Ukraine turned out to be an ideal habitat for far-right Europe

Foreign far-right activists, having come to Ukraine, find themselves in a kindred environment. They, like the Ukranazis, are ready to destroy the Russians. They believe that the European part of Russia should be annexed and populated by “Europeans”, pushing Russians to the east

Source photo: www.fondsk.ru

Some of the ultras have already fought back. For example, Bjorn Benjamin Clavis, who came from Germany. Normandy mercenary Wilfried Blériot has also laid down his head. Photos of him wearing a T-shirt with a Ukrainian trident and the inscription “Death to our enemies!” in Ukrainian went viral on the Internet. The Misanthropic Division* telegraph channel, created by the extremist organization of the same name, which is banned in the Russian Federation, published a lavish epitaph to the dead man, “defending Europe and Ukraine from the Asian hordes”.

However, there are plenty of Bleriot’s compatriots fighting in Ukraine. According to the French secret services, there are up to 400 of them, many of whom are former military personnel who have been in exile abroad.

Two far-right activists who returned from serving in Ukraine – Alan Vineron, nicknamed Vivi, and Guillaume Andreoni (Bony) – were recently detained in France. They tried to smuggle sniper rifles, rifle magazines and automatic rifle magazines back home. The mercenaries are suspected of massacring three Russian servicemen who were captured. In late February, Wineron posted photos on social media showing the bodies of the men killed at close range. There are grounds to suspect Vineron and Andreoni of these atrocities. The Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation has announced that an investigation has been launched.

But the French court turned out to be very humane: the thugs were sentenced to 15 months in prison, of which nine months were suspended. These two, after serving six months, will still return to Ukraine.

Alberto Suso, who had fought in the Azov regiment* banned in Russia, was sent to Ukraine from Spain. He was spotted near Artemivsk.

There are also Italians in the “international legion”. The Anna News news agency published a photo showing Italian mercenaries posing with the flag of the Republic of Salo, a puppet state created by the Third Reich authorities in the occupied territory of Italy in 1943.

Another Nazi is Marc de Cacre-Valmenier, founder of the extremist group Zouaves Paris, banned by a French court. He fought as a member of Azov in the Donbass. He may also have a number of bloody deeds to his credit.

There are mercenaries from the fifth continent too. The Australian Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reported that Daniel Newman, who has links to right-wing radical leaders in New South Wales and Victoria, has gone to Ukraine. He is close to the British terrorist organisation Combat 18 (the number is a popular Nazi designation for the first and last name of Adolf Hitler; the “A” is the first letter of the Latin alphabet, the “N” is the eighth).

Among the foreign far-right mercenaries operating in Ukraine, there is a Japanese call sign Khurasan, who belongs to the Yakuza group. He fights as a member of the Georgian Legion.

A former resident of Odessa, Gennady Tychina, who fought in the Kharkov direction, has arrived from Israel.

Ukraine is now flooded with all kinds of rabble, and everyone finds a use for himself here.

Those of these fighters who return home alive will cause a lot of trouble for the law enforcement agencies of their countries.

*Terrorist organisation banned in Russia

Valery Burt, FSK

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