Edward
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It seems that in today's assessment, Hitler and Nazis have become equivalent with evil - absolutely, positively no argument here - but Stalin and Mao seem, IMHO, to deserve the same assessment, but at least in the general public's view, aren't seen that way.
Combination of factors, I should think. Because Stalin was an ally, none of the allied countries' media were motivated or briefed to demonise him in the way they would have done had 'we' been fighting him and not Hitler. Mao was also further away, and largely inward-looking. The West didn't care so much in general if they were killing their own rather than those from outside. Had Hitler not been The Enemy, I think we'd have seen a culturally more ambivalent approach to him too. Possibly it also has something to do with the difference of approach, as distinct from raw numbers, where Stalin killed those he perceived as a threat (made worse by high paranoia) as distinct from Hitler who actively wanted to entirely wipe out certain groups of people from existence.
As well as that (but, of course, not unconnected re the role of the media) is that I think most people simply weren't as aware of Stalin and Mao's crimes against humanity. I'm sure the easy otherisation of especially the Chinese made it seem less immediate too than the crimes against Europeans by Hitler. (Thinking especially of the otherisation deployed in US anti-Japanese propaganda of the war period).
As an aside note, in December past I went to an event organised by a colleague in the law school which was a talk given by a Polish woman who had survived the Holocaust as a child. Much like visiting Aushwitz and Birkenau, it's one thing to be aware of what happened, and quite another to be directly confronted with the physical evidence. The thing that really struck me, though, was just how recently the term 'Holocaust' was coined - circa 1961, if I remember correctly.
Hitler's plan for the USSR was even more horrific than what actually happened -- for starters, he wanted to slaughter between fifty and sixty percent of the total Russian population. That's about eighty million people, with the rest to be enslaved for the glory of the greater Reich. Add in the Nazi plans for the other SSRs, which would have slaughtered another seventy million people, and it's evident that even Stalin at his worst had never contemplated anything like that. The Russians knew the Nazis considered them "untermensch," subhuman creatures worthy only of death or enslavement -- and they knew they were fighting not just for their nation, but for their survival as a people.
Indeed. Sometimes in this world many folks do find themselves caught in a position where they feel the need to back the lesser evil, for the reason alone that it's less evil.