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Topic: Suicide (Suvorov)


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In the News (Tue 22 Dec 09)

  
  Suicide
Suvorov replies: because he was a stupid self-involved dictator, who picked an entourage of sycophants, and because his generals and strategists (who realized the hopelessness of the whole endeavor) made a series of serious errors and after that blamed everyone else for them.
Suvorov then claims that the Nuremberg trials were orchestrated by Stalin in order to silence anyone who might dream of revealing the Soviet plans for attack (this is somewhat weak).
Suvorov claims the reason for this is simple---the party leaders starting with Khrushchev wanted to hide the truth that the Soviet Union was preparing the takeover of Europe.
www.gotterdammerung.org /books/reviews/s/suicide.html   (1121 words)

  
 Viktor Suvorov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suvorov claims his pseudonym was his army nickname, which was actually intended to mean "smart-ass" (Aleksandr Suvorov was a famed Russian military commander of the 18th century).
Suvorov's most significant claim was that Stalin wished to extend Socialism in one country to all of Europe, set to begin in July 1941 (most probably on July 6).
Suvorov cites Soviet attitudes towards Romania as an example of this; although the Ceauşescu regime maintained an aggressively independent stance towards the Soviet Union for many years, no invasion took place such as were launched against Hungary in 1956 or Czechoslovakia in 1968; because, Suvorov claims, no Soviet citizen envied the Romanians.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Victor_Suvorov   (1072 words)

  
 Stalin's Plan to Conquer Europe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
As Suvorov explains, this plan was entirely consistent with Marxist-Leninist doctrine, as well as with Lenin's policies in the earlier years of the Soviet regime.
Another reason for Germany's lack of preparedness, Suvorov contends, was that her military leaders seriously under-estimated the performance of Soviet forces in the Winter War against Finland, 1939-40.
Suvorov admits to being fascinated with Stalin, calling him "an animal, a wild, bloody monster, but a genius of all times and peoples." He commanded the greatest military power in the Second World War, the force that more than any other defeated Germany.
library.flawlesslogic.com /suvorov.htm   (3695 words)

  
 Chechen Convicted in Okhotny Ryad Plot
In her verdict, Komarova said Murtuzaliyeva was trained as a suicide bomber at a terrorist camp and arrived in Moscow in September 2003 to organize a series of terrorist attacks in the city.
On the video recordings, Murtuzaliyeva glorified jihad and suicide bombings in conversations with her roommates in the apartment, according to investigators from the city prosecutor's office.
Suvorov argued that there was no proof that Murtuzaliyeva had ever handled the explosives, saying her hands had not been examined for traces of the explosives and the foil in which the explosives were wrapped had not been tested for her fingerprints.
www.themoscowtimes.com /stories/2005/01/18/003.html   (1071 words)

  
 Victor Suvorov biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Victor Suvorov (Ви́ктор Суво́ров; real name Vladimir Rezun : Влади́мир Богда́нович Резу́н) (born April 20, 1947) was a Soviet spy of Ukrainian nationality who had been working for GRU, then defected to Britain in 1978, where worked as an intelligence analyst and lecturer.
Suvorov's most significant claim was that Stalin had been preparing a great invasion of the whole of Nazi-occupied Europe, set to begin in July 1941 (most probably on July 6).
This group claims that, while Suvorov is correct in discerning true plans of Stalin and exposing the huge hardware potential of the Soviet military machine, they insist that Suvorov unreasonably dismissed the traditional arguments about problems claimed to plague the Red Army—supposedly poor leadership and low morale.
victor-suvorov.biography.ms   (497 words)

  
 Calendar Details   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
In the past four years female suicide bombers from Chechnya--many of whom had husbands killed during the decade-long fighting with Russian soldiers--have been implicated in a series of deadly suicide attacks across Russia that have left more than 300 people dead.
"Suicide terrorism is not in our culture," says Jabrail Gakayev, a historian at the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology at the Russian Academy of Sciences and a much-quoted member of the Chechen diaspora in Moscow.
He points to the woman who came to the brink of committing a suicide attack, but then turned herself in to the Russian authorities and helped their investigations only to be subsequently sentenced to 20 years in prison.
www.e-etree.org /ETREE/caldetails.asp?HeadlineID=2238   (1174 words)

  
 TR 3/2004: D. Michaels: Marshal Zhukov: A Career Built on Corpses
Not only, Suvorov contends, was Zhukov the only general in world history to be honored for losing more than five million of his men in combat, but he was also an unscrupulous commander who squandered the men serving under him through gross incompetence and callousness.
In that position, Suvorov asserts, Zhukov should have warned Stalin that the advances made by Soviet forces in Finland, the Baltics, and Romania in the past two years had left Hitler no choice but to attack before Germany was totally cut off from her raw material suppliers.
As Suvorov recounts, it was not because the USSR was unprepared for war: they were armed to the teeth and almost ready to attack in an offensive war of their own design.
www.vho.org /tr/2004/3/Michaels334-340.html   (5492 words)

  
 Suvorov's The Last Republic (review)
In "The Last Republic," Suvorov adds to the evidence presented in his two earlier books to strengthen his argument that Stalin was preparing for an aggressive war, in particular emphasizing the ideological motivation for the Soviet leader's actions.
Suvorov sarcastically urges establishment military historians to study a book on Soviet tanks by Igor P. Shmelev, published in 1993 by, of all things, the Hobby Book Publishing Company in Moscow.
In support of his main thesis, Suvorov cites additional data that were not mentioned in his two earlier works on this subject.
yamaguchy.netfirms.com /cikkek/stalin.html   (3566 words)

  
 Discount Icebreaker: Who Started the Second World War? for sale   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Suvorov has answers for them, for all them in his 5(!) sequels to Icebreaker.
Equipment: Suvorov deceitful use of the A20 flying tank in his illustrations is a clever use of a photo that distorts reality to suit his arguments.
I think Suvorov's book(s) on the history of WW2 should be called the "Book of the 20th Century" and he himself should be awarded a Nobel Price.
www.historical-books.net /pub/0241126223.html   (1247 words)

  
 Speaking of terrorism is terrorism :. Analysis, comments :. THE CHECHEN TIMES   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
On the video recordings, Murtuzaliyeva glorified jihad and suicide bombings in conversations with her roommates in the apartment, according to investigators from the city prosecutor’s office.
Murtuzaliyeva and her lawyers said the explosives were planted in her purse when she left it in a room in the police station to wash her hands after being fingerprinted.
Suvorov argued that there was no proof that Murtuzaliyeva had ever handled the explosives, saying her hands had not been examined for traces of the explosives and the foil in which the explosives were wrapped had not been tested for her fingerprints.
www.chechentimes.org /en/comments?id=25292   (707 words)

  
 Orphans find a new family with Russian military   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Concerned with the vast number of war orphans, the Soviet government issued a special provision on Aug. 21, 1943, ordering that military schools should be set up to host and train orphans.
There are six cadet corps: a missile and artillery school; a space and a naval school in St. Petersburg; a mountain school in Ingushetia; a radio electronics school in Kemerovo; a military technology school in Samara and a military musical school in Moscow.
From this year, all Suvorov and Nakhimov schools and cadet corps have been linked into one unified military education system run by the Defense Ministry.
www.russiajournal.com /fan/russia_281_1031_news.htm   (1268 words)

  
 Aquarium.SCW
SUVOROV (V.O.) (to himself) My dear idiot Colonel, I would hang people who do not enjoy themselves in action, who are not intoxicated by the smell of blood.
SUVOROV (V.O.) I was going to make use of this answer when it occurred to me to wonder how my predecessor could have got hold of a pencil and how he could have used it under the gaze of the examiner.
SUVOROV He was a well-known sniper in the 138th rifle division of the 62nd Army.
www.stickymedia.com /Aquarium.asp   (8665 words)

  
 Viktor Suvorov - Dangeruss-Industries.com
Viktor Suvorov ({{langruВи́ктор Суво́ров}}; real name Vladimir Rezun : {{langruВлади́мир Богда́нович Резу́н}}) (born April 20, 1947) was a Soviet intelligence officer of Ukrainian and Russian descent who had been working for the Soviet military intelligence (GRU), but defected to United Kingdom in 1978, where he worked as an intelligence analyst and lecturer.
Published in 1982, this was the sequel to the 1978 original The Third World War (ISBN 0425044777), in which Hackett and his team had speculated about the possible course of a then future Soviet/NATO war in Germany.
He also wrote a number of books about Stalin's times; some of them are fictional, but several of them are deliberately historical, although written in a polemic, popular-science style, driving professional historians mad.
www.dangeruss-industries.com /results/Viktor_Suvorov.html   (633 words)

  
 jottings from tertius
Suicidal Tendencies in the West:Tolerance unreciprocated by Bruce Thornton
That is, the world-view of those for whom appetite and pleasure are the highest goods, flabby tolerance is the camouflage of moral exhaustion, and respect for the culture of the "other" is merely an expression of disbelief in the value of one's own.
Certainly the Islamist sees it that way, which is why he feels confident in predicting the ultimate triumph of his religion: he is willing to die and kill for his beliefs, whereas significant numbers of Westerners don't really believe that there is anything worth dying and killing for.
tertius.blogspot.com /2005/05/suicide-is-not-painless.html   (681 words)

  
 Topic: On Suvorov and Stalin (10 of 22)
Suvorov even argues with one of them in his books - the Jew Gabriel Gorodetsky.
Strategically it was a suicide, with the Anglo-Saxons in his back.
A Russian attack on Romanian oil fields would be the end for Germany and the Red Army was concentrating on the Western border for the strike.
www.nationalism.org /forum/05/67111.htm   (1833 words)

  
 Viktor Suvorov - Stormfront White Nationalist Community   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
If in "Icebreaker" he wrote about Hitler who prevented Stalin, in "Suicide" the main reason of war was because Hitler`s idiocy: he started it because he was just stupid, as well as everyone who was near him.
Suvorov just tries to have money from the westerners by showing them the evil of the USSR, and from Russians by showing them, how they were clever and Germans were stupid?
Suvorov is nice book-seller, surrounded by legend of his secret service, although he never was more then take-and-bring-it-here boy in it.
www.stormfront.org /forum/showthread.php?t=52408&goto=nextnewest   (220 words)

  
 Revising the twentieth century's 'perfect storm' (review)
Suvorov goes on to observe that when the twelve-volume revised edition of this official history was written under Leonid Brezhnev, it was revised to show that it was actually Brezhnev who had won the Great Patriotic War.
Suvorov introduces a Russian adage to demean Hitler's attempt to outwit Stalin: "Never try to trick a trickster." The only reason for Hitler's initial success, for Suvorov, was that Barbarossa was an entirely irrational decision, which the thoroughly logical Stalin could not possibly have anticipated.
Suvorov exaggerates Stalin's "genius." While it is true that he created a police state and built up the Red Army to superpower status, his armed forces failed miserably at the time they were most needed, June 1941.
www.ihr.org /jhr/v20/v20n6p59_Michaels.html   (5719 words)

  
 Close to the Great Church of the Ascension, the small Church of Fyodor Studit is hidden away on the left   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
It is one of the oldest churches in Moscow, and was built in 1626 on the edict of Patriarch Filaret, father of Tsar Mikhail Fyodorovich.
This church was the parish church of General Suvorov, and he lived close by at No. 42 Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street from 1775-1800.
There is a memorial plaque on the wall of the house with the modest yet telling inscription 'Here lived Suvorov'.
www.moskva.ru /guide/streets/big_nikitskaya6e.html   (518 words)

  
 Военная литература : Исследования : Suvorov V. Inside soviet military intelligence   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
I was condemned to death by the Military College of the Supreme Court according to article 64a.
If they at some future time should be judged and given their just deserts, and if, then, my country then considered me to be a traitor also for deserting it, then I am ready to take my punishment, but only after they have taken theirs.
When I was in the GRU I could see two ways to protest: either I could commit suicide; or I could escape to the West, explain my disagreement with the communists and then commit suicide.
militera.lib.ru /research/suvorov8/23.html   (596 words)

  
 Remarks on Suvorov and WWII Historiography
Suvorov proves that while the Red Army was definitely the strongest one by 1939, it is in August that Stalin decided to unleash the war and to start preparation for the total offensive battle over Europe.
But these were not primary evidence as presented by Suvorov; he bases his story on the development and logic of military units and their movements.
Zhukov was forced therefore to submit a defensive plan of deployment a couple of days later; this one is signed by him and Timoshenko and served as the standing order for the defense of the Soviet borders until the attack (reinforced on the 2nd of June and then on the 12th).
www.h-net.msu.edu /~russia/threads/thrdsuvorov.html   (4351 words)

  
 The Belmont Club: The Unstoppable IED
Yet in an ironic twist of history, it was not the 'weaker' nations which successfully turned the submarine and the bombing airplane into decisive weapons but their intended victims.
Suvorov agreed with every one of these facts but pointed out that they did not support the author's central thesis.
Suvorov purchased the book in Paris; it was written in the 1930s.
fallbackbelmont.blogspot.com /2005/08/unstoppable-ied.html   (12018 words)

  
 palestinian terrorism information
Palestinian terrorists have also exploited children in the aid of terror, mainly as human shields and bomb-transporters but also as suicide bombers.
On March 24, after alledgedly capturing a bomb in the bag of 11-year-old Abedullah Quran, probably put without his knowledge (The boy maintins it was planted there by the Israeli's themselves), Hussam Abdo, a Palestinian child aged 16 was captured in a checkpoint near Nablus wearing an explosive belt.
Later, having been invited by the Israeli military, the worlds media watched as an EOD team arrived and by using a police-sapper robot, disarmed the explosive belt from the child.
www.global-terror.com /palestine/palestinian-terrorism.htm   (3043 words)

  
 Terrorism - Open Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Many of these deaths resulted from suicide bombings in Chechnya, Iraq, India and Israel.
In order to reduce the spread of infection, decontamination during a release of chemical or biological agents is an important element of emergency planning.
The Birth of Suicide Bombings as a Popular Weapon
open-encyclopedia.com /Terrorism   (1960 words)

  
 Is a German Military Victory Possible?
Oh, and I know now, that talking to a person, who doesn't know what he is talking about, and doesn't know simple history facts, that are accepted by most of people, and a discussion about a book, which was read by only one person is pointless.
How close this nightmare came to becoming reality is revealed in Russian military historian Viktor Suvorov's definitive account of the buildup to Operation Groza ("Thunderstorm"), the Red Army's massive assault on Germany and the rest of Europe scheduled to begin on July 6, 1941.
Suvorov shows clearly how Stalin came within fourteen days of taking this key step along the path to Bolshevizing the world.
www.suite101.com /discussion.cfm/1206/12498/218268   (7233 words)

  
 The Republican Charitable Fund "Revival"   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Nikolai Suvorov was narcotic dependent for 5 years.
Tried to be treated several times, and when understood that medicine would not help him, tried to commit suicide.
Pasha spoke, that it is impossible to live as we live and tried to finish life by commit suicide.
www.revival.komi.com /english.htm   (2082 words)

  
 CHECHEN FEMALE TERRORIST'S PRISON TERM REDUCED
Zoya Usmanova, one of the defendant's lawyers, said she intended to file a supervisory complaint with the Supreme Court's board.
Vladimir Suvorov, also the defendant's lawyer, said, for his part, that he would appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.
Investigators say she had been trained in a camp as a suicide bomber and came to Moscow to prepare a series of terrorist acts.
www.globalsecurity.org /military/library/news/2005/03/mil-050317-rianovosti01.htm   (303 words)

  
 Topic: On the NWO anti-Russian propaganda (14 of 22)
But there exist on this planet one paperback writer, Victor Suvorov, the one and only person who knows THE TRUTH.
Viktor Suvorov is one of the many such people.
He was not only a monster, but a suicidal person as well…
www.nationalism.org /forum/05/67259.htm   (2372 words)

  
 Operation Barbarossa and the Russian Historians' Dispute (review)
Strauss examines three significant speeches by Stalin (which have also been dealt with by Suvorov, as well as in the pages of this Journal):[note 12] 1.
In every case he was told that even if Suvorov is correct, and Hitler's attack indeed preceded Stalin's by weeks, this must not be acknowledged publicly because it would exonerate Hitler.
Suvorov's first three books on World War II have been reviewed in The Journal of Historical Review.
www.vho.org /GB/Journals/JHR/19/v19n6p40_Michaels.html   (4483 words)

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