Fascism
was not defeated when the Third Reich Fell, It just found a new home
and new 'enablers'.
Far
right Fascist groups are behind the coup in Ukraine and there is no
shortage of proof if we look for it
"If
you look at insignia being worn in Kiev in the street demonstrations
and marches, you'll see SS division insignia still being worn".
During
the Post depression re-emergence of European Nations in the late
1930's the rise of Fascism was ignored or disregarded and the danger
underestimated beyond belief.
7
short years later 50,000,000 mostly innocent children, women and men
were dead.
Racism
was the root cause of this genocide and unchecked it has the chance
to happen again.
"So
this is a very clear record, and the OUN, even in its postwar
publications, has called for ethno-genetically pure Ukrainian
territory, which of course is simply calling for purging Jews, Poles
and Russians from what they consider Ukrainian territory. Also,
current leaders of Svoboda have made blatantly anti-Semitic remarks
that call for getting rid of Muscovite Jews and so forth.
They
use this very coarse, threatening language that anybody knowing the
history of World War II would tremble at. If they were living here,
it would seem like they would start worrying about it."
"Obviously
these people don’t hold monopoly power in Ukraine, but they stepped
up and the United States has been behind the Svoboda party and these
Ukrainian nationalists. In fact, the US connections to them go back
to World War II, and the United States has had a longstanding tie to
the OUN, through the intelligence agencies—initially military
intelligence, later the CIA."
We
all need to wake up quickly before we wake up DEAD.
---Kevin
Hester
Seven
Decades of Nazi Collaboration: America’s Dirty Little Ukraine
Secret
Paul
H. Rosenberg and Foreign Policy In Focus
28
March, 2014
As
the Ukrainian crisis has unfolded over the past few weeks, it’s
hard for Americans not to see Vladimir Putin as the big villain. But
the history of the region is a history of competing villains vying
against one another; and one school of villains—the Nazis—have a
long history of engagement with the United States, mostly below the
radar, but occasionally exposed, as they were by Russ Bellant in his
book Old
Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party (South
End Press, 1991). Bellant's exposure of émigré Nazi leaders from
Germany's World War II allies in the 1988 Bush presidential campaign
was the driving force in the announced resignation of nine
individuals, two of them from Ukraine, which is why he was the
logical choice to illuminate the scattered mentions of Nazi and
fascist elements among the Ukrainian nationalists, which somehow
never seems to warrant further comment or explanation. Of course most
Ukrainians aren’t Nazis or fascists—all the more reason to
illuminate those who would hide their true natures in the shadows…or
even behind the momentary glare of the spotlight.
Your
book, Old
Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party, exposed
the deep involvement in the Republican Party of Nazi elements from
Central and Eastern Europe, including Ukrainians, dating back to
World War II and even before. As the Ukrainian crisis unfolded in the
last few weeks, there have been scattered mentions of a fascist or
neo-fascist element, but somehow that never seems to warrant further
comment or explanation. I can’t think of anyone better to shed
light on what’s not being said about that element. The danger of
Russian belligerence is increasingly obvious, but this unexamined
fascist element poses dangers of its own. What can you tell us about
this element and those dangers?
The element has a long history, of a long record that speaks for itself, when that record is actually known and elaborated on. The key organization in the coup that took place here recently was the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists [OUN], or a specific branch of it known as the Banderas [OUN-B]. They’re the group behind the Svoboda party, which got a number of key positions in the new interim regime. The OUN goes back to the 1920s, when they split off from other groups, and, especially in the 1930s, began a campaign of assassinating and otherwise terrorizing people who didn’t agree with them.
As
World War II approached, they made an alliance with the Nazi powers.
They formed several military formations, so that when Germany invaded
the Soviet Union in June 1941, they had several battalions that went
into the main city at the time, where their base was, Lvov, or Lwow,
it has a variety of spellings [Lviv today]. They went in, and there’s
a documented history of them participating in the identification and
rounding up Jews in that city, and assisting in executing several
thousand citizens almost immediately. They were also involved in
liquidating Polish group populations in other parts of Ukraine during
the war.
Without
getting deeply involved in that whole history, the Organization of
Ukrainian Nationalists to this day defend their wartime role. They
were backers of forming the 14th Waffen SS Division, which was the
all-Ukrainian division that became an armed element on behalf of the
Germans, and under overall German control. They helped encourage its
formation, and after the war, right at the end of the war, it was
called the First Ukrainian division. They still glorify that history
of that SS division, and they have a veterans organization that
obviously doesn’t have too many of members left, but they formed a
veterans division of that.
If
you look at insignia being worn in Kiev in the street demonstrations
and marches, you'll see SS division insignia still being worn. In
fact, I was looking at photographs last night of it, and there was a
whole formation marching, not with the 14th Division, but with the
Second Division. It was a large division that did major battle around
Ukraine, and these marchers were wearing the insignia on the armbands
of the Second Division.
So
this is a very clear record, and the OUN, even in its postwar
publications, has called for ethno-genetically pure Ukrainian
territory, which of course is simply calling for purging Jews, Poles
and Russians from what they consider Ukrainian territory. Also,
current leaders of Svoboda have made blatantly anti-Semitic remarks
that call for getting rid of Muscovite Jews and so forth. They use
this very coarse, threatening language that anybody knowing the
history of World War II would tremble at. If they were living here,
it would seem like they would start worrying about it.
Obviously
these people don’t hold monopoly power in Ukraine, but they stepped
up and the United States has been behind the Svoboda party and these
Ukrainian nationalists. In fact, the US connections to them go back
to World War II, and the United States has had a longstanding tie to
the OUN, through the intelligence agencies—initially military
intelligence, later the CIA.
Your
book discusses a central figure in the OUN, Yaroslav Stetsko, who was
politically active for decades here in America. What can you tell us
about his history?
Yaroslav
Stetsko was the number-two leader of the OUN during World War II and
thereafter. In 1959, Stepan Bandera, who was head of the OUN, was
killed, and that’s when Stetsko assumed the leadership. Stetsko was
the guy who actually marched into Lvov with the German army on June
30, 1941. The OUN issued a proclamation at that time under his name
praising and calling for glory to the German leader Adolf Hitler and
how they’re going to march arm in arm for Ukraine and so forth.
After the war, he was part of the key leadership that got picked up
by the Americans.
There’s
a number of accounts I’ve seen, at least three credible reports, on
how they were in the displaced persons camp—the Allied forces set
up displaced persons camps and picked up tens of thousands of these
former allies of Hitler from countries all over the East—Hungary,
Latvia, Lithuania. There weren’t Polish collaborators; I think most
people know the Germans heavily persecuted and murdered millions of
Polish residents—but Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia and so forth,
Belorussia. They had them in these camps they built and organized
them, where the Ukrainians were assassinating their Ukrainian
nationalist rivals so they would be the undisputed leaders of
Ukrainian nationalist movement, so they would get the sponsorship of
the United States to continue their political operation, and they
were successful in that regard. So when Bandera was out of the
picture, Stetsko became the undisputed leader of Ukrainian
nationalists.
The
Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists in 1943 under German
sponsorship organized a multinational force to fight on behalf of the
retreating German army. After the battle of Stalingrad in ’43, the
Germans felt a heightened need to get more allies, and so the
Romanian Iron Guard, the Hungarian Arrow Cross, the Organization of
Ukrainian Nationalists and others with military formations in place
to assist came together and formed the united front called the
Committee of Subjugated Nations, and again worked on behalf of the
German military. In 1946, they renamed it the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of
Nations, or ABN. Stetsko was the leader of that until he died in
1986.
I
mention this in part because the OUN tries to say, Well, during the
war we fought the Germans and the Communists. The fact of the matter
is that they were the leadership of this whole multinational alliance
on behalf of the Germans the last two years of the war and in the war
thereafter. All the postwar leaders of the unrepentant Nazi allies
were under the leadership of Yaroslav Stetsko.
What
happened when Stetsko, and others like him from other German allied
forces, came to the United States?
In
the United States, when they came, his groups organized "captive
nations" committees. They became, supposedly, the
representatives of people who were being oppressed in Eastern Europe
and the Baltic countries by the Soviet Union. They were, in fact,
being given an uncritical blank check to represent the voices of all
these nations that were part of the Warsaw Pact, when in fact they
represented the most extreme elements of each of the national
communities.
The
Captive Nations Committee in Washington, DC, for instance, was run by
the person who headed the Ukrainian organization of nationalists;
that was true in a number of places. In my hometown area near
Detroit, as well, they played a major role. In the early 1950s, when
they were resettled in the United States, there were at least 10,000
of them that were resettled, when you look at all the nationalities.
They became politically active through the Republican National
Committee, because it was really the Eisenhower administration that
made the policy decision in the early 1950s, and brought them in.
They set up these campaign organizations, every four years they would
mobilize for the Republican candidate, whoever it would be, and some
of them, like Richard Nixon in 1960, actually had close direct ties
to some of the leaders like the Romanian Iron Guard, and some of
these other groups.
When
Nixon ran for president in 1968, he made a promise to these leaders
that they would—if he won the presidency, he would make them the
ethnic outreach arm of the Republican National Committee on a
permanent basis, so they wouldn’t be a quadrennial presence, but a
continuing presence in the Republican Party. And he made that promise
through a guy named Laszlo Pasztor, who served five years in prison
after World War II for crimes against humanity. He was prosecuted in
1946 by the non-Communist government that actually had control of
Hungary at the time (there was a period from ’45 to ’48 when the
Hungarian Communist Party didn’t run Hungary). They were the ones
who prosecuted him. He had served as a liaison between the Hungarian
Nazi party and Berlin; he served in the Berlin embassy of the
Hungarian Arrow Cross movement. This is the guy that got picked to
organize all the ethnic groups, and the only people that got brought
in were the Nazi collaborators.
They
didn’t have a Russian affiliate because they hated all Russians of
all political stripes. There were no African-Americans or Jewish
affiliates either. It was just composed of these elements, and for a
while they had a German affiliate, but some exposure of the Nazi
character of the German affiliate caused it to be quietly removed,
but other [Nazi] elements were retained.
Your
book was researched and published in the 1980s. What was happening by
that point in time, after these groups had been established for more
than a decade?
I
went to their meetings in the 1980s, and they put out material that
really made clear who they were. One of their 1984 booklets praised
the pro-Nazi Ustashi regime in Croatia; these Ustashi killed an
estimated 750,000 people and burned them alive in their own camp in
Croatia. And here they are praising the founding of this regime, and
acknowledging that it was associated with the Nazis, and it was
signed by the chairman of the Republican National Committee. You
couldn’t make this stuff up! It was just crazy.
I
interviewed the Cossack guy; he showed me his pension from service in
the SS in World War II, and how he was affiliated with free Nazi
groups in the United States, and he was just very unrepentant. These
are the umbrellas that were called "Captive Nations Committees"
by these people that Stetsko was over, and was part of, too. The
Reagan White House brought him in, and promoted him as a major leader
and did a big dinner. Jeane Kirkpatrick [UN Ambassador during the
Reagan administration] was part of it, George H.W. Bush as Vice
President, of course, Reagan—and Stetsko was held up as a great
leader. And proclamations were issued on his behalf.
When
Bush Senior was running for president in 1988, he came to these,
basically one of the leading locations of the Ukrainian nationalists
in North America, which is just outside of Detroit, a suburb of
Detroit, to their cultural center, and one of their foremost leaders
in the world is headquartered out of there. At the time, he got Bush
to come there and they denounced the OSI, and Bush just shook his
head; he wouldn’t say anything about it.
The
OSI was the Office of Special Investigations. It was investigating
the presence of Nazi war criminals in the United States, and
deporting those who were found to have lied on their history when
they applied to come into the United States after the war. They had
deported a number of people from all over the United States. They had
a lot of open investigations, and all these émigré Nazis were
trying to bring all the political pressure they could to stop these
investigations, including the Ukrainian nationalists.
So
they denounced them, the OSI investigations, in front of Bush. Bush
nodded his head, but he wouldn’t say anything because he didn’t
want to sound like he was sympathetic to the Nazi war criminals, but
at the same time he didn’t want to offend his hosts by disputing
the issue with them. So, the issue of World War II was still being
played out over four decades later, in the politics of the
presidency, and unfortunately Bush and Reagan continued to be on the
side that we defeated in World War II.
What
was the response when your book came out, with all this information?
How was the information received, and what was the political
reaction?
Prior
to the book’s publication, Washington
Jewish Week had
done a story about some of the ethnic leaders of the Bush campaign
and their history, like denying the Holocaust, or being involved with
these émigré Nazi groups. They named a couple of them that weren’t
part of the Heritage Groups Council, but they were part of the Bush
campaign.
Then,
when I published the book, it brought out a lot more names, and
the Philadelphia
Inquirer and
the Boston
Globe did
stories on them. It got to the point where when a reporter from
the Philadelphia
Inquirer would
call them about one of their ethnic leaders of the Bush campaign, the
standard response was, he’s no longer part of the campaign, and
they’d say that almost as soon as the name would get mentioned. So
that they would call that person—and I’ll give the example of
Florian Galdau, he was, he ran the Romanian Iron Guard in New York
City. He had a wartime record. [Romanian Archbishop Valerian] Trifa
himself was implicated in the mass killing of Jews in Bucharest in
1941, I believe. Galdau’s record is clear, because when Trifa was
prosecuted he was one of the people targeted by the Office of Special
Investigations, and he was forced into deportation in the 1980s, but
in those records, they identify Florian Galdau as one of his
operatives, so his history is known—except, apparently, to the Bush
campaign.
So
when he was identified by the Philadelphia
Inquirer,
they immediately said he wasn’t part of it, so the Inquirer called
Florian Galdau, and he said, “No, I’m part of it. They never said
anything to me. As far as I know I’m still part of the campaign.”
And that was the pattern.
The
Republican National Committee said after the election that they were
going to put a blue ribbon committee together and do an investigation
of the charges in my book. I was never contacted, nobody affiliated
with the book project, the publisher wasn’t contacted. None of the
sources I worked with was contacted. And after about a year, with
nobody raising any issues or questions about it, they just folded it
up and they said, well, we have not had the resources to investigate
this matter.
I
did publish an op-ed in The New
York Times about
two weeks after the election was over, and I think that was the last
time anybody said anything publicly about it that got any kind of
forum. I think they were allowed to just die and wither away—that
is, those leaders. The Republican idea was probably to bring in
another generation of people who were born in the United States as
these émigré’s died off, but they never did anything about this
history that Nixon had bequeathed them with. The Reagan White House
had really made deep political commitments and alliances with them.
They didn’t want to look like they turned their back on them, and
Bush wanted them for his re-election campaign, so he wasn’t going
to turn his back on them either.
If
you want an anecdote, I know that 60
Minutes was
working on a piece that Bradley’s team was working on. Nancy Reagan
herself called the executive producer and said that we would really
like it if you wouldn’t do this story, and they killed it. Because,
basically, it’s not just about Nazis and the Republican National
Committee and the White House. It inevitably raises the question of,
who are they, how did they get here, who sponsored them? And it goes
back to the intelligence agencies at that point. And some people
don’t like treading there; if it’s tied to an intelligence
agency, they prefer to just stay away from the subject. So, some
people at 60
Minutes were
frustrated by it, but that’s what happened. I think that they were
able to effectively kill the story when people tried to cover it.
They were able to persuade news managers to not delve into it too
much.
What’s happened since you wrote your book, and most of the World War II generation died off? What have the OUN and its allies been up to since then that we should be aware of?
Once
the OUN got sponsored by the American security establishment
intelligence agencies, they were embedded in a variety of ways in
Europe as well, like Radio Free Europe, which is headquartered in
Munich. A lot of these groups in the ABN were headquartered in Munich
under the sponsorship of Radio Free Europe. From there, they ran
various kinds of operations where they were trying to do work inside
the Warsaw Pact countries. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, a
number of them moved back into Ukraine as well as the other
respective countries and began setting up operations there, and
organizing political parties. They reconstituted the veterans group
of the Waffen SS, they held marches in the 1990s in Ukraine, and they
organized political parties, in alliance with the United States, and
became part of what was called the Orange Revolution in 2004, when
they won the election there.
The
prime minister [a reference to Viktor Yushchenko, president of
Ukraine from 2005 to 2010] was closely allied with them. They worked
with the new government to get veterans benefits for the Ukrainian SS
division veterans, and they started establishing the statues and
memorials and museums for Stepan Bandera, who was the leader of the
OUN, and who I should say were despised by other Ukrainian
nationalists because of their methods, because they were extreme and
violent toward rival Ukrainian nationalist groups. So Bandera wasn’t
a universal hero, but this group was so influential, in part because
of its US connections, that if you go online and you Google "Lviv"
and the word "Bandera" you’ll see monuments and statues
and large posters and banners of Bandera’s likeness and large
monuments—permanent erected monuments—on behalf of Bandera so
they made this guy like he’s the George Washington of Ukraine.
That
government was in power until 2010, when there was another election,
and a new regime was elected with a lot of support from the East.
Ukrainian nationalist groupings around the Orange Revolution were
sharply divided against each other, and there was rampant corruption,
and people voted them out. The United States was very aggressive in
trying to keep the nationalists in power, but they lost the election.
The United States was spending money through the National Endowment
for Democracy, which was pumping money into various Ukrainian
organizations, and they were doing the same thing in Russia and many
other countries around the world as well. We’re talking about many
millions of dollars a year to affect the politics of these countries.
When
the occupations came in Independence Square in Kiev late last year,
you can see Svoboda’s supporters and you can hear their leaders in
the Parliament making blatant anti-Semitic remarks. The leader of the
Svoboda party went to Germany to protest the prosecution of John
Demjanjuk, who was the Ukrainian who was settled in the United States
who was implicated as a concentration camp guard in the killing of
innocent people. The German courts found him guilty, and the Svoboda
leadership went to Germany to complain about convicting this guy. The
reason? They said they didn’t want any Ukrainians tainted with it,
because they live a lie: that no Ukrainian had anything to do with
the German Nazi regime, when history betrays them, and their own
affiliations betray them. But they don’t like that being out there
publicly, so they always protest the innocence of any Ukrainian being
charged with anything, regardless of what the evidence is.
Your
book was an important revelation but was not alone. Your book notes
that Jack Anderson reported on the pro-Nazi backgrounds of some of
the ethnic advisors as far back as 1971, yet when your report came
out almost two decades later, everyone responded with shock, surprise
and even denial. What lessons should we draw from this history of
buried history? And how should it influence our thinking about the
unfolding crisis in Ukraine?
I
don’t believe it’s ever too late to become familiarized and
educated about the history of this phenomenon—both the wartime
history and our postwar collaboration with these folks. There were a
number of exposés written about the émigré Nazis. There was a 1979
book called Wanted, and
it did a number of case stories of these people being brought into
the United States, including the Trifa story. Christopher Simpson did
a book called Blowback that
discussed the policy decisions; it’s an incredible book. He’s a
professor at American University, and he did years of research
through the Freedom of Information Act and archives, and got the
policy documents under which the decisions were made to bring these
folks together, and not just into the United States but to deploy
them around the world.
Like
my book, it didn’t get the attention it deserved. The New
York Times book
reviewer was negative toward the book. There are people who really
don’t want to touch this stuff. There’s a lot of people who don’t
want it touched. I think it’s really important for people who
believe in openness and transparency and democratic values, who don’t
want to see hate groups come back to power in other parts of the
world, to know what happened.
There
aren't very many Americans who really even know that the Waffen SS
was a multinational force. That’s been kind of kept out of the
received history. Otherwise people would know that there were
Ukrainian Nazis, Hungarian Nazis, Latvian Nazis, and they were all
involved in the mass murder of their fellow citizens, if they were
Jewish, or even if they were co-nationalists that were on the other
side of the issue of the war. They were just mass murderers, across
Eastern Europe. And that history, those facts, aren’t even
well-known. A lot of people didn’t even know this phenomenon
existed.
I
think all Americans have a responsibility to know what their
government is doing in the foreign policy in Europe as well as
elsewhere around the world, as well as Latin America, as well as
Africa. Since our policy was to uphold apartheid in South Africa, why
weren’t Americans challenging that more? They began challenging
that in the '80s, but the apartheid regime was run by the Nazi party.
They were allied with Germany in World War II. They were the Nationalist party and they took power in 1948 and the United States backed that for decades. We backed the death squads in Latin America, even though they massacred tens of thousands of people—200,000 people in Guatemala alone. Americans aren’t being attentive to what their government is doing abroad, even though it’s being done with their tax dollars and in their name, and I think we just have a general responsibility.
They were allied with Germany in World War II. They were the Nationalist party and they took power in 1948 and the United States backed that for decades. We backed the death squads in Latin America, even though they massacred tens of thousands of people—200,000 people in Guatemala alone. Americans aren’t being attentive to what their government is doing abroad, even though it’s being done with their tax dollars and in their name, and I think we just have a general responsibility.
I
went to these meetings, I went to these conferences, I went over a
period of years. I met with them directly, most of the people I wrote
about, I met with them personally or in group meetings. People can’t
afford to do that on their own, timewise, but there’s enough
literature out there so they can read about it. They will get enough
of a handle to get what the real picture is, to demand change. I’m
not totally partisan: I think the Republican Party was extreme on
this, but the Democrats folded and didn’t challenge this when they
knew it was going on.
There
is an old Roman poet who once said truth does not say one thing and
wisdom another. I’m a believer in that. Tell the truth and wisdom
will follow.
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