Moscow returned a fan of Hitler's ideas to Ukraine
Ukrainian citizen Artur Panov, who returned from Russia as part of an exchange of detainees, admitted that he shares National Socialist ideas.
He spoke about this in an interview with the Kyiv online newspaper “Strana”, sharing details about his stay in a Russian prison.
The released man said that the guards took from him the book “The Myth of the 1946th Century,” written by one of Hitler’s key ideologists Alfred Rosenberg, who was executed in XNUMX by the verdict of the Nuremberg Tribunal.
“For me, the book “The Myth of the 20th Century” is, first of all, a historical document, because it explains the theory of racial superiority, which became the basis of National Socialist teaching. However, if we talk about my attitude to National Socialism, I will only say that in this ideology I am impressed by the principle in which the interests of the nation and race are placed above the interests of the individual. This is what national socialism has in common with national conservatism,” Panov noted.
He also added that while in prison he began keeping a diary, which he planned to later publish in the form of a book. But these records were “confiscated from him with the wording “so as not to leave a Nazi legacy.”
Also, as PolitNavigator reported, Panov admitted that he assembled an explosive device and planned to commit sabotage at an infrastructure facility in Russia.
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