Putin Now Using Liberals’ Favorite Talking Point For Why He Invaded Ukraine

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Russian President Vladimir Putin is accused of ripping off one of American liberals’ favorite talking points to justify his unprovoked invasion into Ukraine.

Putin has claimed that his country must invade and pacify the Ukrainian regime because it is run by Nazis. This mirrors how many Americans on the Left attempt to describe themselves as “anti-fascist” in order to be viewed as “the good guy.”

When announcing the invasion of Ukraine, Putin said it was necessary to complete the “demilitarization and denazification” of Ukraine.

He falsely alleged that Kyiv has been carrying out a genocide against Russians in the country for eight years.

This tactic hasn’t swayed many observers, but social media has noted that Putin is stealing straight from the American left’s playbook in order to claim a higher moral ground.

More on this story via Daily Caller:

Supporters of Putin’s theory will point to the Azov Battalion, a single regiment within the Ukrainian National Guard which harbors neo-nazi sympathies and wears Nazi symbolism into battle. However, beyond that battalion, experts say there is little support for the claim that Ukraine is a country run by far-right extremists.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is a Jewish man who lost three relatives in the holocaust. This week, he publicly asked Putin how it is possible he could be both a Jew and a Nazi. Despite that fact, Putin has routinely labeled his opponents and critics in Ukraine as Nazis without evidence.

“You are told we are Nazis. But could a people who lost more than 8 million lives in the battle against Nazism support Nazism?” Zelensky said during a televised address. Ukraine’s far-right ultranationalist Svoboda party won only a single seat out of 450 during the country’s 2019 parliamentary elections.

A 2017 Pew Research poll on religious attitudes found that Ukrainians were more accepting of Jews as their countrymen than anywhere else in Eastern Europe, with only five percent of citizens saying they wouldn’t accept Jews as Ukrainians.

Russia has some of its own ties to Nazi-aligned extremists. That same poll found that 13% of Russian Christians would not accept Jews as fellow citizens. Putin’s regime has been aligned with neo-nazi groups fighting against Ukraine in the Donbas region since 2014. Jews make up a higher proportion of Ukraine’s population than Russia’s, according to the most recent population data available from both countries.

But, like in the United States, simply labeling the other side as Nazis has convinced some, including some Americans, that Putin is in the right.