Staunton, June 22 – Seventy-four years ago today, Hitler turned on his ally Stalin and invaded the Soviet Union, an action that continues to echo in the post-Soviet states with Moscow now routinely but falsely accusing Ukraine of having become fascist while Vladimir Putin’s Russia is rapidly on its way to becoming exactly that, according to Vladislav Inozemtsev.
“Are political
opposition figures [in Ukraine] suppressed?” Hardly. The opposition even
defeated the president’s party in the polls, Inozemtsev points out. And “post-Maidan
Ukraine lives quite peacefully if you do not take into consideration districts
controlled by ‘the separatists.’” It has no interest in expanding its
territory.
“Do Ukrainians recall
imperial times with tears in their eyes? Hardly: they destroy monuments to the
leaders of the totalitarian era and lament the victims of the terror famine and
mass repressions.” According to
Inozemtsev, he “personally does not see anything fascist not only in Kyiv but
even, for example, in Lviv.”
The situation in
Moscow is very different, however. There, the screws are being tightened and
the opposition is being included from politics. Everywhere “there is the
mythologization of the past and its heroization. And as for nationalism, one
need only talk about “the ideology of the Russian world.”
The government uses
legislation to attack minorities it doesn’t approve of. It combines state power
with the capital of the oligarchs. There is “’a vertical’ and a charismatic
leader.” In short, there is evidence
that Russia is increasingly meeting each and every one of the definitional
requirements of fascism.
Russia
“must not forget that the early fascist institutions became the training ground
for that terror which in the second third of the 20th century
swallowed up all of Europe.” It is of course wrong to equate Nazi Germany and
the Soviet Union, the Moscow analyst says, “but one should not fail to reflect
about how all this began a century ago.”
Moreover,
Inozemtsev continues, no one should fail to reflect on “how the first growths
of ‘the banality of evil’ are today penetrating the everyday life” of Russians.
“To think about this is not a crime,” as some in the Kremlin clearly would prefer,
it “but rather a responsibility,” especially on this anniversary.
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