On Monday, 26 February 2018 02:27:49 UTC-8, StarDust wrote:
> Ja! The drunken Sovnyet zsido sub captain sailed to the Baltic,
> Konigsberg, where all the evacuation was and had a field day sinking ships that were evacuating civilians.
> Of course Gustloff was a big fat, easy target.
>
http://docplayer.org/docs-images/71/65780114/images/7-0.jpg
kepzavarral kezded, es a tobbibek sincs ertelme
"During the summer of 1939, the vessel was returned to service to bring the Condor Legion back from Spain after the victory of the Nationalist forces under General Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War. ... she was {also] used as an accommodations ship (barracks) for approximately 1,000 U-boat trainees of the 2nd Submarine Training Division (2. Unterseeboot-Lehrdivision) in the port of Gdynia, which had been occupied by Germany and renamed Gotenhafen, located near Danzig. [how ironic it is] ... Heinz Schön, a German archivist and Gustloff survivor who carried out extensive research into the sinking during the 1980s and 1990s, concluded that Wilhelm Gustloff was carrying a crew of 173 (naval armed forces auxiliaries), 918 officers, NCOs, and men of the 2 Unterseeboot-Lehrdivision, 373 female naval auxiliary helpers, 162 wounded soldiers, and 8,956 civilians, of which an estimated 5,000 were children, for a total of 10,582 passengers and crew.[8] The passengers besides civilians included Gestapo personnel, members of the Organisation Todt and Nazi officials with their families. ... As Wilhelm Gustloff had been fitted with anti-aircraft guns, and the Germans, in obedience to the rules of war, did not mark her as a hospital ship, no notification of her operating in a hospital capacity had been given and, as she was transporting military personnel, she did not have any protection as a hospital ship under international accords."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MV_Wilhelm_Gustloff
...azonkivul, hogy fosznazi-disznyofuriszto apologeta vagy, mija pontyod?