Boston Herald

General demonstrat­es Russian way of brutality

- By rich lowry Rich Lowry is on Twitter @RichLowry.

Russia has found just the man to lead its ongoing assault on Ukraine, Gen. Aleksandr Dvornikov.

The top-level general takes over a war that had no overall commander and as the Russian military has suffered embarrassi­ng setbacks, retreating from its planned siege of Kyiv.

Dvornikov has led the Russian forces in the south and east of Ukraine, which Moscow will now make its main objective, and perfectly encapsulat­es the remorseles­s and long-running brutality of the Russian military.

He became known as the Butcher of Syria for his role leading the Russian campaign in Syria, most notoriousl­y the reduction of Aleppo.

A United Nations human rights official called that city, after the Russians were done with it, “a slaughterh­ouse.” He depicted “a gruesome locus of pain and fear, where the lifeless bodies of small children are trapped under streets of rubble and pregnant women deliberate­ly bombed.”

That ghastly descriptio­n, of course, sounds all too familiar. Naturally enough, the Russian government honored Dvornikov as a “hero of the Russian federation.”

Bucha is another tragic name in a long catalog of Russians atrocities.

Where the Russian military goes, war crimes are sure to follow. It is a reflection of a twisted Russian political culture that never developed an appreciati­on for individual worth, democratic accountabi­lity or humanitari­an norms. Vladimir Putin is not to be confused with Lenin or Stalin — he paints his horrors on a much smaller canvas. But his cold-eyed brutality is characteri­stically Russian.

For the last 100 years, Russia has been a brutalized and brutalizin­g country. It suffered nearly 3.5 million deaths in World War I, another 8 million dead in the Russian Civil War, and then 27 million more in World War II.

The founder of the Soviet state, Lenin, was practition­er of “mass terror.” After the Revolution, the civil war between the Bolsheviks and their opponents was a series of atrocities. Then came the cataract of unspeakabl­e violence in the death struggle with the Nazis.

The Red Army’s decisive march to Berlin at the end of the war was one long, pitiless war crime.

The Russians raped 2 million German women. According to historian Antony Beevor, author of “The Fall of Berlin 1945,” one doctor believed that of 100,000 women raped in the city, 10,000 died as a consequenc­e, many by suicide.

The English-speaking world features its share of shameful and brutal acts, but nothing on the mindnumbin­g scale of such depravitie­s. And the crimes in the U.S. and elsewhere are looked back on with shame, whether slavery or the expropriat­ion of indigenous people. In contrast, in the 21st century, when more civilized practices are supposed to have prevailed, Putin is adding more disgracefu­l blots to Russia’s woeful record.

What kind of force considers a hospital a legitimate military target? Terrorist groups — and the Russian military.

In Syria a few years ago, Russia bombed four hospitals in 12 hours, a savage performanc­e forecastin­g the treatment they’d mete out to Ukraine. According to The New York Times, Syrian health care workers believed that a United Nations “humanitari­an deconflict­ion” list containing the locations of hospitals was used as a target list by Russian forces.

What the Russian lacks in planning and proficienc­y, it makes up in barbarity and utter disregard for humanity. War is hell, but almost all advanced nations try to keep it within some bounds of decency. Russia is an outlier. For it, the cruelty is the point — and the reflexive practice.

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