By Finian Cunningham
January 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - This week
sees the 75th anniversary of the
liberation of the Nazi Auschwitz death
camp by the Soviet Red Army. But the
momentous event is being overshadowed by
renewed attempts by the Polish
authorities – aided by American and
German officials – to shift the blame
for the Second World War on to the
Soviet Union.
The grimly deceptive German maxim
“Arbeit Macht Frei” (“Works Sets You
Free”) adorning the iron-gate entrance
to Auschwitz through which millions of
prisoners passed on their way to death,
could be subtitled today with the more
honest phrase “Wahrheit Macht Frei”
(“Truth Sets You Free”).
Because what is going on in the
Polish commemoration of Auschwitz and
claims about the origins of the Second
World War more generally is an appalling
distortion of history to suit current
geopolitical interests in the West of
undermining Russia. Concealing or
denying the causes of war only traps the
world into repeating war.
Rather than being given a full place
of honor for the liberation of the
extermination camp in southern Poland on
January 27, 1945, by the Soviet army,
today Moscow is being sidelined despite
its crucial role in crushing the Nazi
regime and all its horrors.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has
reportedly declined to attend the 75th
anniversary in Poland. Russia will be
represented by its ambassador to the
country. Putin is attending an
equivalent event in Israel, and at that
alternative commemoration will be
afforded due prominence to mark the
liberating achievement of Russia’s
predecessor, the Soviet Union. It is
understandable why the Russian president
decided to give the event in Poland a
miss because of the toxic claims made
recently by Warsaw and other Western
states concerning allegations that the
Soviet Union colluded with Nazi Germany
in instigating the war.
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This distortion of history has even
gained an official status when the
European Parliament – after Polish and
Baltic state lobbying – adopted a
resolution last September in which the
Soviet Union is cast as equally culpable
along with the Nazi Third Reich for
starting World War II.
When President Putin slammed that
resolution as “nonsense” and went on to
point out Poland’s own documented
collaboration with Nazi Germany, the
current Polish government, along with
German and American diplomats, doubled
down on the accusations impugning Moscow
for having partial responsibility for
the worst conflagration in history.
Those Polish and Western accusations
stem from the historical Nazi-Soviet
non-aggression pact which was signed on
August 23, 1939, one week before the
Nazis invaded Poland. Thus it is claimed
that Stalin’s detente with Hitler
emboldened the latter to launch the war.
As Radio Free Europe
reported: “German envoy Rolf Nikel
and US Ambassador to Poland Georgette
Mosbacher both said on December 30 that
Germany and the Soviet Union colluded to
start the war in 1939 that led to the
death of tens of millions of people on
continental Europe.”
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz
Moraweicka denounced Putin’s version of
history as “lying… trampling the memory
of those events. Poland must stand up
for the truth, not for its own interests
but for the sake of of what defines
Europe.”
That’s quite an audacious feat of
historical distortion.
The motives for such re-writing of
history are obvious. Germany can
unburden some of its war guilt for
terrorizing Europe with its fascist
genocide.
By implicating the Soviets in Nazi
horror, the Americans and their
rightwing surrogates in Poland and the
Baltic states can breath some air into
the stale, breathless claims of “Russian
aggression” towards modern-day Europe.
That twist is especially odious given
that the Soviet Union suffered the most
out of any nation from Nazi barbarity,
with up to 25 million dead and tens of
millions more wounded.
Poland has perhaps the most to gain
from falsifying history. Its own
shameful past of colluding with the Nazi
regime before and during the war is, it
is anticipated, whitewashed and shoved
down the memory hole.
The people lining up to disparage
Russia over alleged Soviet complicity
with Nazi Germany claim, ironically,
that Putin is “rewriting history” by
referring to Soviet records and
propaganda.
One of the finest scholarly accounts
of the period from the First World War
until the late 1930s and the outbreak of
war is the work by British historian AJP
Taylor, entitled ‘The Origins of the
Second World War’ (published 1961).
Taylor is no “fellow-traveller” of the
Soviet Union. His study is a consummate
exercise in objective scholarship.
The Russian perspective is
substantially corroborated by Taylor
(and other Western historians, see for
example this recent
essay by Michael Jabara Carley). The
Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact on the
eve of the war’s outbreak was a
desperate attempt by Moscow to keep the
Third Reich at bay. Because, as Taylor
points out, the Western powers, in
particular Britain and France and
Poland, had consistently rebuffed Soviet
appeals to form a collective European
security pact against Nazi Germany.
Britain, France and Poland looked the
other way when Hitler annexed Austria in
1936 and invaded Czechoslovakia in 1938.
The Fuhrer’s manifesto in ‘Mein Kampf’
and his various ranting speeches during
the 1930s explicitly targeted the Soviet
Union and European Jewry for
annihilation in a Final Solution.
Polish ministers during this period
shared the Nazi contempt for Soviet and
Jewish people. The case of Polish
Ambassador in Berlin Josef Lipski
proposing to Hitler in 1938 a scheme to
deport European Jews to Africa is
indisputable.
What Polish authorities today are
compelled to deny is the objective
historical record which assigns
complicity to their predecessors in
unleashing the Nazi monster. The fact
Auschwitz and other Nazi extermination
camps are on Polish territory does not
seem to give these virulent Russphobes
any pause for thought. The fact that the
Soviet Red Army saved millions of Poles
from Nazi barbarity – a barbarity that
their vain, deluded political leaders
emboldened – is perhaps the clearest
example of how “Lies Do Not Set You
Free”.