Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 15 – Speaking in
Serbia, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that “the vaccination against the
Nazi virus developed at the Nuremberg tribunal is losing its effectiveness in
certain countries in Europe.” He is
right, Boris Vishnevsky says, but the prime example of that tragic trend is the
Russian Federation.
Kremlin-controlled media outlets are
filled with suggestions that fascism and Nazism are on the rise in Ukraine and
the Baltic countries, the Yabloko deputy to the St. Petersburg Legislative
Assembly says, but they fail to note that there is far more evidence of Nazism
in Russia itself (echo.msk.ru/blog/boris_vis/1418806-echo/).
The Ukrainian government, Vishnevsky
says in a Ekho Moskvy blog post today, has behaved in a far more constitutional
way after the flight of former President Viktor Yanukovich than did the Russian
government in October 1993, and extreme nationalists are a far more marginal
group in Ukraine than in Russia.
And “the open manifestations of
neo-Nazism” about which Putin and his regime like to talk about in the Baltic
countries are far more in evidence in the Russian Federation than in any of
them, the deputy writes:
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, attacks of neo-Nazis on those who have differently shaped eyes or a different color of skin have become ‘an everyday affair,’” and the situation with regard to pogroms is the same: they are occurring in Russia but not in Estonia, Latvia or Lithuania.
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, ‘Russian marches’ whose participants carry black hundred slogans and call for the persecution of ‘non-natives.’”
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, the opposition is called ‘a fifth column’ (in the terminology of Spanish fascists) and ‘national traitors’ (in the language of [Hitler’s] ‘Mein Kampf.’”
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, political analysts tied to the regime call Hitler ‘a politician of the highest class’ and do not bear the slightest responsibility for this.”
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, columnists of pro-government media outlets publicly
- “In Russia but not in the Baltics, the leading government television channels declare that the Jews themselves brought on the Holocaust.”
- “And in Russia but not in the Baltics, xenophobia, aggressive nationalism and chauvinism ever more acquire the status of state policy.”
Vishnevsky concludes that
Putin would do well to follow the Biblical injunction to examine the log in his
own eye before looking for the dust in the eyes of others and “began the
struggle with nationalism, racism, xenophobia, and chauvinism” at home instead
of allowing it to grow there while denouncing it elsewhere.
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