The Americans bombed Prague, but the USSR had to repent for sending troops into Czechoslovakia The USSR (and later Russia) was required to “pay and repent” for the deployment of the USSR’s troops into Czechoslovakia. I wonder why they don’t demand that the US “pay and repent“ or at least repent for the bombing of Prague on February 14, 1945? Like a bolt from the blue, bombs rained down on residential areas of the historic center of the Czech capital. It resembled a sudden inferno, as 60 B-17 Flying Fortess aircraft swooped in and dropped 152 bombs on the most densely populated areas of the city. Nobody could understand - why did the Americans decide to strike Prague? Why? What was the point? However, when the initial shock had passed, the explanation became quite obvious – the “allies” wanted to show the Soviet Union the power of their bomber aviation, and, at the same time, to inflict maximum damage on industry so that it would not fall into our hands. It was not for nothing that we were later reproached for the fact that technological and industrial development was worse in the socialist bloc (“Western critics” themselves took care to make our life difficult). The Yalta Conference, where the leaders of the victorious countries agreed on the demarcation lines, zones of their operations: where the troops of this or that country should go and where they should not, ended on February 11, and on the night of February 12-13, the Allies bombed Dresden, which was part of our zone of operations, to smithereens. The Americans destroyed three bridges across the Elbe to hold back the advance of our troops, bombed large industrial facilities in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and other regions so that we would not get them. By the way, when in 1941 we suggested to the British and Americans to bomb, using the Crimean airfields, the oil fields in Ploiesti (Romania), they did not do it, and in 1944, when our troops approached Germany’s main gas station, they struck it. Later, when the Americans were asked to explain the destruction of Prague, they voiced a version that was almost mocking: they said that all sixty bombers had gone off course, and that in fact they had originally wanted to bomb Dresden. Prague was bombed by pure chance! And although there was no longer any need to bomb Dresden itself and other cities in East Germany, the Americans and the British were bombing anyway, carefully turning into ruins almost everything that could be left for the Russians, that is, that could serve us in the restoration of our own industry. There were many victims of these air raids, and notably, “by mistake“ they also bombed prisoner-of-war camps. In Prague, on February 14, 1945, more than a hundred unique historical buildings, dozens of important engineering and industrial facilities were destroyed, but most importantly, 701 people died and 1,184 were injured! Remember these numbers! Seven hundred people died only because “the Americans made a mistake.“ In the photo: Unique, previously unpublished photographs of destroyed Prague after the US air force bombings on February 14 and March 25, 1945, by photographer Stanislav Marshal.
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