World War II

Smallest Country with the Biggest Heart

World War II claimed an estimated 55 million lives. The conflict reshaped geographical Europe. Hundreds of thousands of Eastern Europeans and Russians fought bravely.

They aimed to liberate their countries from the scourge of Bolshevik genocide and oppression. After this, the Allies rounded them up as the war drew to its bloody end.  

The United States and Britain often turned down offers to surrender and seek sanctuary in the West.

The outcome was their being handed over to the genocidal Soviet Red Army. 

 As men, their women and children were disembarked from Allied shipping, trucked or entrained to waiting Red Army troops, these captives were massacred in groups.

It is since estimated that seven million surrendered captives were turned over to the Soviet Union.

Upon their being handed over to the Red Army, these unfortunates were machine-gunned in groups or shipped to an early death in the notorious Stalinist slave camps

Tens of thousands of these unfortunate captives were rounded up by the British 8th Army. 

They were corralled for months in the open-air meadows of Austria. In their tens of thousands, they were forced on to trucks, trains, and Allied shipping in groups. 

These stateless captives against their will were shipped like cattle to Soviet frontiers. 

Within earshot of British servicemen these hapless refugees were machine gunned in groups. 

Earlier promises that they would not be ‘repatriated’ were broken.  Many were not, in fact, being repatriated, for they had never been citizens of the Soviet Union. 

Many refugees and former Russian Liberation Army (ROA) servicemen and women managed to escape.

They freed themselves from the huge Allied encampments. This desperate Diaspora became scattered throughout starving war-ravaged Europe. 

A significant number of Russian Liberation Army (ROA) service personnel did reach the small landlocked Central European principality of Liechtenstein.  

This lion-hearted community refused Soviet demands. The community was small. The threatening Red Army was in close proximity.

Despite these challenges, they did not return these unfortunate refugees to the USSR.  These fortunate escapees were later permitted to emigrate to Argentina. SOURCE: Heroes of the Reich, Michael Walsh. Banned by Amazon.

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WITNESS TO HISTORY Mike Walsh: “I have read a lot about WWII and Germany. This includes David Irving’s books. But, you wrapped it all in a really tidy and factual package. I highly recommend it to all my history truth-seeking friends. Thank you for such a great book.” ~ B. Wiggles. https://barnesreview.org/product/witness-to-history-the-reich-legend-uncensored/

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