of state European Union Georgia Gordon Brown interview julian assange kremlin Lavrov leak London Medvedev missile Moscow NATO obama Putin Rice Russia russian air force russians Saakashvili SAM Sarkozy soldiers South Ossetia sukhoi t-50 tanks Tbilisi Timoshenko troops Tskhinvali Ukraine US us department of state war Washington WikiLeaks Yanukovich Yushchenko

    WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.

  • RSS News from Russia

    • Gorbachev: Russia faces turmoil as Putin won't change (Reuters) February 9, 2012
      MOSCOW (Reuters) – Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev said on Thursday Russia faced turmoil because Vladimir Putin was unable and unwilling to carry out fundamental reform of a tightly-controlled political system. Prime Minister Putin, facing the biggest protests of his 12-year rule, has tried to present himself to Russia's 109 million voters as a l […]
    • Gorbachev: Putin has 'exhausted' his potential (AP) February 9, 2012
      MOSCOW – Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has "exhausted" his potential as Russia's leader, Mikhail Gorbachev declared Thursday, saying Putin's inability to change the Kremlin's political system might prompt more massive anti-government protests. Putin — who became prime minister after serving as Russia's president from 2000 to 200 […]
    • Russian oligarchs should pay privatization fee: Putin (Reuters) February 9, 2012
      MOSCOW (Reuters) – Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, seeking to return to the presidency in an election next month, said on Thursday large Russian companies privatized "dishonestly" in the 1990s should pay a fee to win public acceptance for the deals. "We need to close the period of the '90s, of what, speaking honestly, was dishonest privati […]
    • Canada protests Russian arms support to Syria (AP) February 9, 2012
      TORONTO – A senior Canadian government official says Canada lodged a formal protest with Russia for supplying arms to the Assad regime in Syria. The official said Wednesday Canada's embassy in Moscow delivered a protest note to the Russian foreign ministry. He spoke on condition on anonymity because the official wasn't authorized to speak publicly. […]
    • Russia's Putin warns against outside interference (Reuters) February 8, 2012
      MOSCOW (Reuters) – Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday the world faced a growing "cult of violence" and Moscow must not let events like those in Libya and Syria be repeated in Russia, warning the West against interference in a country he intends to lead for years to come. Weeks ahead of a March presidential election he is almost sure to win despite th […]
  • Site stats

    Politics
    Top Blogs
    Blog Ratings
© 2008 Let Me Tell You… - World politics: gripes, grumbles, and occasional analysis
  • follow:follow:
  • RSS RSS