13. Joseph Stalin
Stalin started off as one of the key allies to America and the west in the war against Nazi Germany, but after the dust settled, attitudes began to change. At first, the west was reluctant to even send military assistance to Stalin when Germany invaded Russia. This was because it was seen as pointless, the Germans were going to win anyway, so why bother? But it soon became obvious that the Russians were going to put up a real fight, and that’s when America and other western countries decided to become Stalin’s friends. But countless Soviet soldiers had to die before Russia was seen as a respectable ally, and Stalin never forgot that. In fact, even after they had won the west’s respect, millions of Soviets continued to die, and Roosevelt and Churchill kept promising Stalin that D-Day was just around the corner. In truth, the Americans were waiting until the German forces had been maimed before they sent their own boys in to die. At the end of the war, 400,000 Americans Soldiers had died compared to 27 million Russian soldiers. It was on the foundation of these broken promises that the Cold War between Russia and America was built, a cold war that was at its height at the time of Stalin’s death.
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