I have had big problems with Timothy Snyder in the past 
(http://louisproyect.org/2010/11/22/an-american-revisionist-historian/) 
but this is good reporting:

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/mar/20/fascism-russia-and-ukraine/

The protests in the Maidan, we are told again and again by Russian 
propaganda and by the Kremlin’s friends in Ukraine, mean the return of 
National Socialism to Europe. The Russian foreign minister, in Munich, 
lectured the Germans about their support of people who salute Hitler. 
The Russian media continually make the claim that the Ukrainians who 
protest are Nazis. Naturally, it is important to be attentive to the far 
right in Ukrainian politics and history. It is still a serious presence 
today, although less important than the far right in France, Austria, or 
the Netherlands. Yet it is the Ukrainian regime rather than its 
opponents that resorts to anti-Semitism, instructing its riot police 
that the opposition is led by Jews. In other words, the Ukrainian 
government is telling itself that its opponents are Jews and us that its 
opponents are Nazis.

The strange thing about the claim from Moscow is the political ideology 
of those who make it. The Eurasian Union is the enemy of the European 
Union, not just in strategy but in ideology. The European Union is based 
on a historical lesson: that the wars of the twentieth century were 
based on false and dangerous ideas, National Socialism and Stalinism, 
which must be rejected and indeed overcome in a system guaranteeing free 
markets, free movement of people, and the welfare state. Eurasianism, by 
contrast, is presented by its advocates as the opposite of liberal 
democracy.

The Eurasian ideology draws an entirely different lesson from the 
twentieth century. Founded around 2001 by the Russian political 
scientist Aleksandr Dugin, it proposes the realization of National 
Bolshevism. Rather than rejecting totalitarian ideologies, Eurasianism 
calls upon politicians of the twenty-first century to draw what is 
useful from both fascism and Stalinism. Dugin’s major work, The 
Foundations of Geopolitics, published in 1997, follows closely the ideas 
of Carl Schmitt, the leading Nazi political theorist. Eurasianism is not 
only the ideological source of the Eurasian Union, it is also the creed 
of a number of people in the Putin administration, and the moving force 
of a rather active far-right Russian youth movement. For years Dugin has 
openly supported the division and colonization of Ukraine.

The point man for Eurasian and Ukrainian policy in the Kremlin is Sergei 
Glazyev, an economist who like Dugin tends to combine radical 
nationalism with nostalgia for Bolshevism. He was a member of the 
Communist Party and a Communist deputy in the Russian parliament before 
cofounding a far-right party called Rodina, or Motherland. In 2005 some 
of its deputies signed a petition to the Russian prosecutor general 
asking that all Jewish organizations be banned from Russia.

Later that year Motherland was banned from taking part in further 
elections after complaints that its advertisements incited racial 
hatred. The most notorious showed dark-skinned people eating watermelon 
and throwing the rinds to the ground, then called for Russians to clean 
up their cities. Glazyev’s book Genocide: Russia and the New World Order 
claims that the sinister forces of the “new world order” conspired 
against Russia in the 1990s to bring about economic policies that 
amounted to “genocide.” This book was published in English by Lyndon 
LaRouche’s magazine Executive Intelligence Review with a preface by 
LaRouche. Today Executive Intelligence Review echoes Kremlin propaganda, 
spreading the word in English that Ukrainian protesters have carried out 
a Nazi coup and started a civil war.

The populist media campaign for the Eurasian Union is now in the hands 
of Dmitry Kiselyov, the host of the most important talk show in Russia, 
and since December also the director of the state-run Russian media 
conglomerate designed to form national public opinion. Best known for 
saying that gays who die in car accidents should have their hearts cut 
from their bodies and incinerated, Kiselyov has taken Putin’s campaign 
against gay rights and transformed it into a weapon against European 
integration. Thus when the then German foreign minister, who is gay, 
visited Kiev in December and met with Vitali Klitschko, the heavyweight 
champion and opposition politician, Kiselyov dismissed Klitschko as a 
gay icon. According to the Russian foreign minister, the exploitation of 
sexual politics is now to be an open weapon in the struggle against the 
“decadence” of the European Union.

Following the same strategy, Yanukovych’s government claimed, entirely 
falsely, that the price of closer relations with the European Union was 
the recognition of gay marriage in Ukraine. Kiselyov is quite open about 
the Russian media strategy toward the Maidan: to “apply the correct 
political technology,” then “bring it to the point of overheating” and 
bring to bear “the magnifying glass of TV and the Internet.”

Why exactly do people with such views think they can call other people 
fascists? And why does anyone on the Western left take them seriously? 
One line of reasoning seems to run like this: the Russians won World War 
II, and therefore can be trusted to spot Nazis. Much is wrong with this. 
World War II on the eastern front was fought chiefly in what was then 
Soviet Ukraine and Soviet Belarus, not in Soviet Russia. Five percent of 
Russia was occupied by the Germans; all of Ukraine was occupied by the 
Germans. Apart from the Jews, whose suffering was by far the worst, the 
main victims of Nazi policies were not Russians but Ukrainians and 
Belarusians. There was no Russian army fighting in World War II, but 
rather a Soviet Red Army. Its soldiers were disproportionately 
Ukrainian, since it took so many losses in Ukraine and recruited from 
the local population. The army group that liberated Auschwitz was called 
the First Ukrainian Front.

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