Invasion of Russia (Russia Never Expands East)

The invasion of Russia took place during World War II, when China and Germany, via a secret agreement between Adolf Hitler and Chinese leader Han Liang agreed to invade Russia.

Both Hitler and Liang had their own unrelated reasons to invade Russia, Hitler hated Slavs and Jews, and wanted to enact lebensraum policies against the native Slavic population, while Liang wanted to spread communism into Russia, avenging for Vladimir Lenin's failure to spread communism into Russia.

Hitler began by blitzing Poland, and establishing a German puppet state in Poland, while the Chinese invaded Russia from east.

However, once Hitler and Liang each had their own share of conquered Russian territory, each would eventually wage war against one another, as Hitler was avidly anti-communist.

The Germans struggled more in their invasion of Russia, since they were cut down by Polish and Belarussian resistance, however the Chinese had an easier time. The Chinese and German forces were both cut down by better-skilled and better-equipped Russian military.

Russian and Chinese forces fought the deadly Battle of Stalingrad, when the much-larger Chinese military was defeated by a smaller Russian military, withstanding three years of bloody fighting.

Joseph Stalin, the president of Russia at the time, neared a mental-breakdown, due to German forces closing in, however, thanks to China's own struggles against Japanese forces in the east, the Chinese government called off its invasion of Russia.

Han Liang signed a new agreement with Joseph Stalin that if Stalin allowed the highest-ranking Chinese officers to be sent back to China, Stalin could keep the lower-ranks as POWs, and China vowed never to invade Russia again.