The murderous, imperialist North Atlantic Treaty Organisation cannot hide its historical links with the Nazis. On 11 July 2017, the official account of NATO on Twitter published an English movie trailer called "Forest brothers. Fight for the Baltics". The tweet of NATO's account was writing: "This is the story of the Forest Brothers who fought the Soviet army for their homelands after WWII."
Of course, it is known that NATO has championed in anti-communist and anti-soviet propaganda. However, this time, the murderous alliance went a step further: It openly promotes and glorifies SS legionaries and Nazis who fought in the ranks of the so-called "Forest brothers". NATO deliberately hides the truth.
The “forest brothers” were armed national forces which were operating in the 1940’s-1950’s on the territory of the Baltic Republics of the USSR — Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — these forces were substantially consisted of former soldiers of the Nazi SS. After all, all these supposed “liberation armies of the Baltics” actively fought against the USSR's Red Army, starting from 1944, precisely when the Baltic countries were liberated from fascist occupation.
The “forest brothers” were armed national forces which were operating in the 1940’s-1950’s on the territory of the Baltic Republics of the USSR — Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — these forces were substantially consisted of former soldiers of the Nazi SS. After all, all these supposed “liberation armies of the Baltics” actively fought against the USSR's Red Army, starting from 1944, precisely when the Baltic countries were liberated from fascist occupation.
This is the story of the Forest Brothers who fought the Soviet army for their homelands after WWII pic.twitter.com/4JcfuJPmeO— NATO (@NATO) 11 Ιουλίου 2017
NATO and the EU bear huge responsibilities for the "resurrection" of Nazism and Fascism in the Baltic states and in countries of Eastern Europe, like Ukraine and Poland. They have actively supported fascist movements and, through their policies, they promote the glorification of Nazi-SS collaborators in former Soviet republics, including Latvia and Lithuania.