Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 9 – “’The Victory
Parade’ in Putin’s Russia is unique in its absurdity, one in which an imperial
army presents itself as ‘defenders of the motherland,’ occupiers as liberators,
and invaders as anti-fascists,” Aleksandr Khots says. It is thus “a hybrid
parade of ‘heroes’ of a hybrid war,” of “totalitarianism under the mask of
anti-fascism.”
The Russian opposition journalist
points out that “a military parade by definition is a symbolic event connected
with the present even if it is devoted to past victories because the army with its
‘patriotism’ and militarism is always (especially in Russia) an instrument of
present-day policy” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5911710F5A1D8).
The military parade in Moscow
today features not the weapons that Soviet forces used against the Germans in
World War II but those they have used against Ukraine and other countries in
recent times. And among those marching
and being celebrated were those who invaded and occupied Ukrainian cities.
In short, Khots says, this parade is
“a parade of hybrid murderers and occupied who hide themselves under the mask
of ‘liberators’ and ‘anti-fascists.’”
(The commentator doesn’t say but for half of Europe, Stalin’s victory in
1945 was much the same: it brought them not freedom but a half century of
enslavement.)
No one should be deceived by
references to 1945 and “the immortal regiments,” he continues. The only meaning of this parade for those who
organized it and the only meaning they want others to take away from it is that
Moscow again has “a strong instrument for its imperial policies of occupation.”
“It is no accident,” Khots says, that
among the portraits of “the immortal regiment” are people like Zakharchenko,
Motorola and Givi, people who weren’t even born when the victory supposedly
being celebrated occurred but who have been conducting a war for Moscow against
Ukraine in recent years.
According to the Russian journalist,
today’s event is best understood as “the parade of an occupation army, a
demonstration of the powers of the Russian regime, an instrument of
militarization and stupefaction of ‘the popular masses’ – under the cheap
camouflage of past ‘historical victories.”
“For
a long time already,” he concludes, we have been living in a country of total
imitations, from ‘elections’ to ‘democracy,’ ‘constitutionality,’ ‘division of
powers,’ ‘an independent court system,’ and ‘a parliament.’” Thus, no one
should be surprised that a Victory Parade under Putin would be “such a cheap
imitation of its initial meaning, false and cynical.”
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