Now, I believe that only among the men who fought in Ukraine in 1943, may be those guilty of war crimes against civilians (I believe there is evidence of incidents concerning sack of four villages and partaking in rounding up a Jewish ghetto in one town). However, you will observe that the overall number of them is just about 800, of whom 500 were volunteers. Vast majority of volunteers (it is estimated about half of this 38,000 may have been willing to join rather than forced to join; I think this estimation is reasonable), joined while front had being pushed back to Estonia. Consequently they can't be guilty of crimes against Belorussian or Ukrainian civilians. And I can't hold fighting USSR together with Germans against them, as they responded to call from their legal government. Mind you, we did not really resist the first time in 1940, but we did the second time in 1944 - because by then we knew what we could expect.
Those who committed crimes against civilians are even out of discussion.
All SS volunteers are criminals according to Nuremberg trial.
Well, I get that you at least agree that for there to be recognizable state of war, official declaration of war is not necessary. Also it is said that the convention applies even when there is no resistance (previously bolded by me). And you do not have to conquer a country to occupy it, you can also occupy country that has surrendered. It is clear, that our government tried to to everything to AVOID war. They adopted the policy of "finlandization" before the Finns did, and it did not work out for them, since this was (correctly?) perceived as weakness, and each time they gave in, they met harsher demands. First, in the treaty of mutual assistance http://www.forost.ungarisches-institut.de/pdf/19390928-3.pdf it was agreed that we will remain sovereign country, then this promise was broken. As we were in no position to resist by then, we surrendered completely - and after that we were occupied. As for asking for help - from who? Germany? Had signed MRP, which we knew of. Britain? They were not able to help Poland nor prevent the fall of Paris. Their hands were full as it was, not to mention Germany held both Denmark and Norway, so any help to Estonia would have been technically impossible at this point. Finland? Latvia?
And what happened after surrender? Take a look at this picture:
http://www.okupatsioon.ee/nimekirjad/raamat/kgbdok/valitsus.html
This is Estonian government formed in 1938. Only one of these men survived past 1944 - the foreign minister who was in Geneva. Of others, 6 died in prison camps, 5 were executed, 1 fell in battle against Soviet paratroopers. Families of 3 were deported. Similar fate befell 8 former heads of state and 38 ministers. Or take Gen. Johan Laidoner, commander-in-chief or army.
I said it myself, state of war must exist de-jure or de-facto.
Everything else in your message directed to condemn Soviet actions, which, as I already admitted several times, were not justified. Nothing more to discuss.
Now you get down to the real reason. Russian government is reluctant to take responsibility, as it fears demands of compensation. Simple. True. I may add that I would not support any such demands - besides doomed to be futile, the bartering that would follow would beat most divorce procedures. I'd like an apology though. And some token of good will, like return of scientific collections of Tartu University, andPresident's Chain of Office, for example.
What is the reason for us to admit the term which you can't prove and trying to throw to our faces at every convenient moment?
For apology, it is discussable. Though we have own pretensions to you, so this must not be one-sided.
That is core of the debate, whether "claim" is an "action". Anyway most signatory states continued to recognize Estonia and did not recognize SSR's, so their interpretation was different from yours and Soviet one.
Agree.
Every account I've read of these demonstrations mentions, that they were accompanied by Red Army armored vehicles. I also gave numbers how many members of Communist Party there was in Estonia. Multiply these numbers with reasonable constant and you'll get how many could have supported annexation (although even many local communists were hoping for status kind of like Mongolia). What, do you want to say Zhdanov was morally above such actions?![]()
The only thing I want to say, is that it's strange "occupation", when you get such support demonstrations instead of protests. Tanks didn't prevent Danish army from resisting and Czech civilian people from expressing their opinion.
I agree with this comparison. Than again, I do not think this should be some kind of criminal offense. People should have right to question things.
If you think that my opinion is extremist, you are mistaken. It is shared by most of Russians, including historians, and pretty close to official position. You don't think most of Russians are equivalent of holocaust deniars, do you?
That's what I'm trying to do here, to get opinion of Russians over to whomever want to understand it.