AP/ August 31, 2009, 2:34 PM

Putin Slams West Before WWII Anniversary

Russia's prime minister on Monday condemned Moscow's 1939 treaty with Berlin that carved up Europe, as well as a British and French pact with the Nazis, in remarks published before the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II.

Moscow's deal with Hitler was "immoral," Vladimir Putin wrote in an article for Poland's daily Gazeta Wyborcza. But he also blamed other European nations for leaving the Soviet Union to face Nazi Germany alone.

Putin, on the eve of his visit to Poland for war anniversary ceremonies, reiterated his support for a new collective security treaty to replace NATO that would include all of Europe, the United States and Canada.

He also struck a conciliatory note on the 1940 massacre by Soviet secret police of Polish military officers and intellectuals in Russia's Katyn forest and other locations.

Putin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other European leaders are to attend the ceremonies Tuesday at Westerplatte, a former Polish military outpost that held off a Nazi attack over the first week of the German invasion.

For Poles, this Baltic Sea peninsula has come to symbolize their wartime heroics.

Nazi Germany sparked the war by invading Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, just days after its Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop signed a mutual nonaggression treaty with his Soviet counterpart, Vyacheslav Molotov.

Soviet troops then invaded Poland 16 days later, in what the Poles call a "stab in the back," acting on the deal with Hitler to divide Europe.

But Putin argued Moscow had no choice, blaming Western leaders for failing to oppose Hitler's appetite for territorial expansion.

"Without a doubt there are full grounds to condemn the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact of August 1939. But after all, a year earlier France and England signed a well-known agreement with Hitler in Munich, destroying all hope for the creation of a joint front for the fight against fascism," Putin wrote.

Putin said the Munich treaty encouraged Hitler by showing he would face no opposition. Poland, however, argues it was the Molotov-Ribbentrop deal that sparked the war that engulfed the globe, taking more than 40 million lives, including six million Polish citizens.

Putin insisted the legacy of the war served as an example of the importance of including Moscow in all European security architecture.

"All the experience of the period between the wars ... convincingly shows that it is impossible to create an effective collective security system without the participation of all countries of the continent, including Russia," he said.

Yet Putin also struck a conciliatory note with Poland - a former Soviet satellite-turned European Union member - saying that the grief caused by the 1940 murder of more than 20,000 Polish prisoners of war by the Soviet NKVD struck a cord with the average Soviet citizen, who also suffered under totalitarianism.

"To the people of Russia, whose fate has been deformed by a totalitarian regime, the sensitivity of Poles over Katyn, where thousands of Polish soldiers lie, is well understood," Putin wrote in what appeared to be an unusually strong criticism of the Soviet government from him.

Putin called for "joint grief and forgiveness" in the hope that "Russian-Polish relations will sooner or later reach such a high level of true partnership," as Russian-German ties.

Before the anniversary ceremonies, Putin is to meet with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk for much awaited talks on bilateral economic issues. Tusk is also expected to raise the sticky points, like the Katyn massacre.

Polish prosecutors trying to pursue the perpetrators say they are getting no support from Moscow, which they say refuses to declassify relevant files.

Putin was in Poland as president in 2005 for the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the German death camp of Auschwitz by the Red Army, but held no political talks.
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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proudmilvet says:
I've been wanting to say something like that since i was a kid & Nikita Khruschev was in charge!
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proudmilvet says:
F**K Putin!
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mjlewis6 says:
Putin is RE-WRITING History by acting in such a vein.

STALIN and HITLER had an ARMS DEAL GOING BACK BEFORE ANY WHITE PAPER agreement with Germany that France and England may have had over the Sudetenland in Austria. Make no mistake of BLAMING the English and French for NOT standing up to Hitler and Russia having to make a separate deal.

What Russia had in RE-ARMING GERMANY in violation of the peace accords, was for every three planes made for Germany, the Russians kept one for their armed services. There is no confusion of facts on these issues of heavy weapons armaments and machine guns with which the German Russian manufacture cooperation in Russia was responsible
AND WELL BEFORE ANY ENGLISH AND FRENCH "DEAL" with Nazi Germany.

STALIN intended to use HITLER by striking Germany when it was at its weakest during the conflict. There was no second front into England so that Operation Barbarossa against RUSSIA was undertaken to secure oil material for the Third Reich. Russia destroyed its own Experienced ARMY CORPS in a Strategic Planted SPY operation. Hence, the Operation Barbarossa almost succeeded were it not for the ill-preparation of the German Armed Forces ad dictated by Hitler taking over the planning away from the German General Staff...Incompetence by Hitler allowed Soviet Russia to survive.
One better than Putin's re-write of History is that had the ALLIES SUCCEEDED in WWI to have properly suppressed the Russian Revolution by Supporting the White Russians, the Crown....along the Trans-Siberian Railway....there never would have been a Soviet Russia to have RE-ARMED GERMANY!!
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RCC_Soldaten says:
'...it was the Molotov-Ribbentrop deal that sparked the war that engulfed the globe, taking more than 40 million lives, including six million Polish citizens. '

BTW - Most of them Catholic including 2500 priests.
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RCC_Soldaten says:
If the 'West' hadn't opened a second front in North Africa and Italy, Moscow would be a provincial capital of the Third Reich.
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antoniof123 says:
Putin, on the eve of his visit to Poland for war anniversary ceremonies, reiterated his support for a new collective security treaty to replace NATO that would include all of Europe, the United States and Canada.

This makes sense so let's not do it.
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TheMasses2002 says:
Putin used to lead the USSR's KGB.
Who is he to say anything is immoral?
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