Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
Vargfar
Var har du hört att Hitler inte accepterade dom ryska fascisterna? Kan du utveckla det?
Det var ju en hel del ryssar som stred på Tysklands sida mot judebolsjevismen i sitt eget hemland.
Den ryska vintern tillsammans med utrustningen som sagt var väl snarare anledningen till att dom förlorade striden. Till slut han ju fienden mobilsera sig igen så att säga.
I grund, Hitler ville vinna med bara Tyska soldater för att utrota den slaviska befolkingen.
Hans egen arme
hade självständigt byggt en slavisk nazistisk rörelse som spred sig automatisk
och skulle ha hjälpt Tyskarna.
Men Hittler dödade dom, och dom som överlevde gick över till att slås för Stalin.
Hitlers hat mot slaver var enormt och väldigt irrationelt.
Hade han bara accepterat slaver så skulle han ha vunnit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collab...d_Soviet_Union
In the autumn of 1941, Field Marshal von Bock had sent to Hitler's Headquarters a detailed project for the organization of a Liberation Army of some 200,000 Russian volunteers, and for the formation of a
local government in the province of Smolensk. It was returned in November 1941 with the notation that
"such thoughts cannot be discussed with the Führer," and that "politics are not the prerogatives of Army Group Commanders." Of course, Field-Marshal Keitel, who wrote this notation, did not show the project to Hitler.[5]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia..._Party#History
Finally, to finally resolve the problem of "domination by the Jews and Freemasons", Rodzaevsky called[when?] for an alliance of Fascist Russia, Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan.[1]:170
A problem with this future foreign policy was the open anti-Slavic racism expressed by the Nazis, who saw all Slavs as Untermenschen (sub-humans) and the Soviet Union as a place that was to be Germany's Lebensraum ("living space") that millions of Germans would colonize after conquest of the Soviet Union.[1]:170 One of the völkisch tracts not translated into Russian by the Russian Fascist Party was Mein Kampf, as Hitler's denigration of Slavs as Untermenschen and his statements that Germany's Lebensraum was to be found in the Soviet Union presented problems for the Russian Fascists.[1]:170 Rodzaevsky wrote to Hitler, asking him to amend Mein Kampf, and upon receiving no reply, finally did translate Mein Kampf into Russian in 1936
with the offending passages removed.[1]:170–171 In his speeches to his followers, Rodzaevsky praised Hitler as a "great statesman" and
tried to explain away Hitler's anti-Russian statements and his intentions to colonize Russia, as expressed in Mein Kampf, as something written a long time ago that was not relevant at present, saying that he knew that Hitler had changed his views about Russia.[1]:171 Several of the RFP leaders called for the restoration of the monarchy, but Rodzaevsky himself remained vague on this issue until 1940, only saying that a Russia under his leadership would not be a republic and refusing to commit himself explicitly to a Romanov restoration.[1]:171