BStrong
Penultimate Amazing
Considering the documented willingness of the political commissars to summarily execute Russian soldiers and civilians during and immediately after WWII, I don't see much of a case for any benevolence on the part of the Soviet central government.
During the battle for Stalingrad, the Soviets own records documented a sentence of death in absentia for a woman that refused orders to stop fighting and retreat, and a case where the sentence of death that was carried out on a Soviet soldier in an anti-aircraft artillery unit that in a letter home described how difficult it was to shoot down attacking German aircraft.
In those years, life was cheap in the Soviet.
During the battle for Stalingrad, the Soviets own records documented a sentence of death in absentia for a woman that refused orders to stop fighting and retreat, and a case where the sentence of death that was carried out on a Soviet soldier in an anti-aircraft artillery unit that in a letter home described how difficult it was to shoot down attacking German aircraft.
In those years, life was cheap in the Soviet.