Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

appalachiablue

(41,182 posts)
Thu Apr 7, 2022, 03:23 PM Apr 2022

Putin's Brutality Is Part of Long History of Europe as Global Center of Violence



- A rescue team clears debris of a destroyed building in Borodianka after combat during Russia's war in Ukraine.
_______
- Truthout, Op-Ed by Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch, April 7, 2022. -Ed.

Excuse me if I wander a little today- and if it bothers you, don’t blame me, blame Vladimir Putin. After all, I didn’t decide to invade Ukraine, the place my grandfather fled almost 140 years ago. I suspect, in fact, that I was an adult before I even knew such a place existed. If I could be accused of anything, maybe you could say that, for most of my life, I evaded Ukraine. All of us are, in some fashion, now living inside the shockwaves from the Russian president’s grotesque invasion and from a war taking place close to the heart of Europe.

I was not quite one year old in May 1945 when World War II in Europe ended, along with years of carnage unparalleled on this planet. Millions of Russians, 6 million Jews, god knows how many French, British, Germans, Ukrainians, &… well, the list just goes on & on… died and how many more were wounded or displaced from their homes and lives. Given Adolf Hitler’s Germany, we’re talking about nothing short of a hell on Earth. That was Europe from the late 1930s until 1945. In the more-than-three-quarters of a century since then, with the exception of the brief Soviet invasions of Hungary in 1956 & Czechoslovakia in 1968, a civil war (with outside intervention) in the early 1990s in the former Yugoslavia, as well as warring in marginal places like Chechnya, Europe has been the definition of peaceful. Hence, the shock of it all.

It wouldn’t have been faintly the same if Vladimir Putin had invaded Kazakhstan or Afghanistan or… well, you get the idea. In 1979, when the leaders of the Soviet Union did indeed send the Red Army into Afghanistan & again, just over 2 decades later, when George W. Bush & crew ordered the U.S. military to invade the same country, there were far too few cries of alarm, assumedly because it hadn’t happened in the heart of Europe & who the hell cared (other, of course, than the Afghans in the path of those 2 armies). Now, the Vlad has once again turned part of Europe into a war-torn nightmare, a genuine hell on earth of fire & destruction. He’s blasted out significant parts of major cities, sent more than 4 million Ukrainians fleeing the country as refugees, & uprooted at least 6.5 million more in that land. Consider it a signal measure of the horror of the moment that more than half of all Ukrainian children have, in some fashion, been displaced.

Since that country became the focus of staggering media attention here (in coverage terms, like days after the 9/11 attacks), since it became more or less the only story on Earth, little surprise that it also came to seem like a horror, a crime, of an essentially unparalleled sort, an intrusion beyond all measure. The shock has been staggering. You just don’t do that, right? - The Heartland of War, Historically Speaking: Strangely enough the Russian president’s gross act fits all too horribly into a far larger & longer history of Europe & this planet. Until 1945, rather than being a citadel of global peace, order, & European-Union-style cooperation, that continent was regularly a hell of war, conflict, & slaughter. You could, of course, go back to at least 460 BC, when the 15-year Peloponnesian War between the Greek city states of Athens & Sparta began in an era that has long been considered the “dawn of civilization.” From then on through Roman imperial times, war, or rather wars galore, lay at the heart of that developing civilization...

Read More, https://truthout.org/articles/putins-brutality-is-part-of-long-history-of-europe-as-global-center-of-violence/
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Editorials & Other Articles»Putin's Brutality Is Part...