Viljam Pylkäs was an ordinary Finnish farmer from Karelian Isthmus and a veteran of Winter War.
He lost his home to russians and because of this, hated russia from the bottom of his heart.
In this thread I'll tell his story and about the incident that made him famous.
Pylkäs is the model for hero character "Antero Rokka" of the book and movies "Tuntematon Sotilas"(Unknown Soldier) written by Finnish author and brother in arms Väinö Linna.
As said in the beginning, Viljam Pylkäs was a farmer with wife and two kids from small town of Sakkola in Karelian Isthmus.
He was trained as machinegunner during his conscript military service (1933-1934) and served in this role during the Winter War.
Pyökäs fought in the ErP 6 (Seperate Battalion 6) "Karelian Battalion" considered as elite unit even though it had had regular infantry training.
The battalion saw extremely heavy battles defending the Mannerheim Line at shores of Vuoksi river and Taipaleenjoki river.
Many men of this battalion were living in Karelian Isthmus, so many men saw the destruction of their homes during the battles.
Pylkäs lost his farm and home among the areas that Finland had to give to USSR in the peace treaty of 1940.
In Continuation War Viljam Pylkäs served in a machinegun company of Infantry Regiment 8, in same unit with young squad leader corporal Väinö Linna, future famous writer.
During offensive phase of Continuation war, Infantry Regiment 8 reached it's objectives at Svir river in january 1942 and after the battles ended the regiment dug into defensive positions on February 1, starting the stationary warfare time of the regiment.
Legendary event that Pylkäs is known for, occurred at Pertjärvi in April 1942 during the Soviet spring offensives.
Regiment was located in middle of swamps of southern shore of Svir river where the line consisted of nothing but seperate outposts surrounded by the wilderness.
On one morning of April, after their platoon had repelled an attack, Pylkäs's platoon heard yells for help and sounds of heavy gun fire from direction of neighboring regiment the Finnish-Swedish JR 61.
The main attack was focused there.
Platoon leader Einari Kokkonen ("Koskela" in Unknown Soldier) told Pylkäs to go see if they were leaving their positions.
There was about 100 meters to the closest outpost of JR 61.
Pylkäs grabbed Suomi SMG and took private Kärkkäinen with him.
As they approached the OP, a guard post's leader came at them yelling that the russians were coming right onto them.
Pylkäs realized the line wasn't going to hold, told to get him more SMG magazines and went to nearby LMG nest in a good spot.
Soviets were attacking already about 20 meters away in deep snow, as he opened fire.
He emptied up magazine after another, the JR 61 soldiers crawled in the snow passing on more SMG magazines from the rear, giving them to Kärkkäinen who was refilling magazines for Pylkäs.
He kept firing until the barrel overheated and was then replaced but as he continued firing the retreating enemies got out of range.
Pylkäs fired 17 submachinegun magazines in total and 83 kills was later counted to his account.
Even though Pylkäs was always excellent soldier in combat he never received the Mannerheim Cross because he had serious problems with the military discipline that he didn't appriciate and was therefor constantly in trouble with his superior officers.
Nevertheless his actions brought him the 4th class Cross of Liberty with swords,and as Germans heard about this incident,he was also awarded the 2nd class Iron Cross.
Later during the war he participated in repelling smaller attacks and then fought in battles during the major Soviet offensive.
During the retreating phase,on July 4,1944, the war ended for Viljam Pylkäs when he was wounded by a bullet that hit his arm crushing the bone.
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Stalin's USSR was even worse than Hitler's Germany.
As monstrous as the nazi ideology was with holocaust and other ethnic cleansing of Europe, it's no match for Stalin.
In this thread, I'll list Stalin's often unspoken atrocities.
🧵
1. The Holodomor (1932–1933)
Stalin’s forced collectivization of agriculture—seizing land and grain from peasants to fund industrialization. Estimates of Ukrainian deaths range from 3.5 to 7 million, with some regions losing a third of their population.
2. Forced Collectivization (1928–1940)
Beyond Ukraine, collectivization wrecked rural life across the USSR.
Peasants who resisted were executed, deported, or starved. Roughly 5–10 million died from famine, exile, or violence tied to this policy.
Cancelling F35 order would be costly for Finland, since all the work already made on the order would have to be paid
There would be a delay to replace our aging Hornets with modern European aircraft
But 8,4b € for unsafe option is still worse than that.
Short thread🧵
Original plan was that Finland receives its first F35's in fall 2025.
No planes have been delivered yet, so there would not be that problem.
Money spent on years of training the Finnish pilots would also be for nothing, that is money that will not come back.
Biggest impact would be that Trump would most definitely take it personally and target Finland with retaliatory measures for showing distrust on USA and humiliating the US arms industry.
However, for its size, it is very capable of its intended uses.
In the near future, however, the capability of Finnish Navy will increase considerably. 🧵
Finnish Navy has 246 ships in one Naval fleet: the Coastal Fleet.
Its core is made up of missile boats and mine layers.
Finnish Navy is specialized in coastal combat in the Finnish archipelago, so Finland has a selection of fast crew transport ships.
Hamina class is a class of ships formed by the fourth generation of Finnish missile boats.
Missile boats are 51 meters long. They use stealth technology in their design & have a small draft (1,7 meters) that enables movement in shallow archipelago, using cover of the islands.