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Russian MFA Information and Press Department Commentary in Connection with the Signing by the US President of the Proclamation on Captive Nations Week, 2008


Last week US President George Bush signed a regular proclamation on the theme of "captive nations," with which he annually comes up on the basis of a law adopted way back in the Cold War era. Well, it's business as usual, but this time around one "novelty" has appeared: quite unambiguously the equal sign is put between Nazi fascism and Soviet communism, which are now coupled as a "single evil" of the 20th century.

By the way, one cannot but see that such assessments simply feed the efforts of those, who for political and selfish ends are striving to falsify the facts and rewrite history. All this takes place against the backdrop of the surprising tolerance being shown in the United States toward those who in a number of European countries are trying to whitewash "their own" Nazi accomplices.

by blackhawk on Tue Jul 29th, 2008 at 12:55:26 AM EST
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At what point did Nazism and the Soviet Union/Communism become interchangeable evils?  

I remember being taught that both were baaaad growing up, but there seems to be a recent concerted effort to link the two indelibly.  Which seems a bit rich to me.  And kinda weird since, you know, the Soviet Union is now defunct and it seems the time has passed for propaganda and demonization.  Seems like this would be the time to begin to look back and try to understand what happened, why it happened, what can be learned from it.  Also, it seems pointedly aimed at Russia, solely Russia (not countries in which some people collaborated with Russia, not places like Ukraine, not Communist countries that, uhm, still exist, etc.) and at all of Russia, as if it were some monolithic entity collectively responsible for everything that happened.  Also, and this is probably what gets me the most, Nazism required human rights violations, atrocities.  The extermination of ethnic peoples was part and parcel of the ideology.  Atrocities were committed in the name of Communism (as we've also seen them committed in the name of Democracy and Christianity and so on) but were not exactly the cornerstone of the ideology.  I have to struggle to find anything redeeming whatsoever about Nazism (can't) but it's -to me- possible to understand and even appreciate the noble and humane sentiments inherent in Communism.  And even now, I repeatedly hear those who lived under Soviet regime lament the loss of some of aspects of life which seemed more humane than what has replaced it, without nec. calling for a return to those days.  This is so completely lost on Americans.  They hear "Communism" and think "pogroms, gulags, censorship."  Which are in fact things we should condemn.  But that's not exactly the whole story...  

"Pretending that you already know the answer when you don't is not actually very helpful." ~Migeru.

by poemless on Tue Jul 29th, 2008 at 12:41:52 PM EST
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