Tuesday, January 7, 2014

The well-known left-wing activist was also Eleanor Roosevelt - Roosevelt

American aid to Stalin under the Lend-Lease
22 June 1941, Hitler's armies invaded the Soviet Union, which in the first months of the war suffered enormous losses, both in men and in military equipment. Soviet leader Stalin wrote about this to the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a letter lunch trucks for sale of September 3: "... this mortal danger that hangs over the Soviet Union can be prevented by immediate delivery to Russia at least 400 aircraft and 500 tanks per month." [I]
Assistance enabled the American Lend-Lease Act signed by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, March 11, 1941 year. Under this Act in 1941-1945, the U.S. granted the United Kingdom, China, the USSR, France and other countries - aid amounting to 50.1 billion dollars that time. What is the equivalent of $ 759 billion in the prices of 2008.
First deliveries of war materials were shipped from the U.S. to the USSR very early, in the summer of 1941, and so a few months earlier than the USSR was included in the delivery lunch trucks for sale under the Lend-Lease. One example is the oil tanker "Saint Clair", which arrived in Vladivostok, September 2, 1941 year. [Ii]
Already on Oct. 1, 1941, the United lunch trucks for sale States, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union signed the first protocol Moscow, [iii] who began a regular lunch trucks for sale supply of war materials to the Soviet Union. Aid to the USSR under the Lend-Lease was the American side managed by Edward Stettinius, Harry Hopkins and General John York's. The whole three of them were fans of Bolshevism and strong supporters of "unconditional support" for the Soviet state. Moreover, lunch trucks for sale until 1943, very few Americans were opposed aid to the USSR.
Harry Hopkins was the closest and most influential adviser lunch trucks for sale to FDR and the unmistakable Soviet spy. [Iv] In turn, Stettinius "glorified" by the fact that his appointment as Secretary of State in 1943 - told to give Stalin the Soviet codebooks gained by the Finnish lunch trucks for sale army in Finland. This resulted in a significant delay in deciphering the Soviet telegrams sent by the grid Soviet agents in the United lunch trucks for sale States to Moscow and prevented the discovery of the high penetration of the Roosevelt administration by Soviet spies - such as, among others, Hopkins.
Soviet spy Alger Hiss was also - another associate of Roosevelt. Hiss 1933 was a lawyer lunch trucks for sale in the organizations implementing the New Deal [v] (the New Deal, literally "new hand") Roosevelt. Since 1936, Hiss was an employee of the Department of State. lunch trucks for sale Despite the fact that already in 1939 it was known to belong to a secret cell Hiss Communist Party, is not released from work.
The well-known left-wing activist was also Eleanor Roosevelt - Roosevelt's wife, who ran his own press conferences exclusively for women. It presidential marriage is survived forty years, despite the tragedy and betrayals. Late, but very passionate love Eleanor to the young Communist Russian origin reportedly even changed the course of history ... [vi]
In the "Short Encyclopedia of the United States" [vii] you can find the information that the U.S. provided the Bolsheviks: 15.000 [viii] aircraft, 700,000 trucks, 51,000 jeeps, 7,000 tanks, 35,000 motorcycles, lunch trucks for sale 27 warships, 2,000 radar. And also substantial quantities of raw materials , light weapons, clothing and food.
One of the Soviet aces and later Air Marshal - Alexander lunch trucks for sale Pokryszkin, received the American fighter P-39 Airacobra 48 "victories". [X] Most American aircraft, as many as 8,000 were delivered to the USSR by air from Alaska - Siberia ... In Krasnoyarsk wing fighters dismantled and shipped them by rail, the bombers flew directly to their units.
Come to light in the 1990s. Soviet archives revealed that the huge territories of Siberia was missing 113 Soviet pilots - and the planes were piloted by them, still are found in Siberia.
American aid to the USSR in the years 1941-1945 totaled 11.3 billion dollars, which in dollars in 2008 would be approximately 168 billion. In total, the U.S. sent 18 million tons of material, of which 49 percent was provided through the port of Vladivostok. For example, in the years 1942-1945, the Soviets produced only 92 locomotives and 2,635 wagons, and the aid received 1,966 locomotives and 11,075 wagons - and thus aid amounted lunch trucks for sale to 81.6 and 80.7 percent.
In 1945, almost two thirds lunch trucks for sale of trucks in the Soviet Army was manufactured in the USA. Military Trucks Dodge 3/4 ton and 2-ton Studebaker were among the best in their classes lunch trucks for sale for a Soviet Eastern Front.
Supplies of arms and war materials from the Western Allies were so for the Bolshevik state the importance of Stalin's life. Their absence could yet include mean the inability to conduct military operations by steel

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