During the war, not even our gov in London was making a noise about too much because such were the hard realities (this is also why we didn't declare war in 1939 or later, we had to play with the cards we had). And as always, you refuse to give any (evil) agency to MOSCOW for actually fucking killing people and then blaming the others, and lying and lying and lying about it. (You know that not a few in Russia still lie about it right? Besides those who celebrate it.)
The undertaking of the Katyn case in Great Britain in the 1970s resulted in the most widespread Soviet and Polish action in defense of the Katyn lie since the times of the 1951 Madden Committee. On 15 April 1971, the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, after the approval or consultation of Leonid Brezhnev, Alexei Kosygin, Mikhail Suslov, Yuri Andropov, Andrei Gromyka and Boris Ponomarov, decided to take action to block publicizing the truth about Katyn in Great Britain. A "démarche to the Ministry of England" was sent to the British government, defending the version about Polish officers formulated in 1943-1944[lxx]. In the following years, the initiative of erecting a monument to the victims of Katyn in London caused a strong contraction on the part of Moscow and Warsaw, aimed at defending the lie about the alleged German responsibility for Katyn[lxxi].
Why can't tell me even your sources that you believe AND repeat as they lie to you? I don't get it. You shield the people who lie to you. That's pathetic.
During the war, not even our gov in London was making a noise about too much
And what was the cause of that? Oh right, the British and Murican government pressuring them to shut up about the true perpetrators of Katyn. Just like after the war, they did precisely nothing to help the Polish government.
They're criminals of the highest order, then as now. But of course, I don't judge, this is just geopolitics. However, you insist that they're good and noble, and that you are therefore not to blame for being their lackey.
In retaliation for Sikorski demanding an impartial Red Cross investigation of
the mass murder he and Beria had perpetrated, Stalin declared that he was
breaking off all relations with the Polish exile government in London. Adding to
its unpleasant effect, Stalin’s poison-pill letter was hand delivered to Churchill at
his country house, Chartwell, where the overworked prime minister was enjoying
a rare day of rest on Good Friday.
It was a moment of truth for Churchill and Roosevelt. Would these signatories
of the Atlantic Charter swallow Stalin’s slanders against the International Red
Cross and the Polish government, on whose behalf the war had been fought in the
first place?
The answer was yes. Churchill, who replied first, reassured Stalin on April 24
that Britain would “oppose vigorously any ‘investigation’ by the International
Red Cross or any other body in any territory under German authority,” and
promised to send his foreign minister to meet with Sikorski and “press him as
strongly as possible to withdraw all countenance from any investigation under
Nazi auspices.” In a follow-up telegram sent on April 25, Churchill did remind
Stalin, delicately, that Sikorski had “several times raised this question of the
missing officers with the Soviet government, and once with you personally,”
suggesting that he suspected Stalin knew more than he was letting on. But
Churchill then forfeited any possible leverage on the matter when he promised
Stalin that he would lean on Sikorski to “restrain Polish press from polemics.”
Roosevelt, in his reply to Stalin, declared that Sikorski had “made a mistake”
in asking for a Red Cross investigation, and that he was confident Churchill
would find a way to set the London Poles straight, so they would “act in the
future with more common sense.” Roosevelt did express hope that Stalin would
order a mere “suspension of conversations with the Polish Government-in-Exile
rather than a complete severance of relations,” but this was only a suggestion. The president even promised Stalin that he would try to “help [him] in any way” with his Polish problem—for example, by “looking after any Poles which you may
desire to send out of the Soviet Union.” Stalin politely declined the president’s
bizarre offer to cleanse the USSR of unwanted Poles, assuring Roosevelt, with a
wink, that he viewed any and all Poles residing on Soviet soil as his close
personal “friends and comrades,” of whom there was no “question of their being
deported from the Soviet Union.”
Encouraged by the obsequious response from his allies, the Vozhd broke off
relations with Sikorski’s government. In a letter to Sikorski’s liaison diplomat in
Moscow on April 25, nearly as brutal as the ultimatum he had served the Polish
ambassador prior to the Soviet invasion in September 1939, Molotov faulted
Sikorski for “fail[ing] to offer a rebuff to the vile fascist calumny” that the Soviet
government had murdered the Polish officers. “The Soviet government are
aware,” Molotov continued, “that this hostile campaign against the Soviet Union
has been undertaken by the Polish government in order to exert pressure… for the
purpose of wresting from them territorial concessions at the expense of the
interests of Soviet Ukraine, Soviet Belorussia and Soviet Lithuania.” In this way,
Stalin and Molotov misdirected their own guilt by slander, and ascribed to the
Polish exile government the very imperialistic motives they had used to
dismember Poland. Here was Soviet diplomatic cynicism raised to an art form
Far from objecting to this bullying, Stalin’s Western allies fell quickly into
line. In his telegram to Stalin on April 25, Churchill reassured the Soviet dictator
that he was “examining the possibility of silencing those Polish papers in this
country which attack the Soviet government.” As early as April 23, the head of
the US Office of War Information, Elmer Davis, based on no evidence
whatsoever, broadcast a report about Katyn endorsing Stalin’s claim that the mass graves represented a Nazi and not a Soviet crime—a position that would remain the official line of the US government until 1951.
This excerpt is from Sean McMeekin's book "Stalin's War".
For the privilege of being thrown to the wolves after World War II, and putting you in the prison of Soviet domination, the British and the Americans told the Polish government to be quiet.
Speaking of Sikorskis, any comment on the admission by your hero Radek [Sic]orski (the traitor who married a foreign whore) that it was the US that blew up Nord Stream 2, my friend?
And as always, you refuse to give any (evil) agency to MOSCOW for actually fucking killing people and then blaming the others
I thought it was without saying that "Stalin is bad".
But if I have to say it... Stalin is bad. Eating your own feces is bad. Genocide is kinda bad mkaay?
You know that not few in Russia still lie about it right?
Not surprising. People in nationalist countries are very resistant to the idea that their country did anything wrong.
Yeah, "they're criminals of the highest order", but not the Moscowites, who are criminals of some lower order even when they're the ones actually murdering people and lying about it (while you believe them). Fuck off, man. Just, fuck off.
Ah, you're upset that it is upon record that the Western allies helped Moscow cover up the Katyn massacre, and pressured the Polish government, contrary to your earlier claims.
There, there. We still love you, no matter what your bad opinions are, because we know you mean well.
Never? There never was any 'Ukraine'. Little Russia was the name by which it was known. Hell, it's the name of one of the Tchaikovsky symphonies.
I don't give a damn about what Putin thinks. Ukraine is not a real country. A rump Galicia as a buffer with NATO, that is its fate.
The UK and the US, your friends.
You do know I can just ignore you, right?
During the war, not even our gov in London was making a noise about too much because such were the hard realities (this is also why we didn't declare war in 1939 or later, we had to play with the cards we had). And as always, you refuse to give any (evil) agency to MOSCOW for actually fucking killing people and then blaming the others, and lying and lying and lying about it. (You know that not a few in Russia still lie about it right? Besides those who celebrate it.)
Why can't tell me even your sources that you believe AND repeat as they lie to you? I don't get it. You shield the people who lie to you. That's pathetic.
And what was the cause of that? Oh right, the British and Murican government pressuring them to shut up about the true perpetrators of Katyn. Just like after the war, they did precisely nothing to help the Polish government.
They're criminals of the highest order, then as now. But of course, I don't judge, this is just geopolitics. However, you insist that they're good and noble, and that you are therefore not to blame for being their lackey.
This excerpt is from Sean McMeekin's book "Stalin's War".
For the privilege of being thrown to the wolves after World War II, and putting you in the prison of Soviet domination, the British and the Americans told the Polish government to be quiet.
Speaking of Sikorskis, any comment on the admission by your hero Radek [Sic]orski (the traitor who married a foreign whore) that it was the US that blew up Nord Stream 2, my friend?
I thought it was without saying that "Stalin is bad".
But if I have to say it... Stalin is bad. Eating your own feces is bad. Genocide is kinda bad mkaay?
Not surprising. People in nationalist countries are very resistant to the idea that their country did anything wrong.
Yeah, "they're criminals of the highest order", but not the Moscowites, who are criminals of some lower order even when they're the ones actually murdering people and lying about it (while you believe them). Fuck off, man. Just, fuck off.
Ah, you're upset that it is upon record that the Western allies helped Moscow cover up the Katyn massacre, and pressured the Polish government, contrary to your earlier claims.
There, there. We still love you, no matter what your bad opinions are, because we know you mean well.