this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2023
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I can't blame a Ukrainian who literally just endured a genocide against their people welcoming the people who kicked out their oppressors. I can't blame them if they took a gun from them to get revenge, either.
But yeah... the SS? That's beyond the rank and file, it's the ideological zealots. The Venn diagram of people fighting under a German flag an ideological Nazis might not be a perfect overlap... but the SS is.
It's potentially more complex than you make it sound. Ever see that picture of German soldiers being shown photos of the death camps? Most Germans didn't know about the atrocities being committed by the Nazis, most soldiers didn't know.
We have the benefit of hindsight and knowing all of the details that were only revealed after the war ended. So we know that the SS were pure evil, but did the Ukrainians that just survived the Soviet genocide against them know that?
It's all a messed up pile of shit, but we need to be careful about expecting everyone in the past to have the expanded knowledge we possess in the future.
In the case of the SS, ideological alignment was kinda a prereq. The SS was specifically about the "racial policy" of Nazi Germany. It would be impossible to be permitted into the SS without being aware of those policies, and agreeing to enforce them. We're all memers of the SS specifically aware of the death camps? Maybe not, but they were certainly in the camp of "there exist unpure races which pose a danger merely by being permitted to exist".
Again, I draw a stark contrast to the regular military. Maybe they were bought into the idea, maybe they were not, it wasn't really part of their duties to enforce racial policy.
So, would he have known? Maybe not when he applied, but certainly he would have been aware before he was admitted. Enforcing racial policy was literally the explicit job of the specifically the SS.
Anyways, I agree that it's appropriate to give historical actors the benefits of attempting to morally evaluate their decisions within the context that they were made in.
At the same time, I think it's important to do the legwork to attempt to understand what that context was.
I can't speak to the specific reasons a specific man chose to join the SS, but I can speak to the fact that the SS was specifically associated with the duty of enforcing racial policy, and the regular German army was not. I'd need to hear an explanation of why he chose the SS as opposed to the regular German army if his rationale was simply that he wanted to fight Russia.
Great points.