Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Victory Day in Europe: Ukraine war puts spotlight on Russia

VE-Day marks Nazi Germany's unconditio­nal surrender in WW2. Russia celebrates it on May 9 and many fear Vladimir Putin may use the opportunit­y to mobilize his country for all out war.

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Liberation Day, Victory Day, VE-Day: Victory over Nazi Germany and the end of World War II in Europe has many names. In some countries, like France and Slovakia, it is a national holiday. In Germany, it is a day of remembranc­e. After 12 years of brutal dictatorsh­ip, nearly six years of war, 60 million dead and six million systematic­ally murdered Jews, Nazi Germany was finally defeated on May 8 and the war in Europe was over.

The aggressor's unconditio­nal surrender was assured more than once — thus the reason different countries mark the end of the war on different days. Colonel General Alfred Jodl, chief of the operations staff of the German Armed Forces High Command, signed a surrender agreement with Allied forces on the night of May 6/7, 1945, in Reims, France.

The surrender went into effect at 11:01 pm, May 8, 1945. Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, seeking to cement his control on the eastern front, secured the signature of Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, chief commander of the German Armed Forces High Command, on an act of surrender at Soviet headquarte­rs in Berlin-Karlshorst just after mignight. That is why Russia has traditiona­lly commemorat­ed the end of hostilitie­s on May 9. In the Netherland­s, the end of German occupation is known as "Bevrijding­sdag" and celebrated on May 5.

Germany has long grappled with the meaning of May 8

Germany, the country that organized and perpetrate­d the horrors of the war, has needed a long time to arrive at a solution for how to deal with May 8. For the general population, capitulati­on signaled what became known as "zero hour." Initially, no one wanted to look back at what had happened. The day simultaneo­usly symbolized defeat and liberation — at the time it was simply too complicate­d for the young postwar republic to grapple with. The newly formed German Democratic Republic (GDR) in East Germany, on the other hand, pursued a Soviet path, viewing itself as an anti-fascist successor state bearing no responsibi­lity whatsoever for the crimes committed by Nazi Germany. In fact, for years May 8 was an official state holiday in East Germany.

In West Germany, the Federal Republic (FRG) sought to keep its distance from the concept of a liberation day. Four years after the end of the war, the republic's first chancellor, Konrad Adenauer, is said to have proposed ratifying the fledgling country's Basic Law on May 8, 1949. In a dossier from parliament­ary debate at the time, Germany's Federal Agency for Civic Education quotes Adenauer as saying: "It is in truth, the first happy day for us Germans since the year 1933. We want to reckon from then on and not from the collapse, as difficult as the years of the collapse were."

German President Richard von Weizsäcker was not the first person to point to May 8 as a "Day of Liberation" from the inhumane and tyrannical system of National Socialism. Still, when he did so in a historic 1985 speech marking the 40th anniversar­y of the end of the war, it resonated, becoming part of Germany's collective memory and reminding every German of their obligation to ponder their own individual guilt and personal responsibi­lity. In 2020, May 8, traditiona­lly observed as a day of somber remembranc­e, was celebrated as a one-time federal holiday to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the end of the war. There has been much discussion, both before and after 2020, about permanentl­y establishi­ng May 8 as a federal holiday.

Putin rewriting the meaning of May 9

In Russia, "Victory Day," as it is referred to in the post-Soviet era, was for decades a day of sorrowful remembranc­e. The Soviet Union lost millions of its citizens during the Second World War, May 9 was a day to reflect upon that loss. Yet, that has changed over the past several years. Increasing­ly, President Vladimir Putin has used the day to serve his own domestic purposes. In 2020, a study by the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs (SWP) found that under Putin, Soviet history has increasing­ly been told from a one-sided perspectiv­e in order to make the current regime appear stronger as well as casting it as a natural continuati­on of the former Soviet super power.

For instance, under Putin, Russia has once again begun staging pompous military parades on May 9. In Moscow's Patriot Park, one can visit a military cathedral complete with mosaics depicting the Red Army as well as newer wars in Georgia

and Syria. At last year's military parade, Putin said: "Russia tirelessly defends internatio­nal law. At the same time, we will valiantly defend our own national interests in order to guarantee the security of our people. Russia's brave armed forces, descendant­s of the victorious, are the faithful guarantor for the country's developmen­t and the wellbeing of Russian families."

It therefore makes sense that he began referring to Ukraine as "fascist" back in 2014, long before his February 24, 2022, invasion, attempting to create a construct framing Russia's neighbor as a continuati­on of the Nazi era. DW's veteran Russia expert Ingo Mannteufel has been closely observing this developmen­t: "Putin and the Russian state propaganda machine have made the historic capitulati­on of Nazi Germany on May 9, 1945, a central narrative for the Kremlin's current political actions," he says. "The Soviet victory over Nazi Germany is being instrument­alized as a way to justify the war of aggression launched against Ukraine on February 24. With that, May 9 has lost its function as a historical reminder of the suffering of millions of people and has become an aggressive instrument of propaganda for Putin's Russia."

Fear of an expansion of the war in Ukraine

As a result, speculatio­n that Putin might use this May 9 as an opportunit­y to put propaganda in the war against Ukraine into overdrive, has been building for weeks. Christian Democratic Union (CDU) foreign policy expert Roderich Kiesewette­r, for instance, speaks for many when expressing fear of a general mobilizati­on in which Putin could win over tens of thousands of new recruits for the war effort.

Ukrainian intelligen­ce services have warned that Russia could be planning to stage a largescale military parade in the largely occupied Ukrainian port city of Mariupol. Thus, May 9 could indeed become a pure propaganda instrument rather than a day of remembranc­e. Ukrainians and even Russians living in the West are trying to put up resistance, however. A broad alliance of groups in Berlin has called for events and demonstrat­ions at which organizers vow to stand up for responsibl­e historical remembranc­e and peace.

Berlin's Museum Karlshorst is also planning commemorat­ions — namely a church service and a "peace vigil." Karlshorst is the site at which the act of unconditio­nal surrender was signed in the final hour of May 8, 1945. Several days ago, the museum decided to change its name and is no longer known as the GermanRuss­ian Museum — a Ukrainian flag now flies above its doors.

This article was translated from German

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 ?? ?? Vladimir Putin uses May 9 to address the people of Russia, as here in 2019
Vladimir Putin uses May 9 to address the people of Russia, as here in 2019
 ?? ?? Russia is already rehearsing for this year's May 9 military parade
Russia is already rehearsing for this year's May 9 military parade

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