International Military Tribunal for the Far East
On 3 May 1946, the International Military Tribunal for the Far East began its work in Tokyo, the capital of Japan. It was the last joint “political project” of the USSR and the West, before the Cold War began. Experts of the “Nuremberg: Casus Pacis” project explain the difference between the Tokyo Trial and the Nuremberg Trials, and how it happened that in Japan it was not top officials, but their subordinates who were convicted for the crimes.
Document: 300 Thousand Words for Soviet Radio Listeners
Mikhail Gus was a Soviet international radio journalist, publicist and art critic, who witnessed many of the events of the Second World War. He also worked at the Nuremberg Trials. Residents of the USSR listened to his reports from Nuremberg through special radio devices – so-called black "plates", which were in every apartment and at work places in those years. On 3 May 1946, he sent a telegram to the All-Union radio (the State Committee on Radio Broadcasting) with a report on five months of the work at the trials. And in 1971 he published a book of essays "Madness of the Swastika", in which he described many vivid episodes which he witnessed during the trial.
British Military Tribunal Delivers 11 Death Sentence
Britain Halts Jewish Immigration to Palestine
Soviet-Japanese-Korean March on International Workers’ Day
Sevastopol Becomes The Main Naval Base In The Black Sea
IBM Delivers 1.5m Punch Cards to Third Reich to Keep Track of Jews
The author of the film "The Great Unknown War", Andrey Medvedev, says that the cooperation the Nazis received from large capitalists is still little known
Major War Criminals Indicted in Tokyo
The Stone Flower, Soviet Union's First Colour Film, Comes Out
Plan is Not to Take Moscow, but To Surround it and Starve it to Death
“Nuremberg. Casus Pacis”, the Eurasian People’s Assembly cooperated with the president of the Digital History Foundation, the historian and researcher Egor Yakovlev, to create the documentary cycle “Genocide. Reich’s plan”. The Third Reich documents are being published in Russian for the first time and prove irrefutably that the Nazis’ crimes cannot be excused simply as excesses which occasionally occur in wartime or the private acts of a handful of unspeakably cruel people. The blockade of Leningrad, along with the mass executions in occupied territories and the extermination of prisoners of war, as well as the medical experiments in castration and sterilisation in concentration camps, were all a well-planned and concerted attempt to destroy Soviet ethnicity. Today we publish the first package of documents which shed light on Germany's true intentions towards the civilian population of the European part of the USSR: to kill up to 30 million people through artificially created starvation and unbearable living conditions.
Location For the World's 1st NPP in Obninsk Determined
On 27 April 1946, the government of the USSR approved a location for constructing laboratory “B”. Eight years later, the first nuclear power plant in the world started operating on the basis of the laboratory.
Soviet Troops Transfer Harbin to Chinese Administration
During the Japanese occupation of Harbin, this former Russian city was subordinated to a puppet state - Manchukuo. The Red Army advanced into Harbin in August 1945.
‘American Führer’ Fritz Kuhn is Released
On 25 April 1946, Fritz Julius Kuhn, a German-born former US citizen, was released from a prison for displaced persons. He was a notorious anti-Semite, adventurer, and fraud.
USSR Tests Its First Jet Fighters
Mussolini's Corpse Stolen From Tomb
John F. Kennedy Begins His Political Career
John Maynard Keynes, Father of Post-War Financial System, Passes Away
On 21 April 1946, John Maynard Keynes, the prominent British economist who influenced all of world economics, passed away. A key economic concept for the 20th century is named after him – Keynesian economics. Keynes is also considered to be the founder of macroeconomics as a separate academic discipline.
International Refugee Organisation Established
On 20 April 1946, the United Nations established the International Refugee Organisation (IRO) to assist the huge number of refugees flooding into Europe after World War II.
Main Cathedral of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius Reopens for Worship
On 19 April 1946, the first religious service since its reopening was held in the Main Cathedral of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius - the largest male monastery of the Russian Orthodox Church. The monastery dates back to the 14th century and, in its time, has served as a centre for religious, political, and cultural life, as well as having been pressed into service as a publishing house.