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#8
TimeEurope.com
January 20, 2002
Putin Plays Follow the Leader
Is Stalin coming back in style?
BY YURI ZARAKHOVICH/MOSCOW
Friday, Jan. 18, 2002 Back in 1941 as Hitler attacked the U.S.S.R. and the
Red Army crumbled, General Georgi Zhukov is said to have muttered after a
dressing down from Stalin: "Damn the mustachioed bastard!" Stalin
stroked his moustache and asked: "Who do you mean, Comrade Zhukov?"
"Hitler, of course," Zhukov said. "Who else?"
On an official visit in Poland this week, Putin suggested that the Russian
law regarding the compensation of victims of Stalinist repression should extend
to Polish citizens as well. "We won't compare [these] repressions to
Nazism," said Putin, "But we don't want to close our eyes to the
negative sides of the Stalin regime."
A couple of days earlier, Polish journalists asked Putin about Stalin's place
in Russian history. Putin regarded the question as "provocative", but
answered reluctantly that Stalin was a dictator. However, he added, "The
problem is that it was under his leadership that this country won World War II
... It would be stupid to ignore that." If Nazi Germany had won that war,
would we have seen some president of a post-Nazi democratic Germany suggesting
56 years later that the Hitler regime had other sides beyond the negative ones?
Hitler built highways, won the war, etc...
Putin, has shown some sympathy for Stalin. He restored the music of the
Stalin era-national anthem and seems bent on controlling the Russian media and
regional governments as well. What does this portend for Russia? If the country
won the war under Stalin's leadership, it only proves the sad adage ascribed to
Churchill: Russians are adept at creating problems first and heroically
overcoming them later.
Was it not Stalin who facilitated Hitler's rise to power by his policy of
setting communists against social democrats in Germany? Was it not Stalin who
dreamed of setting Hitler against the bourgeois West to advance the communist
revolution? Was it not Stalin who made a deal with Hitler in 1939 to carve up
Europe between the two dictators? Was it not Stalin who ignored all the warnings
that Hitler would attack the U.S.S.R.? By 1945, Stalin had learned enough about
warfare to defeat Hitler. But this victory had a price: over 26 million lives in
four years. Not much of a bargain. All in all, Stalin's dictatorship cost Russia
over 100 million lives. This is what Stalin's regime was really all about--and
"It would be stupid to ignore this."
Back in the victorious 1945, Stalin raised a toast to the patience of the
Russian people. "Any other people would have overthrown such a
government," Stalin said in reference to his own regime, and went on to
praise the patience and the steadfast confidence the people had in his
leadership.
Today, many Russian are befuddled by poverty, mayhem and a reform process
that seems to lead nowhere. Putin is positioning himself as a firm and resolute
leader, a father figure for the democratic era. Hence, his respectful references
to Stalin. Why should the Russian President consider a question on Stalin's
place in history "provocative?" To quote Stalin once again: "When
provoked, don't succumb to provocations." Indeed, we shouldn't--not to
Stalin's provocations, nor to Putin's.
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