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On the struggle against fascism in World War II

In the US, Victory in Europe Day is commemorated on May 8. Russia celebrates 
Victory Day on May 9. Either way, it is a commemoration of the defeat of one 
of the most vicious powers that ever arose in world history, Nazi Germany.

The fascist Axis powers of World War II were a threat to everyone living on 
the earth. Their defeat was crucial. And the victory over the Axis powers  
gave a tremendous impetus to progressive struggles around the world. Among 
other things, this victory accelerated the national liberation movement in 
Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. And yet, this same national liberation 
movement fought against some of the victorious governments of World War II. 
It fought against British, French, and US imperialism in many bloody and 
protracted confrontations that sometimes won and sometimes lost.

There is a tremendous gulf between the people who heroically fought fascism, 
and the imperialist motives of the governments. Many more examples could be 
given. The Western imperialist Allies not only tried to maintain colonialism, 
but they betrayed the left-wing resistance movements that had sprung up in 
Europe against the fascists

And the same thing happened on the Eastern Front in Europe. The Soviet Union 
was one of the Allied powers. The sacrifice of the Soviet peoples against 
fascism will never be forgotten. They bore the brunt of assault by the bulk 
of the Nazi armies. Millions upon millions of Soviet working people died in 
this struggle, and they helped save the world. But the Stalinist government 
stained the anti-fascist banner.

There was the Katyn massacre of over 20,000 Poles in 1940 by the Soviet 
government; this was a major crime and an embarrassment to the anti-fascist 
cause. During the war, there was also the mass deportation in 1944 of all 
Chechens from Chechnya, of all Crimean Tatars from Crimea, and of a number of 
other small nationalities from their lands. No Chechens were left in 
Chechnya, or Tatars in Crimea, and return didn't start until well after 
Stalin died. Back in World War II, Red Army soldiers of these nationalities, 
soldiers who had fought fascism, might return home only to find their 
families gone, and they themselves would be deported. There was also the 
extensive rape of women by the Soviet army during the occupation of its 
sector of Germany, and to some extent elsewhere in Europe.

Many more examples could be given. The Soviet government had betrayed the 
Russian revolution and Marxism long before World War II;  it had become the 
government of a new  bourgeoisie; and this could be seen in the way it acted 
during the war.

The Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, but today the Russian government is 
saying that it bears the banner of anti-fascism and deserves to have a sphere 
of influence that includes any country that was in the old Soviet Union.  It 
has been shouting about this louder and louder as its intervenes in Ukraine. 
It says that anti-fascism is peculiarly Russian, and that its neighbors such 
as the Ukrainians are fascists. What a lie! The Ukrainian people fought 
against the fascists as did the Russian people. There are good and bad class 
trends in all countries: anti-fascism isn't a  matter of being Russian. The 
Putin government in Russia talks about being anti-fascist: but after annexing 
Crimea, it began oppressing the Crimean Tatars again (those who were able to 
return to Crimea).  It denigrates the right to self-determination to Ukraine, 
although that was supposedly guaranteed in the Soviet Constitution. It makes 
a mockery of the democratic rights of the Russian people. And Putin makes 
deals with fascist forces across Europe, such as with Le Pen's infamous 
National Front in France.

Let's remember the sacrifice made by millions upon millions of people in the 
struggle against fascism in World War II, a struggle that not only took place 
in Europe but in Asia, Africa, and elsewhere.  But let's also remember that 
both the Western capitalist governments and the Soviet state-capitalist 
government carried out their own imperialist plans under cover of this war. 
If we are going to carry forward the anti-fascist banner today, it would help 
to be clear about what happened in the past. We need a class perspective on 
why World War II occurred, on what happened in this war, and on what the 
different class forces did.  We need to remember: the working people fought 
fascism, and they fought it for the sake of freedom,  but the Allied 
governments fought the Axis with different goals from that of the working 
people.

We must keep the legacy of anti-fascist struggle alive and vigorous; this 
means supporting today all peoples who fight for freedom and the right to 
self-determination against dictatorial regimes or occupiers. We must not 
allow the symbols of the struggle in World War II to be used against the 
anti-fascist and liberation struggles of today.  We must not forget about 
what the Western governments did after defeating the Axis, and we must not 
forget what the Soviet government did either.

 -- Joseph Green, editor, "Communist Voice"

Taken from the Detroit Workers' Voice Mailing List for May 10, 2015,
with a couple of typos corrected.
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