EU Nazi Symbols on Ukraine’s Front Lines Highlight Thorny Issues of History - Troops’ use of patches bearing Nazi emblems risks fueling Russian propaganda and spreading imagery that the West has spent a half-century trying to eliminate.

Nazi Symbols on Ukraine’s Front Lines Highlight Thorny Issues of History
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Thomas Gibbons-Neff
2023-06-05 09:29:28GMT

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An image of a Ukrainian soldier wearing a patch containing the Totenkopf symbol, an example of Nazi iconography, that was posted on the Twitter account of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry, then deleted.Credit...Vlad Novak, via Ukraine MOD Twitter account

KYIV, Ukraine — Since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine last year, the Ukrainian government and NATO allies have posted, then quietly deleted, three seemingly innocuous photographs from their social media feeds: a soldier standing in a group, another resting in a trench and an emergency worker posing in front of a truck.

In each photograph, Ukrainians in uniform wore patches featuring symbols that were made notorious by Nazi Germany and have since become part of the iconography of far-right hate groups.

The photographs, and their deletions, highlight the Ukrainian military’s complicated relationship with Nazi imagery, a relationship forged under both Soviet and German occupation during World War II.

That relationship has become especially delicate because President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia has falsely declared Ukraine to be a Nazi state, a claim he has used to justify his illegal invasion.

Ukraine has worked for years through legislation and military restructuring to contain a fringe far-right movement whose members proudly wear symbols steeped in Nazi history and espouse views hostile to leftists, L.G.B.T.Q. movements and ethnic minorities. But some members of these groups have been fighting Russia since the Kremlin illegally annexed part of the Crimea region of Ukraine in 2014 and are now part of the broader military structure. Some are regarded as national heroes, even as the far-right remains marginalized politically.

The iconography of these groups, including a skull-and-crossbones patch worn by concentration camp guards and a symbol known as the Black Sun, now appears with some regularity on the uniforms of soldiers fighting on the front line, including soldiers who say the imagery symbolizes Ukrainian sovereignty and pride, not Nazism.

In the short term, that threatens to reinforce Mr. Putin’s propaganda and giving fuel to his false claims that Ukraine must be “de-Nazified” — a position that ignores the fact that Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, is Jewish. More broadly, Ukraine’s ambivalence about these symbols, and sometimes even its acceptance of them, risks giving new, mainstream life to icons that the West has spent more than a half-century trying to eliminate.

“What worries me, in the Ukrainian context, is that people in Ukraine who are in leadership positions, either they don’t or they’re not willing to acknowledge and understand how these symbols are viewed outside of Ukraine,” said Michael Colborne, a researcher at the investigative group Bellingcat who studies the international far right. “I think Ukrainians need to increasingly realize that these images undermine support for the country.”

In a statement, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said that, as a country that suffered greatly under German occupation, “We emphasize that Ukraine categorically condemns any manifestations of Nazism.”

So far, the imagery has not eroded international support for the war. It has, however, left diplomats, Western journalists and advocacy groups in a difficult position: Calling attention to the iconography risks playing into Russian propaganda. Saying nothing allows it to spread.

Even Jewish groups and anti-hate organizations that have traditionally called out hateful symbols have stayed largely silent. Privately, some leaders have worried about being seen as embracing Russian propaganda talking points.

Questions over how to interpret such symbols are as divisive as they are persistent, and not just in Ukraine. In the American South, some have insisted that today, the Confederate flag symbolizes pride, not its history of racism and secession. The swastika was an important Hindu symbol before it was co-opted by the Nazis.

In April, Ukraine’s Defense Ministry posted a photograph on its Twitter account of a soldier wearing a patch featuring a skull and crossbones known as the Totenkopf, or Death’s Head. The specific symbol in the picture was made notorious by a Nazi unit that committed war crimes and guarded concentration camps during World War II.

The patch in the photograph sets the Totenkopf atop a Ukrainian flag with a small No. 6 below. That patch is the official merchandise of Death in June, a British neo-folk band that the Southern Poverty Law Center has said produces “hate speech” that “exploits themes and images of fascism and Nazism.”

The Anti-Defamation League considers the Totenkopf “a common hate symbol.” But Jake Hyman, a spokesman for the group, said it was impossible to “make an inference about the wearer or the Ukrainian Army” based on the patch.

“The image, while offensive, is that of a musical band,” Mr. Hyman said.

The band now uses the photograph posted by the Ukrainian military to market the Totenkopf patch.

The New York Times asked the Ukrainian Defense Ministry on April 27 about the tweet. Several hours later, the post was deleted. “After studying this case, we came to the conclusion that this logo can be interpreted ambiguously,” the ministry said in a statement.

The soldier in the photograph was part of a volunteer unit called the Da Vinci Wolves, which started as part of the paramilitary wing of Ukraine’s Right Sector, a coalition of right-wing organizations and political parties that militarized after Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea.

At least five other photographs on the Wolves’ Instagram and Facebook pages feature their soldiers wearing Nazi-style patches, including the Totenkopf.

NATO militaries, an alliance that Ukraine hopes to join, do not tolerate such patches. When such symbols have appeared, groups like the Anti-Defamation League have spoken out, and military leaders have reacted swiftly.

Last month, Ukraine’s state emergency services agency posted on Instagram a photograph of an emergency worker wearing a Black Sun symbol, also known as a Sonnenrad, that appeared in the castle of Heinrich Himmler, the Nazi general and SS director. The Black Sun is popular among neo-Nazis and white supremacists.

In March 2022, NATO’s Twitter account posted a photograph of a Ukrainian soldier wearing a similar patch.

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A Ukrainian service member is wearing what appears to be a Black Sun on the chest of her uniform in this photograph published by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine on Feb. 14 and on the NATO Twitter account before being deleted.Credit...General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine

Both photographs were quickly removed.

In November, during a meeting with Times reporters near the front line, a Ukrainian press officer wore a Totenkopf variation made by a company called R3ICH (pronounced “Reich”). He said he did not believe the patch was affiliated with the Nazis. A second press officer present said other journalists had asked soldiers to remove the patch before taking photographs.

Ihor Kozlovskyi, a Ukrainian historian and religious scholar, said that the symbols had meanings that were unique to Ukraine and should be interpreted by how Ukrainians viewed them, not by how they had been used elsewhere.

“The symbol can live in any community or any history independently of how it is used in other parts of Earth,” Mr. Kozlovskyi said.

Russian soldiers in Ukraine have also been seen wearing Nazi-style patches, underscoring how complicated interpreting these symbols can be in a region steeped in Soviet and German history.

The Soviet Union signed a nonaggression pact with Germany in 1939, so it was caught by surprise two years later when the Nazis invaded Ukraine, which was then part of the Soviet Union. Ukraine had suffered greatly under a Soviet government that engineered a famine that killed millions. Many Ukrainians initially viewed the Nazis as liberators.

Factions from the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and its insurgent army fought alongside the Nazis in what they viewed as a struggle for Ukrainian sovereignty. Members of those groups also took part in atrocities against Jewish and Polish civilians. Later in the war, though, some of the groups fought against the Nazis.

Some Ukrainians joined Nazi military units like the Waffen-SS Galizien. The emblem of the group, which was led by German officers, was a sky-blue patch showing a lion and three crowns. The unit took part in a massacre of hundreds of Polish civilians in 1944. In December, after a yearslong legal battle, Ukraine’s highest court ruled that a government-funded research institute could continue to list the unit’s insignia as excluded from the Nazi symbols banned under a 2015 law.

Today, as a new generation fights against Russian occupation, many Ukrainians see the war as a continuation of the struggle for independence during and immediately after World War II. Symbols like the flag associated with the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and the Galizien patch have become emblems of anti-Russian resistance and national pride.

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A Russian volunteer fighter for the Ukrainian Army, center, wearing a Galizien patch and another featuring a Totenkopf in southern Ukraine in 2022.Credit...Ivor Prickett for The New York Times

That makes it difficult to easily separate, on the basis of icons alone, the Ukrainians enraged by the Russian invasion from those who support the country’s far-right groups.

Units like the Da Vinci Wolves, the better-known Azov regiment and others that began with far-right members have been folded into the Ukrainian military, and have been instrumental in defending Ukraine from Russian troops.

The Azov regiment was celebrated after holding out during the siege of the southern city of Mariupol last year. After the commander of the Da Vinci Wolves was killed in March, he received a hero’s funeral, which Mr. Zelensky attended.

“I think some of these far-right units mix a fair bit of their own mythmaking into the public discourse on them,” said Mr. Colborne, the researcher. “But I think the least that can and should be done everywhere, not just Ukraine, is not allowing the far right’s symbols, rhetoric and ideas to seep into public discourse.”

Kitty Bennett and Susan C. Beachy contributed research.

Thomas Gibbons-Neff is a Ukraine correspondent and a former Marine infantryman. @tmgneff
 
These rights aren't just handed out like candy to an obese American child on Halloween. They're earned with sweat and blood by winning wars and protecting their borders. History doesn't celebrate losers like Germans, Ukrainians, Palestinians, or whatever native American tribes lost their lands to superior European forces. It will only remember who won, not who was "in the right."

If Ukrainians want to wear the symbols of losers who thought they were building a thousand year old reich but instead got their country taken over by commies and amerimutts within 20 years, let them. It's good for a laugh.
Yeah, I always said it's misguided as a Slav to wear those, and that Slavs and Balkan peoples have a rich history full of ethnonationalism and blood shedding for self-determination, so there's zero need to adopt those German symbols. And yet, some Ukrainians chose to do so, and seem to insist on doing it. But for me, that's not something I would worry about.
Also, winning and losing is not everything. Crushing the Germans came with an insane cultural cost. And Soviets, Russians and allies, Amerimutts, "denazified" Germany, burned its historical legacy, and crushed its ethnic identity. I do not support any of that. Just supremacy regardless of how and why is not my style, I am mildly idealistic, if you want.
Then again... Germans attempted to crush national identities and literally genocide peoples they randomly "elected" to be subhuman, so you know what, you play the game, you lost and got fucked.
But such a retarded game to play...
 
Yeah, I always said it's misguided as a Slav to wear those, and that Slavs and Balkan peoples have a rich history full of ethnonationalism and blood shedding for self-determination, so there's zero need to adopt those German symbols. And yet, some Ukrainians chose to do so, and seem to insist on doing it. But for me, that's not something I would worry about.
Also, winning and losing is not everything. Crushing the Germans came with an insane cultural cost. And Soviets, Russians and allies, Amerimutts, "denazified" Germany, burned its historical legacy, and crushed its ethnic identity. I do not support any of that. Just supremacy regardless of how and why is not my style, I am mildly idealistic, if you want.
Then again... Germans attempted to crush national identities and literally genocide peoples they randomly "elected" to be subhuman, so you know what, you play the game, you lost and got fucked.
But such a retarded game to play...
On one hand it is very much a retarded game to play, but on the other hand it's the only game humanity knows, going back tens of thousands of years in our history.

So, you know. Git gud, or die trying.
 
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A Ukrainian service member is wearing what appears to be a Black Sun on the chest of her uniform in this photograph published by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine on Feb. 14 and on the NATO Twitter account before being deleted.Credit...General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
...where? Is it supposed to be that circle patch which is nothing but a mass of indistinct pixels?

Is this where we are with this shit? :story:
 
Man, Russia has its own neo-Nazi problem which as far as I am concerned is just the craziest thing imaginable. I guess even Russians hate Russians with a burning, murderous passion at times. Frankly I can't really blame the Ukies for wearing this shit, mostly because in Southeastern Europe its heavily associated with dead Russians for obvious reasons of the Nazis doing a better job of it than even Napoleon.
 
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Who cares? I know I sure as hell don't. It doesn't bother me at all. I don't go around with a Ukrainian flag in my avatar like some kind of cringey faggot and then get all butthurt when I find out the media and government lied to me about the Ukrainians being a bunch of left leaning fruity weirdos. Turns out they aren't. Some of them are actual Nazi LARPer's, I am sure it's a minority of them though since they have a Kike as their president.

The Nazis were actually pretty cool so it's not surprising some people are using their symbols.
 
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Yeah, I always said it's misguided as a Slav to wear those, and that Slavs and Balkan peoples have a rich history full of ethnonationalism and blood shedding for self-determination, so there's zero need to adopt those German symbols. And yet, some Ukrainians chose to do so, and seem to insist on doing it. But for me, that's not something I would worry about.

Because Ukraine has no historic ethnonational identity unless it's connected to the USSR or Russia. The only alternative historic anti-Russian ethnonational position that could be utilized by the CIA is OUN-Nazi.
 
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