If Russia was allied with Italy and Japan, they would have lost to the US, England, Germany, and France. The allies would have taken Italy out of the war in six months, ganged up on Russia with a massive Operation Barbarossa reinforced with millions of US, French, and British soldiers joining the Wehrmacht, who would now have a much, much, much better supply system to go along with the millions of reinforcements. The US would keep Japan busy while they finished off Russia and smash them after Russia was finished.
Russia's performance in WW2 is nowhere near as impressive as it is made out to be. They had way too much trouble with a country a fraction of their size who had declared war on the entire planet.
Russia was too big
the Western Front was tiny compared to the Eastern Front
Russia losing: not for certain
in 1941, 90% Soviets hated koba dzhugashvili , once Moscow´d be liberated from commies , ussr´d collapse in the same day
"The
Lokot Autonomy (
Russian: ...) was a semi-autonomous region in
Nazi German-occupied Central
Russia led by
Bronislav Kaminski's administration from July 1942 to August 1943. The name is derived from the region's administrative center, the
urban-type settlement of
Lokot in
Oryol Oblast (now located in
Bryansk Oblast). The "Autonomy" covered the area of eight
raions (the present-day
Brasovsky,
Dmitriyevsky,
Dmitrovsky,
Komarichsky,
Navlinsky,
Sevsky,
Suzemsky and
Zheleznogorsky districts) now divided between Bryansk, Oryol and
Kursk Oblasts.
[2] The autonomy was to serve as a test case for a Russian collaborationist government under the
SS in
Reichskommissariat Moskowien.
[3]"
In October 1941, the Nazi German military advance into
Soviet Union from
Operation Barbarossa reached the Lokot area near the city of
Bryansk, and it was captured by the Germans on October 6, 1941.
[4] In November 1941
Bronislav Kaminski (an engineer at a local
distillery) and
Konstantin Voskoboinik (a local technical school teacher) were approached the German military administration with proposals to assist them in establishing a civil administration and local police. Voskoboinik was designated by Germans as
starosta of the "Lokot
volost". Kaminski became Voskoboinik's deputy. Other deputies appointed were Stepan Mosin and Roman Ivanin (the head of the local militia), both former prisoners.
[5]
Initially the militia headed by Voskoboinik numbered no more than 200 men. It assisted Germans in policing the area, and committed numerous atrocities against the civilian population loyal to the Soviet authorities or
Soviet partisans, Soviet
prisoners-of war (POWs),
Jews and ordinary civilians.
[6][7] By January 1942 the militia's personnel was increased to 400-500.
During a partisan attack headed by
Alexander Saburov on January 8, 1942, Voskoboinik was mortally wounded. After his death Kaminski took over the command and further expanded the militia.
[1][7]
In cooperation with German forces the militia commenced anti-partisan operations, and by spring of 1942 the militia had 1,400 armed personnel. The number of Soviet partisans in this area was estimated at 20,000 men – they controlled almost the entire rear of the Army Group Center's area of operations.
[8]
In March 1942 Kaminski's representative to the German Second Panzer Army in
Oryol gave assurances that Kaminski's unit was "ready to actively fight the guerrillas" and to carry on a propaganda campaign against "
Jewish Bolshevism" and Soviet partisans. Soon thereafter the commander of
2nd Army Generaloberst Rudolf Schmidt appointed Kaminski as the mayor of the Army Rear Area 532 centered in the township of
Lokot. On 19 July 1942, after the Commander of
Army Group Centre, Field Marshal
Günther von Kluge gave an official approval, the Lokot administration received some degree of
autonomy and nominal self-rule under the supervision of major von Veltheim and colonel Rübsam. Kaminsky was appointed the oberburgomeister of the Autonomous Administration of Lokot (comprising eight
raions) and the brigadier of the local militia.
From June 1942, Kaminski's militia took part in the major anti-partisan action, code-named Operation Vogelsang, as a part of
Generalleutnant Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa's kampfgruppe (taskforce) Gilsa II.
Germans did not interfere in the affairs of the Lokot Autonomy as long as their transports were kept safe and the republic delivered the required food quotas to the Wehrmacht. Collective farms were abolished, and a large degree of free enterprise was permitted. Kaminski established the Autonomy's own court, jails and newspapers. Kaminski's speeches published in the newspapers of the region emphasised that the aims of Nazi Germany and Russia "are the same".
The schools (closed after the German invasion) were reopened, and a radio station along with theater groups were established in Lokot,
Dmitrovsk and
Sevsk [9] Newspapers published in the Lokot Autonomy were typical of all newspapers published on Nazi-occupied Russian territories, featuring articles exposing "Jewish Bolshevism" crimes along with
Nazi propaganda which included the usual heavy dose of
anti-Semitism. The Jewish population in the Autonomy was annihilated without German assistance: 223 Jews were shot in the township of
Suzemka, and 39 at
Navlya.
[10]
In October 1942 Kaminski renamed Lokot township as the town of Voskoboinik. Streets in other townships of the Autonomy were also renamed.
In the autumn of 1942 Kaminski ordered the compulsory draft into militia of all able-bodied men. Its units were reinforced with the "volunteers" drafted from Soviet POWs at the nearest Nazi concentration camps. Kaminski ordered the gathering of Soviet tanks and armored cars abandoned in 1941 due the lack of fuel or minor mechanical failures – by November 1942 his unit has in possession at least two
BT-7 tanks and one 76 mm artillery system. Due the lack of uniforms and boots (some units were barefoot) the Germans provided Kaminski's brigade with used uniforms: these were sufficient for only four battalions.
By late 1942, the militia of the Lokot Autonomy had expanded to the size of a 14-
battalion brigade with close to 8,000 men under arms called the
Russian National Liberation Army (RONA). From November 19, 1942 to December 1942, Lokot was inspected by the order of the
Alfred Rosenberg.
In January 1943, the brigade numbered 9828 people; the armored unit of brigade has one heavy KV-II, two medium T-34, three BT-7 and two BT-5 light tanks, and three armored cars (BA-10, 2 BA-20).
In the spring of 1943 the brigade's structure was reorganized – there were five regiments created with three battalions in each, anti-aircraft battalion (three AAA guns and four heavy machine guns), armored unit. A separate "guard" battalion was created; brigade strength was estimated to be 12,000 men in total.
Lokot Autonomy - Wikipedia