HistoryAtWar on MSN
Through German eyes: How soldiers judged friends and foes in World War II
World War II is often reduced to simple sides and slogans, but the men who fought it saw a far more complicated reality.
The last Nazis on Greenland were captured in October 1944, when American soldiers raided a hidden German weather station on ...
Russia has lost around 1.2 million soldiers during the Ukraine War—a number that pales in comparison to its losses during the ...
Survival World on MSN
15 submachine guns that turned soldiers into legends during WWII
Image Credit: Survival World ...
Every year in late December, my childhood home transformed into a vision of American bliss. We’d gather to ornament a tree, drape string lights around the house, and sit down to an elaborate feast.
Between 1942 and 1945, nearly 8,000 American warplanes traveled through Alaska on their way to the Soviet Union as part of a critical supply line that helped defeat Nazi Germany on the Eastern Front.
At the October meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club, an annual forum for Russian policy talks that has in recent years become a platform for Kremlin ideology, Russian President Vladimir Putin was ...
These small units of scouts would infiltrate behind enemy lines, often in pretty inhospitable areas like forests, swamps and the rugged steppes of the Soviet Union. They would report on the strength ...
This new book comes with everything you need to run your Soviet forces in games of Bolt Action, plus a guide to collecting, modelling and painting your armies across the breadth of World War II.
On July 30, one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded struck off the Kamchatka peninsula, in Russia's far east. Within minutes, tsunami warnings were issued in Russia, much of Asia and across the ...
Patrick David Sharrocks receives funding from the Natural Environment Research Council, grant number NE/S007458/1. On July 30, one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded struck off the Kamchatka ...
Could the moon landing have been an international program? Roger D. Launius President John F. Kennedy and Chairman Nikita Khrushchev during their meeting in Vienna, Austria. National Archives and ...
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