Introduction: The most brutal Soviet Red Army in World War II was not Russians and Ukrainians who suffered German aggression, but Mongolians, Tatars, Central Asians and Caucasians from Asia. Although Russians also committed many atrocities, those terrible atrocities were mainly committed by Mongols, Tatars and Central Asians, and the areas where they lived were not invaded by Germans. (Although the Tatars of Craimu suffered from the German March, they regarded Germany as the liberator.) But they were much more ruthless than the Russians and had no feelings for the Soviet Union. They were all forcibly recruited.
In World War II, the most brutal Soviet Red Army was not Russians and Ukrainians who suffered German aggression, but Mongolians, Tatars, Central Asians and Caucasians from Asia. Although Russians also committed many atrocities, those terrible atrocities were mainly committed by Mongols, Tatars and Central Asians, and the areas where they lived were not invaded by Germans. (Although the Tatars of Craimu suffered the German March, they regarded Germany as a liberator. )