A Russian journalist investigates the 1940 massacre of 15,000 Polish officers in Soviet captivity.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Relatively Objective Russian View of the Katyn Massacre and 50-year Coverup,
By
This review is from: The Murderers of Katyn (Hardcover)
Iwo Pogonowski has an introduction to this book, in which he briefly describes the events which led to the Katyn Massacre. In the end of the book, Pogonowski also provides a valuable chronology of events leading up to the massacre and the ensuing decades-old coverup.
Abarinov evaluates reports that some of the Polish POWs had been deliberately drowned in the White Sea (pp. 93-96). Other reports indicate that all the Poles had died by shooting. The reader learns that, as the invading Germans were approaching the Smolensk region in 1941, the NKVD tried to burn the local archives. Failing that, Soviet planes several times dropped incendiary bombs on the relevant building after the Germans had taken Smolensk (p. 187); again to no avail. Later, Soviet propaganda attempted to blame the Germans for the Katyn massacre, in part by pointing to the fact that the ammunition used in the shootings had been German-made. However, the German company, Gustaw Genschow, had been selling ammunition to the Soviet Union on a large scale before WWII (pp. 352-353). One survivor of the Kozelsk (Kozielsk) camp, Professor Stanislaw Swianiewicz, survived an assassination attempt (p. 286). Another Katyn witness, the American John Van Vliet, had his testimony stolen from the American archives, apparently according to the machinations of Alger Hiss (pp. 287-288). Abarinov briefly discusses the exhumation of the Polish corpses at Mednoye in 1991. Unlike in other areas, the corpses and other artifacts had been exceptionally well-preserved (p. 329). There are late-1939 descriptions of Polish deportees near Stavropol, and the gross destitution under which they lived (p. 143). Later, the Poles released and allowed to join General Anders' army lived under horrible conditions. They had to live in tents during the winter of 1941-1942 and, not surprisingly, many of them froze to death (p. 147). Additionally, several former-Soviet witnesses recall that they saw Poles in the USSR after the war. Some of these (p. 132) were undoubtedly Poles who were not released despite the provisions of the Sikorsky-Maisky Pact, while others (p. 148) were victims of the postwar Soviet takeover of Poland. This book is indeed at times hard to follow, even for someone who knows something about the events described herein. However, the greatest value of this book, in my opinion, is not the information it provides, but the fact of some "ordinary" Russians acknowledging the massacre and the Soviet responsibility for it.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
For specialized reader on a specialized topic,
By NOYDB "NOYDB" (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Murderers of Katyn (Hardcover)
Unfortunately, I read this book a fairly long time ago, so my memory is relatively hazy on the details. Nonetheless, I'll second the previous reviewers compliments, as well as affirm that the book is difficult to follow, especially for someone with only a basic background on the issue and its context. Due to the nature of the event, it also needs to be read somewhat critically, though this is of course not the fault of the author. All in all, however, it covers an interesting topic whose sheer scale of grotesqueness puts current affairs and charges in perspective.
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