Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 25 – Just as the
Soviet government sought to evade its responsibility for the murder of Polish
officers during World War II by blaming the Germans, so too the Russian
government of Vladimir Putin is seeking to evade responsibility for its
killings in Ukraine by blaming Ukrainian forces for them, according to Vitaly
Portnikov.
The Ukrainian commentator notes that
in January 1944, Stalin formed a commission whose very title showed that he
wasn’t interested in establishing the truth about the murders in Katyn but
rather in winning support for his version of reality that the Germans and not
the Soviets had committed them (rus.newsru.ua/columnists/24Sep2014/novkatyn.html).
Now, 70 years later, Portnikov says,
“Russian propaganda has received an analogous assignment – to tell the subjects
of Vladimir Putin and the world about ‘the terrible crimes of [Ukrainian
forces]’ on the territory of the Donbas,” including “certain ‘mass burials of
peaceful residents’” by the National Guard and Ukrainian military.
Just how fraudulent the current
Russian effort is and just how much it resembles what Stalin did with amazing
success at the end of World War II is shown by references in Moscow’s call for
such investigations to institutions like “the Investigative Committee of the
Donetsk Peoples Republic” which have never existed.
Of course, Portnikov notes, in
Russia itself, such institutions do exist and are “one of the important
instruments of authoritarianism.” Thus
is it entirely possible that they are being set up in Russian-occupied Donetsk
and “possible include Russian investigators” who in their own country “have the
reputation of falsifiers.”
Other Russians involved in this
revival of a Stalinist tactic include representatives from the Putin
Presidential Council on Human Rights, the Putin Social Chamber, and others who
can be counted on to report what the Kremlin wants reported and nothing else,
Portnikov says. But the most cynical appointment to this group is that of the
Council’s head Mikhail Fedotov.
He has gained notoriety among other
things for his calls to “investigate Ukrainian human rights activists,” clearly
so that their reputations can be blacked in the media and their findings of
Russian complicity in crimes on Ukrainian territory can thus be downplayed or rejected
out of hand.
But the most serious consequence of
what the Kremlin is doing in this regard is not even the new wave of lies it
will spread about, the Ukrainian commentator says. Instead, it is this: Russia
cannot free the [Ukrainian] territories it has seized … because those occupied
districts are the site of major crimes and the celebration of criminality.”
To withdraw would open the way for a
real investigation, and the lies of the Putin regime would thus stand revealed
to the world just as those of the Stalin regime about the murder of Polish
officers in Katyn were. But the Kremlin
clearly calculates that it can muddy the waters on this long enough just as
Stalin and his successors did to conceal its crimes and keep its conquest.
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