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  2. World War II reparations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_reparations

    Furthermore, in 1942, the Greek Central Bank was forced by the occupying Nazi regime to lend 476 million Reichsmarks at 0% interest to Nazi Germany. [ 56 ] After the war, Greece received its share of the reparations paid by Germany to the Allies as part of the proceedings of the Paris Reparation Treaty of 1946 which the Inter-Allied Reparations ...

  3. Forced labour under German rule during World War II

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_labour_under_German...

    Only after the fall of communism in Poland in 1989/1990 did the Polish government try to renegotiate the issue of reparations, but found little support in this from the German side and none from the Soviet (later, Russian) side. [35] The total number of forced labourers under Nazi rule who were still alive as of August 1999 was 2.3 million. [1]

  4. German atrocities committed against Soviet prisoners of war

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_atrocities...

    German advances through 5 December 1941, with large groups of encircled Red Army soldiers in red. Nazi Germany and its allies invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. [4] [5] The Nazi leadership believed that war with its ideological enemy was inevitable [6] due to the Nazi dogma that conquering territory to the east—called living space ()—was essential to Germany's long-term survival, [7 ...

  5. War crimes of the Wehrmacht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_crimes_of_the_Wehrmacht

    British historian Ian Kershaw wrote that the genocide and extreme brutality used by the Nazis was their way of ensuring the Lebensraum ("living space") for the people who met the strict requirements of being part of Hitler's Aryan Herrenvolk ("Aryan master race") and the elimination of the Slavic people: The Nazi revolution was broader than ...

  6. Adolf Hitler's wealth and income - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_Hitler's_wealth_and...

    The Berghof, Hitler's private retreat, was renovated at a massive cost, all of it paid for with Nazi Party donations. While hyperinflation of the Weimar Republic had crippled the German economy and plunged millions of German workers into unemployment, Hitler and his party received lavish donations from wealthy benefactors at home and abroad. [18]

  7. Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_labor_of_Germans_in...

    Richard Overy in The Dictators: Hitler's Germany and Stalin's Russia puts total number of German POWs captured by the USSR at 2,880,000 of whom 356,000 died. [54] However, in his Russia's War, Richard Overy maintains that according to Russian sources 356,000 out of 2,388,000 POWs died in Soviet captivity. [55]

  8. Soviet offensive plans controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_offensive_plans...

    Historians have debated whether Stalin was planning an invasion of German territory in the summer of 1941. The debate began in the late 1980s when Viktor Suvorov published a journal article and later the book Icebreaker in which he claimed that Stalin had seen the outbreak of war in Western Europe as an opportunity to spread communist revolutions throughout the continent, and that the Soviet ...

  9. Operation Barbarossa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Barbarossa

    Hitler also addressed the German people via the radio, presenting himself as a man of peace, who reluctantly had to attack the Soviet Union. [209] Following the invasion, Goebbels instructed that Nazi propaganda use the slogan "European crusade against Bolshevism" to describe the war; subsequently thousands of volunteers and conscripts joined ...