By Jonah
Goldberg
Wednesday,
April 12, 2023
Vladimir
Putin and his war machine get more respect than they deserve from the West.
This may
seem a bit counterintuitive. After all, just 9 percent of Americans have
a favorable opinion of Russia, and the
International Criminal Court recently issued an arrest warrant for Putin for war
crimes.
But if
you listen to a lot of the debate over Ukraine, you might be forgiven for
thinking Putin’s invasion was just a bad mistake, badly implemented by an
otherwise serious country. Sure, terrible things are happening in Ukraine, but
terrible things happen in war. What’s left out is that the terrible
things are the policy, not the unintended consequence of it.
Reports
of torture and rape started pouring in from the earliest days of the invasion.
In March 2022, Russian troops electrocuted
the genitals of male civilian prisoners and sexually brutalized girls and women
from age 4 to 82.
These
weren’t isolated incidents but the beginning of a campaign of atrocities to
come. Numerous mass graves full of corpses, some showing evidence of execution, rape, and torture, have been found in areas liberated by
Ukrainian forces. The bodies of mutilated children have been discovered.
Such horrors can distract from the more routine evils of targeting civilians,
including schools and hospitals, and the stealing of thousands of children.
It also
leaves out the fact that such tactics aren’t aberrations. Similar crimes were
committed in Putin’s other adventures, in Chechnya, Georgia, and Syria.
But the
most conspicuous fact that’s absent from the public conversation is that the
Russian military has been a villainous force for more than a century.
The
horrendous crimes of imperial Russia were part of a pre-modern era of warfare
prior to the Geneva Conventions and other laws of war. But it’s worth
remembering that the armies of the czars were famously brutal even for a brutal
age. Even Alexander II, the “liberal” reformer who freed the serfs also ordered
the genocide of the Circassians and other natives of the
Caucuses. Between 600,000 and 1.5 million people were killed, the rest deported
to the Ottoman Empire. That institutional memory lived on, like a ghost in the
Russian killing machine.
The
Bolsheviks may have dispatched the czars, but they only amplified the czarist
approach to war. Stalin’s genocides and forced deportations look more like a
continuation than a break with the czarist past. And today’s atrocities extend
that sinister tradition, too.
Putin
has built on the Soviet effort to turn World War II into a kind of state religion, in which the messianic Red Army
saved Europe from fascism. Obviously, the Russian sacrifice in World War
II—after Hitler broke his pact with Stalin—was staggering. But the Soviet
approach to war—using Russian soldiers as fodder for enemy guns until the enemy
is exhausted—replicated in Ukraine today is nothing to be proud
of.
Neither
is the Red Army’s record as “liberators” in Eastern Europe, where they
terrorized the population with mass rape. In Hungary, the estimates of rape range from 50,000 to
200,000. So many pregnancies resulted, that in January 1946, Hungary’s
social-welfare minister requested of his superiors “to qualify
all babies as abandoned whose date of births is from 9 to 18 months after the
liberation.”
In
Vienna alone, there were between 70,000 and 100,000 rapes. Estimates in
Soviet-controlled Poland exceed 100,000. In Germany, they run as high
as 2 million. Stalin dismissed complaints saying
that his troops had been through so much they deserved to “have fun with a woman.”
The full
scale of the mass rapes will never be known, in part because the Soviets destroyed
records and kept them secret until the end. And it is now an official secret in
Russia once again, as Putin has made it a crime to denigrate the military or to besmirch the memory of the Red Army. He also
preemptively exempted troops committing war crimes from
prosecution at home or abroad under the Geneva Convention. On Saturday,
former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev vowed that Ukraine will be erased.
Horrible
things happen in every war. However imperfectly, the West has tried to adhere
to principles of war and to minimize future horrors and crimes. The Russian
military has never bothered with such views, and under Putin, who’s nostalgic
for the worst aspects of both czarist and Soviet Russia, it seems to see barbarism and cruelty as part of its identity.
The
invasion of Ukraine is the product of a society that, having never successfully
confronted the sins of its past, has come to see them as virtues.
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