History Daily - The Soviets Celebrate Victory Day
Episode Date: May 9, 2025May 9, 1945. The Soviet Union celebrates Victory Day after Germany’s unconditional surrender brings an end to World War II in Europe. This episode originally aired in 2022. Support the show! Join ...Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Is it a new cotio, Ki-kiris.
Hae asuntilanae muttomastomast
A.combeau, pauccautton,
Avae, Auxmobile and do Lainanahakness.
S-pank, Suomen Mutcottomintombe,
Panky.
It's June 21, 1941, near Poland's eastern border,
nine months into World War II.
Under the cover of night,
German soldiered Alfred Liskov
flees his military unit
and heads for Soviet territory.
A communist sympathizer,
Alfred is determined to warn the Soviets
that a German invasion of the Soviet Union,
is imminent, so he bounds towards a nearby river that separates Poland from the Ukraine.
Without hesitation, Alfred jumps into the water and swims toward the Soviet Union.
On the other side, he emerges dripping wet and exhausted, but still takes off in a run.
Soon he sees a flashlight shining in the distance.
As Alfred hurries toward the light, he finds himself mere feet away from a pair of Soviet soldiers.
Spotting Alfred's German uniform, the soldiers reach for their guns.
Immediately, Alfred raises his hands and surrendered and issues a series of protestations in German.
Cautiously, the soldiers grab Alfred by the arms and march into their truck.
Since World War II's inception, the Soviet Union has flirted with the idea of joining the Axis powers.
But unbeknownst to the Soviets, Hitler has been planning to enact a war of annihilation on the Soviet Union,
a plan the German dictator was set into motion during the summer of 1941.
Alfred Liskov's warning will come too late for the Soviets.
Throughout the Germans' invasion, the Soviet Union will suffer heavy casualties and numerous defeats.
But contrary to the Nazis' expectations, the Soviets will not collapse under the pressure.
Instead, four years after their entry into the war, the Red Army will descend on Berlin, victorious,
bringing the war in Europe to an end on what will come to be known as Victory Day, May 9, 1945.
From Noisor and airship, I'm Lindsay Grant, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is May 9, 1945.
The Soviets celebrate Victory Day.
It's 11.05 a.m. on November 12, 1940, at a.m. at a Berlin train station,
a little over a year since the start of World War II.
As a train pulls into the station, Soviet.
foreign minister of Wichaslev Molotov, grabs his belongings and mentally prepares himself for the
long day of negotiations ahead. Molotov's been sent here to discuss a potential alliance between the
Soviet Union and Germany. Last year, Britain declared war on Germany for their invasion of Poland,
and since then, two opposing military alliances have formed, the British-led allies and the German-led
access powers. At the request of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, Molotov is in Berlin today to negotiate the
terms for the Soviet Union to become the fourth axis power, joining Germany, Italy, and Japan.
As Molotov walks inside the train station, he sees its adorned with Soviet flags, and he smiles
as an orchestra inside the station begins playing the Soviet Union's national anthem. Among the
fanfare, Molotov spots Joachim von Ribenshrop, Nazi Germany's Minister of Foreign Affairs. After a
brief breakfast, the two dignitaries begin talks. Negotiations continue for two days.
And at Molotov's final meeting with Ribbentrop, the German foreign minister presents a draft of Germany's terms for the Soviets' entry into the Axis powers.
Armed with Germany's list of proposals, Molotov returns to Moscow.
But the Germans' terms don't satisfy Stalin's desire for territory in Eastern Europe.
So 11 days after the negotiations, the Soviets offer a counterproposal.
But enraged by Stalin's growing territorial ambitions, Hitler labels the Soviet dictator a cold-blooded blackmailer.
who must be brought to his knees.
Germany never responds to the Soviet's proposal.
Instead, Hitler signs a secret directive
authorizing the invasion of the Soviet Union.
Unaware of Hitler's plans,
Stalin will continue to push for the powers
to come to an agreement on their entry into the axis,
but Germany will remain unresponsive
until June 22, 1941,
when German troops descend on the Soviet Union,
launching the largest military invasion in history.
It's December 28, 1941, in the Soviet city of Leningrad, six months after the Germans first invaded the Soviet Union.
Inside her home, 11-year-old Tanya Savachiva, opens a small notebook and prepares to record the tragic reality that has become her life.
Three months ago, Axis troops formed a ring around Leningrad, cutting off all rows to the city and beginning a siege.
Conditions have grown grim. The German Air Force intentionally targeted civilian food supply.
power plants and water treatment facilities.
Deaths now near 100,000 a month, mostly from starvation.
The only food currently available to Leningrad citizens is 125 grams of bread a day,
and half of it consists of sawdust.
With city transport out of service and temperatures below zero,
even the walk to the breadline has proved an enormous task for this city's exhausted civilians,
many of whom collapse and die in the streets.
The famine has already begun to rabbit.
Tonya's family. Earlier today, Tanya's sister, Jena, died in the arms of her other sister, Nina,
succumbing to exhaustion and malnutrition, exacerbated by her long shifts at the munitions
factory and commitment to donating blood. Tanya fights back tears as she flips to a blank page in her
notebook. In large, childlike handwriting, Tanya logs her sister's death in simple terms,
writing, Jena died on December 28th at 12 noon, 1941.
One month after Genia's death, Tanya's grandmother dies of heart failure after losing a third of her body weight due to starvation.
At her grandmother's insistence, Tanya's family postpones her burial so they can keep her ration card until the end of the month.
Again, Tanya opens her diary and pencils in the tragedy.
Grandma died on the 25th of January at 3 o'clock, 1942.
The following month, Tanya's sister Nina disappears.
Failing to ever hear from her again, Tanya and her family assume she's dead.
The next month, Tanya's brother dies.
One month later, Tanya logs the death of her favorite uncle.
And the following month, she notes the death of a second uncle.
Three days later, Tanya's mother dies.
Tanya again opens her notebook to record a family member's death.
Mama, on May 13th, at 7.30 in the morning, 1942.
Salvichivas are dead.
Soon, Tanya is sent to an orphanage where she becomes one of 140 children rescued from Leningrad and brought to another village.
But the deeply malnourished Tanya never recovers her health.
Two years after her mother's death, Tanya dies from intestinal tuberculosis.
By its end, the Germans' two-and-a-half-year blockade at Leningrad will become the most lethal siege in history,
resulting in the deaths of an estimated one-and-a-half million soldiers and civilians.
The economic destruction and human loss in Leningrad will exceed the war's bloodiest battles,
surpassing even the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Tanya's diary will eventually be used during the Nuremberg trials as evidence of the Nazi's war crimes.
But six months after the siege's end, the Soviets on the eastern front turned the tide of the war for the Red Army
and the Allies at the Battle of Stalingrad.
It's the co-shoffauts.
A-Mobile and do Lainanah hake.
S-pank-s-Pankment-Mutkka.
Jenk, Anna, Hymus, loistta.
Was a ki-kary-to-is-a-old.
S-lina, take it to mehabilist.
Ha'-you-juice-lust-Mobiles.
S-pank, Suomen-Mutkett.
And naptak sili-tali aina'an aterian-jerk.
Genk, Anna, Hymusi loist.
It's the early morning of November 11th,
1942 at the barricotty gun factory in Stalingrad.
Inside, Soviet troops shuffled to their assigned positions.
Private Melia Rosenberg heads to a station in the factory's basement, machine gun in hand.
As Melia walks through the crumbling building, he takes care to avoid the pile of corpses strewn around him.
Four months ago, the German army launched a large-scale offensive on Stalingrad,
an important industrial center and transport hub for the Soviets.
Aerial bombing and a ground siege has ravaged the city,
and pin the Soviets against the bank of the Volga River.
There, they fought tooth and nail to hold their line,
making a final stand at the Birkadi Gun Factory.
But the chance of a Soviet victory seems slim.
Aircraft has struggled to drop supplies onto the Soviet's small foothold.
Most fall in the river or behind German lines.
The dwindling food supply has forced the Soviets to live off one cracker a day,
and at night they have begun collecting corpses,
searching the bodies for any leftover food and ammunition.
This morning, Melia stares at one of the piles of corpses near his station.
In the morning's eerie silence, he wonders if today will be the day he too dies.
But soon the deafening thunder of artillery fire breaks Milia out of his contemplation.
The ground trembles beneath his feet as the barrage becomes the strongest he's ever experienced.
Soon another Soviet soldier runs toward Melia's station in the basement with a chilling report.
The Germans have destroyed their neighboring divisions and now have them surrounded.
Mealia accepts this information with a solemn nod.
Cut off from reinforcements and supplies,
Melia's division fights in isolation for over a week.
Melia will later describe the intensity of the fight,
saying we were hungry and lice-ridden.
But in the frenzy, there came a point where I pitied no one,
not even myself.
We fought savagely for every brick in every wall.
Against the odds, Melia and his comrades resist all assaults on their foothold.
And after eight days,
Melia and his division launch a counteroffensive, targeting the poorly armed Romanian soldiers
on the Germans' flanks. Eventually, the Soviets break through their defenses and encircle the Germans.
By the time German reinforcements arrive in December, the Soviets' position is too strong to be overtaken.
On February 2nd, 1943, exhausted and humiliated, the Germans surrender.
In the end, the Battle of Stalingrad will become the deadliest battle of World War II.
In total, two million will die.
But the loss of life won't be in vain.
The Soviet's victory at Stalingrad will shock the Axis Powers and turn the tide of World
War II.
Soon the Germans will begin a retreat back to Berlin, and it's there that the Red Army
will wage their final offensive, an attack designed to crush Nazi Germany once and for
all.
It's April 20, 1945, in Berlin, the day of Adolf Hitler's 56th birthday.
Inside her apartment building,
29-year-old Dorothea von Schoen-Flugel
huddles in the building's cellar,
alongside her young daughter and neighbors,
as explosions rock Berlin.
For months, an Allied victory has seemed increasingly inevitable.
Still, Hitler has refused to surrender.
Instead, the German Fuhrer has begun drafting
previously exempt Germans into the war effort.
Ready to force a surrender,
Stalin unleashed over two and a half million soldiers,
7,500 aircraft and over 6,000 tanks on the German capital.
Today, after breaking through the German lines around the city,
the Soviets begin their artillery barrage.
Dorothea clutches her trembling daughter as the explosions grow incessant.
She curses Hitler for bringing the fight back to their doorstep.
For days, the battle in Berlin rages on
as the Soviet and German troops fight street by street for control of the city.
The Soviet sites are set on Hitler's chancelry in the city center,
where the German leader has stayed in his underground bunker for the last three months.
But before the Soviets reach him, Hitler commits suicide.
His death spells the end for Nazi Germany, and within two days, fighting in Berlin ceases.
Before long, vans with loudspeakers populate the streets of Berlin, ordering Germans to cease all resistance.
The Soviets' victory at the Battle of Berlin will mark the end of World War II in Europe,
but few Soviets will be able to forget the war's enormous cost.
Over the course of World War II, the Soviet Union will lose over 20 million of its citizens,
nearly a third of the war's total casualties, and 50 times the number of American losses.
This unparalleled cost will remain a point of resentment for the Soviets,
many of whom will accuse the United States of intentionally delaying their Normandy invasion
to force the Soviets to bear the brunt of the war's devastation.
Soon, lingering distrust, coupled with tense post-war negotiations,
will rupture the uneasy alliance between the Soviet Union,
Union and the United States, setting the stage for a 50-year Cold War.
after the Soviet Union entered World War II.
Thousands of Russian soldiers and cheering civilians
fill the square for Moscow's Victory Day celebration.
Atop a stage in the middle of the square
stands Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The square's crowd falls silent
as Putin approaches the stage's lectern.
Since Moscow's first Victory Day celebration
on May 9, 1945,
the event has become an annual occurrence.
But over the last few decades,
the celebration has taken on a new political significance
as an event indicative of Russia's complicated relationship with the West.
In 2005, dozens of foreign leaders attended Moscow's parade,
including U.S. President George W. Bush.
Today, amid rising tensions between Russia and Ukraine,
the president of Tajikistan is the only foreign dignitary in attendance.
But the absence of Western leaders doesn't seem to perturb Putin.
As Putin begins his annual address, he proceeds in standard fashion.
He thanks Russia's veterans,
before recalling the sacrifices of the Soviets and the Red Army's heroism during World War II.
Then Putin glances at the script before him and reads the next sentence.
At the most difficult moments in the war, during decisive battles that determined the result of the struggle against fascism,
our people were united.
But as Putin comes to the word united, the Russian president makes an impromptu edit.
On the spot, he switches out the word united for the word alone, declaring that the Soviets'
were alone in their toilsome, heroic, and sacrificial path to victory.
The official transcript of Putin's speech made publicly available earlier
will reveal the President's spontaneous departure from his prepared address.
His improvisation will highlight the deepening post-Cold War rift between Russia and the West.
The alteration will send the heads of political analysts spinning.
Headlines will decry Putin's shunning of the West,
and Russians will accuse Putin of using a day of remembrance for his own political purposes.
an agenda that will become clear, less than one year later,
when Russian troops invade Ukraine in Europe's biggest military mobilization since World War II.
Soon, reports will circulate that Putin will not just celebrate victory over the Germans in May of 2022.
Speculation will swirl that the Russian president will use Victory Day as a deadline for military achievement in Ukraine,
a testament to the extent to which the symbolic power of the date endures in Russian imagination,
And a reminder, past strained Russia's relationship with the West had become
in the eight decades since the Soviet's inaugural victory day on May 9th, 1945.
Next, on History Daily, May 12, 2002, Jimmy Carter becomes the first current or former U.S. president
to visit Cuba in almost half a century.
From Noisor and Airship, This is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Molly Bond.
Sound design by Misha Stanton.
Music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written in research by Alexander Curry Buckner.
Executive producers are Stephen Walters for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
