Eastern Europe

Soviet dam targeted during World War II by Soviets and Germans

The strategically-important Dnieper hydropower plant in Ukraine is targeted by both Soviet and German troops during WWII. On August 18, 1941, the dam and power plant are dynamited by Soviet troops retreating in front of advancing German forces. The facility is bombed again in 1943 by retreating German troops.

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Germans pollute reservoir in Bohemia

In one of the few verified German tactical uses of biological warfare, German forces pollute a large reservoir in northwestern Bohemia, Czechoslovakia with sewage in May 1945. See also the entry for the Pontine Marshes in 1944.

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Soviets create flood to slow German troops

In November 1941, Soviet troops flood the area to the south of the Istra Reservoir near Moscow in an effort to slow the German advance. Just a few weeks later, German troops use the same tactic to create a water barrier to halt advances by the Soviet 16th Army.

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Hungary and Czechoslovakia dispute over Danube

Hungary abrogates a 1977 treaty with Czechoslovakia concerning construction of the Gab??kovo?Nagymaros project based on environmental concerns. Slovakia continues construction unilaterally, completes the dam, and diverts the Danube into a canal inside the Slovakian republic. Massive public protest and movement of military to the border ensue; issue taken to the International Court of Justice.

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Russians attack Moldovan hydroelectric dam

In June, hostilities between Moldova and Russia in a short but intense conflict inclujde a rocket-artillery attack on the hydroelectric turbines at the Dub?sari power station on the Nistru (or Dniester) River.

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