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1 |
ID:
172616
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Summary/Abstract |
The paper examines the position of the Republic China consulates in the Soviet Union in 1937-1938. During the Great Terror period. Chinese consulates found themselves in an ambiguous position. On the one hand, they represented a friendly state and were not closed down as many other foreign consulates were at the time. But on the other, NKVD charged many of their staff with working for the Japanese intelligence service, while the consulates' efforts to protect their nationals were viewed by the Soviet side as hostile.
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2 |
ID:
165647
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Summary/Abstract |
REMEMBER Pastor Schlag from the TV series "Seventeen Moments of Spring"? Remember when in the spring of 1945, the poor bloke played by Rostislav Plyatt stumbled on skis from Germany to Switzerland with only a hunch that the person who sent him there, Stirlitz, was not a German patriot but a Soviet intelligence officer?
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3 |
ID:
139431
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Summary/Abstract |
This article discusses the general relationship between Soviet partisans and the Shoah in Ukraine. This topic also touches upon the issue of the involvement of Jews in Soviet paramilitary, reconnaissance, sabotage and terrorist military units that were operating behind the Wehrmacht front lines. To a lesser extent, the context of these events is shown; in particular, the moods of the population on the occupied territories are described.
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4 |
ID:
107118
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
GENERATIONS OF SOVIET PEOPLE and citizens of the Russian Federation have been asking the same question: Was the Soviet Union ready to rebuff Hitler's aggression on June 22, 1941? If the country was completely ready why the crushing defeats and appalling casualties of the first months of the war? If it was not prepared then who is to blame?
In many respects (the number and efficiency of heavy tanks) the Red Army was much superior to the Wehrmacht which had no heavy tanks at the early stages of war in the East.
Why then the humiliation of the early months?
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5 |
ID:
160601
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Summary/Abstract |
A CURIOUS DOG first leapt out of the bushes. It sniffed everything around it. Then it ran on. There was its mistress. The high boots that in England are called Wellingtons. Khaki jodhpurs. A green oilcloth jacket with a brown velvet collar. And the woman herself was a blonde with a distinctive (if not characteristic) bump in her nose, clearly passed down from her Norman ancestors.
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6 |
ID:
162822
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Summary/Abstract |
THIS is the continuation of our efforts to find out who were the women whom Soviet intelligence planted as secret agents in Western Europe via Britain in 1941-1943. They went ashore in the UK with Soviet passports to the names of Maria Dicksen, Yelena Nikitina, Emilia Novikova, Anna Uspenskaya, and Anna Frolova.
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