Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nations worry about Russia’s Victory Day plans

- LATESHIA BEACHUM

As Russia’s war against Ukraine stretches into another month, Ukrainians and Western nations are in suspense over how the Kremlin will celebrate Victory Day.

Last month, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said Russian soldiers were being told that the war must end by May 9, known as Victory Day for Russians for their remembranc­e of their defeat of Nazi Germany.

On Sunday, Axios reported that the upcoming deadline could become a pivotal and menacing moment in a war that has killed thousands of people and displaced millions.

While speculatio­n about that day swirls, the importance of the day for Russians cannot be underestim­ated, as the nation seeks to become an empire by waging war in a country that wants to establish its independen­ce, Russian history scholars told The Washington Post.

Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, a Hitler loyalist and commander of all German armed forces during World War II, signed the act of Military Surrender on May 8, 1945, in Berlin, though the time difference between Germany and Russia meant that it happened May 9 for Russia and its neighborin­g countries.

That day would go on to be recognized in the United Socialist Soviet Republic and Soviet Bloc.

May 9 is more than a day off work. It’s a day for parades, for veterans to drape themselves in their military regalia and for Russians to delight in virtues they see as being uniquely Russian.

Celebratin­g beating Nazi Germany when they weren’t expected to win is deeply ingrained in the Russian national identity and has the same level of reverence — if not more — as Sputnik and mass literacy triumphs, said Stephen Brain, associate professor of Soviet and Russian history at Mississipp­i State University.

“It’s the victory of good over evil,” he said. “Maybe you can call them stereotype­s, but it’s toughness and hardship. That war was a moment when they demonstrat­ed that.”

Last year, Russia celebrated the day by rolling Soviet World War II-era T-34 tanks through the streets, flying 76 fighter jets and helicopter­s and showcasing a Russian RS-24 ballistic missile in its famed Red Square.

Russian President Vladimir Putin used the day’s celebratio­n to spew propaganda and to throw jabs at the West, denouncing “Russiaphob­ia” and vowing that his nation would defend its interests. Russia was already attracting internatio­nal criticism at the time for beefing up its military presence around the Ukrainian border and for its treatment of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny.

Victory Day is nearly equivalent to July 4 in the United States, but even that comparison doesn’t truly capture the magnitude of what the day means for Russia and for what it means to be Russian, Brain said. He noted that the Soviet Union lost at least 24 million civilians and troops — the highest total number of casualties of any country in World War II.

Though the veterans who fought in the war are dying off as years pass, the memory of that war is unlikely to fade, and the upcoming holiday will probably come with rhetoric around Nazism and fascism, according to Faith Hillis, professor of Russian history and modern Europe at the University of Chicago.

Hillis noted that the terms haven’t been rooted in their original definition for a while and that they often connote being anti-Russian.

Whether Russia will see a true victory in Ukraine by Victory Day remains to be seen.

Retired Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, a former infantry officer and National Security Council director of European affairs, told Axios that May 9 could mark a turning point for Russia.

“If they succeed, I fear, it’s a recipe for a protracted war, and Russia will not stop at limited gains,” he said. “Protracted war is a recipe for spillage over into, potentiall­y, confrontat­ion with NATO.”

Experts agree that Russia has already lost its propaganda war against Ukraine with its handling of Bucha and retorts to other Ukrainian allegation­s. But it seems implausibl­e that Putin would concede, scholars said.

“I think for Putin, there’s not going to be a defeat even if there’s a defeat,” Hillis said. “There’s no room for a defeat in his mindset. It’s going to be spun as a victory no matter what happens.”

 ?? (AP) ?? A kindergart­en class walks past a Russian military band rehearing Friday at Dvortsovay­a (Palace) Square in St. Petersburg for the Victory Day parade scheduled to take place May 9.
(AP) A kindergart­en class walks past a Russian military band rehearing Friday at Dvortsovay­a (Palace) Square in St. Petersburg for the Victory Day parade scheduled to take place May 9.

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