75th anniversary of the great victory: Shared responsibility to history and our future
President Vladimir Putin |
75 years have passed since
the end of the Great Patriotic War. Several generations have
grown up over the years. The political map of the planet
has changed. The Soviet Union that claimed an epic, crushing victory
over Nazism and saved the entire world is gone. Besides,
the events of that war have long become a distant memory, even
for its participants. So why does Russia celebrate the 9th
of May as the biggest holiday? Why does life almost come
to a halt on June 22? And why does one feel
a lump rise in their throat?
They usually say that the war
has left a deep imprint on every family's history. Behind these
words, there are fates of millions of people, their sufferings
and the pain of loss. Behind these words, there is also
the pride, the truth and the memory.
For my parents,
the war meant the terrible ordeals of the Siege
of Leningrad where my two-year old brother Vitya died. It was
the place where my mother miraculously managed to survive.
My father, despite being exempt from active duty, volunteered
to defend his hometown. He made the same decision as millions
of Soviet citizens. He fought at the Nevsky Pyatachok bridgehead
and was severely wounded. And the more years pass, the more
I feel the need to talk to my parents and learn
more about the war period of their lives. But I no longer have
the opportunity to do so. This is the reason why I treasure
in my heart the conversations I had with my father
and mother on this subject, as well as the little
emotion they showed.
People of my age
and I believe it is important that our children, grandchildren
and great-grandchildren understand the torment and hardships
their ancestors had to endure. They need to understand how their ancestors
managed to persevere and win. Where did their sheer, unbending
willpower that amazed and fascinated the whole world come from? Sure,
they were defending their homes, children, loved ones and families.
However, what they shared was the love for their homeland, their
Motherland. That deep-seated, intimate feeling is fully reflected
in the very essence of our nation and became one
of the decisive factors in its heroic, sacrificial fight against
the Nazis.
People often wonder: What would
today's generation do? How will it act when faced with a crisis situation?
I see young doctors, nurses, sometimes fresh graduates that go
to the ”red zone“ to save lives. I see our servicemen
fighting international terrorism in the North Caucasus, fighting
to the bitter end in Syria. They are so young. Many servicemen
who were part of the legendary, immortal 6th Paratroop
Company were 19–20 years old. But all of them proved that they
deserved to inherit the feat of the warriors of our
Motherland that defended it during the Great Patriotic War.
This is why I am confident that
one of the characteristic features of the peoples
of Russia is to fulfil their duty without feeling sorry
for themselves when the circumstances so demand. Such values
as selflessness, patriotism, love for their home, their family
and Fatherland remain fundamental and integral
to the Russian society to this day. These values are,
to a large extent, the backbone of our country's
sovereignty.
Nowadays, we have new traditions
created by the people, such as the Immortal Regiment. This
is the memory march that symbolises our gratitude, as well
as the living connection and the blood ties between
generations. Millions of people come out to the streets carrying
the photographs of their relatives who defended their Fatherland
and defeated the Nazis. This means that their lives, the ordeals
and sacrifices they endured, as well as the Victory that
they passed to us will never be forgotten.
We have a responsibility
to our past and our future to do our utmost to prevent
those horrible tragedies from happening ever again. Hence, I was compelled
to come out with an article about World War II
and the Great Patriotic War. I have discussed this idea
on several occasions with world leaders, and they have showed their
support. At the summit of CIS leaders held at the end
of last year, we all agreed on one thing: it is essential
to pass on to future generations the memory
of the fact that the Nazis were defeated first and foremost
by the entire Soviet people and that representatives of all
republics of the Soviet Union fought side by side together
in that heroic battle, both on the frontlines
and in the rear. During that summit, I also talked with
my counterparts about the challenging pre-war period.
That conversation caused a stir
in Europe and the world. It means that it is indeed high time
that we revisited the lessons of the past. At the same
time, there were many emotional outbursts, poorly disguised insecurities
and loud accusations that followed. Acting out of habit, certain
politicians rushed to claim that Russia was trying to rewrite
history. However, they failed to rebut a single fact or refute
a single argument. It is indeed difficult, if not impossible,
to argue with the original documents that, by the way, can
be found not only in Russian, but also in foreign archives.
Thus, there is a need
to further examine the reasons that caused the world war
and reflect on its complicated events, tragedies and victories,
as well as its lessons, both for our country and the entire
world. And like I said, it is crucial to rely exclusively
on archive documents and contemporary evidence while avoiding any
ideological or politicised speculations.
I would like to once again
recall the obvious fact. The root causes of World War II
mainly stem from the decisions made after World War I.
The Treaty of Versailles became a symbol of grave injustice
for Germany. It basically implied that the country was to be
robbed, being forced to pay enormous reparations to the Western
allies that drained its economy. French Marshal Ferdinand Foch who served
as the Supreme Allied Commander gave a prophetic description
of that Treaty: “This is not peace. It is an armistice
for twenty years.”
It was the national humiliation
that became a fertile ground for radical and revenge-seeking
sentiments in Germany. The Nazis skilfully played on people's
emotions and built their propaganda promising to deliver Germany from
the “legacy of Versailles” and restore the country
to its former power while essentially pushing German people into war.
Paradoxically, the Western states, particularly the United Kingdom
and the United States, directly or indirectly contributed
to this. Their financial and industrial enterprises actively invested
in German factories and plants manufacturing military products.
Besides, many people in the aristocracy and political
establishment supported radical, far-right and nationalist movements that
were on the rise both in Germany and in Europe.
“Versailles world order” caused
numerous implicit controversies and apparent conflicts. They revolved
around the borders of new European states randomly set
by the victors in World War I. That boundary delimitation
was almost immediately followed by territorial disputes and mutual
claims that turned into “time bombs”.
One of the major outcomes
of World War I was the establishment of the League
of Nations. There were high expectations for that international
organisation to ensure lasting peace and collective security. It was
a progressive idea that, if followed through consistently, could actually
prevent the horrors of a global war from happening again.
However, the League
of Nations dominated by the victorious powers of France
and the United Kingdom proved ineffective and just got swamped
by pointless discussions. The League of Nations
and the European continent in general turned a deaf ear
to the repeated calls of the Soviet Union to establish
an equitable collective security system, and sign an Eastern European
pact and a Pacific pact to prevent aggression. These proposals
were disregarded.
The League of Nations also
failed to prevent conflicts in various parts of the world,
such as the attack of Italy on Ethiopia, a civil war
in Spain, the Japanese aggression against China
and the Anschluss of Austria. Furthermore, in case
of the Munich Betrayal that, in addition to Hitler
and Mussolini, involved British and French leaders, Czechoslovakia
was taken apart with the full approval of the League
of Nations. I would like to point out in this regard that,
unlike many other European leaders of that time, Stalin did not disgrace
himself by meeting with Hitler who was known among the Western
nations as quite a reputable politician and was a welcome
guest in the European capitals.
Poland was also engaged
in the partition of Czechoslovakia along with Germany. They
decided together in advance who would get what Czechoslovak territories.
On September 20, 1938, Polish Ambassador to Germany Józef
Lipski reported to Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland Józef
Beck on the following assurances made by Hitler: “…in case
of a conflict between Poland and Czechoslovakia over our
interests in Teschen, the Reich would stand by Poland.”
The Nazi leader even prompted and advised that Poland started
to act “only after the Germans occupy the Sudetes.”
Poland was aware that without
Hitler's support, its annexationist plans were doomed to fail.
I would like to quote in this regard a record
of the conversation between German Ambassador to Warsaw Hans-Adolf
von Moltke and Józef Beck that took place
on October 1, 1938, and was focused
on the Polish-Czech relations and the position
of the Soviet Union in this matter. It says: “Mr Beck expressed
real gratitude for the loyal treatment accorded to Polish
interests at the Munich conference, as well
as the sincerity of relations during the Czech conflict.
The Government and the public [of Poland] fully appreciated
the attitude of the Fuehrer and Chancellor.”
The partition
of Czechoslovakia was brutal and cynical. Munich destroyed even
the formal, fragile guarantees that remained on the continent.
It showed that mutual agreements were worthless. It was the Munich
Betrayal that served as the “trigger” and made the great
war in Europe inevitable.
Today, European politicians,
and Polish leaders in particular, wish to sweep the Munich
Betrayal under the carpet. Why? The fact that their countries once
broke their commitments and supported the Munich Betrayal, with some
of them even participating in divvying up the take, is not
the only reason. Another is that it is kind of embarrassing
to recall that during those dramatic days of 1938, the Soviet
Union was the only one to stand up for Czechoslovakia.
The Soviet Union,
in accordance with its international obligations, including agreements
with France and Czechoslovakia, tried to prevent the tragedy
from happening. Meanwhile, Poland, in pursuit of its interests, was
doing its utmost to hamper the establishment of a collective
security system in Europe. Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Józef
Beck wrote about it directly in his letter
of September 19, 1938 to the aforementioned Ambassador
Józef Lipski before his meeting with Hitler: “…in the past year,
the Polish government rejected four times the proposal to join
the international interfering in defence of Czechoslovakia.”
Britain, as well
as France, which was at the time the main ally
of the Czechs and Slovaks, chose to withdraw their
guarantees and abandon this Eastern European country to its fate.
In so doing, they sought to direct the attention
of the Nazis eastward so that Germany and the Soviet Union
would inevitably clash and bleed each other white.
That was the essence
of the western policy of ‘appeasement,’ which was pursued not
only towards the Third Reich but also towards other participants
of the so-called Anti-Comintern Pact – the fascist Italy
and militarist Japan. In the Far East, this policy culminated
in the conclusion of the Anglo-Japanese agreement
in the summer of 1939, which gave Tokyo a free hand in China.
The leading European powers were unwilling to recognise
the mortal danger posed by Germany and its allies
to the whole world. They were hoping that they themselves would be
left untouched by the war.
The Munich Betrayal showed
to the Soviet Union that the Western countries would deal with
security issues without taking its interests into account. In fact, they
could even create an anti-Soviet front, if needed.
Nevertheless, the Soviet Union
did its utmost to use every chance to create an Anti-Hitler
coalition. Despite – I will say it again – the double‑dealing
on the part of the Western countries. For instance,
the intelligence services reported to the Soviet leadership
detailed information on the behind-the-scenes contacts between
Britain and Germany in the summer of 1939.
The important thing is that those contacts were quite active
and practically coincided with the tripartite negotiations between
France, Great Britain and the USSR, which were, on the contrary,
deliberately protracted by the Western partners. In this
connection, I will cite a document from the British archives. It
contains instructions to the British military mission that came
to Moscow in August 1939. It directly states that the delegation
was to proceed with negotiations very slowly, and that
the Government of the United Kingdom was not ready
to assume any obligations spelled out in detail and limiting
their freedom of action under any circumstances. I will also note
that, unlike the British and French delegations, the Soviet delegation
was headed by top commanders of the Red Army, who had
the necessary authority to “sign a military convention
on the organisation of military defence of England, France
and the USSR against aggression in Europe.”
Poland played its role
in the failure of those negotiations as it did not want
to have any obligations to the Soviet side. Even under pressure
from their Western allies, the Polish leadership rejected the idea
of joint action with the Red Army to fight against
the Wehrmacht. It was only when they learned of the arrival
of J. Ribbentrop to Moscow that J. Beck reluctantly and not
directly, but through French diplomats, notified the Soviet side: “…
in the event of joint action against the German aggression,
cooperation between Poland and the Soviet Union, subject
to technical conditions which have to be agreed, is not out
of the question.” At the same time, he explained
to his colleagues: “… I agreed to this wording only
for the sake of the tactics, and our core position
in relation to the Soviet Union is final and remains
unchanged.”
In these circumstances,
the Soviet Union signed the Non-Aggression Pact with Germany. It was
practically the last among the European countries to do so.
Besides, it was done in the face of a real threat of war
on two fronts – with Germany in the west and with
Japan in the east, where intense fighting on the Khalkhin
Gol River was already underway.
Stalin and his entourage,
indeed, deserve many legitimate accusations. We remember the crimes
committed by the regime against its own people
and the horror of mass repressions. In other words, there
are many things the Soviet leaders can be reproached for, but poor
understanding of the nature of external threats is not one
of them. They saw how attempts were made to leave the Soviet
Union alone to deal with Germany and its allies. Bearing in mind
this real threat, they sought to buy precious time needed
to strengthen the country's defences.
Nowadays, we hear lots
of speculations and accusations against modern Russia in connection
with the Non-Aggression Pact signed back then. Yes, Russia is
the legal successor state to the USSR, and the Soviet
period – with all its triumphs and tragedies – is
an inalienable part of our thousand-year-long history. However, let
me also remind you that the Soviet Union gave a legal and moral
assessment of the so-called Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. The Supreme
Soviet in its resolution of December 24, 1989 officially
denounced the secret protocols as “an act of personal
power” which in no way reflected “the will of the Soviet
people who bear no responsibility for this collusion.”
Yet other states prefer
to forget the agreements carrying signatures of the Nazis
and Western politicians, not to mention giving legal
or political assessments of such cooperation, including
the silent acquiescence – or even direct abetment –
of some European politicians in the barbarous plans
of the Nazis. It will suffice to remember the cynical
phrase said by Polish Ambassador to Germany J. Lipski during his
conversation with Hitler on September 20, 1938: “…for solving
the Jewish problem, we [the Poles] will build in his honour …
a splendid monument in Warsaw.”
Besides, we do not know if there
were any secret “protocols” or annexes to agreements
of a number of countries with the Nazis. The only
thing that is left to do is to take their word for it.
In particular, materials pertaining to the secret Anglo-German
talks still have not been declassified. Therefore, we urge all states to step
up the process of making their archives public and publishing
previously unknown documents of the war and pre-war
periods – the way Russia has been doing it in recent years.
In this context, we are ready for broad cooperation and joint
research projects engaging historians.
But let us go back to the events
immediately preceding the Second World War. It was naïve to believe
that Hitler, once done with Czechoslovakia, would not make new territorial
claims. This time the claims involved its recent accomplice
in the partition of Czechoslovakia – Poland. Here,
the legacy of Versailles, particularly the fate
of the so-called Danzig Corridor, was yet again used
as the pretext. The blame for the tragedy that Poland
then suffered lies entirely with the Polish leadership, which had impeded
the formation of a military alliance between Britain, France
and the Soviet Union and relied on the help from its
Western partners, throwing its own people under the steamroller
of Hitler's machine of destruction.
The German offensive was
mounted in full accordance with the blitzkrieg doctrine. Despite
the fierce, heroic resistance of the Polish army,
on September 8, 1939 – only a week after the war broke
out – the German troops were on the approaches
to Warsaw. By September 17, the military and political
leaders of Poland had fled to Romania, betraying its people, who
continued to fight against the invaders.
Poland's hope for help from its
Western allies was vain. After the war against Germany was declared,
the French troops advanced only a few tens of kilometres deep
into the German territory. All of it looked like a mere
demonstration of vigorous action. Moreover, the Anglo-French Supreme
War Council, holding its first meeting on September 12, 1939
in the French city of Abbeville, decided to call off
the offensive altogether in view of the rapid developments
in Poland. That was when the infamous Phony War started. What Britain
and France did was a blatant betrayal of their obligations
to Poland.
Later, during the Nuremberg
Trials, German generals explained their quick success in the East.
Former Chief of the Operations Staff of the German Armed
Forces High Command General Alfred Jodl admitted: “… we did not suffer defeat
as early as 1939 only because about 110 French and British divisions
stationed in the west against 23 German divisions during our war with
Poland remained absolutely idle.”
I asked for retrieval from
the archives of the whole body of materials pertaining
to the contacts between the USSR and Germany
in the dramatic days of August and September 1939. According
to the documents, paragraph 2 of the Secret Protocol
to the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of August 23, 1939
stated that, in the event of territorial-political
reorganisation of the districts making up the Polish state,
the border between the spheres of interest of the two
countries would run “approximately along the Narew, Vistula and San
rivers.” In other words, the Soviet sphere of influence included
not only the territories that were mostly home to Ukrainian
and Belorussian population but also the historically Polish lands
in the Vistula and Bug interfluve. This fact is known
to very few these days.
Similarly, very few know that,
immediately after the attack on Poland, in the early days
of September 1939, Berlin strongly and repeatedly called on Moscow
to join the military action. However, the Soviet leadership
ignored those calls and planned to avoid engaging
in the dramatic developments as long as possible.
It was only when it became
absolutely clear that Great Britain and France were not going to help
their ally and the Wehrmacht could swiftly occupy entire Poland
and thus appear on the approaches to Minsk that
the Soviet Union decided to send in, on the morning
of September 17, Red Army units into the so-called Eastern
Borderlines (Kresy), which nowadays form part of the territories
of Belorussia, Ukraine and Lithuania.
Obviously, there was no alternative.
Otherwise, the USSR would face seriously increased risks because –
I will say this again – the old Soviet-Polish border ran only
within a few tens of kilometres from Minsk. The country would
have to enter the inevitable war with the Nazis from very
disadvantageous strategic positions, while millions of people
of different nationalities, including the Jews living near Brest
and Grodno, Przemyśl, Lvov and Wilno, would be left to die
at the hands of the Nazis and their local
accomplices – anti-Semites and radical nationalists.
The fact that the Soviet
Union sought to avoid engaging in the growing conflict
for as long as possible and was unwilling to fight
side by side with Germany was the reason why the real contact
between the Soviet and the German troops occurred much farther
east than the borders agreed in the secret protocol. It was not
on the Vistula River but closer to the so-called Curzon
Line, which back in 1919 was recommended by the Triple Entente
as the eastern border of Poland.
As is known,
the subjunctive mood can hardly be used when we speak
of the past events. I will only say that,
in September 1939, the Soviet leadership had an opportunity
to move the western borders of the USSR even farther west,
all the way to Warsaw, but decided against it.
The Germans suggested
formalising the new status quo. On September 28, 1939 J.
Ribbentrop and V. Molotov signed in Moscow the Boundary
and Friendship Treaty between Germany and the Soviet Union,
as well as the secret protocol on changing the state
border, according to which the border was recognised
at the demarcation line where the two armies de-facto stood.
In autumn 1939,
the Soviet Union, pursuing its strategic military and defensive
goals, started the process of incorporation of Latvia, Lithuania
and Estonia. Their accession to the USSR was implemented
on a contractual basis, with the consent
of the elected authorities. This was in line with international
and state law of that time. Besides, in October 1939,
the city of Wilno and the surrounding area, which had
previously been part of Poland, were returned to Lithuania.
The Baltic republics within the USSR preserved their government
bodies, language, and had representation in the higher
government entities of the Soviet Union.
During all these months there was
an ongoing invisible diplomatic and politico-military struggle
and intelligence work. Moscow understood that it was facing a fierce
and cruel enemy, and that a covert war against Nazism was
already going on. And there was no reason to take official statements
and formal protocol notes of that time as a proof
of ‘friendship' between the USSR and Germany. The Soviet
Union had active trade and technical contacts not only with Germany, but
with other countries as well. Whereas Hitler tried again and again
to draw the Soviet Union into Germany's confrontation with
the UK. But the Soviet government stood firm.
The last attempt
to persuade the USSR to act together was made by Hitler
during Molotov’s visit to Berlin in November 1940. But Molotov
accurately followed Stalin's instructions and limited himself
to a general discussion of the German idea
of the Soviet Union joining the Tripartite Pact signed
by Germany, Italy and Japan in September 1940
and directed against the UK and the USA. No wonder that
already on November 17 Molotov gave the following instructions
to Soviet plenipotentiary representative in London Ivan Maisky:
“For your information…No agreement was signed or was intended
to be signed in Berlin. We just exchanged our views
in Berlin…and that was all…Apparently, the Germans
and the Japanese seem anxious to push us towards the Gulf
and India. We declined the discussion of this matter as we
consider such advice on the part of Germany to be
inappropriate.” And on November 25, the Soviet leadership
called it a day altogether by officially putting forward
to Berlin the conditions that were unacceptable
to the Nazis, including the withdrawal of German troops
from Finland, mutual assistance treaty between Bulgaria and the USSR,
and a number of others. Thus it deliberately excluded any
possibility of joining the Pact. Such position definitely shaped
the Fuehrer's intention to unleash a war against the USSR.
And already in December, putting aside the warnings of his
strategists about the disastrous danger of having a two-front
war, Hitler approved Operation Barbarossa. He did this with the knowledge
that the Soviet Union was the major force that opposed him
in Europe and that the upcoming battle in the East
would decide the outcome of the world war. And he had no
doubts as to the swiftness and success of the Moscow
campaign.
And here I would like
to highlight the following: Western countries, as a matter
of fact, agreed at that time with the Soviet actions
and recognised the Soviet Union's intention to ensure its
national security. Indeed, back on October 1, 1939 Winston
Churchill, the First Lord of the Admiralty back then,
in his speech on the radio said, “Russia has pursued a cold
policy of self-interest… But that the Russian Armies should stand
on this line [meaning the new Western border] was clearly necessary
for the safety of Russia against the Nazi menace.”
On October 4, 1939, speaking in the House
of Lords, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax said, “…it should be
recalled that the Soviet government's actions were to move
the border essentially to the line recommended
at the Versailles Conference by Lord Curzon… I only cite
historical facts and believe they are indisputable.” Prominent British
politician and statesman David Lloyd George emphasised,
“The Russian Armies occupied the territories that are not Polish
and that were forcibly seized by Poland after World War I … It
would be an act of criminal insanity to put the Russian
advancement on a par with the German one.“
In informal communications with
Soviet plenipotentiary representative Ivan Maisky, British high-ranking
politicians and diplomats spoke even more openly.
On October 17, 1939, Under-Secretary of State
for Foreign Affairs R. A. Butler confided to him that
the British government circles believed there could be no question
of returning Western Ukraine and Belorussia to Poland. According
to him, if it had been possible to create an ethnographic Poland
of a modest size with a guarantee not only of the USSR
and Germany, but also of Britain and France, the British
government would have considered itself quite satisfied.
On October 27, 1939, Neville Chamberlain's senior advisor Horace
Wilson said that Poland had to be restored as an independent
state on its ethnographic basis, but without Western Ukraine
and Belorussia.
It is worth noting that
in the course of these conversations the possibilities
for improving British-Soviet relations were also explored. These contacts
to a large extent laid the foundation for future alliance
and Anti-Hitler coalition. Winston Churchill stood out among responsible
and far-sighted politicians and, despite his infamous dislike for the USSR,
had been in favour of cooperating with the Soviets even before.
Back in May 1939, he said in the House of Commons, “We
shall be in mortal danger if we fail to create a Grand Alliance
against aggression. The worst folly… would be to… drive away any natural
cooperation with Soviet Russia…” And after the start
of hostilities in Europe, at his meeting with Ivan Maisky
on October 6, 1939 he confided that there were no serious
contradictions between the UK and the USSR and, therefore, there
was no reason for strained or unsatisfactory relations. He also
mentioned that the British government was eager to develop trade
relations and willing to discuss any other measures that might
improve the relationships.
World War II did not happen
overnight, nor did it start unexpectedly or all of a sudden.
And German aggression against Poland was not out of nowhere. It was
the result of a number of tendencies and factors
in the world politics of that time. All pre-war events fell into
place to form one fatal chain. But, undoubtedly, the main factors
that predetermined the greatest tragedy in the history
of mankind were state egoism, cowardice, appeasement
of the aggressor who was gaining strength, and unwillingness
of political elites to search for compromise.
Therefore, it is unfair
to claim that the two-day visit to Moscow of Nazi Foreign
Minister J. Ribbentrop was the main reason for the start
of World War II. All the leading countries are to a certain
extent responsible for its outbreak. Each of them made fatal mistakes,
arrogantly believing that they could outsmart others, secure unilateral
advantages for themselves or stay away from the impending global
catastrophe. And this short-sightedness, the refusal to create
a collective security system cost millions of lives
and tremendous losses.
Saying this, I by no means
intend to take on the role of a judge, to accuse
or acquit anyone, let alone initiate a new round
of international information confrontation in the historical field
that could set countries and peoples at loggerheads. I believe
that it is academics with a wide representation of respected scholars
from different countries of the world who should search
for a balanced assessment of what happened. We all need
the truth and objectivity. On my part, I have always
encouraged my colleagues to build a calm, open
and trust-based dialogue, to look at the common past
in a self-critical and unbiased manner. Such an approach
will make it possible not to repeat the mistakes committed back then
and to ensure peaceful and successful development for years
to come.
However, many of our partners
are not yet ready for joint work. On the contrary, pursuing
their goals, they increase the number and the scope
of information attacks against our country, trying to make us provide
excuses and feel guilty. They adopt thoroughly hypocritical
and politically motivated declarations. Thus, for example,
the resolution on the Importance of European Remembrance
for the Future of Europe approved by the European
Parliament on September 19, 2019 directly accused
the USSR – along with the Nazi Germany – of unleashing
the Second World War. Needless to say, there is no mention
of Munich in it whatsoever.
I believe that such
‘paperwork’ – for I cannot call this resolution
a document – which is clearly intended to provoke
a scandal, is fraught with real and dangerous threats. Indeed, it was
adopted by a highly respectable institution. And what did it
show? Regrettably, it revealed a deliberate policy aimed at destroying
the post-war world order whose creation was a matter of honour
and responsibility for the countries a number
of representatives of which voted today in favour of this
deceitful resolution. Thus, they challenged the conclusions
of the Nuremberg Tribunal and the efforts
of the international community to create after
the victorious 1945 universal international institutions. Let me remind
you in this regard that the process of European integration
itself leading to the establishment of relevant structures,
including the European Parliament, became possible only due
to the lessons learnt form the past and its accurate legal
and political assessment. And those who deliberately put this
consensus into question undermine the foundations of the entire
post-war Europe.
Apart from posing a threat
to the fundamental principles of the world order, this also
raises certain moral and ethical issues. Desecrating and insulting
the memory is mean. Meanness can be deliberate, hypocritical
and pretty much intentional as in the situation when
declarations commemorating the 75th anniversary
of the end of World War II mention all participants
in the Anti-Hitler coalition except for the Soviet Union.
Meanness can be cowardly as in the situation when monuments
erected in honour of those who fought against Nazism are demolished
and these shameful acts are justified by the false slogans
of the fight against an unwelcome ideology and alleged
occupation. Meanness can also be bloody as in the situation when
those who come out against neo-Nazis and Bandera's successors are killed
and burned. Once again, meanness can have different manifestations, but
this does not make it less disgusting.
Neglecting the lessons
of history inevitably leads to a harsh payback. We will firmly
uphold the truth based on documented historical facts. We will
continue to be honest and impartial about the events
of World War II. This includes a large-scale project
to establish Russia's largest collection of archival records, film
and photo materials about the history of World War II
and the pre‑war period.
Such work is already underway. Many
new, recently discovered or declassified materials were also used
in the preparation of this article. In this connection,
I can state with all responsibility that there are no archive documents
that would confirm the assumption that the USSR intended
to start a preventive war against Germany. The Soviet military
leadership indeed followed a doctrine according to which,
in the event of aggression, the Red Army would promptly
confront the enemy, go on the offensive and wage war
on enemy territory. However, such strategic plans did not imply any
intention to attack Germany first.
Of course, military planning
documents, letters of instruction of Soviet and German
headquarters are now available to historians. Finally, we know
the true course of events. From the perspective of this
knowledge, many argue about the actions, mistakes and misjudgement
of the country's military and political leadership. In this
regard, I will say one thing: along with a huge flow of misinformation
of various kinds, Soviet leaders also received true information about
the upcoming Nazi aggression. And in the pre-war months,
they took steps to improve the combat readiness
of the country, including the secret recruitment
of a part of those liable for military duty
for military training and the redeployment of units
and reserves from internal military districts to western borders.
The war did not come
as a surprise, people were expecting it, preparing for it. But
the Nazi attack was truly unprecedented in terms of its
destructive power. On June 22, 1941, the Soviet Union faced
the strongest, most mobilised and skilled army in the world
with the industrial, economic and military potential of almost
all Europe working for it. Not only the Wehrmacht, but also Germany’s
satellites, military contingents of many other states
of the European continent, took part in this deadly invasion.
The most serious military
defeats in 1941 brought the country to the brink
of catastrophe. Combat power and control had to be restored
by extreme means, nation-wide mobilisation and intensification
of all efforts of the state and the people.
In summer 1941, millions of citizens, hundreds of factories
and industries began to be evacuated under enemy fire
to the east of the country. The manufacture
of weapons and munition, that had started to be supplied
to the front already in the first military winter, was
launched behind the lines in the shortest possible time,
and by 1943, the rates of military production
of Germany and its allies were exceeded. Within eighteen months,
the Soviet people did something that seemed impossible. Both
on the front lines and the home front. It is still hard
to realise, understand and imagine what incredible efforts, courage,
dedication these greatest achievements were worth.
The tremendous power
of Soviet society, united by the desire to protect their
native land, rose against the powerful, armed to the teeth,
cold-blooded Nazi invading machine. It stood up to take revenge on the enemy,
who had broken, trampled peaceful life, people's plans and hopes.
Of course, fear, confusion
and desperation were taking over some people during this terrible
and bloody war. There were betrayal and desertion. The harsh
splits caused by the revolution and the Civil War,
nihilism, mockery of national history, traditions and faith that
the Bolsheviks tried to impose, especially in the first
years after coming to power – all of this had its impact. But
the general attitude of the of Soviet citizens and our
compatriots who found themselves abroad was different – to save
and protect the Motherland. It was a real and irrepressible
impulse. People were looking for support in true patriotic values.
The Nazi ‘strategists’ were
convinced that a huge multinational state could easily be brought
to heel. They thought that the sudden outbreak of the war,
its mercilessness and unbearable hardships would inevitably exacerbate
inter-ethnic relations. And that the country could be split into pieces.
Hitler clearly stated: “Our policy towards the peoples living
in the vastness of Russia should be to promote any form
of disagreement and split.”
But from the very first days,
it was clear that the Nazi plan had failed. The Brest Fortress was
protected to the last drop of blood by its defenders
representing more than 30 ethnicities. Throughout the war – both
in large-scale decisive battles and in the protection
of every foothold, every metre of native land – we see examples
of such unity.
The Volga region
and the Urals, Siberia and the Far East, the republics
of Central Asia and Transcaucasia became home to millions
of evacuees. Their residents shared everything they had and provided
all the support they could. Friendship of peoples and mutual
help became a real indestructible fortress for the enemy.
The Soviet Union
and the Red Army, no matter what anyone is trying to prove
today, made the main and crucial contribution to the defeat
of Nazism. These were heroes who fought to the end surrounded by the enemy
at Bialystok and Mogilev, Uman and Kiev, Vyazma
and Kharkov. They launched attacks near Moscow and Stalingrad,
Sevastopol and Odessa, Kursk and Smolensk. They liberated Warsaw,
Belgrade, Vienna and Prague. They stormed Koenigsberg and Berlin.
We contend for genuine,
unvarnished or whitewashed truth about war. This national, human truth,
which is hard, bitter and merciless, has been handed down to us
by writers and poets who walked through fire and hell
of front trials. For my generation, as well
as for many others, their honest and deep stories, novels,
piercing trench prose and poems have left their mark on the soul
forever. Honouring veterans who did everything they could
for the Victory and remembering those who died
on the battlefield has become our moral duty.
And today, the simple and great
in their essence lines of Alexander Tvardovsky's poem “I was
killed near Rzhev …” dedicated to the participants
of the bloody and brutal battle of the Great Patriotic
War in the centre of the Soviet-German front line are
astonishing. In the battles for Rzhev and the Rzhev
Salient alone from October 1941 to March 1943, the Red Army
lost 1,342,888 people, including wounded and missing in action.
For the first time, I call out these terrible, tragic
and far from complete figures collected from archive sources. I do it
to honour the memory of the feat of known
and nameless heroes, who for various reasons were undeservingly,
and unfairly little talked about or not mentioned at all
in the post-war years.
Let me cite another document. This
is a report of February 1945 on reparation from Germany
by the Allied Commission on Reparations headed by Ivan
Maisky. The Commission's task was to define a formula according
to which defeated Germany would have to pay for the damages
sustained by the victor powers. The Commission concluded that
“the number of soldier-days spent by Germany
on the Soviet front is at least 10 times higher than
on all other allied fronts. The Soviet front also had to handle
four-fifths of German tanks and about two-thirds of German
aircraft.” On the whole, the USSR accounted for about
75 percent of all military efforts undertaken
by the Anti-Hitler Coalition. During the war period,
the Red Army “ground up” 626 divisions of the Axis states,
of which 508 were German.
On April 28, 1942,
Franklin D. Roosevelt said in his address to the American
nation: “These Russian forces have destroyed and are destroying more armed
power of our enemies – troops, planes, tanks, and guns –
than all the other United Nations put together.” Winston Churchill
in his message to Joseph Stalin of September 27, 1944,
wrote that “it is the Russian army that tore the guts out
of the German military machine…”
Such an assessment has
resonated throughout the world. Because these words are the great
truth, which no one doubted then. Almost 27 million Soviet citizens lost
their lives on the fronts, in German prisons, starved
to death and were bombed, died in ghettos and furnaces
of the Nazi death camps. The USSR lost one in seven
of its citizens, the UK lost one in 127, and the USA
lost one in 320. Unfortunately, this figure of the Soviet
Union's hardest and grievous losses is not exhaustive.
The painstaking work should be continued to restore the names
and fates of all who have perished – Red Army soldiers,
partisans, underground fighters, prisoners of war and concentration
camps, and civilians killed by the death squads. It is our duty.
And special role here belongs to members of the search
movement, military‑patriotic and volunteer associations, projects like
the electronic database ”Pamyat Naroda“ (Memory of the People),
which contains archival documents. And, surely, close international cooperation
is needed in such a common humanitarian task.
The efforts of all
countries and peoples who fought against a common enemy resulted in victory.
The British army protected its homeland from invasion, fought
the Nazis and their satellites in the Mediterranean
and North Africa. American and British troops liberated Italy
and opened the Second Front. The US dealt powerful
and crushing strikes against the aggressor in the Pacific
Ocean. We remember the tremendous sacrifices made by the Chinese
people and their great role in defeating Japanese militarists. Let us
not forget the fighters of Fighting France, who did not fall
for the shameful capitulation and continued to fight
against the Nazis.
We will also always be grateful
for the assistance rendered by the Allies in providing
the Red Army with munition, raw materials, food and equipment.
And that help was significant – about 7 percent of the total
military production of the Soviet Union.
The core
of the Anti-Hitler Coalition began to take shape immediately
after the attack on the Soviet Union where the United
States and Britain unconditionally supported it in the fight
against Hitler's Germany. At the Tehran Conference in 1943,
Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill formed an alliance of great
powers, agreed to elaborate coalition diplomacy and a joint
strategy in the fight against a common deadly threat.
The leaders of the Big Three had a clear understanding that
the unification of industrial, resource and military
capabilities of the USSR, the United States and the UK
will give unchallenged supremacy over the enemy.
The Soviet Union fully
fulfilled its obligations to its allies and always offered a helping
hand. Thus, the Red Army supported the landing
of the Anglo-American troops in Normandy by carrying out
a large-scale Operation Bagration in Belorussia.
In January 1945, having broken through to the Oder River,
our soldiers put an end to the last powerful offensive
of the Wehrmacht on the Western Front
in the Ardennes. Three months after the victory over Germany,
the USSR, in full accordance with the Yalta agreements, declared
war on Japan and defeated the million-strong Kwantung Army.
Back in July 1941,
the Soviet leadership declared that “the purpose of the war
against fascist oppressors was not only the elimination
of the threat looming over our country, but also help for all
the peoples of Europe suffering under the yoke of German
fascism.” By mid-1944, the enemy was expelled from virtually all
of the Soviet territory. However, the enemy had to be
finished off in its lair. And so the Red Army started its
liberation mission in Europe. It saved entire nations from destruction
and enslavement, and from the horror of the Holocaust.
They were saved at the cost of hundreds of thousands
of lives of Soviet soldiers.
It is also important not
to forget about the enormous material assistance that the USSR
provided to the liberated countries in eliminating the threat
of hunger and in rebuilding their economies
and infrastructure. That was being done at the time when ashes
stretched for thousands of miles all the way from Brest
to Moscow and the Volga. For instance,
in May 1945, the Austrian government asked the USSR
to provide assistance with food, as it “had no idea how to feed
its population in the next seven weeks before the new harvest.”
State Chancellor of the Provisional Government
of the Austrian Republic Karl Renner described the consent
of the Soviet leadership to send food as a saving act
that the Austrians would never forget.
The Allies jointly established
the International Military Tribunal to punish Nazi political
and war criminals. Its decisions contained a clear legal
qualification of crimes against humanity, such as genocide, ethnic
and religious cleansing, anti-Semitism and xenophobia. Directly
and unambiguously, the Nuremberg Tribunal also condemned
the accomplices of the Nazis, collaborators of various
kinds.
This shameful phenomenon manifested
itself in all European countries. Such figures as Pétain, Quisling,
Vlasov, Bandera, their henchmen and followers – though they were
disguised as fighters for national independence or freedom from
communism – are traitors and butchers. In terms of inhumanity,
they often exceeded their masters. In their desire to serve,
as part of special punitive groups they willingly executed
the most inhuman orders. They were responsible for such bloody events
as the shootings of Babi Yar, the Volhynia massacre, burnt Khatyn,
acts of destruction of Jews in Lithuania and Latvia.
Today as well, our position
remains unchanged – there can be no excuse for the criminal acts
of Nazi collaborators, there is no period of limitations
for them. It is therefore bewildering that in certain countries those
who are smirched with cooperation with the Nazis are suddenly equated with
World War II veterans. I believe that it is unacceptable to equate
liberators with occupants. And I can only regard the glorification
of Nazi collaborators as a betrayal of the memory
of our fathers and grandfathers. A betrayal
of the ideals that united peoples in the fight against
Nazism.
At that time, the leaders
of the USSR, the United States, and the UK faced,
without exaggeration, a historic task. Stalin, Roosevelt
and Churchill represented the countries with different ideologies,
state aspirations, interests, cultures, but they demonstrated great political
will, rose above the contradictions and preferences and put
the true interests of peace at the forefront.
As a result, they were able to come to an agreement
and achieve a solution from which all of humanity has benefited.
The victor powers left us
a system that has become the quintessence
of the intellectual and political quest of several
centuries. A series of conferences – Tehran, Yalta, San
Francisco and Potsdam – laid the foundation of a world
that for 75 years had no global war, despite the sharpest
contradictions.
Historical revisionism,
the manifestations of which we now observe in the West, primarily
with regard to the subject of the Second World War
and its outcome, is dangerous because it grossly and cynically
distorts the understanding of the principles of peaceful
development, laid down at the Yalta and San Francisco
conferences in 1945. The major historic achievement of Yalta
and other decisions of that time is the agreement to create
a mechanism that would allow the leading powers to remain within
the framework of diplomacy in resolving their differences.
The twentieth century brought
large-scale and comprehensive global conflicts, and in 1945,
nuclear weapons capable of physically destroying the Earth also
entered the scene. In other words, the settlement
of disputes by force has become prohibitively dangerous.
And the victors in the Second World War understood that.
They understood and were aware of their own responsibility towards
humanity.
The cautionary tale
of the League of Nations was taken into account in 1945.
The structure of the UN Security Council was developed
in a way to make peace guarantees as concrete
and effective as possible. That is how the institution
of the permanent members of the Security Council
and the right of the veto as their privilege and responsibility
came into being.
What is the power of veto
in the UN Security Council? To put it bluntly, it is
the only reasonable alternative to a direct confrontation
between major countries. It is a statement by one
of the five powers that a decision is unacceptable to it
and is contrary to its interests and its ideas about
the right approach. And other countries, even if they do not agree,
take this position as a given, abandoning any attempts
to realise their unilateral efforts. It means that in one way
or another it is necessary to seek compromises.
A new global confrontation
started almost immediately after the end of the Second World War
and was at times very fierce. And the fact that
the Cold War did not grow into the Third World War has become
a clear testimony of the effectiveness
of the agreements concluded by the Big Three.
The rules of conduct agreed upon during the creation
of the United Nations made it possible to further minimise risks
and keep confrontation under control.
Of course, we can see that
the UN system currently experiences certain tension in its work
and is not as effective as it could be. But the UN still
performs its primary function. The principles of the UN Security
Council are a unique mechanism for preventing a major war
or a global conflict.
The calls that have been made
quite often in recent years to abolish the power of veto,
to deny special opportunities to permanent members
of the Security Council are actually irresponsible. After all, if
that happens, the United Nations would in essence become
the League of Nations – a meeting for empty talk
without any leverage on the world processes. How it ended is well
known. That is why the victor powers approached the formation
of the new system of the world order with utmost
seriousness seeking to avoid repetition of mistakes made
by their predecessors.
The creation
of the modern system of international relations is one
of the major outcomes of World War II. Even the most
insurmountable contradictions – geopolitical, ideological, economic –
do not prevent us from finding forms of peaceful coexistence
and interaction, if there is the desire and will to do so.
Today the world is going through quite a turbulent time. Everything
is changing, from the global balance of power and influence
to the social, economic and technological foundations
of societies, nations and even continents. In the past
epochs, shifts of such magnitude have almost never happened without major
military conflicts. Without a power struggle to build a new
global hierarchy. Thanks to the wisdom and farsightedness
of the political figures of the Allied Powers, it was
possible to create a system that has restrained from extreme
manifestations of such objective competition, historically inherent
in the world development.
It is a duty
of ours – all those who take political responsibility and primarily
representatives of the victor powers in the Second World
War – to guarantee that this system is maintained and improved.
Today, as in 1945, it is important to demonstrate political will
and discuss the future together. Our colleagues – Mr Xi Jinping,
Mr Macron, Mr Trump and Mr Johnson – supported the Russian
initiative to hold a meeting of the leaders
of the five nuclear-weapon states, permanent members
of the Security Council. We thank them for this and hope
that such face-to-face meeting could take place as soon as possible.
What is our vision
of the agenda for the upcoming summit? First of all,
in our opinion, it would be useful to discuss steps to develop
collective principles in world affairs. To speak frankly about the issues
of preserving peace, strengthening global and regional security,
strategic arms control, about joint efforts in countering terrorism,
extremism and other major challenges and threats.
A special item
on the agenda of the meeting is the situation
in the global economy. And above all, overcoming
the economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Our
countries are taking unprecedented measures to protect the health
and lives of people and to support citizens who have found
themselves in difficult living situations. Our ability to work
together and in concert, as real partners, will show how severe
the impact of the pandemic will be, and how quickly
the global economy will emerge from the recession. Moreover, it is
unacceptable to turn the economy into an instrument of pressure
and confrontation. Popular issues include environmental protection
and combating climate change, as well as ensuring
the security of the global information space.
The agenda proposed
by Russia for the upcoming summit of the Five is
extremely important and relevant both for our countries
and for the entire world. And we have specific ideas
and initiatives on all the items.
There can be no doubt that
the summit of Russia, China, France, the United States,
and the UK will play an important role in finding common
answers to modern challenges and threats, and will demonstrate
a common commitment to the spirit of alliance,
to those high humanist ideals and values for which our fathers
and grandfathers fought shoulder to shoulder.
Drawing on a shared historical
memory, we can trust each other and must do so. That will serve
as a solid basis for successful negotiations and concerted
action for the sake of enhancing the stability
and security on the planet, for the sake
of prosperity and well-being of all states. Without
exaggeration, it is our common duty and responsibility towards
the entire world, towards the present and future generations.
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