Saken wrote: Сейчас легко найти списки всех товаров и даже платежи СССР и потом России по Ленд Лизу - могу ошибаться (не хочу искать), но вроде платили до конца 90-х пока все не выплатили.
В июне 1990 года были установлены новый срок окончательного погашения задолженности (2030 г.), а также сумма – 674 млн. долларов. После распада СССР долг был переоформлен на Россию. Что-то выплачивалось, но окончательного расчёта так и не произошло. Знающие проблему специалисты считают, что из общего объёма американских поставок по ленд-лизу Советский Союз, а затем и Россия признали, а затем частично оплатили 722 млн. долларов, то есть около 7%.
http://ru-an.info/%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0 ... %B7%D1%83/
All told, Lend-Lease provided $50.1 billion worth of supplies to the Allies during the conflict, with $31.4 billion to Britain, $11.3 billion to the Soviet Union, $3.2 billion to France and $1.6 billion to China.
http://militaryhistory.about.com/od/ind ... se-act.htm
Кое-что нарыл про 7%.
During the lend-lease debate, opponents had tried to exclude the Soviet Union from the program. But American strategists knew that only the Red Army could defeat Hitler on the ground, and lend-lease would help do just that. U.S. aid constituted only about 7 percent of what the Soviet Union itself produced during the war, but it did allow the Soviets to concentrate their production in the most efficient manner. Lend-lease to Russia was, for Roosevelt, much more than just a wartime aid program. It could demonstrate the benefits of the American system and promote mutual trust, all key elements in Roosevelt's postwar plans. It was, therefore, presidential policy to promise to give the Russians almost everything they requested. Misunderstandings and resentment resulted when supply requirements to other theaters made it impossible to deliver. The Cold War prevented a formal lend-lease settlement with the Russians until June 1990, when, with the Soviet system on the verge of collapse, a repayment agreement (for nonmilitary goods) was reached.
Lend-lease, what Churchill had called "the most unsordid act," was an immensely successful wartime aid program, one that set the stage for the U.S. foreign aid programs that followed. Lend-lease was designed to help win the war without leaving behind a residue of war debts and recriminations, and it did just that.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/lend-lease.aspx