The West risks creating a ‘Snow ISIS’ in Europe with extremists going to fight in Ukraine
By: Rachel Marsden
A neo-Nazi terrorist threat could emerge from the fog of war as radicals return from the frontlines
A new assassination attempt shook Russia last week, targeting a prominent 
civilian figure — this time, writer Zakhar Prilepin, whose car was blown up in 
Nizhny Novgorod region.
The hit, which Prilepin survived, is reminiscent of the incident that killed 
political scientist and activist Darya Dugina last year near Moscow, and also 
the bombing that targeted military blogger Vladlen Tartarsky and leveled a Saint 
Petersburg café. These attacks are similar to those routinely condemned by the 
West when they’re committed by jihadists. But Western officials’ clear lack of 
interest in identifying or denouncing the perpetrators of these incidents speaks 
volumes.
And speaking of sabotage, who’s responsible for launching the drone that blew up 
over the Kremlin last week? The shrug from Washington is deafening. Classified 
US documents leaked online last month already fingered Ukrainian agents who 
“pursued drone attacks inside Belarus and Russia, contrary to US and Western 
wishes, and leaders in Kyiv have considered further targets outside Ukraine,” 
according to NBC News. Yet when asked about the incident by the Washington Post, 
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that the incident should be taken with 
“a very large shaker of salt” – as though US officials weren’t already fully 
aware of the general intention to pursue precisely such attacks. But Western 
officials constantly play on plausible deniability. What enables them to do so 
is their insistence on distinguishing between Ukraine the country, on one hand, 
and pro-Ukrainian agents and groups on the other.
There sure is a lot of sabotage against Russia happening right now. Some is 
attributed to Ukraine directly, as France’s Le Monde did recently in the wake of 
the bombing of a train in Bryansk. Other acts, like the attack on the Nord 
Stream pipeline network – a centerpiece of Russian-European economic cooperation 
– have been described by US officials as being perpetrated by undefined 
“pro-Ukrainian” groups.
Any distinction is really just a minor detail considering that NATO allies can’t 
even be bothered to make it themselves when it might suit them. They knowingly 
trained Azov battalion neo-Nazis, as Canada’s Ottawa Citizen and other Western 
media have documented. Those soldiers had ultimately been folded into the 
Ukrainian army and their background was conveniently whitewashed. 
The security threat that the US and its allies are fomenting in Europe is 
reminiscent of their actions in Syria. They trained and equipped “moderate” 
Syrian rebels in a failed attempt to overthrow President Bashar Assad, and many 
of these fighters ended up joining al-Qaeda. 
Furthermore, Western-supplied weapons ultimately ended up in the hands of the 
Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) and al-Nusra. A resounding success for a 
counter-terrorism operation.
The West risks creating an international terrorist Disneyland in Ukraine like it 
did in Syria. Back in 2018, French intelligence services worried about the 
return of French jihadists from Syria and the impact of retuning fighters on 
French and European domestic security. Do they have the same fears about 
returning fighters from Ukraine? 
Just last month, a couple of French men, reportedly in their 20s, got off a bus 
in Paris from Lviv, Ukraine, were arrested, went straight to court, and have 
already been sentenced to 15 months in prison (with nine of those being a 
suspended sentence). 
In French justice terms, that means they were caught red handed. All this 
happened so whiplash fast that if you blinked you would have missed it. So who 
are these guys exactly? Well, French intelligence certainly knows. They’ve 
reportedly been tracking these two specifically for a while now. One is 
identified unofficially in French mainstream media as “Alain V” and was 
previously featured in a press report on neo-Nazis in the French army. He was in 
the military’s alpine hunter division, so he’s probably a great skier. Maybe he 
was just over in Ukraine for some skiing with the “Snow ISIS” neo-Nazis mentored 
by the West.
 
The suspect reportedly also has a tattoo in German of the Schutzstaffel 
loyalty pledge to Adolf Hitler and is said to have written on Facebook in 2018 
that migrants should get a “good bullet in the back of the head.” So he was 
already on the authorities’ naughty list even before he allegedly went to 
Ukraine with his pal, whom we know little about, but whose identity in various 
French sources has been unofficially floated as “Guillaume A.” 
After arriving back in Paris, these two were promptly arrested for what’s being 
described as prior admission of guilt for transport and possession of weapons, 
some of which they also seem to have managed to get onto the bus, having been 
allegedly caught outright with assault rifle magazines. 
Is this just the tip of the iceberg of a much larger threat to Europe? According 
to France’s domestic intelligence service, the DGSI, about 400 French citizens 
are fighting in Ukraine, including an estimated 30 known neo-Nazis. 
All this might come as a real shock to the Western establishment that keeps 
arguing that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special military operation 
objective of denazification is nothing but fake news, and issuing fact checks to 
that effect, saying that the notion of neo-Nazis in Ukraine is just Russian 
propaganda. They’d just better hope that with all the weapons and training that 
the West has dumped into Ukraine, any potential blowback on Europe also stays 
nothing more than a mere figment of the imagination. But whether they’re 
ignorant, naive, or reckless, you’d think that this incident would serve as a 
wake up call.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN