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Newsflash: Stalin Liberates Normandy

National D-Day memorial gives honor to the former Soviet empire leader


BY DR. PAUL KENGOR

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Heart of Stone. Even then, the statue represents far graver
distortion. Consider: Stalin was morally complicit in the
indescribable deaths of all those boys (non-Russian) who
stormed the beaches of Normandy on June 6, 1944. Yet, there’s
a statue erected in his honor for Normandy’s liberation.

Heart of Stone. Even then, the statue represents far graver distortion. Consider: Stalin was morally complicit in the indescribable deaths of all those boys (non-Russian) who stormed the beaches of Normandy on June 6, 1944. Yet, there’s a statue erected in his honor for Normandy’s liberation.

Call it another Twilight Zone moment; another ignominious contribution to the "you-can't-make-this-up" category.

First, Mao Tse-tung was honored by oblivious New Yorkers, with their Empire State Building aglow in red and yellow last October to commemorate the birth of Red China. Mao's nearest rival for trophy of top mass murderer in history was Joseph Stalin.

Perhaps other clueless Americans could find a way to honor Stalin, too -- maybe closer to Washington, D.C., the nation's capital?

Hey, don't laugh. The National D-Day Memorial in Bedford, Va. has done just that, erecting a statue of Stalin. No, I'm not kidding.

Predictably, the mainstream press is not talking about this. The press is dominated by the same people who dominate our educational system; they are largely uninterested in the horrors of communism. It is Joe McCarthy, not Joe Stalin, who consumes their Cold War outrage.

The only reason I know about this travesty is the vigilant work of Lee Edwards' Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, which has the heroic goal of trying -- desperately -- to educate Americans about the forgotten holocaust committed by communists in the 20th Century, which exceeded 100 million deaths, double the combined death total of the two world wars.

Likewise worthy endeavors, such as the National Holocaust Memorial, do crucial work reminding us of Hitler's genocide. But aside from Edwards' organization, no other has formally assumed the task of reminding the world of the unparalleled carnage caused by communist governments -- where, incidentally, Joseph Stalin led the pack.

As for the Stalin statue, Edwards' group has a website (StalinStatue.com) to call attention to this moral-historical slander. The site features a petition to remove the statue, with more than 3,000 signatures from every state and more than 40 countries, including some really upset folks from the former Soviet empire.

Addressed to the National D-Day Memorial Foundation and President Obama's secretary of the interior, Ken Salazar, the petition demands that the "true history of World War II must be protected from distortion and misinformation which threaten to erase or alter well-established and documented facts."

Among those facts is a rather vital one, noted in the petition's next line: "neither Joseph Stalin nor Soviet forces played any part in the D-Day landing at Normandy."

Indeed, ironically, such disinformation was once the crass domain of Kremlin propagandists, cooked up to dupe gullible Westerners. Stalin himself had his in-house stooges retroactively invent him a gallant wartime role. Imagine that his arch-rival from the Cold War -- the United States of America -- would earnestly pick up that charge, under no threat of execution or imprisonment by the long-dead tyrant. Stalin is surely howling from his tomb.

Even then, the statue represents far graver distortion. Consider:

Stalin was morally complicit in the indescribable deaths of all those boys (non-Russian) who stormed the beaches of Normandy on June 6, 1944. Five years earlier, during the dark of night August 23-24, 1939, Stalin's USSR and Hitler's Germany signed a secret pact.

One week later, in keeping with that pact, Hitler invaded Poland from the west. Two and a half weeks later, the Red Army, likewise in keeping with that pact, invaded Poland from the east. World War II was on. The catalyst for Europe's ultimate liberation would come June 6, 1944, D-Day -- no thanks whatsoever to Stalin.

Importantly, Russian soldiers (not Stalin) deserve commendation for Hitler's defeat. In June 1941, Hitler betrayed Stalin, invading the USSR. It was a bloody rout. No country suffered as many dead as the USSR -- 40 times the combined death toll of America and Britain. A major reason for Russia's staggering losses was Stalin's Great Purge, where the tyrant murdered the nation's high command, leaving novices in charge of opposing Hitler's blitzkrieg. This was so irresponsibly, wickedly disastrous that Stalin's successor, Nikita Khrushchev, rightly blamed Stalin for the millions of Russian boys killed by the Nazis.

If this history is new to you, then you, too, are a victim. You're a casualty of America's educational system, from public schools to our woefully biased, scandalously over-priced universities. That likewise applies to those responsible for honoring Stalin at the National D-Day Memorial, who are probably oblivious. Really, their monument to Stalin is a monument to American education.

It's time to purge the architect of the Great Purge. The statue should be dismembered not peacefully but violently, befitting Stalin's character. I suggest a sledgehammer, with survivors of the dictator's savage campaigns, from Poland to the Ukraine to Siberia, each getting a whack.

-- Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science and executive director of The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College. His books include "The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism" and the forthcoming "Dupes: How America's Adversaries Have Manipulated Progressives for a Century."


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COMMENTS
2 comments posted for this article
JA
 9/ 7/2010 - 5:07pm
   After reading this article, I was initially irritated that this bust would be placed in the D-Day Memorial. However, a very brief investigation supplied me with the text of the Stalin plaque. It is available for everybody to read on the Memorial's own website: http://www.dday.org/index.php?page=Stalin. The plaque is quite clear about Stalin's atrocities (as much detail as any plaque could contain). The text is too long to post here, but an excerpt says, "some 20 million were sent to gulags or executed." There is also a mention that he influenced D-Days date and place. I am perfectly fine with the bust now, because we were allied with this monster for a short time. This should not be forgotten. There is no disinformation being spread here, and it certainly isn't an homage to Stalin. Indeed, the only disinformation I can find is your lack of providing all salient facts in your OpEd. That, and tying this to some sort of grand conspiracy by the media and educators. It is no wonder that this 'issue' isn't being reported by most media. They most likely did basic research (eg. 10 seconds on Google).
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toddkreigh
 8/27/2010 - 2:45pm
   Thank you, Dr. Kengor. This sets the record straight.
   
   I might only add the Red Army - which lost 20 million men as opposed to the 400,000 combat deaths of American soldiers - was sent into battle without the benefit of outfitting or training, as a result primarily of a dysfunctional economy broken by more than 20 years of Bolshevism at the inception of WWII, as well as the murders of Red Army officers in Stalin's "purges" of the late 1930's.
   
   As is stated, a monument to Stalin as a D-Day memorial is a tribute not to Stalin, but to the ignorance of the uneducated as well as those who act as cheerleader-apologists for socialist utopias and totalitarian butchers.
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