3/09/2021

The dead bodies of German soldiers captured and killed by Soviet troops at the Battle of Moscow were seen in the snow.

On the Eastern Front of World War II, from October 2, 1941 to January 7, 1942, Nazi German and Soviet troops attacked and defended the outskirts of Moscow. German soldiers were captured and killed before Moscow. The black outline of the bodies of fallen German soldiers could be seen in the snowfall. On the battlefield, German soldiers charged and were killed, and fell into the snow. Felt boots were looted and lost from the bodies of many German soldiers who were killed and left for dead. The German soldiers who died in the war were loved by their German mothers and their sons, and their mothers were loved by their sons. However, the sons who became German soldiers were frozen in silence and died in the extreme cold.

 From December 1941 to January 1942, the winter in Moscow was the coldest of the 20th century, reaching about -45°C (-22°F). The fierce Moscow snowfall blew away the bodies of German soldiers. The bodies were blown away as if they had never been there before. The corpses of the German soldiers would only come out again with the sun in the spring. Then there will be a flood of blood in the creek and on the earth. The wheels smashed into the outstretched limbs of the dead German soldiers. From the impact, the dark, rigid corpses lifted a little and came back as hard as a board. People shuddered in the face of this demonic act of terror.

 The Nazi Germans, after several Soviet encirclement and invasion leading to collapse, the Soviets stopped the Germans on the Mozhaysk defensive front, only about 120 km from the capital Moscow. The Wehrmacht, which broke through the Soviet defenses on the Eastern Front, was slowed by weather conditions, and autumn rains turned roads and fields into thick mud, severely hampering German soldiers and vehicles, supplies, etc. The severe cold of 1941-1942 and the freezing of the ground brought the offensive to a halt. The Moscow offensive resulted in approximately 581,000 German and 1,029,234 Soviet casualties.



Fifteen Vietnamese civilians were killed and four injured by the explosion of a mine on a country road 8 km west of Tuy Hòa, March 18, 1966.A mother became a victim of a landmine explosion and her daughter cried out beside the corpse.

About 15 Vietnamese civilians were killed and four others wounded in a landmine explosion on a rural road about 8 km west of Tuy Hoa in Sout...