@moffintosh Being critical of the West is okay, but why whitewash Stalin — he was just as much a piece of shit as Hitler was. The top arguments are debatable, yet, German–Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty is very real. Did anyone else have a friendship treaty with the Nazis? The article in Pravda in which Stalin is very protective of Hitler is also very real. Talking about defending someone from Hitler in this light is just laughable — fighting over spheres of influence isn't protecting.

@moffintosh And yes, Soviet Union was also doing bussiness with Hitler, trains carrying commodities were moving till the very invasion, the worst part is that Germany might not have enough resources to start the invasion had this not been happening. SU was providing training grounds to German pilots at Lipetsk air base. Soviet Union was extraditing Jews to the Nazi Germany to their imminent death, there is so much more than M-R pact. Pinning it on the West is wrong on so many levels.

@m0xee

Soviet Union was also doing bussiness with Hitler, trains carrying commodities were moving till the very invasion, the worst part is that Germany might not have enough resources to start the invasion had this not been happening.

You mean after tge west financed them and commerced with them for years?

SU was providing training grounds to German pilots at Lipetsk air base. Soviet Union was extraditing Jews to the Nazi Germany to their imminent death, there is so much more than M-R pact.

Imma need a source for those, expecially given Stalin's speach of 1931 and the bolsheviks being generally pro national self-determination (see finland in 1918)

@moffintosh@berserker.town @m0xee@social.librem.one The Soviets did, indeed, provide training and facilities to Wiemar Germany after WW1, but:

In August 1933, Molotov assured German ambassador Herbert von Dirksen that Soviet-German relations would depend exclusively on the attitude of Germany towards the Soviet Union.[47] However, Reichswehr access to the three military training and testing sites (Lipetsk, Kama, and Tomka) was abruptly terminated by the Soviet Union in August–September 1933

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany%E2%80%93Soviet_Union_relations,_1918%E2%80%931941#Initial_relations_after_Hitler's_election

@moffintosh@berserker.town Also, regarding Soviet economic assistance claims:

Economically, the Soviet Union made repeated efforts to reestablish closer contacts with Germany in the mid-1930s.[55] The Soviet Union chiefly sought to repay debts from earlier trade with raw materials, while Germany sought to rearm. The two countries signed a credit agreement in 1935.[56]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany%E2%80%93Soviet_Union_relations,_1918%E2%80%931941#Relations_in_the_mid-1930s

So, this was all in the early-mid 1930s when Hitler
was being elected and shortly after Hitler was elected as Chancellor of Germany. I.e., this wasn't the full-blown Nazi Germany we are familiar with in books and movies. For all intents and purposes this was still Wiemar Germany under brand new Nazi leadership beginning the rearming process. And this trade with the USSR wasn't some good-will/supportive measure, it was that the USSR was in debt to Germany and they were trying to pay down their loans. @m0xee@social.librem.one

@adiz @m0xee Wikipedia's source is a british monarchist from a russian noble familtly who esxaoed from russia after the revolution.
A trustworthy source from a reactionary political movement which isn't totally known for liying and cherry picking history

@moffintosh@berserker.town Dubious source, sure, but I think it's pretty well documented/understood that Stalin was antisemitic. Which is whatever, lots of people were antisemitic. That's like denigrating some random "great" historical figure because he/she didn't like "gypsies"---nobody did within the historical context. It's kinda a strawman since Stalin's attitudes and Stalinist USSR's actions towards Jews isn't relevant to the core arguments at hand, and neither Stalin nor Stalinist USSR participated in Nazi Germany's genocide of Jewish folks. @m0xee@social.librem.one

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@adiz @moffintosh I have a very different impression of this. I don't think that Stalin personally was antisemitic, but he wasn't against throwing Jews under the bus for the sake of appeasing his ally. I don't have any link at hand, but there were many Jews in higher ranks of NKVD and they were getting replaced as cooperation was gaining steam. So yes, there was no partaking in the genocide, but Stalin had nothing against that either.

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