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This is an archive article published on April 9, 2010

Norwegian Nazis asked Hitler for Russian land: WWII documents

Nazi-occupied Norway's puppet government repeatedly asked Berlin to establish Norwegian territories in the Soviet Union during World War II,documents released in Oslo on Friday revealed.

Nazi-occupied Norway’s puppet government repeatedly asked Berlin to establish Norwegian territories in the Soviet Union during World War II,documents released in Oslo on Friday revealed.

The documents,posted on the National Archive Service’s website,showed that the fascist National Unification party that ruled Norway for most of the 1940-45 occupation had requested several different Soviet territories.

The archives posted 281 documents showing the Norwegian “lebensraum” ambitions,out of a total of around 5,000 World War II documents published in connection with the 70th anniversary of the Nazi invasion of Norway on April 9.

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National Unification “launched a vigorous campaign to get German authorities to accept the idea of a territory under Norwegian administration in what was expected to be a quickly defeated Soviet Union,” the archives website says in an introduction to the newly released records.

Not long after the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941,the collaboration government under Vidkun Quisling established a “Russian office” and an institute called “Austrveg” in Oslo to promote the idea,the documents showed.

The Norwegian fascists had first requested a protectorate in the northwestern Murmansk area,but faced with German resistance moved their sights to areas in today’s Ukraine and Belarus.

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