The Soviet Union During World War 2
Study of the history of the Soviet Union during the second world war is of great importance in helping us to understand the world around us as it stands today. To that end this history of the war will attempt to analyse the Soviet role in it; how it came to become involved, the decisions it made during the conflict, and what it attempted to gain from the war.
To do this, we must go back to the period before the outbreak of war.
Foreign Policy
The Soviet Union spent much of the late nineteen thirties courting the nations of Eastern Europe. Indeed, much effort and energy was expended attempting to bring nations like Romania and Bulgaria into the Soviet sphere of influence. That these attempts largely failed can be attributed to long standing political differences. It is also largely accepted now that during the inter war period many European states viewed the Soviet Union and its leader Josef Stalin with a suspicious eye.
Josef Stalin
Stalin himself reciprocated this view and was heard commenting to a close aide in nineteen thirty-eight, “These fascists, capitalists and imperialist dogs would gladly see our workers paradise in ruins.” So it is perhaps not hard to understand what lay behind the events of the following year.
What of German expansionism? The Soviet Union appeared disinterested on the issue of the German-Austrian union, Auchless, and of German territorial gains in Czechoslovakia. This position was determined more by practicality than anything else. Stalin himself spent much of his time overseeing the rapid expansion of the Red Army, and in any case, the Soviet Union was in no position to intervene in these matters, even if it had the desire to.
Study of the history of the Soviet Union during the second world war is of great importance in helping us to understand the world around us as it stands today. To that end this history of the war will attempt to analyse the Soviet role in it; how it came to become involved, the decisions it made during the conflict, and what it attempted to gain from the war.
To do this, we must go back to the period before the outbreak of war.
Foreign Policy
The Soviet Union spent much of the late nineteen thirties courting the nations of Eastern Europe. Indeed, much effort and energy was expended attempting to bring nations like Romania and Bulgaria into the Soviet sphere of influence. That these attempts largely failed can be attributed to long standing political differences. It is also largely accepted now that during the inter war period many European states viewed the Soviet Union and its leader Josef Stalin with a suspicious eye.

Josef Stalin
Stalin himself reciprocated this view and was heard commenting to a close aide in nineteen thirty-eight, “These fascists, capitalists and imperialist dogs would gladly see our workers paradise in ruins.” So it is perhaps not hard to understand what lay behind the events of the following year.
What of German expansionism? The Soviet Union appeared disinterested on the issue of the German-Austrian union, Auchless, and of German territorial gains in Czechoslovakia. This position was determined more by practicality than anything else. Stalin himself spent much of his time overseeing the rapid expansion of the Red Army, and in any case, the Soviet Union was in no position to intervene in these matters, even if it had the desire to.