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Eurozine | 08May2016 | Timothy Snyder
http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2015-05-08-snyder-en.html
When Stalin was Hitler's
ally
As Russia revives the
tradition of wars of aggression on European territory, Vladimir Putin
has chosen to rehabilitate the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact as good foreign
policy. But why violate now what was for so long a Soviet taboo?
Timothy Snyder explains.
As Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine, Vladimir Putin has chosen
to rehabilitate the alliance between Hitler and Stalin that began the
World War II. In speaking of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact as good
foreign policy, he violates both the long Soviet taboo and adjusts his
own prior position that the agreement was "immoral". What might he have
in mind? What is it about the alliance with Hitler that is appealing
just at the present moment? What does this revision of the history of
World War II mean as Russia revives the tradition of wars of aggression
on European territory?
Putin has become an amateur of history, and his recent speeches reveal
a kind of wishful reconstruction of the Russian past. Mixing clichés
with a good deal of bad faith, he has presented, since his war upon
Ukraine began in February 2014, a rather strange history of his own
country. He has maintained that Russia and Ukraine are one nation
because of a baptism that might or might not have happened more than a
thousand years ago in a trading post that was, at the time, a synthesis
of pagan Vikings and Jewish Khazars. He presents Crimea, now that it
has been invaded and annexed, as eternally Russian, even though its
history is a European pageant of cultures. Its Russian character is due
largely to the murderous expulsion of Crimean Tatars by the Stalinist
regime in 1943. As Belarusian President Lukashenko has mischievously
pointed out, by Putin's own logic of ethnic history it would make more
sense to hand over Moscow to the Crimean Tatars than it does to hand
over Crimea to Moscow. After all, Muscovy began as a protectorate of
the Tatars. Finally, Putin has claimed that Russia should expand
southward because there was once a region called New Russia. He gets
the borders of the historical district wrong, but this only conceals
the deeper error. Expanding Russia into New Russia makes as much sense
as England claiming New England or Scotland claiming New Caledonia or
South Wales claiming New South Wales. In contemporary history, Russian
propaganda embraces simple contradiction and dares the "decadent" West
to notice: there is no Ukrainian nation but all Ukrainians are
nationalists; there is no Ukrainian state but its organs are
oppressive; there is no Ukrainian language but Russians are being
forced to speak it.
Even against this unusual and quite spectacular backdrop of historical
distortion, President Putin's endorsement of the Molotov-Ribbentrop
pact is worthy of special attention, especially in Germany. The
significance of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact for the history of the
twentieth century could hardly be greater. His alliance with Stalin
allowed Hitler to fight a war of aggression against Poland with Soviet
help, and thereby stands at the beginning of all of the succeeding
tragedies of the war, in Poland and elsewhere. In claiming that Stalin
was behaving as a reasonable statesman in 1939, Putin is saying that at
that moment Hitler should not have been resisted. This is not only a
problematic assessment of Soviet foreign policy. It is also a direct
challenge to the fundamental myth of the establishment of the postwar
Federal Republic of Germany, which is that Hitler should have been
resisted in 1939. And there were of course European states that did
make the opposite decision at the time: France and Great Britain and
most significantly Poland did resist Hitler in 1939. Hitler had courted
Poland as an ally for a war against the Soviet Union for five years,
between early 1934 and early 1939, and was refused. He courted Stalin
for a war against Poland for three days in August 1939, and was
accepted with enthusiasm.
On 20 August 1939 Hitler asked Stalin for a meeting, and Stalin was
more than happy to agree. For five years the Soviet leader had been
seeking an occasion to destroy Poland, and now one had arrived. Stalin
understood, of course, that he has making an arrangement to destroy the
largest homeland of European Jews with the most important anti-Semite
in the world. Stalin had made preparations for the alliance with
Hitler, kowtowing like so many other leaders to the Leader's
anti-Semitism. In the hope of attracting Hitler's attention, he had
fired his Jewish commissar for foreign affairs, Maxim Litvinov, and
replaced him with the Russian Vyacheslav Molotov. The dismissal of
Litvinov, according to Hitler, was "decisive." It would be Molotov who
would negotiate an agreement with Hitler's minister of foreign affairs,
Joachim von Ribbentrop, in Moscow on 23 August 1939.
By that time, Jews had a fairly accurate sense of what was to be
feared. Five years of accelerating repression in Germany had been
followed by shocking violence in Austria during the Anschluss. The
destruction of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 [including
Carpatho-Ukraine] had also been a disaster for Jews [and
Ukrainians]. Czechoslovak Jews had fled the regions
annexed to Germany, losing their property along the way. Jews resident
in Slovakia lost their citizenship as a new state was created, in
alliance with and dependent upon Berlin. In Geneva in late August 1939,
where Zionists were meeting at their world congress, the news of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact came as a shock. Everyone present immediately
understood what the announcement of the "non-aggression pact" meant:
that Hitler had been unleashed and that a war was coming. Chaim
Weizmann, the leader of the General Zionists, closed the congress with
the words: "Friends, I have only one wish: that we all remain alive."
This was no empty pathos. A secret protocol to the Nazi-Soviet
non-aggression pact stipulated the division of eastern Europe between
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Hitler had the ally he needed to
begin hostilities. The east European regions concerned by the secret
protocol of the German-Soviet agreement were the heartland of world
Jewry, continuously settled by Jews for half a millennium. Once the war
began, they would quickly become the most dangerous place for Jews in
their entire history. A Holocaust would begin here less than two years
later. Within three years almost all of the millions of Jews who lived
there would be dead. Stalin famously said that the Molotov-Ribbentrop
pact was an alliance "signed in blood". Much of the blood shed in the
lands concerned by the agreement would be that of Jewish civilians.
The current press coverage of Putin's historical turnabout focuses not
on the relationship between the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and the war
itself but on the particular fears of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and
Estonia, the four states than in 1939 were occupied by the Red Army
after the pact. On 17 September 1939 Stalin joined his ally Hitler in a
military attack on Poland, sending the Red Army to invade the country
from the east. It met the allied Wehrmacht in the middle and organized
a joint victory parade. The Soviet and German secret police promised
each other to suppress any Polish resistance. Behind the lines the
Soviet NKVD organized the mass deportation of about half a million
Polish citizens [including
many Ukrainians, such as Anton Shevchuk] to the Gulag. It
also executed thousands of Polish officers, many of whom were fresh
from combat against the Wehrmacht.
The destruction of the Polish state is remembered in Polish history,
understandably; what is often overlooked is the way that Polish and
Jewish history must overlap. The Polish citizens murdered by the NKVD,
usually reserve officers with a higher education, were killed because
they represented the elite of the Polish state. Often they were Jews,
whose death at Soviet hands left their families to face the German
occupation without them. Wilhelm Engelkreis, a Polish Jewish doctor and
reserve officer, was murdered at Katyn. His daughter, writing later
from Israel, recalled her childhood despair. Hironim Brandwajn, a
doctor, was shot in the back of the neck with his brother officers at
Katyn; his wife Mira would die two years later [after
Hitler attacked Stalin on 22Jun1941] in the Warsaw ghetto
without knowing what had happened to her husband. Mieczyslaw Proner,
for example, was a pharmacist and chemist and a Jew and a Pole and a
reserve officer and combatant. He fought against the Germans in the
Polish Army, only to be arrested by the Soviets and murdered with a
bullet to the back of the neck. A few months later his mother was
ordered to the Warsaw ghetto, from which she was deported to Treblinka
and gassed [according
to the Holocaust Industry].
In the speech that rehabilitated the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, and on
other occasions, Putin has justified the Soviet alliance with Nazi
Germany by referring to the complicity of the western powers in the
destruction of Czechoslovakia at Munich. Although he is absolutely
right that the betrayal of Czechoslovakia was an important step towards
the war and the Holocaust, it is not at all clear that the reference to
Munich really improves Putin's case. From all appearances, he himself
sees both Munich and the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, which he tends to
group together, as positive examples. The Russian campaign against
Ukraine in 2014 is startlingly similar to the German campaign against
Czechoslovakia in 1938. It features the use of ethnic nationalism, the
invention of historical regions that are only taken for granted after
violence ("Sudetenland" and "Novorossiya"), the support of separatists
who would never have a chance without foreign backing, and the desire
to destroy a European system by destroying a major European state that
happens to be more democratic than some of its neighbours.
Of course, in the West, Munich is generally seen as a mistake and a
negative example. And Putin's invocation of the Munich accords is
rather incomplete without reference to Soviet policy at the time.
France was trying to come to an agreement with the Soviet Union during
the first half of 1938, but its interlocutors kept disappearing into
the maw of the Great Terror. We will know more about this if and when
the relevant archival collections are opened, but to all appearances
the Munich crisis was evaluated at the time in the Kremlin as an
opportunity to intervene in eastern Europe. Even as London and Paris
urged Prague to compromise with Hitler, the Soviets provided
indications of their willingness to send their armed forces to central
Europe to protect Czechoslovakia -- which for simple geographical
reasons would have required an invasion of Poland or Romania or both.
Four Soviet army groups were in fact moved to the Polish border. On 12
September 1938, Hitler gave a speech about the need to liberate Germans
from Czech policies of extermination, and to do away with
Czechoslovakia generally. Three days later the Soviet regime
accelerated the ethnic cleansing of its own borderlands with Poland.
Beginning on 15 September 1938, Soviet authorities carried out swift
mass executions of Soviet citizens found guilty of espionage for
Poland, most of them ethnic Polish men.
Oral instructions to the local NKVD made clear that "Poles are to be
completely destroyed". Throughout the territory of Soviet Ukraine,
Polish men were shot in huge numbers in September 1938. In the city of
Voroshilovgrad (today Luhansk), for example, Soviet authorities
considered 1226 cases in the Polish Operation during the Czechoslovak
crisis, and ordered 1226 executions. In the regions of Soviet Ukraine
adjacent to the Polish border, Soviet units went from village to
village as death squads in September. Polish men were shot, Polish
women and children were sent to the Gulag, and reports were filed later
-- over and over again. In the Zhytomyr region Soviet authorities
sentenced a hundred people [Ukrainians,
Poles or Jews?] to death on 22 September 1938, 138 more on
23 September, and 408 on 28 September. That was the day that Hitler had
set as the deadline for an invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The Red Army was standing at the Polish border; and the NKVD had
cleared the hinterland of suspicious elements by massive shootings and
deportations of Poles, regarded as the enemy nation. But instead the
crisis was resolved. At Munich the leaders of Britain, France, Italy
and Germany decided that Czechoslovakia should cede the territories
that Hitler wanted. This was a shameful action and is remembered as
such today not only in Prague but in London, Paris and Washington.
Soviet policy during those weeks is entirely forgotten. But the terror
and mobilization provides a useful bit of background to Soviet policy
after the next European crisis generated by Hitler did create the
opportunity for a Soviet invasion of Poland. The Soviet deportations of
Polish citizens in 1940 repeated, on a smaller scale, the methods of
the Great Terror. Beria, the head of the NKVD, established a special
troika to deal rapidly with the files of all of the Polish prisoners of
war. He established a quota for the killings, as had been done in 1937
and 1938. In the Polish Operation of the Great Terror of 1937-1938,
Polish men had been shot and the families deported to be exploited and
denationalized. This was repeated in 1940. If the families of the
executed men were in the Soviet zone, they were deported to the Gulag.
After the invasion of Poland, the next major Soviet act of aggression
during the period of alliance with Nazi Germany was the invasion of
Finland in November 1939. The winter war was a very costly victory for
the Soviet Union, although the losses were much greater, in relative
terms, for the much smaller target of invasion. A rehabilitation of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact is also a rehabilitation of that war. In summer
1940, the Red Army entered the three Baltic states, Lithuania, Latvia
and Estonia. After sham referenda they were annexed to the Soviet
Union. These three small countries lost tens of thousands of citizens
to deportations, including most of the elites. They were declared by
Soviet law never to have existed, so that service to the state became a
crime under Soviet law. This Soviet idea that states can be declared to
exist or not remains in the political memory of today's elites in the
zone affected by the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact. Because Poland,
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia were attacked by the Soviet Union in 1939
and 1940, while Stalin was Hitler's ally, their elites today have also
been immune to other Russian propaganda positions, for example the
grotesque claim that Russia had to invade Ukraine in order to protect
Europe from fascism. They remember not only the Molotov-Ribbentrop
pact, but also the Nazi-Soviet Treaty on Borders and Friendship that
followed, and the sham elections and propaganda in the Soviet zone that
so resemble recent Russian actions in occupied Ukraine.
President Putin's rehabilitation of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact is
certainly directed against the lands between Berlin and Moscow: but in
two variants. In the first variant, Moscow invites Poland to play the
historical role of Germany, and partake in a division of Ukraine. No
one in Warsaw took seriously such proposals. In the second variant,
Moscow suggests to Berlin that Germany would be better suited if it
acted as a great power, ignoring the new rules of the European Union
and following the old rules of the interwar period. Although this would
be strategic idiocy for Germany, whose admirable power position depends
precisely upon European integration, important German statesmen such as
Gerhard Schroeder and Helmut Schmidt have taken meaningful steps
towards endorsing this position.
It would be a mistake, however, to imagine that the significance of
President Putin's position is limited to the fate of eastern Europe,
important though that is. What is happening is the shift from one
possible Russian memory of the war to another, a memory mutation with
implications for all of Russia and all of Europe.
Two versions of World War II were always available, because the Soviet
Union fought on both sides of the war. From 1939 to 1941 the Soviet
Union was a German ally, fighting in the eastern theatre and supplying
Germany with the minerals, oil and food needed to make war against
Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and most
importantly France and Britain. During this stage of the war Stalin was
eager to please Hitler, and in general fulfilled not only obligations
of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and the Treaty on Borders and Friendship
but also specific requests of his German ally. There was one major
exception. Stalin was perfectly aware of the plight of Jews in the
German zone of Poland. Unsurprisingly he was completely uninterested in
helping them. In February 1940 Adolf Eichmann proposed to the Soviet
leadership that two million Jews, the bulk of Polish Jewry, be
transferred from Germany to the USSR. There was no sign of interest in
Moscow. This was one of the few German requests that was not fulfilled
during the period of the alliance.
After Hitler betrayed Stalin and the Wehrmacht invaded the USSR in June
1941, the Soviet Union was suddenly on the other side of the war, and
quickly found itself in a grand alliance with Britain and the United
States [see
the perfidy of Roosevelt
and Churchill].
Soviet propaganda passed over the first war in silence and celebrated
Soviet feats of arms in the second. Given the millions of Soviet
citizens killed by the Germans this made perfect political sense. The
victory in the "Great Fatherland War" became something like a second
founding myth of the Soviet Union, and remains so in Russia and
Belarus. In this telling of Soviet history, the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
had to be denied: not so much because it was as a crime but because it
was a blunder. After all, it allowed German troops to approach the
Soviet Union well before the invasion of 1941, it aided Germany to
become the European power that almost reached Moscow, and it created a
false sense of complacency in the Kremlin. Stalin refused to believe
that Germany would invade in 1941. He dismissed more than a hundred
intelligence warnings of the coming invasion as British propaganda, and
was caught completely off guard. In the decades that followed the war,
the Soviet Union wanted to present itself as a power that stood for
peace. It therefore had to deny that it was one of the powers that
began the war.
But as today's Russia fights a war of aggression in Europe, its leaders
seem to be moulding, in ways that might seem contradictory, this
traditional emphasis on the defensive war of 1941-1944 with the
available alternative, the war of aggression of 1939-1941. Certainly,
emphasis on a war of aggression harmonizes much better with the current
media climate inside Russia. Between 1939 and 1941, as the Soviet Union
presented Nazi Germany in its own internal propaganda as a friendly
state, Soviet society ceased to criticize German policies and began to
publish Nazi speeches. People in public meetings occasionally misspoke,
praising "Comrade Hitler" or calling for "the triumph of international
fascism." Swastikas began to appear on buildings or even on posters of
Soviet leaders. A similar level of ideological confusion is evident in
Russia today. Jews are blamed for the Holocaust on national television;
intellectuals close to the Kremlin rehabilitate Hitler as a statesman;
Russian neo-Nazis march on May Day; Nuremberg-style rallies where
torches are carried in swastika formations are presented as
anti-fascist, and a campaign against homosexuals is presented as a
defence of true European civilization. In its invasion of Ukraine,
Russia has called upon the local and European far Right to support its
actions and spread its version of events. In the recent electoral
farces in occupied Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, as in the earlier faked
referendum in occupied Crimea, European far-right politicians,
including fascists have come as "observers" to endorse the gains of
Russia's war.
Far from being an eccentric detail, these "observers" reveal the
fundamental contemporary meaning of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.
Indeed, it is the Kremlin's basic alignment with the European far Right
against the European mainstream that made the rehabilitation of the
Stalin-Hitler pact inevitable, or at least predictable (I predicted it
in May 2014?). Although Putin would certainly be pleased if actual
German or Polish political leaders were foolish enough to take the bait
of agreeing to a new division of Europe, he must be satisfied for the
moment with the people who have actually responded, in one way or
another, to his appeal to destroy the existing European order:
separatists across Europe (including the admiring leadership of UKIP),
large anti-European rightwing populist parties (of which the most
important is the French Front National), as well as the far-right
fringe, including fascists and Nazis. They are, for the time being at
least, the partners in the Putin's new Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, because
they are the rightwing revanchists that Putin will find in contemporary
Europe.
In making his alliance with Hitler, Stalin had a political logic. He
imagined that in supporting the Nazi state as it began its world war he
would turn the German armed forces to the west, away from the Soviet
Union. In this way, the inherent contradictions of the capitalist world
would be exposed, and Germany, France and Britain would collapse
simultaneously. In his own way, Putin is now attempting the same thing.
Just as Stalin sought to turn the most radical of European forces,
Adolf Hitler, against Europe itself, so Putin now attempts the same
thing with his grab bag of right-wingers. His allies on the far Right
are precisely the political forces that wish to bring the European
Union to an end, and return Europe to an age of nation states. It
should go without saying that this would be a catastrophe for all
concerned, including in the end for Russia. But there is an important
difference between Stalin in 1939 and Putin in 2014. One can at least
credit Stalin for attempting to resolve a real problem: Hitler did
indeed intend to destroy the Soviet Union. In allying with Hitler he
compromised his ideology and made a strategic mistake, but he was at
least responding to a real threat. Putin, on the other hand, had no
European enemy. Russian foreign policy has elected to present the
European Union as an adversary, for reasons that remain mysterious.
It is unlikely that President Putin actually believes in the various
ideologies of the far Right with which they happily consort, at home
and abroad, any more than he believes in the ideologies of the far
Left, when such groups are daft enough to offer their help to the
Russian project. Russia began a war in Ukraine for no reason that
anyone is now capable of defining, and thereby began an alienation from
the West that, from the point of view of Russia's basic interests,
makes absolutely no sense. The tortured and fruitless search for a
strategic justification for this disaster has led to the jettisoning of
one of the basic moral foundations of postwar politics: the opposition
to wars of aggression in Europe in general and the Nazi war of
aggression in 1939 in particular. The rehabilitation of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact is not the reflection of a clear ideology, but
it may be something worse: an embrace of nihilism as a defence of
incompetence. To embrace the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact is to discard the
basis for common understanding in the western world for the sake of a
momentary tactic that can destroy but cannot create.