Eastern Front (Late War)

Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020 Eastern Front (Late War), painted by Mark Tasaka 2020


The Eastern Front (1941-1945), known as the Great Patriotic War in the Soviet Union, was the largest and deadliest theatre in the Second World War, accounting for over 30 million military and civilian deaths. The bulk of the German war machine was dedicated to fighting on the Eastern Front, resulting in some 5.1 million German military deaths; this accounted for roughly 80 percent of all German military deaths during the war. The Eastern Front started with the Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, on June 22, 1941, and ended with the unconditional surrender of Germany on May 9, 1945 (Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945; however, this information did not reach Moscow until May 9).


















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