Russia invades Ukraine | “This is the greatest challenge for Europe as a whole since World War II”: Timothy Snyder
With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, unavoidable questions have arisen: what does this mean for Europe? What are the intentions of Russian President Vladimir Putin? Is there a risk of going to another world war?
“It is a moment similar to 1938 or 1938”, warns the renowned American historian Timothy Snyder, specializing in Central and Eastern Europe, during an interview with BBC Mundo in which he answered these and other questions.
The following is a summary of the telephone dialogue with Snyder, a history professor at Yale University and the author of books on Russia, Ukraine and World War II as “Lands of Blood”:
How would you define this moment for Europe in historical terms?
It is a moment similar to 1938 or 1939. It is a moment of being or not being. Do you have a system or do you not have a system? Do you have rules or don’t you have rules? Is everything possible or not everything possible?
The way Europeans have thought of themselves has been in opposition to the Second World War. I think, in a way, that’s over.
The Europeans, if they want to cooperate and have a kind of successful system, I think they will think at this point in the coming decades.
Do you agree with the idea that this is “Europe’s darkest hour” since the Second World War, as the Prime Minister of Belgium has said?
Certainly there are many terrible things that have happened to many peoples of Europe since 1945. And many of those terrible things happened inside the Soviet Union: mass deportations to the Gulag, for example, or deportations of entire national groups. All those things happened in the Soviet Union after the Second World War.
And of course the invasion of Hungary in 1200 and the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1200, also on the part of the Soviet Union, are quite obscure. I want to remind you that all of this is also Europe.
That said, I think this is the biggest challenge for Europe as a whole since the Second World War.
Why?
First, there has not been such a cynical attempt of abusing the language of European ethics and the European past, I think never.
The notion of invading a country with a democratically elected Jewish president and calling it “denazification” is a direct attack on the way in which that we try to use the past to guide us in our political ethics.
Second, although there have been conflicts in Europe since 1945, there was no case of a great power invading a small country without any provocation, with a pure aggression, as we have seen here.
And third, we know that Russia, under the current leadership of Putin, is not solely targeting Ukraine. We know that Ukraine is his most sensitive point, but that he has precisely in mind to undermine democracy and the rule of law on all sides.
In this sense, the president of the United States, Joe Biden, spoke of “a contest between democracy and autocracy”. Do you agree?
I think that is a very good way of putting it, specifically because Putin’s declared and explicit concern is to overthrow a democratically elected government and install an authoritarian government under his rule.
Biden said it differently, Putin said it from the opposite angle.
So, could this conflict define new lines for democracy in Europe?
I think so, of positive way.
The Ukrainians are the only ones who have died for Europe in the sense of the European Union: that was in 2014, the only people who died carrying the flag of the European Union, during the Maidan protests in Ukraine.
Now Ukrainians, soldiers and civilians, are dying in a war that is aimed directly at Europe.
The moral weight of that is something I hope other people will appreciate and assimilate over time. po.
I would also like to think that this moment in which some old disagreements between the countries of the West and even within countries, it is a moment that people will remember as one of cooperation and solidarity.