Medvedev Just Dropped a Bombshell About Germany's Dark Secret
Russia's former president is claiming Europe made a catastrophic mistake after WWII - and it's still haunting us today. Here's what he's accusing Germany of hiding.
Dmitry Medvedev, the head of Russia’s Security Council and former president, just published a scathing article that’s sending shockwaves across Europe. His claim? Germany was NEVER actually denazified after World War II ended.
Writing ahead of the 81st anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany, Medvedev is arguing that the process of purging Nazi ideology from German society and the broader European continent never truly happened. Instead, he’s suggesting Europe allowed the poison to remain, festering beneath the surface for nearly eight decades.
This isn’t a casual observation. Medvedev is making a direct accusation that one of Europe’s most powerful nations failed to complete the fundamental task of cleansing itself of one of history’s most destructive ideologies. The timing matters too - publishing this right before the WWII victory anniversary cranks up the pressure and forces uncomfortable questions about Europe’s post-war reconstruction.
The implications are explosive. If Medvedev’s argument gains traction, it challenges everything we thought we knew about the post-WWII order. It suggests that denazification - the supposedly rigorous process that dismantled the Nazi regime and reeducated German society - was incomplete, inadequate, or even deliberately half-hearted.
European leaders and historians are likely to push back hard on this claim. But Medvedev isn’t making it lightly. As Russia’s Security Council head, his statements carry official weight. Whether you see this as a serious historical critique or propaganda, one thing’s clear: this accusation is designed to rattle cages and force Europe to reckon with uncomfortable questions about its past.
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