Posted on 05/10/2005 8:59:01 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
On May 9, 2005, a grand ceremony in Moscow commemorated the victory over Nazi Germany sixty years ago. The victims of Soviet liberation, however, do not join in the commemoration with the same celebratory sentiments. The questions raised publicly and officially for the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union concern the central one: victory for whom? According to both Vladimir Putin and what passes for his opposition, May 9, 1945, was a historic victorytheir victoryleading to the liberation of half of Europe.
Their main argument is that the USSR paid by far the highest cost in human lifetraditionally estimated at some 20 millionduring the war. However, it is far from clear why Stalins criminal incompetence and total contempt for human life, which unnecessarily magnified the Russian cost in casualties, should now become a justification for rewriting the history of the war.
The Russians argue that by contributing to the defeat of Nazism, Moscow brought liberation to Eastern and Central Europe. But the facts are quite different. Poland, whose partitioning in 1939 by Hitler and Stalin marked the beginning of the war, lost the eastern half of her territory and became a Soviet subject; similarly, Romania, at the end of the war an ally of Moscow, lost a fourth of her land as well as her independence. But the worst was the fate of the Baltic states. For the second time in four years, they lost everything: their statehood; some 20% of their people (sent to Siberia); and in the cases of Latvia and Estonia, the near loss of their very ethnic existence through forced Russification.
The Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe in the wake of the Great Patriotic War also brought about one of the largest campaigns of ethnic cleansing ever: the deportation of some 3 million Germans in then Czechoslovakia and Poland, most of whom had lived there for the better part of a millennium, to what became the Soviet-controlled part of the truncated Germany. The Red Armys soldiersself-proclaimed liberatorsunleashed a wave of raping, stealing, and brutality on the peoples of Eastern and Central Europe. Even Allied soldiers, like those of Romania, were randomly captured and sent to the Gulag.
Russia has consistently refused to repudiate the 1939 non-aggression pact with Germany, wherein the two partitioned Eastern Europe. Sergei Yastrzhembsky, Russia's representative in talks with the EU, is a prime example of Russias continued denial of the realities of 1945, as his comments about the Baltic States made on May 5 demonstrate: "One cannot use the term occupation to describe these historical events. The troop deployment took place on an agreed basis and with the clearly expressed agreement of the existing authorities in the Baltic republics. There was no occupation of foreign territory seized by military means." The Balts would be surprised indeed to find that their nonexistent authorities in 1945 agreed to Soviet annexation. Yastrzhembsky added that he would advise those seeking constructive relations with Russia not to project phobias and historical prejudices onto those relations. Orwell would feel vindicated.
When, in December 2004, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe held hearings on the crimes of communism, a Russian representative held that communism was not responsible for the deviations of Stalinism, which betrayed the beautiful ideals of Lenin.[1][1] That was five months ago!
Many Russians have never fully understood how their role in 1945 was seen quite differently in Eastern Europe than at home, and that for many East Europeans, the Soviet liberation achieved through the wave of Soviet rapes, lootings and deportations, and subsequent domination-- were by no means welcome, to say the least. Russians are often still shocked at the ingratitude of their present western neighbors. In that sense, if few others, Putin is indeed representative of his peoples sentiments. Even today Moscow tries hard to bully its neighbors into accepting its version of World War II history. Combine that with his recent claim that the end of the USSR was a geopolitical catastrophe and all of the above become much easier to explain.
The presidents of Lithuania and Estonia have pointedly refused to participate in the Moscow celebrations. Latvias President, Vaira Vike-Frebeirga, did show up but only to remind the participants of the other, dark side of 1945. President Alexander Kwasniewski of Poland will do the same. Even Vladimir Voronin, Moldovas self-proclaimed communist president, will be absent after being accused by Moscow of fascism for paying respect to the graves of both Soviet and Romanian soldiers fallen in World War II. The term fascist for all those who dare to criticize Stalins 1945 actions--and occasionally for those who criticize Russia today remains a rhetorical tool in the Russian media and official language, just as before Putins catastrophe; it was applied to communist Voronin, East European nationalists and the Baltic democrats alike.
Why is what may appear as quibbles over the past (to some) relevant today? First of all, because todays Russia sees itself and behaves like Stalins successor, albeit, fortunately, without his means. Moscow plays a decisive role in maintaining secessionist (and truly Stalinist) enclaves in Moldova and Georgia, as well as in Azerbaijan. Moscow keeps Alexander Lukashenkas totalitarian regime in power in Belarus and continuously bullies the Baltic states--after interfering in the democratic process in Georgia and Ukraine.
From the perspective of Russias neighbors and victims of the Soviet pseudo-liberation of 1945, Moscow remains a constant threat. The post-1991 East and Central European rush to join NATO, as an act of protection against Russian imperialist reflexes, and the prevailing pro-American sentiments in the region, serve as evidence. Such actions and sentiments stand in sharp contrast to the anti-American mood of Western Europe, an area which has the luxury of distance from Russia and the historic benefit of having been truly liberatedby Americansin 1945. This contrast is now being played out within the newly expanded EU, as recent debates in the European Parliament in Strasbourg have demonstrated.
When asked to vote on a resolution condemning the infamous Yalta Agreements of 1945, signed by Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin, which gave the latter what amounted to a free hand over half of Europe, West European leftists were true to form. Belgian Socialist Véronique de Keyser repeated the Russian argumentOne should not insult the memory of some 20 million Russians who perished as liberatorswhile her German colleague, Martin Schulz, reminded everyone that the Red Army helped defeat Nazism and put an end to the Holocaust--as if the latter was Stalins goal or that it could have excused what happened during and after the Soviet liberation.
On the other hand, Estonian socialist Toomas Ilves and the Polish Marek Siwiec pointed out that the end of the war was a disaster for their peoples, and that one must commemorate at the same time the victims of Nazism and communism. An embarrassed president of the European Parliament, Spanish socialist Josep Borrell, whose idea of commemoration included a violin concerto, was accused by Polish MPs of lack of respect for their country an opinion shared by the Balts.[2][2] Ultimately, the East Europeans version failed at Strassbourg. Though Western Europeans old reflexes of conciliating Moscow may continue unabated, the good news is that the new members do not share them.
Compare that spectacle with President Bushs public position, expressed in a letter to President Vike-Freiberga: In western Europe, the end of World War II meant liberation. In central and eastern Europe, the war also marked the Soviet occupation and annexation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and the imposition of communism. That brought the following reaction from Russian defense Minister Sergey Ivanov:
That war was won at the cost of countless deaths and the impact on demographics and our living standards is still perceptible. And when some now argue over whether we did or did not occupy other countries, I feel like asking them: 'And what would have become of you if we hadn't broken the back of fascismwould you still exist as a people?'[3][3]
Answer to Ivanov: we will never know (although the German occupation in the Baltics was, by Nazi standards, fairly benign), but we do know that under Soviet rule, the Balts were almost eradicated as peoples, on purpose.
One has to note that the newly strengthened realism in Washington on matters related to Moscows behavior has much to do with the new Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, a former academic who specialized in Russian affairs. Accordingly, and encouragingly, the administration has had sharp reaction to Russian protests to President Bushs visit to Latvia and Georgia, two of Moscows historic victims. Even if Putin pretends not to know and the Western Europeans apparently do not know, Russia is no more, and must not be allowed to become again what it was in 1945: the slave master of its neighbors. The more often Washington (and Riga or Warsaw) remind it of these facts, the safer everyone in Europe will be.
Notes:
[1] Cf. Sylvaine Pasquier, « Pays Baltes-Russie. A chacun sa mémoire, » L'Express, May 2, 2005
[2] Rafaële Rivais, « 8 mai 1945 : la résolution Yalta oppose les eurodéputés de l'Est et de l'Ouest, » Le Monde, May 5, 2005.
[3] Andrew Osborn, Bush prepares for Moscow visit with attack on Soviet era, The Independent, May 5, 2005.
Come on. come on, we gotta leave Russia a little something
"to hang on to".
The man with the gun shoots. When that man is dead, the other man will take the gun and shoot.
Evidence that Stalin was a complete, utter psychopath:
Stalin trusted no one. He didn't trust his wife, his children, the Party members who had served with him loyally for years, nor the members of the Red Army who had risked their lives for him. He didn't trust the working class, the peasants or the intelligensia. He didn't trust anyone in fact except one person.
Adolf Hitler.
Regards, Ivan
Your reply interested me to the extent that I found and posted the following.
Dictator Stalin stirs nostalgia as Russians remember war
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1400490/posts
And here's another article--one that contains information on the recent whereabouts of the statue of Stalin. The plan is to transport it to Volgograd (formerly known as Stalingrad).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From evil tyrant to wartime saviour, Stalin's political makeover divides Russia
From Jeremy Page in Moscow
Times Online
May 06, 2005
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1599804,00.html
IN A secluded courtyard behind a Moscow art gallery, the twice-lifesize bronze figure of Josef Stalin stares into the distance with an icy, arrogant glare. Beside him sit Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, looking his way, as if hanging on his words.
Russia has not seen such a flattering portrayal of the iron leader since 1956, when Nikita Khrushchev denounced Stalin.
But as the country prepares for the 60th anniversary of Hitlers defeat on Monday, this monument to the Yalta conference in 1945 is the most tangible sign of a growing movement to rehabilitate Stalin.
History and facts cannot be changed these people saved us from the fascists, Zurab Tsereteli, the president of the Russian Academy of Arts, who sculpted the 4m-high statue, said. Some people like Stalin, some people dont. I simply depicted historical facts. Mr Tsereteli says that local authorities in Yalta now in Ukraine commissioned the work and wanted to unveil it on Monday. But that plan was abandoned as debate rages over Stalins role in history and relevance to modern Russia.
A Moscow politician then sparked a furore by suggesting that the statue be erected in the Russian capital. Finally, the Mayor of Volgograd, formerly known as Stalingrad, agreed to put it up for May 9, but that plan has also been postponed. The statue remains in limbo behind Mr Tseretelis gallery, a monument more to Russians ambiguous feelings towards Stalin than to his wartime leadership.
For many Communists, veterans and nationalists, he is still the heroic author of the Soviet Unions rapid industrialisation and victory over Hitler. We must defend the truth and rehabilitate the great name of Stalin, Gennady Zyuganov, the Communist Party leader, said recently. He also called for Volgograd to be renamed Stalingrad.
The town of Mirny in Siberia is marking May 9 by erecting a bust of Stalin because veterans and young people asked for it, a local official said. Legislators in the city of Oryol, where 157 political prisoners were executed on Stalins orders, recently appealed to the Kremlin to erect monuments and name streets in his honour.
In a recent poll by the All-Russian Public Opinion Research Centre, 20 per cent of respondents described Stalins role in Russian history as very positive and 30 per cent as somewhat positive. Yet for political liberals, human rights groups and descendants of his victims, Stalin ranks alongside Hitler as one of history s worst mass murderers. They and most historians say that ten to twenty million people died in Stalins purges, famines, deportations and gulags.
The Soviet Union almost lost the war because of his purges of Red Army officers, and Russia is still suffering the fallout of his policies, such as deporting the Chechens to Central Asia in 1944. As a dictator Stalin has blood not just on his hands but up to his neck, and as a military leader his role was not so great, Sergei Sigachev, the executive director of the Russian rights group Memorial said.
The writer Marietta Chudakova recently organised a protest letter by cultural figures and sent it to President Putin. Just as the Germans cannot allow monuments to Hitler to be put up, so we cannot allow monuments to Stalin, she said.
But the debate also reflects contemporary Russian politics. Those who support Stalins rehabilitation also argue that Russia needs a strong leader and support Mr Putins moves to curb democracy. Those fighting the Stalinist revival are among the Presidents most vocal critics.
As on many sensitive political issues, the Kremlin itself sends mixed signals. Last week Sergei Lavrov, the Foreign Minister, denounced attempts to turn May 9 into a jubilee of Stalinism. Yet last year a memorial plaque to Volgograd on the Kremlins walls was replaced with one to Stalingrad. A history textbook critical of Stalin was also banned last year. This week Stalins famous wartime quote Our cause is just. Victory will be ours is splashed on posters in Moscow.
In many ways Mr Tsereteli embodies this ambivalence. His grandfather was shot on Stalins orders in 1937, and he says that he would never make a statue of him alone.
Yet he saw no conflict in making the Yalta monument and replicas for several Russian cities. Remember, he said, people did not like the Eiffel Tower when it first went up.
THE MAN OF STEEL
# Born Vissarion Jughashvili in 1879 in Gori, Georgia, where he is revered as a local hero
# In 1913 he changed his name to Stalin, or man of steel
# When Lenin died in 1924 he became leader of the USSR after a power struggle with his rival Trotsky
# Up to 5 million people died in famines in 1932 and 1933 caused by his forced collectivisation programme
# An estimated 1 million people were killed in his 1936-38 purges of the Party and the Red Army
# He deported an estimated 1.5 million people to Siberia and Central Asia in the 1940s
# He died in 1953 and was denounced by Nikita Khrushchev in his secret speech in 1956
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