Canada’s Ukrainian Nazi fiasco raises even more troubling issues
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Last week, Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau apologized for the fact that a Ukrainian (and naturalized Canadian) who
had fought for Adolf Hitler’s 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS, had
appeared to rapturous applause from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and
the entire Canadian House of Commons. To call that a cock-up would be like
calling the Titanic a boating accident.
So under the bus went the House Speaker turned speed-bump who extended the
invitation, with Trudeau calling the incident “deeply embarrassing to the
Parliament of Canada and by extension to all Canadians,” but adding that “it's
going to be really important that all of us push back against Russian
propaganda, Russian disinformation, and continue our steadfast and unequivocal
support for Ukraine.”
Yet again, inconvenient facts were dismissed as “Russian propaganda,” much like
the very real fact that Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia
Freeland’s Ukrainian grandfather was the editor of a Nazi newspaper. She also
tried to pass that fact off initially as Russian disinformation while she was
Canada’s foreign affairs minister in charge of directing Canada’s policy toward
Russia and Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has literally cited “de-Nazification” as one of
the two main justifications for Russia’s military operation in Ukraine.
No one’s saying that Ukraine is full of Nazis, but it’s hard not to argue their
lack of prominence or power when they keep popping up in prominent Western
places and hailed as “heroes” — like when Stanford University’s campus hosted
some Azov battalion fighters.
One eminent researcher with the university, when asked about having met with
them, replied that “they originated among Ukrainian nationalists, but to call
them neo-Nazis is to accept Russia’s framing of what they represent today,”
adding that “by the time they defended Mariupol they were fully integrated into
the [Armed Forces of Ukraine] and are heroes that I’m proud to support.”
In other words, they may have been neo-Nazis before, but that all became moot
when they were whitewashed into the army and started doing the West’s dirty work
against Russia. At that point, they became heroes, and anyone truthfully evoking
their inconvenient past is doing harm to the Western establishment’s narrative.
Speaking of these Azov “heroes,” Canada was given fair warning years ago when
Canadian military personnel discovered while training them in Ukraine that they
had inconspicuous Nazi tattoos. “Canadian officials who met with members of a
Ukrainian battalion linked to neo-Nazis didn’t denounce the unit, but were
instead concerned the media would expose details of the get-together,” reported
the Ottawa Citizen in November 2021 — well over a year before any Russian
incursion into Ukraine.
So for those who have asked how 98-year-old veteran Yaroslav Hunka, from the
Nazi side of the Second World War, could have possibly managed to slip through
the cracks, the answer is that he really didn’t. The Nazi undertones have always
existed, but they’ve long been downplayed as a means to an end — that of taking
Russia off the geopolitical chessboard as a competitor to the US, leaving only
China in the way of total global dominance with no options for any other nations
other than to get sized for a Made in the USA economic straitjacket. To that
same end, the history of the Red Army’s role as an ally of the West against Nazi
Germany has been virtually erased. This would also explain why the chances were
pretty low that even Canadian parliamentarians with any personal integrity would
have had the historical knowledge to do the math and ask, “Hang on, if Hunka is
Ukrainian and was just introduced as having fought against Russians during WWII,
then wouldn’t that put him on Hitler’s side?” Instead, they all clapped like
trained seals — which is an insult to seals, who arguably have greater capacity
for critical thought.
The incident has since triggered an extradition request for war crimes from
Poland, whose citizens were victims by the thousands of Hunka’s division, and
controversy over a monument to Hunka’s Ukrainian Waffen-SS unit in the province
of Ontario.
Jewish groups are demanding that Canada release classified documents about Nazis
given refuge in Canada in the wake of WWII, around the time that Washington was
loading up on Nazi scientists under Operation Paperclip and facilitating the
escape of Vichy France’s “Butcher of Lyon,” Nazi Klaus Barbie, to Bolivia in
order to fight communists in Latin America (after hiring him to do the same in
Europe with the 66th Detachment of the US Army Counterintelligence Corps).
Historical reckonings are one thing, but what about these same leaders seizing
the opportunity to ensure that they don’t create new blowback around today’s
events? If anyone should have known better than to clap for Hunka after his
service record had been read aloud, it should have been Zelensky. The fact that
he didn’t makes you wonder who really has the power in Kyiv — or who ultimately
will when the dust settles. Given that our lawmakers fail to grasp even the most
documented aspects of history, it shouldn’t be assumed that they have the
faintest idea what they’re doing now in Ukraine, either.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN