>>216394306
>retarded post again
There was no allying. There was an agreement that the USSR would enter the territory of the former Russian Empire (parts of Poland) to protect the Russian population in the chaos that had arisen (Germany's invasion due to Poland's refusal to return German land with German inhabitants who were being persecuted), primarily from Polish nationalists. The Soviet army entered Poland without a fight and was welcomed as liberators. Hitler had declared a hunt for communists in his country back in the 1930s, so diplomatic relations between the USSR and Germany had already been damaged before that. Germany needed the USSR not to interfere in the war against Poland, and the USSR needed to protect its own population that had ended up outside its borders as a result of the civil war in Russia.
What does the American "school curriculum" say about the supply of food, raw materials, and military equipment to Germany during the war?
What does the American "school curriculum" say about Japan's surrender? That you dropped two atomic bombs on it? Not because the USSR destroyed the Kwantung Army in China?
What does it say about the silent inaction of the Allies (France, England, etc.) in response to Hitler's invasions and annexations?