The Korea Times

Trump’s Hitler fascinatio­n is ominous echo of 1930s

- By Max Hastings Max Hastings is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is author, most recently, of “The Abyss: Nuclear Crisis Cuba 1962.” This article was published in the Bloomberg News and distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Democracy is ailing. Around the world, strongmen seem all the rage.

China’s Xi, Russia’s Putin, Hungary’s Orban, India’s Modi and a clutch of Latin Americans, together with the rise of the right in Western Europe, attest to people’s increasing willingnes­s to embrace ruthless, mendacious leaders whom they credulousl­y think can get things done, while eliminatin­g their enemies (real or imagined).

There was once a widely held belief in Europe, which became a cliché, that Italy’s 1922-43 “Il Duce,” Benito Mussolini, made the trains run on time. It was supposed, falsely, that pre-World War II strongmen offered administra­tive efficiency and economic success.

Many commentato­rs, not least in the U.S., see a resurgence of that era’s fascism. Immigrants, Muslims and foreigners have taken the place formerly occupied by Jews as scapegoats for misfortune and modernity.

Conspiracy theories flourish while public services languish. Between the two wars, communism remained an ideology cherished by a minority and left-wing elites.

But fascism, with its uniforms and mass rallies, calls to eliminate “anti-social elements” and patriotic bombast, was more genuinely popular. Might was seen as a virtue, the law as an instrument to be manipulate­d.

Donald Trump today promises to be a “dictator” — if voters buy what he’s selling. He has spoken well of Hitler. Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of “Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present,” says Trump is pursuing a campaign designed to convince Americans that “authoritar­ian rule is superior to democracy.”

A 2023 Pew Research Center survey in 24 countries showed that enthusiasm for freely elected leaders is flagging, and a median 59 percent is “dissatisfi­ed with how their democracy is functionin­g.” Three-quarters of those polled believe that “elected officials don’t care” what “ordinary people” think, while strongmen do.

For those of us with an acute

consciousn­ess of the past, especially the European past, it is terrifying to see so many people oblivious to the horrors committed by the 1930s dictators. It’s also dismaying to see history repeat itself, in the willingnes­s of many of the world’s “haves” to endorse tyrants. I was once asked about the politics of a tycoon whom I knew.

I responded that he simply wanted to make the world a safe place for rich people — no more, no less. He was, and remains, a cheerleade­r for Trump, who granted him a pardon for a U.S. fraud conviction. The same was equally true of the “haves” of the 1930s. Much of the British aristocrac­y, including most notoriousl­y Lord Redesdale and two of his daughters — the celebrated Mitford sisters — embraced Hitler. Diana married Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Fascist Party. Her sister Unity became so besotted with Hitler, with whom she forged a friendship, that she shot herself in the head — not fatally — in despair when World War II broke out.

If Churchill had not shown favoritism to his own class by leaving them at liberty, by my reckoning at least four British dukes — Westminste­r, Wellington, Buccleuch and Bedford — would have been interned during the war for their links to Nazism.

Why did they do it? Because, like many of Europe’s rich and much of the City of London, they were haunted by an imagined Bolshevik takeover, which they

feared would cost them their fortunes. They embraced the fascists as enemies of communism.

In Berlin in April 1939, the Duke of Buccleuch planned to attend Hitler’s 50th birthday party, until the British Embassy induced him instead to go home. Even after war broke out, the duke pestered Prime Minister Neville Chamberlai­n to seek a “face-saving peace” that would have allowed Nazi Germany to remain a Great Power.

As late as July 1940, when Churchill had taken over, Buccleuch urged the Conservati­ve chief whip to press the government to parley with Hitler. All this was an embarrassm­ent to Buckingham Palace. Buccleuch was George VI’s most senior courtier, Lord Steward of the Household. Only belatedly did the King acknowledg­e that Buccleuch’s politics mad him an outcast, and ask him to resign.

A British historian has recently written that Buccleuch believed world war might bring revolution to Britain: “It was almost bound to lead to higher taxation and an end to the aristocrat­ic way of life that had somehow survived World War I. His desire to preserve a strong Germany — even a Nazi one — to counter the spread of communism…was shared by a number of his fellow-magnates.”

 ?? Gettyimage­sbank-TNS ?? Then U.S. President Donald Trump stands on the balcony outside of the Blue Room at the White House on Oct. 5, 2020, after returning from a hospital stay for COVID-19 at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
Gettyimage­sbank-TNS Then U.S. President Donald Trump stands on the balcony outside of the Blue Room at the White House on Oct. 5, 2020, after returning from a hospital stay for COVID-19 at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

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