<DIV>I too am not a military historian, however I share Medvedev's assessment. During the hardest part of the war (before the US entered the war), the Red Army had no choice but be self-sufficient.
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid; WIDTH: 100%"><BR>>do you think that the Russians<BR>>>would have been able to defeat Hitler without American<BR>>>supplies and material?<BR>><BR>>---<BR>>I have no idea. I'm not a military historian.<BR>>Roy Medvedev is of the opinion that the US part in the war was <BR>>inconsequential.<BR>><BR><BR>This is Medvedev's opinion. I've posted a longer version of this before, but <BR>anyway... BTW Ekho Moskvy is a liberal radio station appealing to the <BR>intelligentsia.<BR>:<BR>TITLE: RADIO INTERVIEW WITH ROI MEDVEDEV, HISTORIAN AND WRITER, ON<BR>JOSEPH STALIN<BR>[EKHO MOSKVY RADIO, 14:00, MARCH 5, 2003]<BR>SOURCE: FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE (http://www.fednews.ru/)<BR><BR><BR>Anchor: Hello and welcome to Ekho Moskvy. It's 14:08 Moscow<BR>time. I am Alexander Klimov. And our guest is historian and<BR>publicist Roi Medvedev. Good day, Roi Alexandrovich.<BR><BR>Medvedev: Good
day.<BR><BR>Anchor: We are going to talk about -- guess what? It's the<BR>50th anniversary since the death of Stalin. And I would begin by<BR>asking you to comment on this topic. But first let me give you the<BR>number of our studio pager to which you can page your questions:<BR>961-2222. I will read out the most interesting ones and we will all<BR>try to answer them together.<BR>---<BR>Anchor: And there is another myth. Stalin as the greatest<BR>military commander, the Generalissimo. And Vladimir asks whether<BR>Stalin lives up to that title?<BR>Medvedev: He does because he commanded a colossal military<BR>machine. Over four years 15 million people took part in the war. It<BR>was a war unlike any other in the history of mankind.<BR>Of course, there were appalling casualties. The Soviet Army<BR>lost 10,000 soldiers in combat every day. Nine million soldiers and<BR>officers died in the battlefield. 10,000 a day. And I am not<BR>speaking about prisoners of war, I am not speaking about
the<BR>wounded. No other wars had ever inflicted such casualties. But the<BR>country had won that war.<BR>Anchor: By the way, did it win because of the help of allies<BR>or would we have won single-handed?<BR>Medvedev: We would have won anyway. At the end of the day we<BR>would have won by ourselves. That was obvious by the end of 1943.<BR>But the Allies did help in some ways and diminished our casualties<BR>and shortened the war. But otherwise we would have managed<BR>ourselves.<BR><BR>_________________________________________________________________<BR>The new MSN 8: advanced junk mail protection and 2 months FREE* <BR>http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail<BR><BR>___________________________________<BR>http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk</BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>