Flames in the Sky: Epic stories of WWII air war heroism from the author of The Big Show (Pierre Clostermann's Air War Collection Book 2) by Pierre Clostermann
Author:Pierre Clostermann [Clostermann, Pierre]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Silvertail Books
Published: 2021-01-27T22:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER SIX
FLAMES OVER WARSAW
âLord God Almighty, the children of a warlike nation raise to Thee their disarmed hands. They call to Thee from the depths of the mines of Siberia and of the snows of Kamchatka. From Muscovite and Prussian servitude, Oh Lord, deliver us.â
From a poem of 1831 by Adam Mickiewicz.
At 8.15 a.m. on the 29th July 1944, Radio-Moscow broadcast in Polish the following call to the Resistance in Warsaw:
âFor Warsaw, which has never given in and has continued to fight, the hour of action has come.
âThe Germans will doubtless try and make a stand in the city, piling up more ruins and massacring thousands more victims. Your houses and gardens, your bridges and stations, your factory and office buildings will be turned into defensive positions by the enemy. They will expose the city to destruction and its inhabitants to certain death. They will pillage, and reduce to dust what they cannot take away.
âThat is why it is more than ever necessary to remember that the Hitlerite flood destroys everything. Only an active effort, and fighting in the streets, the houses, the factories and the shops of Warsaw will bring nearer the hour of liberation and save both the town's heritage and the fives of your fellow citizens.
âPoles, the hour of liberation is at hand!
âPoles, to arms!
âDo not lose an instant, Praga and the industrial suburbs of Warsaw are already within range of Russian guns!â
At 5 p.m. on 1st August, a bomb went off in the Gestapo Headquarters, which unleashed the insurrection. 50,000 soldiers of the Polish underground army, helped by the entire population, seized three-quarters of the city after five hoursâ bitter fighting which cost them more than 7000 killed.
The trap was set, and, in full view of the whole civilised world, was about to close mercilessly on the Polish martyrs.
As soon as the insurrection was really under way the Soviet troops withdrew six miles under orders from Moscow, thus breaking off contact with the Germans, though they were in full retreat. Rokossovsky was to remain a neutral but interested spectator, while the S.S. wiped out all those embarrassing patriots.
The Polish Prime Minister, Mikolajczyk, at once took a plane to Moscow, to try to move Stalin. Stalin replied that he would help Warsaw only on condition that Poland accepted the Lublin puppet government and also the Curzon Line.
Mikolajczyk sent a heart-rending appeal to Roosevelt, who intervened on 24th August. Stalin did not even reply to the Anglo-American request for the use of airfields to enable the R.A.F. and the U.S.A.F. to bring supplies to Warsaw by air. In the meantime the Soviet radio was claiming that âreactionary elements in Warsaw had risen without orders, to sabotage the operations of the victorious Red Army.â
The Russian refusal over the airfields was particularly surprising as, three months earlier, on seven separate occasions, American forces of 500 to 700 bombers and fighters from England had landed on Russian territory after raids on East Prussia. These planes had then left for North Africa, after being refueled by the Russians, bombing on their way targets in Austria and Czechoslovakia.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Africa | Americas |
Arctic & Antarctica | Asia |
Australia & Oceania | Europe |
Middle East | Russia |
United States | World |
Ancient Civilizations | Military |
Historical Study & Educational Resources |
Machine Learning at Scale with H2O by Gregory Keys | David Whiting(3644)
Never by Ken Follett(3535)
Fairy Tale by Stephen King(2953)
The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman(2811)
Oathbringer (The Stormlight Archive, Book 3) by Brandon Sanderson(2644)
Will by Will Smith(2581)
Rationality by Steven Pinker(2151)
The Dark Hours by Michael Connelly(2081)
The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity by David Graeber & David Wengrow(2018)
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing by Matthew Perry(2005)
Can't Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds - Clean Edition by David Goggins(2004)
Principles for Dealing With the Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed and Fail by Ray Dalio(1900)
HBR's 10 Must Reads 2022 by Harvard Business Review(1698)
A Short History of War by Jeremy Black(1672)
Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone by Diana Gabaldon(1601)
515945210 by Unknown(1522)
443319537 by Unknown(1396)
Kingdom of Ash by Maas Sarah J(1393)
A Game of Thrones (The Illustrated Edition) by George R. R. Martin(1373)
