1. The brutality of the war is shocking, and during World War II, Nazi Germany ** more than six million Jews, this number is sad.
But what is even more distressing is that there are also people from European countries, such as Ukrainians, Romanians, Lithuanians, Estonians, Latvians, who act as **.
Today, we would like to pay special attention to this part of Ukraine's history, a story about the genocide of innocent civilians.
2. [Ukrainian Nazis after 2014] After the outbreak of the Ukrainian crisis in 2014, ultra-nationalist forces in Ukraine rose again.
This includes far-right parties in Ukraine"Liberals"with"Nationalist volunteers"and other organizations. These organizations promote racism, anti-Semitism and xenophobia, which pose a threat to democracy and stability in Ukraine.
3. [Nazis spread throughout the Western world. The United States supported the Nazis, and the Nazis bit back the United States. Nazism does not exist only in Ukraine. There are also far-right forces throughout the Western world, including the United States.
These forces promote racism, anti-Semitism and xenophobia, which have a negative impact on society. And the support and connivance of the United States for these forces has made the situation even worse.
In the end, the bite back of Nazism will only cost society as a whole.
Stepan Bandera: A radical force for Ukrainian independence Stepan Bandera was born in 1909 in the Ivano-Frankivsk region of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, a historically mixed Jewish and Ukrainian settlement.
Poland's restoration and favor of Jews made it a place where Jews and Ukrainians mingled. However, more than four hundred years of oppression have made Ukrainians in the west develop a deep hatred for Poland and Jews.
Bandera, who has been a member of various Ukrainian nationalist organizations since childhood, is convinced that the independence of Ukraine can be fought for only by extreme means. He led youth groups in military training and manufacturing, and even planned assassinations.
His strong will and outstanding action led him to become the standard-bearer of the organization in 1931. However, his radical actions were not recognized by Poland**, and in 1934 he was sentenced to death for plotting to assassinate the Polish Minister of the Interior, which was later commuted to life imprisonment.
Until 1939, when Germany blitzed Poland, Bandera was released and joined the "organization of Ukrainian nationalists". Soon after, the Soviet Union also invaded Poland and carved up the eastern part of Poland.
Bandera took advantage of this opportunity to gather a number of Ukrainians who opposed the USSR under his banner. From here, Bandera collaborated with Nazi Germany, received German funds, engaged in hostile activities against the USSR, sabotaged Soviet transport, industry and agricultural enterprises.
Under his leadership, hundreds of members underwent military and administrative courses, preparing for the formation of pro-German ** in the future. Stepan Bandera, an activist who did not hesitate to collaborate with the Nazis for the sake of Ukraine's independence, reflects the complex ethnic and political issues of Ukrainian history.
On June 30, 1941, Germany invaded Ukraine, and Bandera's deputy, Stetsko, went with the German army and announced that a new state would be established in Ukraine.
On the night of the founding of the country, they began a large-scale campaign against the Jews, killing more than 1,500 people. On July 3-4, they helped the Germans execute 45 Ukrainian professors and their families.
Soon the Germans arrested Bandera and Stetsko and imprisoned them in the Hausen concentration camp. Schukhevich took over the puppet power of the Germans and in 1943 manipulated the Volyn Great, with nearly 100,000 Poles in the Volyn region.
He also joined the 14th Grenadier Division of the German Waffen-SS "Galicia" in 1943, which was mainly composed of members from the Lviv region of western Ukraine.
This big ** has cast a huge shadow on the Ukrainian people, whose goal is to create a state that contains only Ukrainians.
The history of Ukraine under Nazi rule: In 1944, the Soviet Red Army liberated Ukraine, and Germany freed Bandera and Shukhevich from concentration camps. Under the arrangement of Nazi Germany, the OUN gathered the best forces in Eastern Europe, including Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, to establish an organization called the "Anti-Bolshevik National Group", led by Bandera and Stetsko.
A year later, Nazi Germany fell, and with it, the ABN, which served the Nazis, was disbanded, and its leadership fled to the West. These ultra-nationalists have begun a new exploration.
The Ukrainian Nazis committed heinous crimes during World War II with a population of more than 1 million people. Ukrainian Nazis after World War II: After Germany's defeat, the Western world could have given the Ukrainian Nazis a break, but they didn't do so because they saw the Soviet Union as their new common enemy.
These anti-Soviet ultra-nationalists have taken on a new use. Bandera settled in Munich after the war, and with the financial support of the British Intelligence Six, he and his second boss Stetzko resurrected the former "anti-Bolshevik group of countries", intending to unite all the ** anti-Soviet forces in exile in Europe and overthrow all the communist countries in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union and the world.
The Soviet Union assassinated him several times, but they were all thwarted by the West. It was not until 1959 that he was killed by the KGB with ***. Stetzko took on the responsibility of leading the ABN, and they tried to clear their name for their crimes during World War II, never mentioning the fact that they cooperated with Nazi Germany, and portrayed themselves as national heroes who opposed the aggression of Nazi Germany and Soviet communism and pursued national independence.
Like dogs who can't change their, they still can't change their arbitrary and brutal nature, and they will resolutely crack down on even those who disagree with each other among the exiles.
In 1959, the ABN's efforts were successful, and the concept of "enslaved states" was formally recognized by the United States** and enshrined in the form of law.
This concept still exists today, and now the list involves countries such as North Korea, Russia, and also China. In 1983, ABN and Stetzko were invited to the White House as advanced groups and individuals.
At the event, Reagan and Vice President Bush cordially met with ABN leader Stetzko and made an affectionate promise to him: "Your struggle is our struggle, and your dream is our dream."
One day you will be free. You are the conscience of the free world. When Stetzko died in 1986, Reagan publicly expressed his condolences, and in a message of condolence, Reagan described Stetko's life as "burning his life with a love of freedom, shining a light on the dark ages that were shrouded in it." ”
Considering Stetzko's past crimes, the "freedom" in the mouths of these Americans** is chilling. Subsequently, Stetsko's widow became the leader of the ABN.
Later, Stetsko's widow returned to Ukraine with members of the OUN organization and formed the political party "Ukrainian Nationalist Congress". The party is allied with Ukraine's former ** Yushchenko's party, and its member Roman Zwaric also served as justice minister during the administration of Yushchenko and Tymoshenko.
In February 2014, when the Ukrainian crisis erupted, the democratically elected Viktor Yanukovych was overthrown, and the fortunes of Donetsk and Crimea took a major turn. Large-scale clashes have erupted between the army and local independence forces, and Ukraine is facing unprecedented challenges.
* In order to strengthen its strength, a large number of ultra-racist and neo-Nazi civilian armed forces have been absorbed. However, this approach not only fails to solve the problem, but only exacerbates the tearing and destabilization of the country.
Against this background, the Azov Battalion, consisting of the football hooligan gang "80 Sect", managed to attract the attention of the ** and became a paramilitary organization. The Azov battalion grew rapidly and was eventually incorporated into the Ukrainian National Guard.
This growth, at the expense of the peace of the country, makes further destabilization and ** inevitable in Ukraine, with or without an external military strike.
The far-right forces in Ukraine are gradually rising, and they are using heavy ** attacks on civilians and ** to torture prisoners. While the U.S. once banned support for the Azov Battalion, they later lifted the ban under pressure from the Pentagon and have continued to support Ukrainian neo-Nazis, including funding, **, and killing techniques.
This situation is not just a problem with the Azov battalion, but a nationwide phenomenon in Ukraine. More and more Ukrainians have begun to support this far-right ideology, and some have even signed decrees to remove statues of communists.
Such behaviour is deeply worrisome.
A number of neo-Nazi parties have emerged in Ukraine in recent years, such as Yarosh, Right Sector, Svoboda, and National Corps, with Svoboda receiving 215% of the votes.
The presence of these parties, as well as their entry into parliament, shows that the Nazi problem, which is prevalent on the European continent, goes further in Ukraine. The Nazi campaign has taken a heavy toll on the people of Donetsk and Luhansk, who have killed more than 14,000 people, including the elderly, women and children, over the course of eight years.
At the same time, Russians and pro-Russian Ukrainians living in Ukraine have also received a huge shock. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, they were already sad about the loss of their homeland, and now, they are becoming more and more unfamiliar with what is happening in Ukraine, and they miss Russia even more intensely.
I saw a recently rescued ordinary resident say: "We waited in the basement for a long time, second after second, until they opened the door and said 'good evening' to us, and my tears flowed because I knew our people were coming." ”
This story reminds us once again that we should resolutely oppose any form of extremism and racism, protect the rights and interests of vulnerable groups, and promote social harmony and progress.
The logo of the "2nd SS Tank Division" of Nazi Germany hung at the "Patriots of Ukraine" rally legitimized the actions of the Russian special military operation in terms of denazification.
The evil deeds of Ukrainian politicians and neo-Nazis made the Ukrainian people unbearable, and they finally elected an actor as **. However, the combined actions of Ukrainian politicians, oligarchs, actors and neo-Nazis have pushed the country into the abyss.
Not only in Ukraine, but also in the Western world, the Nazi problem is widespread in the Western world, due to the widening gap between rich and poor, high inequality and intensifying ethnic conflicts in Western capitalist countries.
Countries such as Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Greece, Romania, Slovenia, and Spain all have far-right parties, and they are known as Nazi parties.
Their learning outcomes include participation in rallies in the United States**, terrorist attacks in Australia, and the tragic events in Hong Kong, our country.
The Nazis in Ukraine, seemingly far away, are actually within reach. The support of the United States, the military, and the intelligence agencies seems to be for themselves, but in the end it hurts American society in turn.
Just like in the 80s of the last century, the United States supported terrorist groups in Afghanistan, but was retaliated by the 911 terrorist attacks many years later. History always repeats itself, and humanity always lingers on the same mistakes, and that's the only lesson we learn from history. "