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  1. 13 de may. de 2024 · Red Army, Soviet army created by the Communist government after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. Political advisers called commissars were attached to all army units to watch over the reliability of officers and to carry out political propaganda among the troops.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 7 de dic. de 2023 · During the summer of 1943, Hitler undertakes a decisive battle to win the war in the East. However, the determination of the Red Army and the Allied offensive in the West take him by surprise...

    • 38 s
    • 3K
    • National Geographic UK
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Red_ArmyRed Army - Wikipedia

    Officially, the Red Army lost 6,329,600 killed in action (KIA), 555,400 deaths by disease and 4,559,000 missing in action (MIA) (mostly captured). The majority of the losses, excluding POWs, were ethnic Russians (5,756,000), followed by ethnic Ukrainians (1,377,400). [3]

  4. Königsberg, assailed from several sides by the Red Army, fell on April 9. More than 90,000 German soldiers and officers were taken prisoner.

    • Boris Egorov
  5. Late in the war Stalin and the Soviet leadership arguably drove the Red Army on for reasons beyond the immediate defeat of the enemy – looking to postwar territorial acquisition and influence for which many Red Army troops were sacrificed.

  6. Learn about the terror unleashed by the Red Army Faction (RAF) in West Germany and their final dissolution. In the 1970s the Red Army Faction conducted a terrorist campaign against corporate, political, and military targets in West Germany and elsewhere.

  7. 6 de may. de 2024 · In the Battle of Stalingrad (1942–43), the advancing Germans were finally stopped by the Red Army in desperate house-to-house fighting. From The Second World War: Allied Victory (1963), a documentary by Encyclopædia Britannica Educational Corporation.