Ukraine’s rebranded neo-Nazis dazzle the Western press on tour
By: Rachel Marsden
As the Third Assault Brigade continues its European PR journey, its roots in the radical Azov Battalion are conveniently forgotten
“Four soldiers from Ukraine’s popular Third Assault Brigade kicked off their
meet-and-greets in the Polish capital on Sunday, home to large numbers of
Ukrainian refugees, more than two years into the conflict,” reported Agence
France Presse in an article picked up by the French state media’s Radio France
Internationale (RFI).
“Popular?” Really? That’s the only defining characteristic that came to mind
when describing the Ukrainian Army faction created in 2022 from what was left of
the Azov Battalion in the wake of the battle of Mariupol?
A little digging in the French press itself would have revealed that, when this
same Brigade was being trained here in France last year, a leaked report
prompted the French investigative outlet, Mediapart, to describe one member as
having a Nazi SS logo tattooed on his head, while a photo of the same guy showed
him with a swastika flag.
When Mediapart started digging around online for details on some of the other
members who were training in central France, at the La Courtine camp, they hit a
social media jackpot of 'Heil Hitler' salutes, Hitler art, and a potpourri of
various Nazi SS division emblems like they were some kind of Hitlerized stamp
collection.
And those were just the half-dozen or so attendees who were dumb enough to post
it all over social media when this rebranded Azov Batallion had gone to all the
trouble of hiring a 12-person, full-time media team, including a cameraman,
press officers, and editors, according to the European Center for Policy
Analysis.
A Ukrainian showman and comedian who was also a member had been doing some
vlogging to promote the Third Assault Brigade, according to the think tank. All
this industrial-grade whitewashing and here these trainee members were, all over
social media, Naziing it up.
Guess the Azov brand was too tarnished. Too closely associated with neo-Nazism.
And with losing to Russia. So here’s the rebranding. They should have to take
out an ad in the newspapers announcing a name change like anyone else.
Especially since it’s pretty clear that the Western press isn’t going to take
the initiative and investigate in the public interest. That would be rather
inconvenient for all the Western elites interested in promoting these “heroes”
to do the West’s bidding against Russia. Who needs a negotiated peace that could
save lives on all sides when the Western elites have an opportunity to stuff the
pockets of their special-interest cronies by making and selling more weapons.
Enter the Azov movement’s Third Assault Brigade’s European summer tour,
initially intended to encompass nine cities in six countries, but as of now,
reduced by almost half. Billed as the “Our People are Everywhere” tour, with
admission available for purchase on a European ticketing site alongside gigs
like the band Thirty Seconds to Mars’ concert in Istanbul and Lenny Kravitz’s
latest tour. Instead of those shows, people can be entertained by “stories from
the front,” according to their online promotion.
The spin here in Europe now seems to be that all these guys are “popular”
heroes. And if you happen to notice that the group is the successor to Azov,
then the spin dictates that they’re not all neo-Nazi bad guys. That’s just
Russian propaganda. Which is kind of like someone joining Alcoholics Anonymous
and then arguing that they’re strictly there for the free coffee and snacks.
The Western press used to at least be a bit more honest, prior to the Ukraine
conflict going red-hot. “Azov fighters are Ukraine’s greatest weapon and may be
its greatest threat,” The Guardian reported in 2014, calling the group’s
“far-right volunteers” a “danger to post-conflict stability.” Even in the early
days of the conflict’s latest incarnation, on March 5, 2022, an NBC News piece,
whose author clearly had no love lost for Russian President Vladimir Putin,
nonetheless underscored that “Ukraine’s Nazi problem is real,” and cautioned of
the need to “guard against it.”
Fast forward just over two years and the Azov movement has now toured Stanford
University as heroes, where a research department has since dropped Azov from
its roster of radicalized groups, and Oxford’s Reuben College. They received a
warm welcome at the British Parliament’s Westminster Palace for a roundtable
discussion, and former Prime Minister Boris Johnson was photographed posing with
their flag, whose wolf’s hook symbol was used by various Nazi divisons during
the Second World War. And just last month, Washington lifted its ban on directly
supplying the Azov movement with weapons.
The US State Department said at the time that Russia had “long tried to
conflate Ukraine’s National Guard Unit of 12th Special Forces Brigade Azov with
a militia formed to defend Ukraine against Russia’s invasion in 2014, called the
Azov Battalion,” which it says was “disbanded in 2015.” Well, that settles it,
then. All the neo-Nazis just went home a decade ago, kicked up their feet,
cracked open a cold one, and took up gardening and soap carving.
“After a thorough review, Ukraine’s 12th Special Forces Azov Brigade passed
vetting,” the State Department added, adding that “no evidence” of violations of
the questionable, neo-Nazi kind had been found. That’s not actually that hard to
believe when considering that the entirety of the Canadian parliament couldn’t
see an original article Nazi when he was plopped right in front of them,
clapping and cheering for an actual bona fide World War II-era Ukrainian Nazi
invited as a guest of honor to celebrate Vladimir Zelensky’s visit to Ottawa –
before learning that a Ukrainian killing Russians was effectively Hitler’s
homeboy. Woops.
Canada also knew exactly who Azov was, even before the current conflict, when
military brass worried about its trainees’ Nazi tattoos, but ultimately just
decided to keep their mouths shut in the hope that the media would never find
out, as the Ottawa Citizen reported. But the State Department said they all
retired? Guess those were the ones who got bored with their reconversion to
competitive dog grooming?
While the Western establishment treats anti-establishment right-wingers in their
own countries as the enemy, they’re celebrating actual neo-Nazi groups as cool
and heroic badasses. Perhaps – just maybe – it has everything to do with the
masters that each serves.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN