Brian Gregory

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In 1941, it was not difficult to persuade the population that the new war in Russia had to be fought to a finish so that the next generation would not have to go through it again. From the veterans of the eastern front from 1914–17 to young soldiers just out of school and teenagers still at home, families identified the war, not with the Nazi regime, but with their own intergenerational familial responsibilities.
The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939-1945
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