Who set Hitler against Stalin?. Nikolay Starikov

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Who set Hitler against Stalin? - Nikolay Starikov страница 26

Who set Hitler against Stalin? - Nikolay Starikov

Скачать книгу

Russian State Economical Archive. F. 4038. Op. 1.D. 31. L. 22. (Quoted from the book of The New Historical Messenger. 2004. No. 1.)

61

The New Historical Messenger. 2004. No. 1.

62

Frolov, A.N. Modern state and nearest perspectives of railway transport. Economist. 1922. No. 1.P. 176. (Quoted from the book The New Historical Messenger. 2004. No. 1.)

63

Brief course of history of VKPb. M., 1938. P. 251.

64

Lenin, V.I. Collected edition. V. 54. P. 266.

65

In 1924 one dollar was worth one ruble and 94 kopecks. Compare: in 1907 one dollar was worth two tsarist rubles.

66

Archive of the Russian Revolution. M., 1991. V. 5–6. P. 103.

67

Björkegren, H. Traffic in Scandinavia. Russian Revolutionaries in Scandinavia in 1906–1917. M., 2007. P. 425–427.

68

Preparata, G.G. Hitler Inc. How Britain and America made the Third Reich. P. 120.

69

For more details about support the Allies provided to the Whites and reasons of their defeat check Starikov, N. 1917. Who finished Russia? M., 2007.

70

Fest, I. Hitler. V.1. P. 270 .

71

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 44.

72

Bullock, A. Hitler and Stalin. V.1. P. 106.

73

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 27–28.

74

Ibid. P. 76.

75

Fest, I. Hitler. V.1. P. 221.

76

Geiden, K. Way of the NSDAP. Führer and His Party. P. 178.

77

The USSR will be established on December 30, 1922. It will include Russia, Ukraine, Belorussia and the Transcaucasian Republic.

78

Danilov, A.A., Kosulina, L.G. History of Russia. The XX century. M., 1998. P. 235.

79

Fest, I. Hitler. Perm. V.1. P. 253.

80

During the Genoa conference Henry Deterding, Head of the oil company Royal Dutch offered to establish a united consortium that would get all oil concessions in Russia. When the offer failed, he instantly appeared among those financially supporting the beginning politician Adolf Hitler (Geiden, K. NSDAP way. The Führer and his party. M., 2004. P. 146).

81

Fest, I. Hitler. V.1. P. 261.

82

Ibid. P. 352.

83

Sadovaya, G.M. Walther Rathenau: the Path to Rapallo // History and Historiography of the Foreign World in Persons Samara, 1999. P. 121–139.

84

Gintzberg, L.I. Josef Wirth: a Path to Struggle for Peace and Partnership between the Peoples/Modern and Contemporary History 1981. No. 1.P. 105–124; No. 2.P. 102–121.

85

The Ruhr land is approximately 90 km long and 45 km wide. We will mention this land later on again but keep in mind for now that this small piece of land produced about 80 % of German coal, cast iron and steel and had the most developed railway system in the world.

86

Fest, I. Hitler. V.1. P. 265.

87

In Ruhr land 400 people were executed for acts of sabotage and 300 of them were executed by … the German authorities (Preparata, G.G. Hitler Inc. How Britain and America Made the Third Reich. P. 191).

88

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 33.

89

Right after the Hitler’s putsch (8–9.11.1923). Chancellor, G. Stresemann resigned (23.11.1923).

90

Shirer, W. Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. M., 1991. P. 38.

91

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 22.

92

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 36, 62.

93

Ibid. P. 9–10.

94

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 51.

95

Ibid. P. 63.

96

Ibid. P. 50–51.

97

Heiden, K. The Path of NSDAP. Führer and His Party. P. 178.

98

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 40.

99

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 51.

100

Ibid. P. 48.

101

Ibid. P. 39, 55.

102

Martirosyan, A. Who Brought War to USSR? M., 2007. P. 287.

103

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 44.

104

Ibid. P. 52.

105

Seward, D. Napoleon and Hitler. Smolensk, 1995. P. 79.

106

Churchill, W. World War II V.1. P. 151.

107

As Hitler was the major striking force of Nazis during the last year before his coming to the power in the country he was constantly flying to meetings from one German town to another. He was provided with a special rented plane and Goebbels came out with a good advertising slogan: “Führer over Germany”.

108

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 200.

109

Churchill, W. World War II V.1. P. 15.

110

Ibid. P. 15.

111

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 202.

112

Hanfstaengl, E. Hitler. The Missing Years. P. 259–261.

113

Shirer, W. Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. P. 39.

114

It was 1 February 1924. On that day the United Kingdom officially acknowledged USSR.

115

Right after the patron, the vassals also started acknowledging USSR: on 7 February 1924 – Italy where Benito Mussolini was the Prime Minister, on 13 February – Norway, on 25 February – Austria, on 8 March – Greece, on 15 March – Sweden, on 18 June – Denmark, on 6 July – Albania, on 19 July – China, on 1 August – Mexico, on 28 October 1924 – France. The last in this “acknowledgement order” was Japan, it happened on 20 January 1925, while the United States acknowledged USSR on in 1933.

116

Rezun-Suvorov attributes such brutal aggression to USSR of the Stalin period, thus, explaining the mechanism of the World War II. While such concept lost in the battle together with its author Trotsky and Stalin never used it. At the VII congress of Communist International in 1935 it was officially declared that the world revolution was not prepared any more.

117

Stalin, J.V. Collected works. V.9. P. 37.

118

Fest, I. Hitler.

Скачать книгу