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Operacion Urano...el 6º Ejercito condenado en Stalingrado
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<blockquote data-quote="federicobarbarroja" data-source="post: 265003"><p>Si entre esos criminales esta "bubi" Hartmann el as aleman con mas victorias, que fue liberado luego de 10 años de torturas fisicas y mentales, un "criminal" que volaba un me-109, lindos pibes los rusitos.De wiki:After his capture the U.S. Army handed Hartmann, his pilots, and groundcrew over to the Soviet Union, where he was imprisoned in accordance with the Yalta Agreements which stated that airmen and soldiers fighting the Russians had to surrender directly to them. Hartmann was falsely charged with war crimes (specifically, deliberate shooting of Russian civilians) and was subjected to harsh treatment during the early years of his imprisonment, including solitary confinement in total darkness. Hartmann, despite this, refused to confess to these charges, which were later dropped. More subtle efforts by the Soviet authorities to convert Hartmann to Communism also failed. He was also offered a post in the East German (DDR) Air Force which he refused. During his long imprisonment Hartmann's three-year-old son, whom he had never seen, died. After spending ten and a half years in Soviet POW camps he was among the last batch of POWs to be released in 1955 and returned to West Germany, where he was reunited with his wife Ursula, to whom he had written every day of the war.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="federicobarbarroja, post: 265003"] Si entre esos criminales esta "bubi" Hartmann el as aleman con mas victorias, que fue liberado luego de 10 años de torturas fisicas y mentales, un "criminal" que volaba un me-109, lindos pibes los rusitos.De wiki:After his capture the U.S. Army handed Hartmann, his pilots, and groundcrew over to the Soviet Union, where he was imprisoned in accordance with the Yalta Agreements which stated that airmen and soldiers fighting the Russians had to surrender directly to them. Hartmann was falsely charged with war crimes (specifically, deliberate shooting of Russian civilians) and was subjected to harsh treatment during the early years of his imprisonment, including solitary confinement in total darkness. Hartmann, despite this, refused to confess to these charges, which were later dropped. More subtle efforts by the Soviet authorities to convert Hartmann to Communism also failed. He was also offered a post in the East German (DDR) Air Force which he refused. During his long imprisonment Hartmann's three-year-old son, whom he had never seen, died. After spending ten and a half years in Soviet POW camps he was among the last batch of POWs to be released in 1955 and returned to West Germany, where he was reunited with his wife Ursula, to whom he had written every day of the war. [/QUOTE]
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Operacion Urano...el 6º Ejercito condenado en Stalingrado
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