By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
“The woman’s pelvis had been crushed and her hip
detached.”
I don’t even know what that last part means. I suppose I
can imagine a crushed pelvis easily enough. I can’t imagine what a detached hip
looks like or feels like.
The woman in question was famous for a minute. She was a
Ukrainian mother who appeared in a famous news photograph. She is dead now. So
is the child she was carrying. She was photographed being carried out of that
Mariupol maternity hospital that was bombed by Russian troops in Ukraine, one
of many examples of the savagery in which the Russians have been engaged. It is
tempting to write “sub-human” savagery, but savagery is entirely human. Nobody
talks about rattlesnakes or scorpions behaving in a savage fashion — nobody
expects them to be anything other than what they are. But we expect more
of H. sap. — God knows why.
“Unidentified bloodied pregnant woman,” one headline
called her. She must have had a name.
We know the name of Tatiana Perebeinis, 43, and her
children, Nikita, 18, and Alise, 9. They were killed running for their lives
when they were fired on by Russian artillery. Another famous photo. She was an
accountant for a Silicon Valley tech company, working out of Irpin. “Photos of
Tatiana Perebeinis and her kids lying in a gutter, surrounded by suitcases and
pet carriers, ran on the front page of The New York Times on
Tuesday and reverberated around the world,” reports the Daily
Beast. I suppose they did.
Here is another family being wiped out, this time caught on
video. There are more like it than you want to see.
“We are all Ukrainians now,” says the headline over
a Wall Street Journal column. The sentiment is a
humane one. But it is a lie. We are not all Ukrainians. Most of us are far
removed from anything like that kind of danger or that kind of suffering. The
worst we have felt is higher gasoline prices and more expensive groceries. These
matter, of course, and they matter a great deal to the poor, for whom these
additional financial burdens are very heavy. But that is not the same.
It is not easy to be brave, and it is not easy to suffer.
But how much easier it must be to suffer oneself than to watch one’s children
suffer, to be cold and hungry, to die, blown to pieces in the womb before
taking their first breath. How many Ukrainian mothers and fathers would happily
— joyfully — give their own lives if it meant that their children could have a
decent dinner and a safe, warm place to sleep — i.e., if they could have what
my dogs have? Millions, I imagine.
No, we are not all Ukrainians now. Not by a damned sight.
We are not all Russians either. I do not flatter myself
that the Russian people have been waiting for my advice, but I will offer it,
anyway: You have to act. You must. This is your country, your army, your
government, your tax dollars, your flag, your name. Vladimir Putin is not a
superman, and he cannot act alone. What is being done by your government is not
going to be forgiven. You, and your children, and your grandchildren will bear
the shame of this. Things are never going to go back to normal for you. I don’t
know if you have noticed, but, to put it in popular terms, the civilized world
has got together, and we have voted you off the island. The ties between you
and the civilized world that have been cut in recent weeks are not going to be
restored quickly, and many of them will never be restored at all. You are not
part of the civilized world anymore. We are not going to forget what you have
been party to, what so many of you have stood by and accepted.
What makes it worse, if that is possible, and certainly
more asinine: You have already lost, in that what your government had hoped to
achieve will not be achieved. You can murder as many expectant mothers and
children as you like, bomb them until you run out of munitions, burn down the
hospitals and the libraries, execute all the mayors, and you will still have
lost. And when you are gone, the civilized people of this world are going to
help to rebuild Ukraine, and you will be — what? Praying for high gas prices?
‘Denazification’
When Vladimir Putin launched his campaign of mass murder
in Ukraine, one of the pretexts he cited was “denazification.” Putin’s
propaganda machine has for years been retailing the absurd fiction that Ukraine
is a country dominated by vicious neo-Nazis, presumably the very strange kind
of neo-Nazis who choose to rally behind Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the country’s
Jewish president. Putin is fortunate to have cretins such as Representative
Madison Cawthorn (R., N.C.) to aid in the effort.
About denazification . . .
For those who remember just how brutal the 20th century
could be, it is remarkable how forbearing the denazification of Germany was. As
the tide of the war began to turn and it was clear that the Allies would
prevail, Winston Churchill dreamt of dragging Adolf Hitler, whom he considered
to be little more than a jumped-up gangster, to England to be executed,
quipping that the Americans might make an electric chair available via lend-lease.
Churchill opposed the Nuremberg trials, not because he thought they were unjust
but because he wanted the Nazi leadership executed without trial. There are
competing accounts of the conversations at Yalta and elsewhere, but one version
has Joseph Stalin proposing to execute every German officer above the rank of
captain. Dwight Eisenhower is quoted in a report to the Senate suggesting that
the “ringleaders and SS troops should be given the death penalty, without
question. But the punishment should not stop there.” It is unlikely that
Eisenhower meant to execute every German belonging to the SS —
800,000 men by the end of the war — but he did apparently favor keeping the
German people in punitive poverty for some indefinite period of time.
As it turned out, the business of reforming Germany —
West Germany at first, and then unified Germany — did not require such drastic
and bloody measures. Or, rather, it did not require those measures precisely,
though Soviet domination of East Germany was vicious enough. The reconstruction
of post-war Japan involved quite radical measures, including intervening in the
nation’s religious life, but it was accomplished without very much open
violence.
I do wonder what it would take to turn Russia around. I
suppose it would start with a Russia that wanted to be turned around, or at
least a critical mass of Russians who want that. I don’t think there is one.
Jay Nordlinger is right to say that the Russians who protest Putin’s junta are
some of the bravest people in the world. But I do not think there are enough of
them.
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