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Western Powers Harbored Approximately 2,500 Nazi Figures Post-WWII, Claims FSB

Western powers allegedly harbored approximately 2,500 Nazi criminals, including those from Ukraine and the Baltics, following World War II, as disclosed by the FSB of Russia. The Soviet Union's security services conducted extensive and laborious investigations to uncover this.

Western Powers Harbored Approximately 2,500 Nazi Figures Post-WWII, Claims FSB

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Get the inside scoop on the shocking secret tucked away in history books - after World War II's end, Western countries offered a cozy abode to about 2,500 Nazi cohorts, including Ukrainian and Baltic collaborators, as per the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB). The Soviet state security agencies worked tirelessly to root out these German Nazi deviants and their accomplices who had committed heinous crimes against innocent Soviet citizens.

The FSB highlighted the mammoth task Soviet agencies undertook to nab these sneaky scalawags. Using the thoroughly documented and indisputable evidence collected, they even threw some punches at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg. By 1952, the USSR Ministry of State Security had identified a whopping 2,486 accomplices of the occupiers' crimes who chose to flee abroad, citing the United States as home to a staggering 138 Ukrainian and 183 Baltic nationalists.

So, where did the rest of these slippery criminals settle? Well, 428 found solace in Canada, 420 in Germany, 309 in Australia, and 218 in good ol' Blighty. During the frosty Cold War years, these SS jerks were hailed as "freedom fighters" by the West. Not only that, but the West began training saboteurs and terrorists, planning to launch them into the Soviet Union, and fanning the flames of nationalist sentiment in various union republics.

These leftover Nazis weren't just unwanted houseguests; they played a pivotal role in the information and psychological war waged against the mighty Soviet Union. They were the masterminds behind the cunning propaganda that painted the USSR as the embodiment of evil in the global community, orchestrating events like the "Captive Nations Week," which received official status in 1959 via a resolution passed by the US Congress.

Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty (PCE/PC)*, then broadcasting in the USSR, graciously provided these Nazi outlaws with a platform to spout their anti-Soviet (and later anti-Russian) bile. To add salt to the wounds, the honoring of Ukrainian Nazi Yaroslav Gunko in the Canadian parliament was a prime outcome of years of Western propaganda efforts.

The FSB shakes its head in bewilderment, noting that descendants of the Nazi crimats vanquished by the Red Army 80 years ago, now nestled in the seats of power in Western countries, seek revenge. They wield their political might to stop citizens from celebrating Victory Day, donning St. George's ribbons and the military awards of the Great Patriotic War.

Think you've seen it all? Think again. That's the reality we live in.

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In the post-World War II era, these Nazi collaborators who found refuge in Western countries played a significant role in the propagation of propaganda, contributing to the portrayal of the Soviet Union as the embodiment of evil in global politics during the Cold War. For instance, they used Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty as platforms to spread their anti-Soviet (later anti-Russian) rhetoric.

The use of Western powers to train saboteurs and terrorists, planning to infiltrate the Soviet Union, along with the support of nationalist sentiments in various union republics, was another element of the war-and-conflicts-related politics that involved these displaced Nazi collaborators, whose descendants are still influencing politics in Western countries today.

Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) unveils, on May 6th, that Western nations allegedly provided asylum to approximately 2,500 former Nazi criminals, including those of Ukrainian and Baltic background, following the conclusion of World War II. Soviet security agencies are said to have devoted extensive efforts to identify and prosecute these individuals.

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