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Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
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==== Lie 3: The Soviet Union invaded Poland with Nazi Germany! ==== This statement is gay and retarded. [[File:Crossing the Polish-Romanian Border.jpg|thumb|A Polish passport which was used to cross the border at modern-day Zalishchyky, Ukraine, into Romania on the 15th of September 1939, just days before the Soviet intervention in the east.]] In reality, there was NO "Poland", or any Polish governmental entity, that existed by the time the USSR entered into former Poland. Thus, they couldn't invade Poland, much less invade it "with Germany". This was the position of the Soviet Government. On the 17th, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir Potemkin handed a note to Polish Ambassador Grzybowski (polish jibber translator: Gzhibovskiy), stating that the Polish government had collapsed, and treaties thereby ceased to operate.<ref>http://www.msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/mlg09/molotov_texts_091739.html</ref> This is a correct statement. Throughout mid-September, many Polish government officials fled into neighboring Romania, thereby abandoning their government responsibilities. Romania was neutral in the war, and by crossing over to it, these remnants became 'interned'. Recognizing the Polish government in Romania would therefore be a violation of Romanian neutrality and a hostile act toward Hitler. Romania did not want this. The reality of Polish internment became excessively clear throughout the rest of September, and it showed that both the Polish President and Romania both tacitly admitted that Poland was bereft of a state! This was because Romania realized that the Polish President, Moscicki (polish jibber translator: Moskitskiy) was lying when he claimed he 'legally' resigned on the 30th. So, Romania had to fabricate a story that he resigned on the 15th, just before entering Romania, but Moscicki never made this claim!<ref>https://msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/mlg09/moscicki_resignation.html</ref> This whole fiasco happened because resignation is an official act. Only a government official can resign. Moscicki was interned, and therefore, not a government official. Obviously, if the Soviet Union 'jointly' invaded Poland with Germany, we would for sure see evidence of military cooperation and planning before the war even began. But, there is no such evidence. The plan for the Wehrmacht's Polish campaign was drawn up on April 1939, and was named 'Fall Weiß". The attacks were to come from the West (the main direction), the North (from East Prussia), and the South (from Slovakia). It was planned to defeat the main forces within two weeks.<ref>https://www.doc20vek.ru/node/349</ref> The Soviet Union is only mentioned twice in this regard. It reads:<blockquote>Вмешательство России, если бы она была на это способна, по всей вероятности, не по¬огло бы Польше, так как это означало бы уничтожение ее большевизмом. .. На Балтийском море задачами ВМС являются: б) Разведка и принятие мер по прикрытию, по возможности скрытно, на случай выступления советских военно-морских сил со стороны Финского залива.</blockquote>Translated, this reads:<blockquote>Russian intervention, if it had been capable of it, would probably not have helped Poland, for it would have meant its destruction by Bolshevism. .. In the Baltic Sea, the tasks of the Navy are: b) Reconnaissance and taking cover measures, if possible covertly, in case of a Soviet naval intervention from the Gulf of Finland.</blockquote>This shows that the Germans saw the intervention of the USSR was considered unlikely, as the military leadership of Germany only feared the Baltic Fleet of the USSR. Yet, this was months before the signing of the Pact. On August 31st, 1939, days after the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the Germans released the "Directive No. 1 for the Conduct of War". It established adherence to 'Fall Weiß" and set the date for the start of the Polish campaign. However, this directive says nothing about the Soviet Union<ref>https://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/wardir1.asp</ref> - that is, after August 23, 1939, there was no adjustment to the plan for the Nazi invasion of Poland, especially its goals and objectives.
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