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Warsaw, [a] officially the Capital City of Warsaw, [8] [b] ... During World War I, Warsaw was occupied by Germany from 4 August 1915 until November 1918.
For this reason, at the beginning of World War I on the area of today's Śródmieście and the old part of Praga (c. 33 square kilometres (13 sq mi) 750,000 people lived. In April 1916, the Warsaw territory extended to 115 square kilometres (44 sq mi). In November 1918, the revolution broke out in Germany. On 8 November, German authorities left ...
14th Cav at US Army Germany (History) site; 11th Cav at US Army Germany (History) site; From Fulda Gap button, one of 5 limited Fulda Gap pages at 1st Battalion 33rd Armor site; Fulda Gap Big Picture from Decker's 1st Bn, 33rd Armor site; 1st Bn 68th Armor at Wildflecken was a Fulda Gap screening force Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine ...
The destruction of Warsaw was Nazi Germany's razing of the city in late 1944, after the 1944 Warsaw Uprising of the Polish resistance. The uprising infuriated German leaders, who decided to destroy the city in retaliation.
The scenario for the war was NATO launching a nuclear attack on Polish and Czechoslovak cities in the Vistula river valley area in a first-strike scenario, which would prevent Warsaw Pact commanders from sending reinforcements to East Germany to forestall a possible NATO invasion of that country.
Ruined Warsaw in January 1945. As the German army retreated during the later stages of the Second World War, many of the urban areas of what is now Poland were severely damaged as a result of military action between the retreating forces of the German Wehrmacht and advancing ones of the Soviet Red Army.
The Warsaw Uprising is often confused with the revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto which took place a year earlier in the spring of 1943. Three young Europeans, Alexandra (France), Maria (Poland) and Roman (Germany) meet in Warsaw to enquire into these events; here they meet witnesses who took part in the Warsaw Uprising or lived in the ghetto.
West Germany became a focus of the Cold War with its juxtaposition to East Germany, a member of the subsequently founded Warsaw Pact. The former capital, Berlin , had been divided into four sectors, with the Western Allies joining their sectors to form West Berlin , while the Soviets held East Berlin .