by Amiad Horowitz • People's World
In the combined “Western” zones of occupation, where a focus on anti-communism was becoming the norm, de-Nazification took a back seat. Many former Nazi military leaders, government officials, and scientists were welcomed back into positions of power with open arms, as long as they were able to help fight against communism.
The CIA’s “Operation Paperclip” saw U.S. intelligence and its allies take hundreds of Nazi scientists back to the United States to work on weapons research and development and the budding space program. Arguably the most infamous of these scientists was Wernher Von Braun, a member of the Nazi Party and the SS, who helped develop rockets for Hitler, was brought to the U.S., where he designed missiles for the U.S. military and worked for NASA.
The anti-communist allies that occupied western Germany didn’t only embrace Nazi scientists. Many former high-ranking officers from the Nazi military were brought back to head up the development of a new armed force in postwar Germany. Adolf Heusinger, a leading general in Hitler’s military, eventually became Chairman of the NATO Military Committee. Hans Speidel, another high-ranking German general during WWII, was the first four-star general in the reconstituted army of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany).
The policy of accepting Nazis into positions of authority was justified by fierce anti-communist propaganda. In fact, some in the U.S. and British leadership didn’t want to de-Nazify Germany at all. General George S. Patton was famous for wanting to ally with the defeated Nazis and invade the Soviet Union after the war. So strong was the hatred of communists and so real was the fear that capitalism might be replaced worldwide with socialism that the leaders of the U.S. and allied capitalist governments were happy to work with the perpetrators of the most mechanized genocide in human history.
Fast forward to today and it’s clear that the world is witnessing a new round of “Nazi rehabilitation.” While previously such rehabilitation was fueled by fears of the defeat of capitalism, this time the fear is that the U.S. will lose its position as world hegemon.
The current round of Nazi rehabilitation began with the Azov Battalion and other Ukrainian fascist groups who are currently filling the role of foot soldiers in the United States’ proxy war against Russia in Ukraine.
Just a few years ago, the Azov Battalion was considered by the FBI to be the center of the international neo-Nazi movement, because right-wing extremists from around the world would travel to Ukraine to get military training from the group.
The mainstream corporate U.S. media regularly featured stories about the fascist ideology and brutal military tactics of Azov and allied groups. In 2019, for instance, Time magazine did a major feature on the “white supremacist militias” active in Ukraine. Even in the first few weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine, NBC News was still saying “Ukraine’s Nazi problem is real.”
However, once Russian troops crossed the Ukrainian border, with Vladimir Putin saying that U.S.-led NATO expansion threatened Russian security, the Azov Battalion was suddenly recast as heroic resistance fighters, much like Braun and Heusinger over half-a-century ago.
On March 16, 2023, many in Latvia—a NATO and EU member state—celebrated the memory of those Latvians that joined in to fight alongside the Nazis during WWII and joined the foreign division of the SS. These “heroes” helped exterminate Jews, Roma, the disabled, gay people, communists, and the others who were on Hitler’s hitlist. These accomplices to genocide are today being commemorated as national patriots.
There are similar trends in other eastern European countries.
In Poland, there are laws that silence anyone who speaks about the large number of Polish people who collaborated with the occupying Nazi regime between 1939-45. The so-called “Holocaust Law” penalizes anyone who publicly speaks or publishes any written document that mentions any of the well-established historical evidence that many Polish citizens worked with the Nazis during WWII.
When this law was first passed in 2018, the Israeli government protested it, leading to a diplomatic rift between the two countries. However, since Israel recently began its own trend of rehabilitating Nazis and openly welcomed Azov Battalion members into the country, the Netanyahu government accepts the Polish position and will follow the Polish curriculum on future educational trips to Poland for Israeli youth.
Mark Twain once said, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does often rhyme,” and unfortunately we are witnessing that phenomena once again. At the start of the Cold War, Nazis were embraced by the capitalist world in order to aid their confrontation against the USSR and the socialist bloc.
Today, at the start of Cold War 2.0, literal Nazis are once again being welcomed as soldiers for the so-called “liberal” world order to aid in the fight to preserve the United States’ hegemonic power in Europe and beyond.
Notes
(1) Maria "Masha" Bruskina (Belarusian: Марыя Барысаўна Брускіна Marïya Barïsawna Bruskina; Russian: Мария Борисовна Брускина Mariya Borisovna Bruskina; 1924 – 26 October 1941 in Minsk[1]), was a Belarusian Jewish teenage nurse and a Communist martyr[2] to the Antifascist Resistance during the early years of World War II,[3] as well as a niece of the sculptor and Soviet MP Sair Asgur.
While volunteering as a nurse, she cared for wounded Red Army soldiers, and assisted them in escaping the then Nazi-occupied Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. For this, she and 11 other communists of the anti-fascist underground were imprisoned, tortured, and when the teenagers refused to reveal any secrets, publicly executed by the German Wehrmacht.[4]
The German Nazi invaders decided on a public hanging to make an example of Bruskina, along with two other members of the resistance, 16-year-old Volodia Shcherbatsevich and World War I veteran Kiril Trus. Before being hanged, she was paraded through the streets with a placard around her neck which read, in both German and Russian: "We are partisans and have shot at German troops", the latter had of course never actually occurred, Masha having been a nurse. Members of the resistance were routinely made to wear similar signs whether or not they had actually shot at German troops as a display of power and authority by the Nazi invaders, theoretically demonstrating their total control of the occupied nation and its peoples.
She and her two comrades were hanged in public on Sunday, October 26, 1941, in front of Minsk Kristall, a yeast brewery and distillery plant on Nizhne-Lyahovskaya Street (15 Oktyabrskaya Street today). The German Nazi authorities would not allow the victims to be cut down and buried for three days, during which time the bodies were displayed publicly as a warning to other anti-fascists, Jews and Communists.[7]
A witness of the execution said: When they put her on the stool, the girl turned her face toward the fence. The executioners wanted her to stand with her face to the crowd, but she turned away and that was that. No matter how much they pushed her and tried to turn her, she remained standing with her back to the crowd. Only then did they kick away the stool from under her.
—PYOTR PAVLOVICH BORISENKO
Olga Shcherbatsevich, the mother of executed 16-year old activist Volodia Shcherbatsevich, was hanged the same day along with 10 other members of the Soviet anti-fascist resistance in front of what is now the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus.[8]SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA: MASHA BRUSKINA
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