Visiting Reddit really makes you into a patriot

According to this this article there was 130 000 deported citizens of Baltics just in 1940-1941. According to [this article] there was another 505 000 deported citizens of Baltics during 1944-1955.

That has nothing to do with Estonia you are deliberately confusing the numbers.

59,732 in Estonia, 34,250 in Latvia, and 30,485 in Lithuania.

Where did you find your hundred thousands Estonians?

No, they didn't. Soviets invaded Poland in 1939. During invasion they killed 7 500 Polish soldiers, 20 000 Poles were massacred in Katyn and 0,35-1,5 millions were deported, of which 250 000 - 1 000 000 died.

Yes they did for Belarus it mean the birth of their statehood.

Previously before the soviets their territory was under Polish occupation. This is why for them Soviets liberation is a national holiday

same time around 16k Soviet POWs died in Poland just a decade before Katyn

16-20 thousands Soviet POWs died in 1919-1924 due to epidemics (you remember 1918-1920 flu pandemic, don't you)

You are getting confuse again

You are talking about the Spanish Flu wich didnt affect Eastern Europe ended in 1920. Polish soviets war was between 1919 and 1924.

  1. The reasons, why soviet soldiers aren't blindly perceived as heroes in countries they liberated from Nazis (just to "enslave" them for next 50 years).

The perception is different in Belarus and Norway.

The incomparablity of Soviet war crimes with the crimes commited by Alied forces, which I still consider to be proven fact (or can you provide some example of mass murders of tens thousands citizens and deportation of millions of them on any land Allied forces liberated during WWII?)

Sure we have the Bengal famine

http://yourstory.com/2014/08/bengal-famine-genocide/

Or Operation Black Tulip

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Black_Tulip

/r/russia Thread Parent