Stuart Seldowitz, an Islamophobic bigot, is not first US official to express Nazi-adjacent sentiments

Stuart Seldowitz, a former US State Department official in the Israel and Palestinian office section from 1999 to 2003, has become a viral Internet celebrity of sorts. He was fired from his consulting job after being recorded hurling racist insults, engaging in an Islamophobic tirade at a halal food stall vendor. Belligerent and obnoxious, he sneered at the unnamed vendor ‘Did you rape your daughter like Mohammed did?’ Seldowitz was an Obama administration national security council official as well.

In another shared video, referring to the ongoing Israeli assault on Gaza, stating “if we killed 4000 Palestinian kids? It wasn’t enough.” It is shocking enough when a purportedly educated man, a senior government official, expresses that kind of hateful sentiments. However, his bigotry is neither isolated nor aberrant in the foreign policy circles of the Washington beltway. His vitriolic sentiments, while extreme, demonstrate the ideological continuity that marks the bipartisan consensus underlining the extremism of US foreign policies.

Seldowitz is not the first former US government employee to engage in racist tirades. In many ways, he reminds me of convicted Watergate felon and rabid extremist G Gordon Liddy (1930 – 2021). The latter, a former FBI agent and lawyer, gained notoriety for his role in the Watergate scandal. His conviction for burglary, conspiracy and wiretapping did not prevent his career resurgence as a political commentator and sought-after speaker.

His sentence commuted by the Carter administration – from twenty to eight years – he applied and was granted parole in 1977. So what is the point of all this, you ask? Liddy went on to write books, give speeches and broadcast his right wing extremism over the airwaves for the next two decades. In his autobiography, Will, published in 1980, Liddy wrote of his childhood admiration of Hitler and the Waffen SS.

Claiming that the attempted French reconquest of Indochina was going well in the early stages of the post-World War 2 order, its effectiveness attributable to the participation of veterans from the Waffen SS. The French colonial war was hobbled, Liddy felt, by the withdrawal of Waffen SS soldiers after the public outcry at their presence.

He stated that as a child, he felt energised when listening to Hitler’s speeches. He confessed that whenever he stood for the pledge of allegiance in school, he had to suppress the urge to snap out his right arm in emulation of the Hitler salute. This could be explained away by boyish enthusiasm, except that Liddy held on to racist and extremist views well into adulthood.

Regarding the Vietnam war, Liddy expressed the view that if he were in charge, he would have drowned half the nation, and starved the other half. His views, adapting to the times, became no less extremist. Denouncing Obama as a communist, and environmentalism as a form of pagan Al Qaeda-type fanaticism, he never let up in his war of words against opponents he perceived as too left leaning. He was a Donald Trump before Trump.

Ever the unapologetic criminal and Nixon loyalist, Liddy suggested that the European Muslim population could be decimated by applying Riddex, a type of infestation control. He was quite gung-ho about taking out the Muslim community, at least over the airwaves.

Ultranationalist and far right forces are used not only domestically, but also in foreign policy, by the Washington political establishment. Liddy’s expression of admiration for the Waffen SS, while shocking to us, was not that out of place in Cold War Washington. It was not that long ago when Washington was singing the praises of veterans from the SS.

In 1958, Time magazine’s front cover featured a grey-haired, avuncular scientist, with a rocket launching into space in the background. That man was Wernher von Braun, Nazi German scientist, rocket engineer and space enthusiast. He was also a former member of the Waffen SS. Familiar to American audiences as the rocket man, hosting a Disney special on space travel in 1955, his transfer of loyalty from Nazi Germany to the United States was uninhibited by official scrutiny, to say the least.

His ideas and vision, while forming the basis for the Apollo missions to the Moon for the United States, originate from a criminal undertaking. Building rockets for the German military in Europe, thousands of slave labourers died in concentration camps making what became the V-2 missiles. The gregarious, suave rocket expert of NASA had come a long way, and found friendly benefactors in the US military industrial complex.

It is only in recent times that historians are grappling with the consequences of a space programme that largely owes its success to a former Nazi. Employing former ultranationalist personnel in the service of American imperial interests is longstanding US policy. Ukrainian and Baltic Nazi collaborators found gainful employment in the service of US intelligence institutions after the war.

Seldowitz’ hateful statements are the direct product of a political climate conducive to Islamophobia and anti-Arab racism. Right wing foot soldiers are adept at using multicultural sympathies to attract domestic support for their causes, but recycle the officially sanctioned and axiomatic bigotry of the US foreign policy establishment. Antiracism is not just a nice idea, but a practical basis on which to fight the ugly virus of racism in our society.

Oppenheimer, the atomic bombings and the ethical responsibility of scientists

Let’s be clear from the outset – this article is not a review of the movie Oppenheimer. There has been a deluge of commentary about Christopher Nolan’s film, and I do not want to regurgitate all those observations here.

Now that all the hoopla and fanfare regarding Oppenheimer the movie has died down, we can focus on the serious ethical and science issues raised by the Manhattan project, the US effort to build a nuclear bomb. Examining the social impact of the Manhattan project is required, but not enough. The release of the movie, and its popularity, does provide an opportunity to discuss topics which receive scant attention – the ethical responsibility of scientists.

As a group, scientists must take into account the social and ethical consequences of their research, as the current debate around AI demonstrates. The ferocious debates surrounding vaccines, the ugly tactics of the anti-vaxxer groups, the fear-mongering surrounding the use of AI and ChatGPT, all highlight a serious deficiency of our times. What deficiency? Read on….

The capitalist business model has prioritised technology as a commodity, ready to be sold in mass quantities. We have ignored the ethical consequences of technology, and failed to ask for whose benefit scientific innovations are developed and deployed.

The Manhattan project specifically revealed two interconnected features of scientific work – the major impact the sciences had on the wider society, particularly military technology. It also revealed that scientific work can be moulded by big project funding. Major dollar amounts – in this case from the US government – undergirded a massive intertwined effort by physicists, engineers, technicians and workers from various industries. Indeed, the Manhattan project, far from being the product of a few heavy duty formulas derived by physicists – important as they were – marked the beginning of the military-industrial complex.

It took a project on the scale of Manhattan to make us realise that science is not something purely of concern to scientists only. Indeed, scientists such as Oppenheimer realised that their work has consequences for the wider society. He was definitely not the only physicist to recognisable the social and ethical implications of their work.

Years before Oppenheimer became a household name, Hungarian-born and Jewish refugee physicist Leo Szilard (1898 – 1964) emphatically opposed the deployment of nuclear weapons, even though his scientific work led directly to the Manhattan project. Szilard spoke out against using the atomic bomb, and advised US government military authorities to organise a technical demonstration of the bomb on an uninhabited target, as a way of providing a preview to the rulers of Imperial Japan. His suggestion was ignored.

Joseph Rotblat (1908 – 2005), a Polish born British physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project briefly, resigned in protest after discovering its military objectives, and campaigned against nuclear weapons for the rest of his life. He was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1995.

Oppenheimer has became the archetype of the morally tragic figure. A committed scientist, he threw himself wholeheartedly into the Manhattan Project, only to recoil at the horrific destruction wrought by his nuclear creation. He was hounded out of the military-scientific community in the McCarthyite atmosphere in the immediate post-war period. But setting aside his personal emotional and moral turmoil, he still accepted the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, thus making him a war criminal, albeit a morally conflicted one.

Numerous scientists involved in the Manhattan Project understood their obligations to inform the civilian authorities of the moral implications of their work. Many were refugees from Europe, and had dealt with the ethical responsibilities of weapons research. Sensitivities to the moral considerations of their work, they were rebuffed by an increasingly aggressive domestic military industrial complex.

As has been demonstrated by historians and scholar of the period, the atomic bombings of Japan were completely unnecessary and unjustified from a military point of view. It was the entry of the Soviet Union in the Eastern theatre of war that convinced the Imperial Japanese government to surrender. The US had been intercepting Japanese government communications, where Tokyo officials were discussing various options of surrender. American government documents from the time reveal that they knew the atomic bombings were not the decisive factor in persuading Tokyo’s ruling circles to surrender.

Lets not recycle this tiresome debate for the umpteenth time, and stick to our story.

Did Oppenheimer ever consider the fact that Nagasaki, the second Japanese city to suffer nuclear annihilation, was a sanctuary city for Japanese Christians? Japanese Catholics who felt marginalised or discriminated against found refuge in Nagasaki prior to 1945. Did Oppenheimer and the US authorities realise that they condemned to death thousands of Christians, a religion America’s rulers profess to observe?

Did Oppenheimer ever consider the fate of the first victims of radioactivity, the residents of the New Mexico community directly impacted by the very first nuclear weapons test in July 1945? The people of Tularosa Basin, New Mexico, suffered the immediate as well as long term effects of the atomic bomb testing. In the decades after 1945, Tularosa residents have been experiencing higher than average levels of cancer. To paraphrase one resident, it is not a matter of if you will get cancer, but when and what type.

Do not misunderstand – this is not a denunciation of scientific research, or scientists, or the scientific method. It is rather an examination of an area that does not receive enough attention. As genomic companies aggregate our DNA, as scientists consider whether to revive extinct species, (de-extinction to use the term for a proposal to restore the thylacine ‘Tasmanian Tiger’), or AI researchers in their quest for what they define as ‘consciousness’, the obligations to humanity must be paramount in our considerations, not the relentless pursuit of corporate profits.

The Sydney Opera House turns 50, cultural considerations, and Omar the opera

The Sydney Opera House, one of the most iconic structures in Australia (and possibly the world) turned 50 earlier this year. Officially opened in 1973, the story of its architectural design and construction involves labyrinthine intrigues, vitriolic conflict and multiple political clashes. Sixteen years in the making since it was first proposed, (Utzon won the design competition in 1957), it is remarkable that the Opera House was completed, given all the snarling controversy over its design and excessive budgetary strain.

Gradually becoming known as the ‘People’s House’, there is more to the story than just the controversies over its unique architectural design and construction. In 1960, Paul Robeson performed for audiences while the opera house was still being built. Invited by the construction workers, Robeson had been targeted by a McCarthyite campaign of exclusion and blacklisting by the American authorities. This was Robeson’s first world tour since the reinstatement of his passport.

In 1990, soon after his release from a South African prison, Nelson Mandela addressed thousands of cheering supporters from the steps of the opera house. In 2003, anti war protesters scaled the heights of the building to paint ‘No War’ on its side. This slogan denounced the American led (and Australian supported) invasion of Iraq.

Lyndal Rowlands, writing in Al Jazeera, notes a particular irony:

And while the Sydney Opera House may be known as “the people’s house,” Sydney itself has become one of the most expensive places to live in the world.

The creeping commercialisation of property and real estate – it could now be considered rampant – has impacted the opera house as well. In 2018, former Australian prime minister Scott Morrison, indicating where his priorities reside, suggested advertising the Everest Cup, a horse race, on the Opera House building. Defending his decision, Morrison offered the pathetic excuse “it’s not like they are painting it up there.”

Let’s leave aside the reductive parochialism of the jumped-up advertising executive mislabeled ‘prime minister’, who regards public space only in terms of its utility as a giant billboard. I think the 50th anniversary of the Opera House’s official opening affords us an opportunity to reflect on how operatic performances can provide an inclusive platform for the entire community.

It is wonderful to see the Opera host the great works from the classical masters – Puccini’s Tosca, Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Verdi’s La Traviata, just to name a few examples from Sydney Opera’s upcoming repertoire. Yes, we should learn from and respect the masters. Classical music, including opera, is regarded as an elite spectator sport in Australia. Western Sydney, the homeland of so-called mass culture – football, gambling, cricket, alcoholism and anti-immigration, is conducive to raising generations of anti-classical music people.

For young men raised on a musical diet of AC/DC, Cold Chisel and barbecue socialisation, professing an admiration of any classical music makes one vulnerable to social exclusion and charges of that all-purpose Australian homophobic slur. Real men don’t go to the opera; only effete losers like that wimpy kind of foreign-originated classical muck. Richard Wagner is hardly the kind of music to pump out from your stereo system while hooning in the four-wheel drive.

Be that as it may, let’s get back to my suggestion – Omar the opera. What is that? First performed in 2022 in the United States, Omar tells the story of Omar ibn Said (1770 – 1863), an enslaved sub-Saharan African man, who wrote of his experiences in the Arabic language. His memoir, which has survived through the decades since his death in 1863, is on digital display in the US Library of Congress.

Omar ibn Said was an Islamic scholar, kidnapped by slave traders from his homeland in West Africa (what is today Senegal/Mauritania). It was not unusual for people from his region to be literate; the Islamic emirate of Futa Toro was an established society with laws, literature and government. Omar ibn Said was sold into slavery in Charleston, South Carolina. He escaped, was recaptured and returned to slavery, this time in Bladen County, North Carolina. Being literate, as most of the Muslim slaves were, constituted a lethal threat to the institution of slavery.

Completing his memoirs in 1831, he died prior to the implementation of the Emancipation proclamation and the abolition of slavery. His perspective is highly unique, not only because he was literate, but also because he was a member of a religious minority in a time of increasing Christian evangelism. The opera, written by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, tells an important story from a marginalised and oppressed community.

Surely the transatlantic trade of African chattel slavery was a uniquely American – and European – experience? That is true. So why should we import this opera, which is based on a particular American institution, into the Australian cultural repertoire?

In Australia, we have very consciously adopted those aspects of the European cultural experience which dovetail with the imperatives of the British empire. What is considered the cultural heritage of white Europeans finds a ready audience in Australia. If we are to question the relevance of Omar ibn Said’s story of slavery – and his use of Arabic – to the Australian scene, we could quite rightly question what relevance the Teutonic volkisch themes of Wagner’s operas have for Australian opera goers.

Music can give voice to those whose voices have been suppressed or silenced. Omar provides us with a particular opportunity to provide a platform for those whose perspective has thus far been ignored or written out of this history books.

Astronomy intersecting with politics, and the legacy of Ferdinand Magellan

Astronomy, and science in general, is not usually related to sociological or cultural issues. We do not want to return to the bad old days of astronomers, and the wider scientific community, having to justify their research subjects to political commissars or party functionaries. However, even in astronomy, the sociopolitical is never far away.

Mia de los Reyes, assistant professor of astronomy at Amherst College, has written a powerful article making the case that the Magellanic Clouds – galaxies visible from the southern hemisphere – should be renamed. The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds – known to indigenous peoples – are named after Portuguese sailor and conquered, Ferdinand Magellan (1480 – 1521).

The Magellanic Clouds – satellite galaxies of the Milky Way – were observed and known to Polynesian peoples, Australia’s indigenous nations, and the indigenous people of Chile and Argentina. For instance, the Mapuche nation of Chile observed and named the Magellanic Clouds in their oral histories. Likening them to ponds of water, the Mapuche incorporated these astronomical features into their origin stories.

The Kamilaroi nation, indigenous to Australia, observed and recorded their findings of the Magellanic Clouds in their ‘Dreamtime’ stories. The word ‘Dreamtime’ is placed between quotation marks, not out of any disrespect, but because the word though widely used, is not accurate. The indigenous cosmology stories and oral traditions regarding their origins have been inaccurately translated as ‘Dreamtime’. Prior to Ancient Greece and Persia, the indigenous nations were developing their own astronomical knowledge, and used the stars to navigate their journeys – a kind of early GPS.

Arabic and Persian astronomers were well aware of the Magellanic Clouds. Astronomy is not a new subject in the Arab-Islamic worlds, but a deep and extensive discipline. Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, (903 – 986), named the Magellanic Clouds Al-Bakr, in his extensive accounts of astronomical observations.

Each nation named the celestial objects themselves, and so the Portuguese navigator was definitely not the first to have observed the clouds named after him. Magellan was not an astronomer, and made no important contributions to the field. However, he is known for his main activities – killing, enslaving and plundering the indigenous peoples he encountered when circumnavigating the globe.

In Guam, the Philippines and other nations, Magellan is remembered as a coloniser and conquistador who employed horrific violence for greedy, imperial ambitions. The Telhueche people, in modern day Argentina, were enslaved by Magellan, with the youngest and fittest manacled – they were told the manacles were gifts. Abducted and forced to work, thousands of Telhueche people died.

In the Philippines, where Magellan burned villages and killed indigenous inhabitants, his death in 1521 was celebrated as an act of defiance in 2021, on the 500th anniversary of his demise. The Philippine government held a series of events highlighting the indigenous contribution to Magellan’s much-celebrated circumnavigation of the globe.

Where does this process stop? Being woke is all well and good for our times, but surely historical figures are all tainted in some way. If we rename every monument, public place, building, statue, scientific observatory – we will end up driving ourselves insane. William Shakespeare, the Bard, wrote an antisemitic play. Should we ban his works, and rename public buildings honouring him? Where does this stop?

The general point is not in dispute; if we critically examine each and every work of art, literature, scientific endeavour throughout human history, we will have nothing that measures up to our modern standards. When we honour a person by naming a scientific object after them, we are elevating that person’s values and conduct. Magellan’s name is used for a lunar crater, an operational 6.5m pair of optical telescopes in Chile, and an upcoming giant telescope.

When we uphold Magellan as an honourable person worthy of our respect, we are ignoring the terrible pain and suffering he inflicted on indigenous peoples. In fact, we are performing a disservice to astronomy by dismissing or downplaying the indigenous nations’ knowledge of astronomy by elevating Magellan into a heroic figure.

Am I suggesting that every discovery and invention by white European men should be discarded? No, I am not. Should each telescope, currently pointing at the heavens, be smashed to pieces as outrageous devices of scurrilous Western imperialism because they are based on the original design of Galileo? No, of course not. Should we replace modern university courses on cosmology with the Maori ways of knowing? No, I am not.

We need to approach the history of science with a perspective of cultural pluralism. That does not make everybody right about everything, it simply means that indigenous nations, and nonwhite peoples generally, have their scientific achievements accorded respect.

No, renaming the Magellanic Clouds is not the highest priority of the political authorities. It is not the primary topic of conversation at parties. Renaming these galaxies will not solve the myriad economic and social problems of our capitalist system. Actually, while we are on the subject of economic problems, there is a serious issue in the astronomy community which requires urgent economic attention – the collapse of the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico.

Denied upgrades and underfunded for decades, astronomers and engineers warned that the predictable consequence of such systematic neglect would be the collapse of the telescope. That is precisely what happened in December 2020. So economic decisions do have an impact on the kind of science we practice. The Union of Concerned Scientists is demanding an urgent rebuild of the radio telescope.

By removing the name of a man who brought so much harm and suffering to his fellow human beings, we can begin a process of healing. Only then would the cosmos truly be said to belong to all of humanity.

Tolstoy, rival identities, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and a globalised curriculum

Leo Tolstoy (1828 – 1910) did much more than just write the mammoth historical epic, War and Peace. Literature involves more than just reading huge and unwieldy tomes that sit gathering dust in the Classics section. Those works we regard as Classics are important, to be sure. Please read War and Peace, if that is your wish. However, literature helps us define our understanding of ourselves. Whom we admire as the ‘great authors’ can teach us about power relations – and how we view the world – in contemporary times.

Why start with Leo Tolstoy? Because he was not only a great novelist and writer, but an intelligent social commentator. Born into a wealthy family and serving as an officer in the Crimean War, Tolstoy articulated a critique of the Russian state and Orthodox Christianity. Retaining respect for the original message of compassion and empathy contained in the sayings of Jesus, he nevertheless rejected supernatural deities, attacking the theology of the Church as crafty superstitions. He remarked that there is no afterlife, and the biblical account of miracles is fictional.

His wide ranging criticisms of the Imperial Russian state and organised religion did not stop there. He stridently defended the Boxer Rebellion in China. That rebellion (1900-01) was a widespread and tumultuous uprising – a modern jacquerie – by the Chinese peasantry against the foreign encroachments and creeping annexation of Chinese territory. Tsarist Russia, one of multiple nations with economic interests in China, sent troops as part of a counter insurgency intervention to suppress that rebellion.

Tolstoy, a former Russian army officer, noted that the Chinese, having suffered decades of violent foreign occupation, responded with peaceful means in the first place. Seeing their magnanimous actions suppressed with horrendous violence by the occupying powers (Britain, France, the US, among others), the Chinese resorted to violent methods as a last resort. Supporting anti-imperialist movements in Asia, Tolstoy reached out to Mahatma Gandhi, lending his voice to the Indian campaign against British colonialism.

Why am I raising this subject? For two main reasons. Firstly, the Russian embassy in Australia, in line with Kremlin policies and objectives, is encouraging the building of statues and busts of Alexander Pushkin, arguably the greatest of the Russian playwrights and authors. Now, there is nothing wrong with promoting Pushkin – reading his works is very commendable. However, the campaign to raise awareness of Pushkin is more than just a literary exercise.

The Moscow government is attempting to weaponise Alexander Pushkin, mobilising Russian nationalist sentiment among the expatriate community. To be sure, all embassies engage in similar activities. Let’s face it, the reason that William Shakespeare, as brilliant as he was, has become the unrivalled bard (bardology) of the English-speaking world is not an altruistic concern for literature, but a deliberate effort by the British empire to solidify cultural ties to the English homeland.

The British empire, in its zeal to strengthen its transnational project of imperial expansion, relied on cultural ties as much as brute force to unite its disparate colonies. However, there is a second reason for discussing this subject. Ta-Nehisi Coates, African American writer and commentator, was answering a question that Saul Bellow raised back in the 1980s – ‘who is the Tolstoy of the Zulus?’

That culture war remark, though later denied by Bellow, did raise awareness of a gap in our conception of literature’s ‘great authors’. We have a very narrow, exclusively white European-oriented view of what makes up the canons of literature. A direct response to Bellow’s question is easy to find; Zulu writers such as Benedict Wallet Vilakazi, Mazisi Kunene, and John Langalibalele Dube can rightly claim Tolstoy’s mantle in sub-Saharan Africa.

Before there was the English philosopher and darling of Western liberalism, John Locke, there was the Ethiopian philosopher and writer Zera Yacob (1599 – 1692). He, along with other African writers, articulated a concept of Enlightenment prior to the British heavyweights. But more than just listing African Tolstoys, there is a wider point to be made. Our curriculum needs to be globalised.

It is commendable to read Shakespeare, Pushkin and the greats. There is no disputing their immense contribution to world literature and culture. The Kremlin is promoting Pushkin worldwide, while in Ukraine Pushkin’s statues are being demolished as part of a widespread programme of de-Russification. The key difference between Moscow’s policies today and those of the Soviet period is that during the Soviet times, non-Russian authors were deliberately cultivated and promoted.

The state promotion of literature – the USSR did openly what the imperialist nations did covertly during the Cold War.

The ex-Soviet republics, such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Armenia, were encouraged by the official authorities to develop a literary culture indigenous to those republics. As long as you were loyal to the Communist project, non-Russian writers, musicians and authors were heavily subsidised by the state and promoted. Chingiz Aitmatov, (1928 – 2008), born in Soviet Kyrgyzstan, produced an impressive literary output during his career. Despite the political problems he faced, he continued his creative literary activities for decades.

The Nobel Prize winning poet and humanist Rabindranath Tagore was not only admired in his native India, but was strongly influenced by his visits to the USSR. This cross cultural fertilisation is what is lacking into today’s western influenced curriculum. Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize in literature as a lyricist, and that decision generated a huge controversy. Well before him, Tagore, the Nobel laureate and Bengali literary giant, wrote the lyrics of what became the national anthems of three nations. Perhaps we should be aware of that before attacking Dylan’s status as a Nobel prize recipient.

Expanding and diversifying the literary curriculum does not involve the repudiation or cancellation of the existing repertoire of writers. It consists of elaborating our understanding of non-European cultures and their literary contributions. We should all become familiar with the work of the multiple authors who could qualify as the Tolstoy of the Zulus.

Afghanistan in the cricket, when smaller nations win, and cheering the underdog

The Afghan national cricket team has been on a winning streak, defeating England and Pakistan, among others. Afghan expatriates and those living in their home nation have cheered wildly at the stunning success of their team, providing a much-needed boost of optimism amidst a generally sad situation for the Afghani people.

Let’s start with a confession from the outset – I find cricket incredibly boring. My fellow Australians – yes, I was born here regardless of what impression my foreign name gives you – are excited by the sport. I always cheer for the underdog, and the Afghan win, while not in a sport I enjoy, was something to behold. If Afghanistan plays Australia in the cricket, I will be cheering enthusiastically for Afghanistan. I am happy when smaller and/or poorer nations win in sport.

The Australian cricket team has been a resilient, successful team; they can afford to lose to a smaller nation. In fact, whenever the Australians squared off against the West Indies in the 1980s, I vociferously cheered for the West Indies.

The ‘Windies’ team, as any cricketing fan will tell you, were a formidable sporting superpower in the 80s. Their long running success has ensured their players a spot as outsize heroes in the Caribbean. The team was drawn from the various nations and dependencies that constitute the region.

Back in 1976, the West Indies triumphed in cricket over their old adversary England. The effect was electrifying; no longer would the Caribbean nations be dismissed as ‘calypso cricketers.’ The West Indian team trounced their opponents, multiple times. Witnessing a smaller nation – well, a Caribbean island region in this case – emphatically defeating their larger, more organised opponents is wonderful, and supersedes nationalist parochialism.

Morocco, Spain and transcending national boundaries

In December 2022, Morocco defeated Spain in a tense penalty shootout, advancing to the quarterfinals of the FIFA World Cup. Not only was this the first time that an Arab team had advanced so far in the football, the fact that they defeated Spain, the former colonial power in Morocco, added extra resonance to the result.

Displays of euphoria, and mass celebrations of Morocco’s unprecedented advance in the football, was not restricted to Moroccan nationals. True, Moroccan people cheered in the streets, waving their flag. But they also hoisted the Palestinian flag, and the latter became a noticeable fixture in the celebrations of Morocco’s win across the Arab world.

Ben Lewis, writing in SBS news, explained that Palestinian nationalism is the common platform of solidarity and standard bearer of pan-Arab nationalism. Defeating Spain in the soccer was not just a sporting triumph, but an important signal to the world that Morocco, and Arab nationalism by extension, was a potent force in the region and could not be ignored.

The Moroccan government, headed by long term monarch Mohammed VI, is one of a number of Arab regimes that has signed normalisation treaties with Israel. The Abraham Accords, as this series of bilateral agreements is known, signalled a defeat for Palestinian nationalism. The Arab governments, such as Morocco, indicated to the world that they are prepared to abandon demands for Palestinian statehood in exchange for diplomatic recognition and economic cooperation with Israel.

Sporting diplomacy

The Moroccan football team, and their Arab supporters, waved the Palestinian flag not just as part of their jubilant celebrations. They were also repudiating the open normalisation of ties with the Zionist state by their respective governments. To be sure, Morocco has maintained secretive, cooperative contacts with Tel Aviv for decades. Tel Aviv and Rabat have coordinated their efforts in combating revolutionary and pan-Arab nationalist sentiments when it suited their mutual interests.

There is another important observation to be made here; sporting diplomacy is not the exclusive preserve of oppressed or marginalised peoples. Sport events have long been used as a vehicle to promote colonialist and ultranationalist regimes. It is no secret that Hindu supremacist Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, during his trips to Australia, the US and other countries, uses cricket as leverage in building relationships, thus softening his hardened Hindu supremacist message with a sporting gloss.

Mike Meehall Wood and Nakul M Pande write in Jacobin that India’s politicians are never far from the cricket. PM Modi knows this, and he knows that cricket, through the transnational network that was the British empire, became a common sporting and cultural interest binding England’s former colonies with the English overlords. Cultural and sporting exports served to build ties with England’s far flung possessions.

While India’s diaspora community cannot vote in India’s elections, they can certainly build bridges between India and their host nations. Pro-BJP sentiment in the Indian diasporic communities is a useful platform for international support for the Hindutva supremacist project. Cricket is the perfect instrument to solidify ties between the homeland and the expatriates.

Rather than turning expatriate communities into partisans of an ethnosupremacist project, lets briefly look at a counter example. A massive and sustained multicultural community campaign is behind the stunning success of Luton Town football club. The club, languishing in relegation for at least thirty years, finally returned to the premier league.

Obviously, the players on the team deserve all the credit for their amazing turnaround. However, we would be remiss to forget a crucial dimension of their success – the solid community engagement by Luton town people, coming from different ethnic and religious backgrounds, combining to save their football club from complete dissolution.

It was the Luton town football fans who saved their club. The combination of a collective ethos, and treating each ethnic community equitably, resulted in a new form of cooperative management of Luton club. The first in the premier league to be a living wage employer, Luton survived and flourished despite concerted efforts by venture capital to dissolve it through mergers with other clubs.

Why do I cheer for Afghanistan in the cricket? Because ethnic or national pride as a basis for sporting enthusiasm is fine, but too narrow a perspective. Australians are supposed to be renowned for cheering the underdog. Encouraging the longshot to win is deeply embedded in the Australian folklore and sense of history – at least that is what we tell ourselves.

So, in that spirit, I cheer for the smaller nations – Jamaica in the athletics, Palestinians at the Olympics, and today, Afghanis in the cricket. National pride is all well and good, but I would like to see a world where interethnic solidarity is the norm.

As a child of the 80s, I remember Korean Air Flight 007, and the manufactured hysteria that accompanied it

This year marks exactly 40 years – September 1 1983 to be exact – when the Soviet military shot down a civilian airliner, Korean Air Flight 007, killing all 269 people on board. Having flown wildly off-course for thousands of miles, deep into Soviet territory over the Kamchatka peninsula, the pilot ignored repeated warnings. The Soviet authorities, claiming that they confused the airliner with a spy craft, eventually blasted it from the sky.

That incident was seized upon by then US President Ronald Reagan to increase military spending in the United States. The corporate media had a field day, highlighting this act of barbarism as concrete evidence of Moscow’s utter ruthlessness and indifference to human suffering. While I was still in high school at the time, I remember this issue because it helped to educate me about the hypocrisies upon which American foreign policies are based.

How a civilian airliner was able to fly so flagrantly off-course is a mystery to me. It flew over sensitive Soviet military bases and installations in that part of the USSR. Why the pilot, Chun Byung-in, an ex-military man, deliberately ignored the warnings of Soviet military authorities is unclear to me. While I do not like to dabble in conspiracy theories, it is rather odd that a South Korean airliner would fly deep into enemy territory.

The American authorities, years later, admitted that the Soviets mistook the airliner for a spy plane. Moscow claimed that the KAL007 was similar to the US RC-135 spy plane. A flimsy pretext perhaps, but then Boeing, the company that manufactured the Korean airliner, is heavily involved in the construction of military aircraft. In subsequent decades, Boeing has gotten involved in the building of drones.

The Boeing corporation announced, in 2021, that they would construct unmanned drones at a facility near Toowoomba, Queensland. The ABC, which reported the story, helpfully reminds us that this development will create jobs, thus alleviating our concerns about the lethal consequences those machines will generate.

It is worth exploring the conduct of the US authorities in this regard. In 1988, five years after the Soviet shoot down of KAL 007, the American navy deliberately shot down an Iranian civilian airliner. Iran air flight 655, clearly a civilian air bus, was flying on its usual course over the Persian Gulf. The American navy ship the USS Vincennes, which could clearly identify the Iranian aircraft, shot it down killing all 290 people on board. The naval commander of the US warship was subsequently awarded a medal for his ‘courage.’

Former US President George Bush, when asked about the shoot down, angrily dismissed concerns from the relatives of the victims, stating that he would never apologise, being completely unconcerned about the facts of the case.

The KAL 007 flight, crewed by an experienced team, surely knew that they were diverting from their usual flight course. The plane’s mapping information would have contained information about the weather, the geography of the land formations on their path – so the crew would have clearly seen the rocky Kamchatka peninsula beneath them. Why did the pilot not warn the civilian authorities that he was off-course?

I am not suggesting that I have definitive answers to all these unexplored questions. What I can say is that as a consequence of KAL007 straying off course, Soviet air bases and radar systems lit up, thus exposing their locations in that part of the world. A veritable treasure trove of precious intelligence information would have been available about Soviet air defences.

On board KAL007 was Larry McDonald, a fanatical ultrarightist and member of the John Birch Society. The latter is an ultraconservative, libertarian organisation dedicated to pushing American politics further to the Right. McDonald became a kind of ultranationalist martyr for the cause, and Reagan’s White House launched a hysterical campaign of militarist spending. His administration deployed nuclear capable missiles to then West Germany.

Creating a groundswell of domestic public opinion friendly to the idea of increased military spending has lasting consequences. Mass hysteria remains in the collective psyche, able to be revived and recycled against new enemies. By the way, McDonald, during his long political career, once nominated Rudolf Hess for a Nobel Peace prize. Hess, a convicted Nazi war criminal and racist, made a desperate attempt to avoid all-out warfare with Britain, but failed.

What is wrong with that, you ask? After all, do we not regard Claus von Stauffenberg, the German officer who attempted to assassinate Hitler and overthrow the Third Reich, as a hero for his ultimately failed coup d’état? Yes, we do – and we should not. Did Stauffenberg object with Hitler’s genocidal plans for war with the Soviet Union? No, he did not. Did Stauffenberg object to the use of concentration camp labour in manufacturing German armaments? No, he did not.

What relevance does all of this have for contemporary times? There are striking parallels between Reagan’s exploitation of the KAL007 tragedy, and the ballooning Sinophobic hysteria (pun intended) over the alleged Chinese spy balloon which drifted into American air space. The Pentagon, after shooting down that particular aerial intruder (and several other harmless aerial visitors) finally admitted that the Chinese balloon did not have any spying capabilities.

However, the media frenzy accompanying the balloon-paranoia is remarkable. The public is fed a steady diet of ultra processed sound bytes and public relations material based on the concerns of the US military industrial-intelligence complex. Suspicion of the ulterior motives of states designated as enemies becomes a public hobbyhorse for the media commentariat and its docile audience.

Ballooning rhetoric, while keeping us preoccupied, only serves to distribute hot air. It is time to puncture these self-serving tropes and analyse the policy implications of mass hysteria.

The breakout from Gaza, the Abraham Accords, and Palestinian statehood

Firstly, stop recycling the tired old claim of Hamas antisemitism to deny Palestinians their voice. Secondly, the charge of antisemitism is serious, and it is also used as an emotionally manipulative weapon to slander Palestinian solidarity as undergirded by irrational hatred.

Let’s examine some important and related developments in the wake of the October uprising by Palestinian guerrillas. The accusation of antisemitism, flung with repetitive regularity at supporters of Palestinian rights, is aimed at silencing all opposition and condemnation of Israel’s genocidal military campaign against Gaza. The breakout of the besieged territory of Gaza – under Israeli land, sea, and air blockade since 2007 – not only exposed Tel Aviv’s military vulnerability, but also upended the apple cart that is the Abraham Accords.

Tel Aviv’s leaders are nursing their shattered collective ego, now that the carefully cultivated myth of Israel’s military invincibility has been shattered. Zionism’s supporters have spent decades deliberating manufacturing a media image of Israel’s allegedly sophisticated intelligence apparatus, backed up by a network of informants and highly advanced military technology. Gaza airspace is constantly buzzing with drones.

It is impossible to overestimate the propaganda impact, particularly in the Anglophone nations, of the Zionist-friendly image of Israel as a military power, backed by courageous and dedicated warrior citizens, for whom violence is the last resort. Making the ‘desert bloom’, these hardy and intelligent partisans of Zionism have made a home in Palestine, all the while confronting a barbarous, savage-minded, medieval Arab/Muslim ocean of hostility.

Binoy Kampmark writes that Palestinian casualties of Israeli military violence die by the thousands, condemned to anonymity and depersonalisation. Tower blocks are destroyed by Israeli Defence Force (IDF) missile strikes, and the Palestinian fatalities are barely reported. Israeli victims of Hamas attacks on the other hand, are named, their families interviewed, their lives remembered and humanised.

Our sympathy is perverted to serve the propagandistic aims of Zionism. The Palestinians and their supporters are marginalised. Julian Sayarer, writing in Jacobin magazine, makes a point with which this article was started – stop deployed the Hamas bogeyman to deny Palestinians’ independent agency.

The stereotype of the young, bearded, AK-47 waving angry Muslim has become so ubiquitous in our corporatised culture, it is difficult to challenge it. Underlying this stereotype is the perverse insinuation that Palestinian and Arab communities are motivated by an irrational antisemitism in their opposition to Zionism. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Let’s make it clear – Hamas, an Islamist organisation, included antisemitic elements and tropes in its 1988 foundational document. It recycled hateful stereotypes from fraudulent sources, such as the disgraceful Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a Tsarist Russian forgery. The Hamas charter, written by a people dispossessed by military violence and facing a marginalised existence, reflected the thinking of the organisation at that time.

In 2017, Hamas issued a new document, archiving the old charter. Replacing the antisemitic elements with a political perspective, Hamas agreed to a Palestinian state based on the pre-1967 borders, and repudiated its connection with the Muslim Brotherhood. Hamas specified that its conflict is not with Judaism, but with the colonialist project of Zionism. These distinctions are subtle, and important. Casting the opposition to Zionism as an anti colonial fight, not an age-old Crusading battle between Muslims and Jews, is an important step.

It is relevant to note here that Israeli politicians, whose differences are nuanced and afforded an explanation in the corporate media, routinely threaten to wipe out Palestinian and Arab populations. Benny Gantz, former IDF chief of staff and political ‘centrist’, has openly boasted of killing Palestinians. Such sentiments have not affected his political career.

Abraham Accords

Hebh Jamal, writing about the Palestinian military operation of early October, states that Palestinians are not celebrating death and destruction. No, they are not rejoicing at the killing of civilians, or the deaths of children – though the viral story about Hamas decapitating babies remains unverified. They are celebrating a chance at life. Having reduced Gaza to basic subsistence level, Israel has contributed to creating a new generation of aggrieved Palestinians.

The siege of Gaza is actually a case of collective punishment. Colonial powers, as Chris Hedges writes, normally impose collective punishment on rebellious populations – the Germans against the Herero in Namibia, the British against the Kikuyu in Kenya. For that matter, Gaza today resembles the conditions of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War 2.

The major political consequence of the October prison break is the upending of the Abraham Accords. A series of bilateral treaties between Tel Aviv and Arab states, the Abraham Accords were portrayed as ushering in a new era of Israeli-Arab normalisation. A propaganda triumph for the former Trump administration, relations between Tel Aviv and its Arab regional neighbours was always predicated on abandoning the aspirations of the Palestinians.

Normalisation, in the context of Middle Eastern politics, is promoted as a pathway of peace; a reconciliation between traditional enemies and the triumph of pragmatic thinking over ancient hatreds. There is one major problem with that image; the Palestinians remained excluded, and their legitimate demands for an independent state forgotten. For instance, Morocco, having signed a treaty with Tel Aviv in 2020, abandoned even the pretence of speaking up for Palestinian sovereignty.

During the 2022 FIFA World Cup soccer competition, after Morocco defeated Spain, Moroccan fans waved both the Moroccan and Palestinian flags, in a spontaneous and yet politically conscious display of solidarity. Defeating the former colonial power in Morocco, touched a deep chord of sympathy in the Arab psyche. Opposition to normalisation is a deep seated issue in the Arab world.

The outpouring of Palestine solidarity protests around the world demonstrate that Palestinian lives do matter. It is reasonable to oppose ‘condemning both sides’; rejecting the false equivalency between the violence of the slave owner with the enslaved. The colonial power deploys mechanised and systematic violence, while the oppressed fights back with whatever weapons are at their disposal. New York State Senator Julia Salazar wrote that the Palestinians deserve liberation because they are human beings.

Hans Eysenck, scientific debates, and dark money funding manufactured controversies

Psychology presentations do not usually end up with fisticuffs and a punch up. However, fifty years ago, there was a brawl sparked by a controversial psychologist’s speech which has lessons for us today. The fracas, and the reasons for it, are issues which still reverberate throughout our cultural and social life.

Hans Eysenck, intelligence and race

German-born British psychologist Hans Eysenck (1916 – 1997) was the preeminent psychologist of his generation. Heavily cited in the literature, he was the go-to academic in matters of psychology. Assigned to speak about intelligence, IQ and race at the London School of Economics in 1973, his upcoming presentation was the focus of protests by leftwing student groups.

Eysenck, taking up the torch from American educational psychologist Arthur Jensen (1923 – 2012), claimed that intelligence was not only largely inherited, but that different racial groups achieved unequal social outcomes due to genetic differences. Eysenck and Jensen’s view were popular among white nationalist circles. They provided a veneer of scientific ‘respectability’ to viewpoints long considered racist and beyond the pale.

No sooner had Eysenck begun his speech, than students from Maoist and Afro-Asian solidarity groups jumped the stage and assaulted Eysenck. Knocked to the ground and beaten, the incident became one of the first no-platforming episodes in recent history.

It turns out that the Maoist students were correct, though not for the reasons they stated. Eysenck, similarly to his mentor Sir Cyril Burt, was posthumously exposed as a scientific fraud and systematic liar. Manufacturing data to support his pre-existing conclusions about race, heredity and intelligence, Eysenck’s papers have been declared unsafe by his previous employer as a result of his scientific misconduct.

Genomics – explaining ourselves through genes

Psychology, along with the rest of the social sciences, has taken up the gene-centric perspective of society. To be sure, neuroscience, the study of the brain and nervous system, predates the discovery of DNA by decades. However, genetic explanations of every aspect of human behaviour, from alcoholism to sexual orientation, has become predominated by the sweeping and swift genomic claim of ‘it’s in the genes.’ Mapping the human genome was supposed to unlock the mysteries of the basis of human behaviour.

The concept of heritability has been surrounded by confusion – and deliberate sleight of hand – by proponents of genetic determinism for a long time. Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein, two psychologists and coauthors of The Bell Curve, postulate that intelligence is largely inherited. Following in the footsteps of Eysenck – and the American psychologist Arthur Jensen – the hereditarian advocate locates the origins of capitalist socioeconomic and racial inequality in an individual’s genes. A meritocratic society, we are told, will be rewarded for their ‘good’ genes.

There is a fundamental misunderstanding about the role of heritability here. Heritable is implicitly equated with inevitability, or determined. In casual conversation, we all talk about children inheriting traits from their parents – height, hair colour and so on. Let’s have a closer look at the concept of heritability. When something is genetic, it does not mean that it is inevitable in the phenotype.

Let’s look at genetic factors for disease risk. Heritability is a statistical concept, which means that the risk factors for a particular disease within a given population are due to heredity. The heritability estimate of a trait is expressed within the range of 0.0 to 1.0; 0 means little if any genetic factors, and 1.0 means entirely all the trait is due to heritability. For instance, Crohn’s disease has a heritability estimate of 0.75.

What does that mean? It means that within a given population, 75 percent of the risk factors for developing the disease are attributable to hereditary causes. No, it does not mean that if your parents have Crohn’s disease, you as an individual have a 75 percent chance of developing it. No, it does not mean that 75 percent of Crohn’s disease is determined by your genes. Heritability estimates apply to a given population, not to specific individuals in that population.

There is not a simple, linear gene-to-trait causal linkage. For instance, there are multiple genes identified with the expression of schizophrenia. The multifactorial causes of schizophrenia, many of which are non-genetic, are slowly being understood. There is no single ‘intelligence gene’, let alone a racial component in the expression and exercise of intelligence.

Pankaj Mehta, associate professor of physics at Boston University, observes that most phenotypes outcomes, such as height and eye colour, are not purely dependent on genes alone. Mehta explores the example of height, which we think is influenced by genes alone. There is an example, while drawn from horrifying social conditions, does illustrate the point.

During the 1980 and 90s, the Guatemalan Mayan community was targeted by American supported death squads. Mayan children who fled with their families, were raised in the United States. When comparing the respective heights of Mayan children who remained in Guatemala as opposed to US-raised Mayans (between six and twelve years old), researchers found the American-raised children were 10 centimetres taller than their Guatemalan counterparts. Better nutrition, diet and stable educational lifestyle all played a part, more so than heredity, in determining the height outcomes of these children.

Eysenck – spokesperson for big tobacco

Scientists are always debating each other. Controversy is part of the job. However, when a scientist is paid by an interested party in that controversy to manufacture misinformed doubt, that is scandalous. Eysenck, back in the 1990s, produced papers purportedly demonstrating that personality types, rather than cigarettes and its carcinogenic ingredients, were the main determinants of lung cancer.

His theory of ‘cancer prone’ and ‘heart disease’ prone personality types removed the culpability of smoking cigarettes (and the tobacco companies who own and sold them) for human mortality. Years later, an interesting fact came to light; Eysenck had received thousands of pounds in funding from tobacco companies for his research.

It is not so much Eysenck’s financial skulduggery which is at issue here, outrageous as that is. It is the pervasive and secretive influence of dark money on our political, media and scientific institutions. Not only have tobacco companies spent billions manufacturing doubt about the links between nicotine and lung cancer, American and British billionaires have funded fake think tanks, astroturf citizen groups – denying the reality of human-induced global warming.

The Koch family has spent billions on academic institutions which promote the ultra-libertarian philosophy of free markets and reduced government. Denouncing the influence of ideology, they advocate an ideology of unfettered neoliberalism. The ultrarightist Cato Institute churns out seemingly scholarly output in defence of right wing politicians. It advocates a version of individual liberty which somehow morphs into the freedom of corporations to exploit and plunder.

The malign influence of dark money did not end with Eysenck’s death. It continues to metastasise in the institutions of government and science. We must not allow the billionaire megaphone from drowning out the voices of the marginalised. I do not advocate individual violence in the manner of the Maoist students who attacked Eysenck. However, storming the outsize megaphones of the billionaire class is just as urgent today as it was fifty years ago.

Coddling Nazis is not endemic to South American nations, but a decades-long practice in Canada

We have all heard about fugitive Nazi war criminals, escaping post-war Europe, finding sanctuary in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay or some other South American nation. You could be forgiven for thinking that coddling Nazi mass murderers is somehow endemic to the Hispanic condition.

However, that stereotype is incorrect. Providing sanctuary for Nazi criminals however, is not something unique to the Latin temperament. The country in the Americas that has consistently welcomed Nazis, and assisted in rehabilitating their doctrines, is north of the equator – predominantly Anglo Canada.

In September this year, the Canadian parliament gave a rapturous ovation to Ukrainian Yaroslav Hunka. Who is he? Now 98 years old, Hunka was a member of the Waffen SS, specifically the First Ukrainian Division. This unit, originally known as the 14th Waffen SS Grenadier Division, was mostly made up of ultranationalist Ukrainians who fought alongside Nazi German troops in World War 2.

Motivated by the racist ideology of the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists, this division – also known as 1st Galician – committed numerous atrocities against Jews, Poles, Russians and other minority groups. Condemned as a criminal organisation at the end of World War 2, the veterans of the Galician division escaped justice in Europe. Thousands of them found refuge in Britain – and Canada. In fact, Canada is the largest recipient of fleeing Nazi war criminals on the American continent.

The fact that Hunka was officially invited to attend the official address of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the Canadian parliament, exposes the dark side of Ukrainian ultranationalist criminality.

There is one positive side to this story. As Jeremy Appel notes, the international community has asked serious questions regarding Canada’s disturbing record in rehabilitating Ukrainian ultranationalism. Nazi war criminals like Yaroslav Hunka, are not exactly isolated strangers in the wider Ukrainian-Canadian community.

I seem to recall the almighty tsunami of outrage by the Israeli and European governments in response to antisemitic remarks by Palestinian authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, along with senior European politicians, denounced what they saw as a repeat pattern of antisemitism on the part of Abbas. They also condemned what they viewed as the Palestinian authority’s footdragging when it comes to confronting antisemitism in its own ranks.

The Canadian government, in its turn, forcefully denounced Abbas and the Palestinian authorities for their perceived antisemitism.

If that is the case, what would the international community, and Tel Aviv’s supporters, make of Ottawa’s longstanding policy of cultivating, rehabilitating (and now applauding) East European Nazi collaborators? The latter are responsible for the mass murder of thousands of Europeans Jews. After the war, Ottawa, in cooperation with the UK, overlooked the racist criminal past of Ukrainian Nazi collaborator veterans, and provided them with sanctuary.

Ali Abuninah, writing about this topic in Electronic Intifada, notes the rank hypocrisy of those whose current silence on the issue of Canadian sanctuary for Nazi war criminals is deafening:

One might think that the members of this chorus truly care about preserving the memory of the victims of the Nazis, and even take seriously their regular invocation of such slogans as “Never Again.”

But that would be a mistake.

After World War 2, with the Cold War in full swing, thousands of Eastern European Nazi collaborators, including Ukrainian members of the Waffen SS Galician unit, were provided sanctuary in Canada. There, they established vibrant communities, with newspapers, churches, schools, sports clubs – and were a reliable anticommunist bulwark against the Canadian labour movement and trade unions.

Waffen SS veterans, such as the Ukrainians who fought in the 1st Galician division, were given refuge in Britain after the war. The UK government at the time regarded these former SS members as ‘good stock’ who were racially acceptable, and would provide bodies for labour shortages. In the 1950s, Hunka and thousands of his colleagues moved to Canada.

In Canada, these Ukrainians set up the Ukrainian Cultural Congress (UCC), an umbrella organisation dedicated to, among other things, promoting a sanitised version of the Galician division’s record. The mass killings of Jews, Poles and Russians was basically forgotten, and the Ukrainian SS members were portrayed as simple patriots driven into the arms of the Nazis by Stalinist repression. So, the excuse is – ‘the Russians made me do it’.

The Ukrainian nationalist lobby, which provided the recruits for Himmler’s Galician unit, saw Jewish Bolshevism as the main enemy to be confronted. I am certain there was a German politician who said the same thing, and targeted European Jews as the existential threat facing western civilisation. Himmler himself inspected the ranks of the Ukrainian Waffen SS soldiers, solidifying his control over the Eastern European collaborators.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, along with the Canadian political establishment, apologised for inviting and applauding Hunka. The Speaker of the House, Anthony Rota, resigned his position in the wake of the scandal. This incident is being summarily dismissed as a PR gaffe. That is a pathetic attempt to trivialise a serious issue.

It is hardly a mistake when current Canadian deputy PM, Chrystia Freeland openly boasts of her grandfather’s role in recruiting for the Ukrainian Waffen SS division. It is hardly Russian disinformation to point out Ottawa’s deliberate cultivation of a haven for Ukrainian war criminals.

Canada’s willing reception of Waffen SS veterans exposes the moral bankruptcy of Ottawa’s foreign policies. Their scarcely credible claims of fighting for democracy and freedom stand exposed as deceptions. It is high time for Trudeau and Freeland to face the consequences of their actions. The next time you are looking for Nazi refugees, don’t only look at South American nations – cast your view at a nation further up north.