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Looking on from a European perspective, I always found it curious how much the American narrative around the Nazis focussed on the Holocaust to the exclusion of everything else. In Germany's own self-flagellating historiography (at least the version of it delivered in the Eastern states) it maybe is assigned something on the order of 50% of the total weight of sin, with the rest being split between assorted other internal oppression, warmongering, the eastward expansion in search of Lebensraum, and the attendant scouring of Slavs; and in Russia, the focus is naturally overwhelmingly on expansionist conquest and the extermination of their own. That's also why in the context of the Ukraine war, "Zelenskiy is Jewish" looks like a slam dunk argument against "Ukrainian Nazis" to listeners living in the American memespace, but like a barely relevant piece of trivia to those living in the Russian one.
I see too much of an interlocking web of conflicting interests in place in Europe to enable a rehabilitation of the Nazis anytime soon - even in the maximalist scenario of both "Israel is evil" and "killing Soviets is good" catching on, there is still the circumstance that Poland (America's new protégé in the EU) relies on the Nazi invasion of itself for its national myth-building and as a cudgel to keep German interests in check when they are at odds with its own, and the meme is also a very reliable tool against nativist-antiglobalist parties that both are easily associated with the Nazis and a constant threat to ruling class objectives.
I think it goes like this: during the war and after the war, there was already a consensus that Hitler represented a historical form of evil, but during that period the main thing he was considered evil for was warmongering, ie. starting it, all the flagrant invasions, all the bodies (military and civilian) caused by the war, the industrial efficiency of the war and so on. For a lot of countries, of course, the most raw memories were related to German occupation itself and its depredations, or German bombings, or so on. However, after the war, it was the Soviets who staked a stronger claim to this narrative due to bearing the yeoman's burden for fighting the war.
The West soon started to find the focus on the war itself sort of problematic, not only due to the Soviet narrative but the necessity of getting the West German war machine back in order and finding places from former Nazis in the said war machine, getting rid of pacifist tendencies the war narrative was creating etc. This particularly meant America, which hadn't had the experience of German occupation on its own territory.
Thus, in the new narrative, a particular facet of the war - terror against civilians, the Holocaust - took a major role, with the war being cast in terms of democracy and genocide. This, for instance, allowed a comparison of Soviets and Germans as totalitarian states, since Soviets were also associated with persecution, killing and camps - and it actually facilitated the integration of Germany into the military apparatus of the West, since it focused on one particular sin that Germany could repent from vigorously through reparations, while the idea of "good Wehrmacht, bad SS" in terms of the Holocaust (later to be challenged, sure) meant that sufficiently non-Holocaust-contacted German personnel, and some whitewashed Holocaust-connected ones as well, could be utilized.
The Russian WW2 narrative, meanwhile, as said, continues to focus particularly on "the war itself" and the atrocities committed by Germans on all Soviet citizens, implicitly cast as Russians, which means that references to Zelenskyy being Jewish and so on do not really answer this narrative mcuh at all.
Ironic, because the red army was all about committing atrocities on civilians.
It's not particularly expectional about nations to focus more on atrocities committed by others on them than on atrocities they've committed on others.
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