Berlin wall dominoes Fall of Berlin Wall Anniversary More Than Just Media OverkillConsidering the amount of coverage that the arbitrarily chosen 20th anniversary celebration of the fall of the Berlin Wall received, one would think that it was purely, or at least mostly a media event.

As it turned out, despite the cold rain falling on November 9, 2009, it was more of a celebration of the human spirit, of the beginning of the end of communism in Europe and a call for action against continuing violations of human rights throughout the world.

There have been many discussions as to who actually contributed the most to the disintegration of communism.

Most knowledgeable experts underscore the huge contribution of Pope John Paul II, who has given the Polish people the encouragement needed to start the strike at the Gdansk shipyard and to found the Solidarity trade union in 1980.

The communist government has cracked down on Solidarnosc on December 13, 1981. Many activists were imprisoned, but the opposition remained very active, finally reaching the point in February of 1989 of forcing the Polish government to initiate talks with the opposition to defuse social unrest.

solidarnosc Fall of Berlin Wall Anniversary More Than Just Media OverkillHere’s the rest of the timeline of events, leading up to the demise of communism in Europe:

1989

April 5: The Roundtable Agreement is signed in Poland, legalizing independent trade unions and calling the first partially democratic elections in June.

May 2: Dismantling of the Iron Curtain – the boundary between Warsaw Pact and NATO countries – begins as Hungary disables the electric alarm system and cuts through barbed wire on its border with Austria.

Aug. 19: The ‘Pan-European Picnic’ – a peace demonstration at the Hungarian town of Sopron on the Austrian border – turns into an exodus when Hungarian border guards hold their fire as 600 East German citizens flee to the West.

Aug. 24: Tadeusz Mazowiecki is appointed Polish prime minister, becoming the first noncommunist head of state in Eastern Europe in more than 40 years.

Sept. 10: Hungary reopens its border with East Germany, allowing 13,000 East Germans passage to escape through Austria.

Oct. 18: East German leader Erich Honecker is forced to resign.

Nov. 4: One million people rally in East Berlin during weeks of mounting demonstrations.

Nov. 9: The Berlin Wall falls.

Nov. 17: The ‘Velvet Revolution’ in Czechoslovakia erupts in reaction to a police crackdown on peaceful student protests in Prague. Days of mass demonstrations ensue.

Nov. 24: Communists in Prague step down.

Dec. 3: Soviet spokesman Gennady Gerasimov, speaking after a press conference between George H.W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev, who were concluding a shipboard summit at Malta, declared: “From Yalta to Malta, the cold war ended at 12.45 p.m. today.”

Dec. 22: Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaucescu is overthrown. He and his wife, Elena, are executed three days later after a summary trial.

1990

April 8: Hungary elects a non-communist government.

Oct. 3: Germany unifies.

Dec. 9: Poland elects Lech Walesa president.

July 1: Baltic states gain independence from the Soviet Union.

Dec. 25: The Soviet Union dissolves.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Russia Persists in Lies, Rewriting History

Schleswig-Holstein shelling the Polish ammunition depot at Westerplatte, 1 Sep, 1939

Schleswig-Holstein shelling the Polish ammunition depot at Westerplatte, 1 Sep, 1939

Although most Americans consider the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 as the beginning of World War II, that war has actually started years earlier. Even if we discount the 1937 Japanese invasion of China, the universally accepted start of World War II was almost 70 years ago, at 4:45 am on September 1, 1939, when German battleship Schleswig-Holstein on a “courtesy visit” to the Free City of Gdansk – which the Germans called Danzig – opened fire on a small, company-sized garrison of the Polish ammunition depot on Westerplatte.

The heroes of Westerplatte held out for a full week in the face of naval, land and aerial bombing and repeated infantry attacks by the Germans.

France and England declared war on Nazi Germany on September 3, 1939, but did nothing to help Poland, whose forces attacked from the west, north and south by the Germans, kept fighting, while retreating eastwards, planning to establish a more viable defensive line east of Warsaw.

Victim of a Luftwaffe attack on Warsaw, 1939

Victim of a Luftwaffe attack on Warsaw, 1939

Despite a crushing German numerical, strategic and materiel superiority the Polish forces fought bravely and inflicted considerable losses on the invaders. As a matter of fact, the Polish armed forces held longer against the Germans that the combined French-British ones in the spring of 1940. The Polish air force was not destroyed on the ground as the popular, German-inspired myth holds, but despite being relatively small and equipped with antiquated planes, had probably the best-trained pilots anywhere, who managed to either destroy, or damage several hundred German airplanes.

Another German-perpetrated myth, which for some reason seems to be holding up even to this day is that the Polish cavalry attacked German armor with sabers and lances.

This is of course a totally ridiculous notion. During the inter-war years the Polish army had begun to slowly incorporate tanks and tank units into their infantry and cavalry as did most armies of the world at that time and further, Polish cavalry regiments were equipped with anti-tank guns. At instruction centers, soldiers and their commanders were trained in the appropriate tactics to defend against enemy armored units. Cavalry units used horses for moving troops and weapons quickly and fought largely on foot – as infantry.

Polish 303 Squadron fighter pilots during the Battle of Britain, 1940

Polish 303 Squadron fighter pilots during the Battle of Britain, 1940

In any case, the Polish plans to establish a new defensive line east of Warsaw were shattered by the Red Army invasion on September 17, 1939. At that point, the often-isolated units either fought until their ammunition run out, or if they could, escaped the Polish territory into Romania, from where thousands managed to make it to France, subsequently fought in the poorly planned French-British operation in Norway, took part in the fighting of 1940 in France and then many escaped to England.  Afterward, Polish airmen and pilots were instrumental in helping the British win the Battle of Britain, fought in Tobruk, a Polish destroyer actually caught up with the battleship Bismarck and held the contact under fire until Royal Navy heavies arrived. Later, the Second Polish Corps, composed mainly of prisoners released by the Soviets was the first to plant their flag on the ruins of the abbey at Monte Cassino, where German forces held the Allied advance towards Rome for several months.

The Polish First Armored Division was credited with bottling up and helping to destroy a large part of the SS divisions surrounded in the so-called Falaise Pocket and afterward liberated large sections of Holland.

Soldiers of the Polish Home Army (AK)

Soldiers of the Polish Home Army (AK)

The Polish Home Army (AK) fought the occupying Nazi forces almost from the very beginning and to the very end of the war, even took on the occupying Soviets after WWII officially ended. And unlike in most other countries, occupied by the Nazis, Poland did not produce any measurable number of collaborators. At the same time, the Polish nation lost in the process some six million of its citizens, about half of them Jewish. The Home Army fought the occupying German forces during the Warsaw Uprising for 63 days, while the Soviet forces were held by Stalin just on the other shore of the Vistula River. The city was subsequently almost completely destroyed on Hitler’s orders.

The numerous German atrocities on the civilian population of occupied countries merit a separate post.

The AK has transferred parts of the German V-1 flying bombs and the V-2 rockets to England. Even before the war, Polish mathematicians have made great strides in deciphering the operation of the German coding machine, known as Enigma.  Final work on the Enigma was conducted later at Blechley Park, in England and it helped the Allies to a great degree in finally defeating the III Reich. After the horrors of WWII, Poland was de facto occupied by the Soviet Union and didn’t regain its independence until 1989.

Signing of the Ribbentrop Pact in Moscow, 26 Aug 1939

Signing of the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact in Moscow, 26 Aug 1939

All of the above facts are indisputable. But on the eve of the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II, just before many countries’ leaders, including Russia’s PM Vladimir Putin and Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel gather in Gdansk, Poland, Russian state television ran a long documentary essentially arguing that Stalin was justified in ordering the 1939 invasion of Poland and the Baltic states – and also in making a secret deal with Hitler – on the grounds that Poland itself was in a “secret alliance” with the Nazis. What total crap and what gall! As a matter of fact, the Russian mass indoctrination seems to be working quite effectively, as according to a recent poll, the majority of the Russian populace do not even know that their country invaded anyone in 1939.

The strangest thing is that while on September 1, 2009 Vladimir Putin, speaking in Poland was calling the Ribbentropp-Molotov pact “immoral”, the Russian intelligence services were presenting in Moscow translated “documents”, supposedly proving that Poland was in cahoots with Nazi Germany. What gives?!

Maybe the Russians will go back to their earlier assertions that they didn’t murder thousands of Polish officers in the Katyn forest and other places in 1940 and will continue on their path of justifying almost everything that their monstrous “hero” Stalin did. We wish luck to the Russian historians in wiping the blood of at the very least tens of millions of people murdered in all kinds of ways both in “The Gulag Archipelago” and other places, the conquest of distinctly non-Russian Caucasus, including Chechnya and also Siberia. The efforts to reverse the course of rivers, the creation of deserts around the Caspian Sea and other “achievements.”

The Westerplatte Monument, 1 Sep, 2009

The Westerplatte Monument, 1 Sep, 2009

A state, which is incapable of facing the facts of its own history and not having enough confidence and pride in itself cannot even remotely be considered as strong, brave and most of all – honorable.

And one more thing: The Obama administration doesn’t appear to be particularly interested in Eastern Europe, which is a huge mistake, in our opinion. Despite the fact that the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II in Gdansk will be attended by at high-level representatives of at least 12 countries, including Putin and Merkel, at this moment it appears that the U.S.  is sending the National Security Advisor James Jones, not the vice president, or the secretary of state.

On September 1, 2009, Helle Dale had an excellent commentary on this subject in the Washington Times. Take a look.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Nothing Was Done When…

shame1 Nothing Was Done When…

In 1937 Japan invaded China, massacring millions.

Nazi Germany took over Austria in 1938 during the so-called Anschluss.

Hitler extorted through the Munich Agreement in September 1938 the cession of Czechoslovakia’s Bohemian, Moravian and Czech-Silesian borderlands – Sudetenland.

Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939 and despite British and French “guarantees”, the country was occupied and devastated, with the help of the Soviet Union, losing some six million of its citizens.

Nazi Germany exterminated millions of people, Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals and anyone else they didn’t like.

The Soviet Union occupied all of eastern and most of central Europe.

Communist China occupied Tibet, claiming that it was an integral part of historical China.

In 1994 some one million Tutsis and moderate Hutus were massacred in Rwanda, while the world watched.

The Bosnian war raged for three years before anyone did anything about it.

Afghanistan has been occupied and re-occupied over the last 30 years, with no end in sight.

The U.S. invaded Iraq for no apparent reason, killing about a million people in the process and making it the longest war waged by the United States.

The conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region has been going on for years, with only lame attempts of the international community to do something about it.

The war in the so-called “Democratic Republic of Congo” has cost so far nearly 5.5 million lives and the international efforts in the region are half-hearted at best.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been either simmering, or raging for the past 60 years. Israel’s Defense Minister Ehud Barak said his country is engaged in “all-out war” with Gaza’s Hamas rulers.

Once again, the world is doing nothing …

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,