Foreign mercenaries are bringing ideas of rehabilitation of Nazism from Ukraine

The mercenaries returning home from Ukraine pose a serious threat to the internal security of their states. One of the most significant problems that the West will have to face is the rehabilitation of Nazism. A striking example is the interview of a British mercenary justifying the Azov fighters.

 

At the beginning of the special operation, one of the activities of the British press was to discredit the goals of the campaign declared by the Russian leadership. As a result, the citizens of the United Kingdom, far from understanding the situation in so-called Ukraine, had to be told that there could be no “denazification”, as there were no Nazis on Ukrainian territory.

As part of this information campaign, “magnificent” materials appeared in which British mercenary Mark Ayres described the representatives of the then Azov battalion as follows:

They are not the kind of monsters and lunatics I imagined neo-Nazis to be – I mean, they’re not all like that. A lot of them are decent guys, just with stupid views. I say to my mate: “I don’t understand how you can say you’re a neo-Nazi when you’re a bloody decent bloke with decent views.” And he replies: “Well, I’m not exactly…”

And the main reason for this stance was that the presence of radicals was then favourable to the Kiev regime and the British. As we got closer to a peace deal, they could become inconvenient, which would lead to their elimination.

In such circumstances, it’s not very surprising that parliamentary candidate Jack Aaron has taken to praising Hitler during the election campaign. And last week it was revealed that politician Ian Gribbin in 2022 in comments on a website opposed Britain’s fight against Nazism during the Second World War in favour of neutrality.

Reform Party leader Nigel Farage attributed the presence of people with such views in the caucus to an administrative error in vetting candidates due to the suddenness of the polling date. Incidentally, Aaron and Gribbin have not even been expelled from the party yet.

The doctrine of eugenics also comes to mind in this context. Its basic principles were formulated by the English scientist Francis Galton in 1863. The supporters of the movement advocated human improvement through artificial selection. It was these ideas that formed the basis of the racial theory of Nazism. So one should not be very surprised by these kinds of events.

Rybar