Stalin: The Dictator Who Reshaped the 20th Century — Fexingo History

Stalin's 1939 Pact with Hitler: The Secret Protocol That Carved Up Eastern Europe

8 min · 2. juli 2026
episode Stalin's 1939 Pact with Hitler: The Secret Protocol That Carved Up Eastern Europe cover

Description

In August 1939, the world was stunned as Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact. But the public treaty concealed a secret protocol that divided Eastern Europe into spheres of influence. This episode examines the negotiations between Vyacheslav Molotov and Joachim von Ribbentrop, the role of Lavrentiy Beria and the NKVD in securing Soviet interests, and the immediate consequences: the Soviet invasion of eastern Poland, the occupation of the Baltic states, and the Winter War against Finland. We also explore the long-term fallout, including the Katyn massacre and the postwar betrayal of the OUN in Ukraine. Drawing on declassified documents and witness accounts, Lucas and Luna unpack how this pact enabled Stalin to buy time for rearmament while carving up a continent. #MolotovRibbentropPact #SecretProtocol #EasternEurope #Stalin #Hitler #VyacheslavMolotov #JoachimvonRibbentrop #LavrentiyBeria #NKVD #Katyn #OUN #WinterWar #BalticStates #WWII #SovietHistory #1939 #EasternPoland #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Stalin: The Dictator Who Reshaped the 20th Century — Fexingo History community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

164 episodes

episode Stalin's 1930s Railway: The Iron Road That Built an Empire artwork

Stalin's 1930s Railway: The Iron Road That Built an Empire

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore Stalin's railway expansion in the 1930s — a mammoth infrastructure project that moved millions of tons of coal, steel, and grain across the Soviet Union while also transporting prisoners to the Gulag. They focus on the Turkestan–Siberia Railway (Turksib), a 1,500-kilometer line completed in 1930 that connected Central Asia's cotton fields to Siberian grain. The conversation delves into the use of forced labor from the Gulag, the role of American engineers like John S. Rizor, and the railway's strategic importance for supplying troops during World War II. Lucas explains how the railway became a symbol of Soviet modernity in propaganda films like Viktor Turin's 'Turksib' (1929), while also serving as a tool of repression, deporting entire nationalities. The episode also touches on lesser-known figures like the railway's chief engineer, Ivan Rerberg, and the deadly construction conditions that claimed thousands of lives. Tightly focused on a single, powerful thread of Stalinist policy, this episode reveals how railways literally and figuratively connected the Soviet experiment — for better and worse. #Stalin #Turksib #SovietRailway #Gulag #ForcedLabor #Industrialization #CentralAsia #Siberia #JohnRizor #IvanRerberg #ViktorTurin #FiveYearPlan #History #FexingoHistory #Propaganda #Infrastructure #1930s #USSR Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday7 min
episode Stalin's 1939 Winter War: The Bloody Soviet Invasion of Finland artwork

Stalin's 1939 Winter War: The Bloody Soviet Invasion of Finland

In this episode of Stalin: The Dictator Who Reshaped the 20th Century, Lucas and Luna delve into the Winter War of 1939–40 — the brutal Soviet invasion of Finland that exposed the Red Army's weaknesses after the purges. They explore the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact's secret protocol that gave Finland to the USSR, the strategic importance of the Karelian Isthmus, and the Mannerheim Line's defenses. The conversation covers Finnish commander Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, Soviet general Kirill Meretskov, and the catastrophic Soviet losses at Summa and Suomussalmi. Lucas explains how Stalin's purges of officers like Tukhachevsky led to incompetence, while Finnish ski troops used guerrilla tactics to decimate Soviet columns. The episode also touches on the diplomatic aftermath: Finland's cession of territory, its shift toward Germany to regain lost lands in 1941, and the enduring legacy of 'sisu' in Finnish identity. A must-hear for anyone interested in Stalin's foreign policy blunders and the human cost of the purges. #WinterWar #Stalin #Finland #MannerheimLine #MolotovRibbentropPact #RedArmy #GreatPurge #SovietUnion #FinlandHistory #WWII #KarelianIsthmus #Suomussalmi #Sisu #KirillMeretskov #CarlGustafEmilMannerheim #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Stalin's 1931 Bull Session: The Ban on Free Thought artwork

Stalin's 1931 Bull Session: The Ban on Free Thought

In 1931, Stalin convened a secret meeting of Marxist historians at the Institute of Red Professors in Moscow. The so-called 'Bull Session' was a turning point in Soviet historiography, where Stalin personally dictated how Russian history should be written. He condemned the 'school of Pokrovsky'—the dominant Marxist interpretation—for its nihilistic view of tsarist expansion. Stalin insisted that the annexation of non-Russian peoples had been 'progressive' because it brought them into a larger socialist future. This episode unpacks that meeting: the figures involved (Mikhail Pokrovsky, Emelyan Yaroslavsky, Anna Pankratova), the ideological U-turn, and the lasting impact on how history was taught for decades. We also explore how this fit into Stalin's broader consolidation of power, sidelining Old Bolshevik intellectuals and imposing a single narrative that served the state. #Stalin #Historiography #SovietHistory #1931 #BullSession #MikhailPokrovsky #AnnaPankratova #InstituteOfRedProfessors #Marxism #RussianHistory #Censorship #Ideology #Stalinism #USSR #HistoryEducation #EasternEurope #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15. juli 20265 min
episode Stalin's 1935 Metro: Underground Palaces for the Proletariat artwork

Stalin's 1935 Metro: Underground Palaces for the Proletariat

In 1935, Moscow opened its first metro line—a marvel of marble, chandeliers, and socialist realism that doubled as a propaganda tool and a forced labor project. This episode follows the construction of the Moscow Metro under the watch of Lazar Kaganovich, the engineers and architects who designed stations like Mayakovskaya and Komsomolskaya, and the thousands of prisoners and volunteers who dug tunnels. We explore how Stalin used the Metro to project modernity, discipline, and unity, while the NKVD managed security and the Gulag supplied workers. The episode also touches on the rivalries between architects, the use of metro construction as political rehabilitation, and the lasting legacy of the 'palaces for the people.' #Stalin #MoscowMetro #LazarKaganovich #SocialistRealism #MayakovskayaStation #KomsomolskayaStation #Gulag #NKVD #1935 #FiveYearPlan #Propaganda #ForcedLabor #SovietArchitecture #Moscow #SubwayHistory #FexingoHistory #History #EasternEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15. juli 20266 min
episode Stalin's Secret Speech: The 1956 Denunciation That Changed the USSR artwork

Stalin's Secret Speech: The 1956 Denunciation That Changed the USSR

In February 1956, at the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Nikita Khrushchev delivered a four-hour secret speech that would shake the communist world to its core. For the first time, a Soviet leader publicly denounced Joseph Stalin's cult of personality, his purges, his wartime mistakes, and his brutal repression. But the speech was never meant for public ears — it was delivered to a closed session of party delegates, with no foreigners or journalists allowed. Within weeks, however, copies leaked to the West, the CIA circulated it globally, and it sparked uprisings in Poland and Hungary. This episode explores the making of the secret speech, Khrushchev's motives, the revelations about Stalin's crimes — including the execution of military commanders, the deportation of entire nationalities, and the destruction of the Old Bolsheviks — and the speech's explosive aftermath. We examine how Khrushchev balanced truth with party loyalty, why he omitted Stalin's role in the Great Terror's worst excesses, and how the speech led to the Soviet Union's first major cracks. #Stalin #Khrushchev #SecretSpeech #20thPartyCongress #DeStalinization #CultOfPersonality #GreatTerror #HungarianRevolution #PolishOctober #CIA #ColdWar #SovietHistory #NKVD #OldBolsheviks #1956 #Moscow #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 20265 min