Chapter 203: Capital battlefield


Biquge EbookFREE.me, update my latest chapter of the third empire as soon as possible!
Germany's siege of the Polish capital Warsaw has arrived the next day, during this time, the Warsaw Poles suffered unprecedented hardship. The Polish government decided to stay at Warsaw at all costs, and they repelled the Germans' previous trial attacks. However, the German team immediately launched a revenge, and they began to treat the civilians of Warsaw as soldiers. This practice has dramatically increased the mortality rate of civilians.
At the end of the street, a soldier was talking to his wife and a one-year-old child, because the soldier's line of defense was just a few kilometers north of the place of the conversation. The originally beautiful brick-paved street has now been dug, and the road is lined with deep trenches dug up to deal with the Germans.
Almost all soldiers are looking forward to meeting their relatives and their families, and are concerned about the safety of these people. Because the casualties of citizens have been greater than those of soldiers so far, the question of whether a husband can return home alive from the battlefield does not seem to be very different from the question of whether other members of the family can survive the gunfire and bombing .
A few minutes ago, a German bomber was destroyed. It crashed with smoke on a street in Warsaw city and smashed the street into a huge pit. A group of temporary inspection teams composed of citizens and military members of the reserve team inspected the scene of the accident and found that all four German pilots on the plane had been killed.
The surrounding Poles cheered together with the wreckage of the aircraft, because they saw the corpses of the German pilots with flesh. If someone died, they would cheer the people around. This is the impact of war on humans.
The whole of Poland seems to be mobilized. Two Polish soldiers and several temporarily recruited citizens dug pits on the street, then removed the tramway on the side, and buried it in the pit. It became an anti-tank barricade, which was protected on all major streets in Poland.
In the middle of a wider street, the Poles left a destroyed and overturned bus sideways, and the sides were filled with stones, which became a natural line of defense. Relying on this rudimentary defense line, the Poles repelled a German offensive attack, but in the afternoon the German artillery revenge was more intense.
Dead horses are a very common phenomenon in besieged cities, at least in 1937. These dead horses provided food for the hungry Poles, allowing people to spend their most difficult days. Even though the dead horses' bodies have begun to rot and deteriorate, people will still cut off large pieces of meat and eat them to feed their hunger.
A 9-year-old boy named Payevsky hit the civilians in the war that made them homeless. Now he sat sadly next to a twisted bed frame, behind which was the ruin of the bombed house. His brother was under the ruins, but this was just the beginning of his suffering. In the afternoon, his father died on the ground, and his mother left him because he had eaten the dead horse rotten meat.
A hospital in Warsaw ’s south of the city was hit by one of the five bombs dropped by the Germans on the afternoon of the same day. This bomb left a huge diameter of more than ten meters on the side of the house. The crater is at least two meters deep. The hospital was completely scrapped due to the bombing, a dozen patients and a doctor died and more people were injured.
Another bomb was dropped near a Catholic church not far away, which directly made the wooden structure of the church a piece of ruin. The wooden boards turned upside down to witness the great power of the explosion. But because the people here evacuated in time, the people in the church fled to a safe place before the air strike.
An American journalist witnessed the scene of Warsaw being besieged by German soldiers. The refugees sat in a horse-drawn carriage, which was full of their property, looking for a safe refuge for them everywhere on the road. Approximately 10,000 Polish civilians died in the siege of Warsaw, and most of these people died at home without attention.
The American reporter claimed in the report sent back to the country: "No one knows where to hide. Often a person runs to a place that he thinks is safe, but finds that it was abandoned by the previous person because it was unsafe. Places. There are people with burdens and babies everywhere. They are seriously frightened and desperately looking for a place that can provide refuge. "
The American reporter later died in an air raid. A slap-sized shrapnel pierced his lungs and stopped breathing before he was taken to the hospital. Fortunately, he was a baby in this hospital: a shell hit the baby's delivery room, but it did not explode miraculously. Only broken glass and wood chips injured the arms of several babies, which almost made me crazy. The mothers wept bitterly.
Because many hungry Poles dig potatoes in the suburban area, it was a large farm developed before the war, so many people ventured to find food, but the danger is that the German troops have been there.
Because there were frequent people going to this open area, the Luftwaffe fighters who could not find the target began to fly at low altitude near this open area. They swept the crowd on the ground and wiped out the targets they thought should be eliminated.
Soon these fighters achieved their results, and a fw-190d fighter took the opportunity to hit a dozen Polish civilians in one breath. After the plane departed, a little boy carried his baggage and sat silently next to his mother's body, desperate without falling a tear. And just a few steps away from this little boy, a little girl was squatting next to her sister's body and crying loudly.
Her sister was another victim of this attack. The 13mm caliber machine gun directly penetrated the shoulder blade and took half of the shoulder away from the body. The little girl who was alive squatted down and touched the blood-stained elder sister with her hand. When she just touched the face of the deceased, she scared her hand back again. Immediately following her, she began to cry, and hysterically shouted: "My sister! What have they done to you? God!"
War makes people indifferent, it refers to dealing with the enemy. Every time when a loved one leaves, we will find that the heart that was thought to be extremely hard is actually too soft to withstand a blow.
While these people were leaving the world, German Head of State Akado Rudolf was in a trench on the west side of Warsaw, listening to his generals explaining the specific steps to attack Warsaw. In order to better cooperate with the publicity, Akado today wore a red armband on his arm with a 10,000-character sign-just a national flag tied to his arm.
"My head of state." Liszt pointed at the map and said: "We attacked here with 203mm caliber cannons and 150mm caliber cannons, here, and here ... expelling the Polish defenders to the south of the city . "
"Then our sniper squad can enter the northern part of the city, where they cannibalized the Polish defenders who counterattacked, and soon they will pay huge casualties." Another general went on to say: "The tanks and armored vehicles will then help the infantry to consolidate these Occupy the area and repeat these tactics until the Poles are driven out of Warsaw. "
The Air Force Liaison Officer behind Akado also pointed to the map and added: "My head. The Air Force will dispatch 40 Stukka dive bombers to participate in the attack. We will bomb all areas where there is a threat."
Akado listened to these offensive plans, and had no idea of ​​this tragic scene. He put his face on the scissor periscope on the side of the trench, and carefully watched the burning surrounding buildings of Warsaw not far away. For a while, I didn't ask my question again.
Even Akado had to admit that the war was more brutal than he thought. The illusions of those young days, those who wished to command thousands of troops to win, now look indeed too naive: the war brought not only glory and achievement, but also sent death and destruction.
"I heard that the civil affairs department has a Polish resettlement plan, most of the Poles will be sent to specific resettlement areas for specific jobs, right?" After a while, Akado suddenly asked.
"That's it, the head of state." An official in a suit stood behind Akkado and replied: "Because of the Disposal of Captives Act under the Wartime, and the" Supplementary Regulations on Local Enterprise Personnel, "these Polish people want He was moved to Germany in batches to engage in production and labor, and he could only switch to the employment system after three years. "
"Then continue bombardment." Akado straightened up in front of the scissor periscope and looked at General Liszt: "Anyway, this area will be rebuilt in the future, since I have already paid a weapon fee, I don't plan to Take another demolition fee. "
With the instructions of Akado, 70 150-mm howitzers fired 450 rounds within half an hour. The Polish defenders were forced to abandon a whole block to gradually stabilize their positions. Thousands of civilians were on this occasion He died in the shelling.
For Akado, as the afternoon approached that evening, good news reached his interim headquarters. The SS ’s third armored division arrived at Pornic, which was the dividing line between Poland and the Soviet Union that was finally agreed. Many troops have reached their ultimate goal of advancing east.
But the next day they were ordered by the head of state, and they continued to advance east for another 10 kilometers before stopping the attack. At this moment, in the west of Poland, except Warsaw is still resisting, all areas have fallen into the hands of the Germans. Akado ordered in the interim headquarters that more than half of the troops were transferred to the Polish Polish forces to fight the troops and maintain local security.
Latest chapter of Ebook My Third Empire Click here