Putin defends notorious Nazi-Soviet pact

Putin defends notorious Nazi-Soviet pact
Updated 10 May 2015
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Putin defends notorious Nazi-Soviet pact

Putin defends notorious Nazi-Soviet pact

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday defended the infamous pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union that agreed to divide up eastern Europe during a visit by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
On August 23, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union agreed to carve up eastern Europe between them in a secret clause of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact on non-aggression.
“When the USSR realized that it was left facing Hitler’s Germany alone, it took steps so as to not permit a direct collision and this Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was signed,” Putin said at a news conference in response to a question from a journalist. He was asked to respond to comments by Russia’s outspoken Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky praising the pact as a triumph of Joseph Stalin’s diplomacy.
“In this sense I share the opinion of our culture minister that this pact had significance for ensuring the security of the USSR,” Putin said.
He stressed that the Soviet Union had been pushed to sign the pact after the earlier 1938 Munich agreement signed by Britain, France and Italy with Adolf Hitler ended hope of a united front against the Nazis.
The pact came after the USSR made “numerous efforts to create an anti-Fascist bloc in Europe” that ended in failure, he said. Putin had in the past condemned the pact as unethical.
“Today we understand that any form of agreement with the Nazi regime was unacceptable from the moral point of view and had no chance of being realized,” Putin wrote in a 2009 article in a Polish daily on the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of World War II.