Word: bolshevists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Will the Bolshevist armies occupy at least a part of Germany before the Western Allies get to Berlin? Will they not want to set up a Communist regime in Germany? Possibly Stalin might occupy East Prussia as a token of victory and a pledge in hand that Germany would fulfill the armistice conditions to be imposed upon her. But, all things considered, it does not seem likely that Stalin will want to Bolshevize Germany or take an exclusive or even leading part in ruling her in the post-war period...
Although the war-winning ways of the Soviet Army have stemmed the flow in the press of terrorizing descriptions of the Bolshevist menace, there remains still an undercurrent of red baiting in several states which is reminiscent of the shameful violations of civil liberties that followed the last Armistice. the Oklahoma criminal syndicalism case is a test case, in a sense, for it may determine the whole temper and atmosphere of civil liberties for the duration of the crisis, and for the period of local reaction against Communism which may follow this...
Stalin did not get his continental second front in 1942, but when a new front was opened in North Africa he publicly approved. On the 25th anniversary of the Bolshevist Revolution, Stalin, in his big state speech of the year, reviewed the past and for the future struck the note of statesmanship...
...liberal world is going down, a victim to its own errors. . . . Mussolini united ... a social urge and a national idea. Later Germany found a new solution ... in National Socialism. . . . The historic destiny of our era will be settled either according to the barbarous formula of Bolshevist totalitarianism, or according to the spiritual, patriotic formula Spain offers us, or according to any other formula of the Fascist nations...
...host the uninvited guest brought the Great Cross of the German Order of the Eagle,* one of the Third Reich's most dazzling decorations. Mannerheim, reciprocating, buttered up the Nazis by calling them brothers in arms, hoped this year might "see the end of Bolshevist barbarism." Afterward he held what Berlin called "lengthy conversations" with Hitler and other Nazi surprise guests: Chief of Staff General Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel and newly promoted Colonel General Eduard ("Bull") Dietl...