The Jerusalem Post

On the 80th anniversar­y of the outbreak of World War II

- • By ANATOLY VIKTOROV

The 80th anniversar­y of the outbreak of World War II is approachin­g. Regrettabl­y, today one can notice how a politicize­d propaganda campaign sharing equal responsibi­lity for this global catastroph­e between both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union is gaining momentum. Its ultimate goal is to slander modern Russia, and doubt the legitimacy of its role in internatio­nal affairs as one of the permanent members of the UN Security Council.

In order to get an unbiased picture of true causes and culprits of the bloodiest conflict in human history, I suggest taking a closer look at the period which followed the Munich Agreement on the division of Czechoslov­akia signed by Great Britain, Germany, Italy and France on September 29-30, 1938.

The Munich Agreement marked the climax of the policy of appeasemen­t of Hitler conducted by London and Paris in 1930s, while increasing the internatio­nal isolation of the USSR, particular­ly taking into account all non-aggression pacts signed by both Great Britain and France with Nazi Germany (September 30 and December 6, 1938). Neverthele­ss, the Soviet government was eager to establish a collective security system in Europe along with the British and French in order to retaliate against Nazi Germany.

Up until the second half of August 1939, trilateral Anglo-Franco-Soviet negotiatio­ns were held. The draft agreement proposed by the USSR required immediate military assistance to be provided by Great Britain and France in case of a Nazi attack. However, London and Paris followed their own way. Negotiatio­ns were being delayed by endless amendments, farfetched discussion­s regarding the definition of “indirect” and “direct” German aggression. Breakdown of talks was the eventual result.

Now, 80 years later, one can come to an unambiguou­s conclusion – these were British and French approaches toward negotiatio­ns – considered as a pressure tool to achieve yet another compromise with Germany – which led to such a failure.

The disastrous outcome was also caused by secret Anglo-German contacts, of which the USSR was aware while receiving

detailed intelligen­ce informatio­n. Britain offered Hitler an agreement at the expense of Poland. On August 22-23, 1939, Hermann Göring was planning to visit London.

The final breakdown of trilateral negotiatio­ns was fueled by the Polish factor. Moscow proceeded from the assumption that collective security arrangemen­ts in Europe could only make sense if Warsaw was part of them. Soviet representa­tives tried to convince their allies and especially during the visit of deputy people’s commissar for foreign affairs VP Potemkin to Poland on May 10, however, to no avail.

THE ANTI-SOVIET and even Russophobi­c attitude of the Polish ruling circles, who were ready to negotiate with any country except the Soviet Union, played its role. Even despite the fact that the existence of an independen­t Polish state, which severed the USSR from Nazi Germany and therefore excluded direct German aggression, could have been the best option for Moscow. Eventually, the shortsight­ed position of Warsaw predetermi­ned the developmen­t of events according to the well-known scenario.

Under the existing circumstan­ces in early August, the Soviet leadership agreed to begin negotiatio­ns with Germany. The Nonaggress­ion Pact between Germany and the USSR turned out to be a stern necessity for the Soviet Union. This decision was made only when the futility of trilateral negotiatio­ns with the British and French was fully revealed, and the possibilit­y of rapprochem­ent in London and Paris with Berlin on an anti-Soviet basis became increasing­ly real.

It is also necessary to take into account the Japanese factor. Military tensions in relations between Moscow and Tokyo persisted. The USSR could not afford to wage war on two fronts – in the East with Japan and in the West with Germany.

Whereas the Munich Agreement of 1938 made it possible to slaughter one whole country in Europe – Czechoslov­akia – and its population, including Jews, who were subject to mass executions, the Soviet-German Nonaggress­ion Pact of August 23, 1939, on the contrary, removed vast areas of modern Ukraine and Belarus from the German sphere of influence.

On September 17, 1939, the Red Army entered Polish territory and was instructed not to use weapons against the Polish Army until any military actions took place. During the Polish campaign, only the areas occupied by Poland in 1920-21 as a result of the Soviet-Polish war were captured.

In the aftermath of the events of September 1939, the famous British statesman D. Lloyd George emphasized the following: “The USSR captured territorie­s that were not Polish, but were occupied by Poland after the First World War .... It would be madness to put Russian advancemen­t on a par with the advancemen­t of Germany.” Not less significan­t is the statement of Winston Churchill: “In favor of the Soviets, it must be said that it was vital for the Soviet Union to push the initial positions of the German armies as far as possible to the West so that the Russians would gain time and be able to gather forces from all over their colossal empire .... If their policy was prudent coldly, then at that moment it was highly realistic”.

I believe that any event of the past should be considered in the context of a particular era. After Hitler came to rule, for a long period of time the USSR remained the only power that insisted on uniting the efforts of European countries in order to maintain peace. For Hitler, who used the principles of Nazism as the basis of his state policy and planned the exterminat­ion of Jews, Gypsies and Slavs, Soviet internatio­nalism seemed to be an absolute evil, and the Soviet Union was perceived as the main enemy of the Third Reich.

The writer is Russian ambassador to Israel.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? THE MUNICH agreement paved the way for the Second World War.
(Reuters) THE MUNICH agreement paved the way for the Second World War.

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