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Feature: Book on WW II rapes upsets Russia 
By Peter Almond

LONDON, Jan. 26 (UPI) -- A forthcoming book about the Red Army's siege
of 
Berlin in 1945 is causing outrage among senior Russian officials. It
claims 
the extent of rape by Soviet soldiers against German women was much
greater 
than previously realized, and included large numbers of Russian and
Polish 
women who were raped even as they were being liberated from German 
concentration camps.

The book, Berlin -- The Downfall 1945, to be published by Viking in
April, is 
by the acclaimed military historian Anthony Beevor, author of the 
best-selling and award-winning book Stalingrad. As with his research for
that 
epic 1943 siege Beevor had access to detailed Red Army reports and other

documents of the period.

Responding to a full-page report on the book in Thursday's Daily
Telegraph, 
however, Grigory Karasin, ambassador to the Russian Federation in
London, 
called the allegations a disgrace and "a clear case of slander against
the 
people who saved the world from Nazism." 

"The article appeared on the eve of Holocaust Memorial Day, which
transforms 
its publication into an act of blasphemy, not only against Russia and my

people, but also against all countries and the millions of people who 
suffered from Nazism," Karasin wrote to the Telegraph.

Author Beevor replied Saturday by paying tribute to the "frequent acts
of 
great kindness to German women and children," and to the "great
suffering, 
courage and sacrifices of the Red Army in the Second World War." But 
unfortunately, he said, "there is also a much darker side to the story."

Beevor's conclusions are that in response to the vast scale of
casualties 
inflicted on them by the Germans the Soviets responded in kind, and that

included rape on a vast scale. It started as soon as the Red Army
entered 
East Prussia and Silesia in 1944, and in many towns and villages every
female 
aged from 10 to 80 was raped. 

Rape was condoned or even justified by Stalin and his commanders, and
Beevor 
cites the Soviet leader's retort to a protest from Yugoslav Community
Milovan 
Dijilas about Soviet troops raping Romanian, Croatian and Hungarian
women: 
"Can't he understand it if a soldier has crossed thousands of kilometres

through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some
trifle?" 

Rape against the enemy's women has a long history as an act of war, but
in an 
interview with Bookseller magazine earlier this month Beevor said he was

"shaken to the core" to discover that even their own Russian and Polish
women 
and girls liberated from German concentration camps were also violated. 

"That completely undermined the notion that the soldiers were using rape
as a 
form of revenge against the Germans," he is quoted as saying. "By the
time 
the Russians reached Berlin, soldiers were regarding women almost as
carnal 
booty; they felt that because they were liberating Europe they could
behave 
as they pleased. 

"That is very frightening, because one starts to realize that
civilization is 
terribly superficial and the façade can be stripped away in a very short

time."

The details of the Soviet soldiers' behavior, he said, so shocked him
that 
they had forced him to revise his view of human nature. 

"Having always in the past slightly pooh-poohed the idea that most men
are 
potential rapists (echoing the famous claim by the American feminist
Marilyn 
French that 'in their relations with women all men are rapists, and
that's 
all they are') I had to come to the conclusion that if there is a lack
of 
army discipline, most men with a weapon, dehumanized by living through
two or 
three years of war, do become potential rapists."

While the war in Europe ended in May, 1945, Beevor says that the ordeal
for 
German women in Soviet occupied areas continued. A "high proportion" of
at 
least 15 million women who lived in the Soviet zone or were expelled
from 
Germany's eastern provinces were raped. About two million women had
illegal 
abortions every year between 1945 and 1948. 

One of the legacies of the Soviet occupation of Germany has been that,
at 
least until very recently, East German women of the wartime generation 
referred to the Red Army war memorial in Berlin as "the Tomb of the
Unknown 
Rapist."

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