Katyn, Vynnytsia etc.

Shortly after Germany had invaded Poland in the early autumn of 1939, the Soviet Union occupied the eastern half of that country and rounded up a large part of the Polish political and military elite. A short while later, Stalin himself ordered the liquidation of all these captives. On receiving clues from Poles about these massacres, the Germans managed to locate one set of the mass graves near the Polish town of Katyn in 1943, and later another set in Vynnytsia. What followed was an exemplary investigation of the material traces of this mass murder by an international independent commission, something never seen with respect to alleged German war crimes. The results of this investigation were used by Germany to shore up its propaganda efforts against Soviet Russia. After the war, however, Russia tried to pin this war crime on Germany. Only in 1990 did Russia officially admit Stalin’s guilt.

Katyn: Unanswered Questions

The air crash earlier this year in Russia in which the Polish premier and many senior members of his government perished, briefly brought Katyn back into public consciousness. They had been journeying there to commemorate the tragic events in 1940 in which 15,000 Polish officers were murdered by the Soviet NKVD. The events in the…

Khatyn – Another Hoax

History, even current history, is full of lies. But largely because these falsehoods appear in printed form they are believed by many many people, and it is for this reason that the Institute for Historical Review is so vital. One such hoax is that of Khatyn – as opposed to Katyn. On 3 July 1974…

The Crime of Moscow in Vynnytsia

The Crime Of Moscow In Vynnytsia, Introduction by John F. Stewart, Preface by Lewis Brandon, Institute for Historical Review, 1980, 48 pp. paperback, $3.00 from IHR. ISBN: 0-911038-90-6. In 1943 the German occupation authorities in Ukraine discovered the bodies of 9,439 victims of the Soviet NKVD. The victims were all Ukrainian dissidents, who had been…

Katyn

Translator's note: The following is is a typical example of Nuremberg “evidence”. The “testimony” consists of “written statements” said to have been signed by “eyewitnesses”, but which are simply “quoted” in a “report” written by the Stalinists and read aloud (in excerpt form) by the Soviet prosecutor. The “statements” are not attached to the report,…

For the record… Some major mainstream revisions of WWII historiography

Since the end of the Second World War many facts and many legends have been built up surrounding the events or even “non-events” of that international conflict. Many stories which originated through the official and unofficial propaganda channels have become a part of the popular history of the war. From the time of the war…

End of content

End of content