| SCANDAL. Russian military clique hatching plans on capture of English cities |
|
|
| Written by smoc | |||
| Saturday, 26 September 2009 21:22 | |||
|
The London based "Daily Mirror" newspaper has told about the plans of Russian military clique concerning England in its issue dated August 28th. The English paper writes: "Soviet plan to invade Manchester revealed This detailed map (photo), compiled by the Soviet Union in 1974 at the height of the Cold War (nothing has changed today in Russia - KC), reveals their plans to invade Britain's industrial heartland.
It details the main arteries into Manchester and the roads wide enough for tanks - all in Russian script.
Colours are used to denote targets, black for industrial sites, green for military ones and purple for public buildings.
Nikolai Podgorny was one of the ringleaders of Russian state at the time that this eerily meticulous city street guide was compiled for Red Army high command using information from spy planes, satellites and KGB spies.
It has been revealed for the first time in an exhibition maps at Manchester University. Curator Chris Perkins said:
"This and other maps in our exhibition called Mapping Manchester reveal a very different side to this city. It shows the roads which the Soviets felt were wide enough for tanks, including Washway Road, the Mancunian Way and Princess Road.
They even transliterated place names - such as Urmston, Salford and Stretford - into Russian. Quite unnerving as it's only 35 years old".
"It's incredible how detailed their information was. The Soviet military used spy planes to supplement information from UK Ordnance Survey maps and atlases.
"But there's so much extra information, it's fair to assume that they gathered a considerable amount of intelligence on the ground".
|
KYIV -- Russian Black Sea Fleet commanders have raised objections to
spot checks of their military vehicles by Ukrainian traffic police,
RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service reports. After two unsanctioned convoys carrying missiles drove through Sevastopol this summer, Ukrainian authorities began checking Russian naval convoys for proper documentation. |
