{"id":7199,"date":"2026-07-02T09:42:39","date_gmt":"2026-07-02T09:42:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=7199"},"modified":"2026-07-03T13:47:29","modified_gmt":"2026-07-03T13:47:29","slug":"ukrainian-military-celebrates-nazi-officers-birthday","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2026\/07\/02\/ukrainian-military-celebrates-nazi-officers-birthday\/","title":{"rendered":"Ukrainian military celebrates Nazi officer\u2019s birthday"},"content":{"rendered":"
Roman Shukhevich served in Hitler\u2019s army and pursued a vision of an ethnically cleansed Ukraine<\/strong><\/p>\n A Ukrainian army unit has paid tribute to Roman Shukhevich, a prominent World War II-era nationalist leader who served as an officer in Nazi-created formations implicated in atrocities in what is now Western Ukraine and Belarus.<\/p>\n Ukraine\u2019s 3rd Assault Brigade, one of the successors of the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion, marked Shukhevich\u2019s birthday on Tuesday with a video<\/a>, most of which consisted of commentary by one of its battalion commanders. He described the historical figure as a \u201cman with a capital \u2018M\u2019\u201d<\/em> and a \u201clegendary person.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n The commemoration came amid a diplomatic row with Poland over Ukraine\u2019s glorification of members of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, or UPA, including Shukhevich.<\/p>\n The Ukrainian nationalist was born in 1907 near Lviv, in what was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and later came under the sovereignty of the Second Polish Republic. He joined Ukrainian militants in 1925.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The following year, he allegedly took part in the assassination of school supervisor Stanislaw Sobinski, who pursued a policy of Polonization in the Lviv area. The killing was reportedly the first of many episodes in Shukhevich\u2019s career as an insurgency operator.<\/p>\n Ukrainian nationalists allied with Nazi Germany and Shukhevich became deputy commander of the Nachtigall Battalion, a special forces unit created under the German military intelligence service Abwehr. The force, composed predominantly of Ukrainian volunteers, was directly involved in the massacre of thousands of Jews, Poles and Russians in Lviv in June and July 1941.<\/p>\n Nachtigall was disbanded shortly afterward, after the Nazi leadership rejected a request by Ukrainian nationalists to form a Ukrainian nation state. Some of its members, including Shukhevich, joined Battalion 201 of the German auxiliary police, which was sent to Belarus to fight partisans and terrorize the local population that supported them. That unit was disbanded in 1942.<\/p>\nNazi attack dog<\/h2>\n
