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'Putin is Hitler': why we use analogies to talk about the Ukraine war, and how they can lead to peace

The war in Ukraine has produced a disorienting array of analogies. Vladimir Putin is Hitler. Volodymyr Zelensky is a Nazi. Ukraine could become like Afghanistan or Korea. Russia should accept its borders, just as post-colonial African countries did. The invasion is no different to what the west did in Iraq. The Ukrainians are like the Irish fighting for independence from the UK – but also like Brexiteers resisting the EU.

Meanwhile, other countries bordering Russia, and Taiwan, wonder if they could become “another Ukraine”.

Analogies are a key part of how the war in Ukraine is being justified and understood. The invasion is such a seismic (and for many people, surprising) event, that we have a particularly strong appetite for comparisons. Analogies are ubiquitous in human discourse and have always played an important role in politics and international affairs.

Analogy is embedded in our thinking and language. Cognitive psychologists talk about “analogical reasoning”, in which we use what we know about one situation to infer information about another. We use this to understand our circumstances and plan action – a child avoids cauliflower on the basis of having tried and disliked broccoli. Writing symbolises and words categorise similar phenomena. Hence, Russia has outlawed even calling what it is doing in Ukraine a “war”.

Comparison is also built into scientific enquiry, in that it involves drawing inferences between cases which are thought to be analogous. In the study of peace and conflict, comparison has been a way to generate theories about how to manage conflict, such as addressing basic needs, imposing power-sharing between opponents, or third party intervention. But just how generally applicable much of this broad brush knowledge is in complex and variable conflict arenas will always be open to debate.

In politics, analogy is used to both create policy and justify it. For instance, the “lessons” of Vietnam strongly influenced later American foreign policy. The fear of “another world war” currently holds sway over NATO’s approach to Ukraine. Arguing by analogy may be one of the most persuasive strategies of communication. Putin’s talk of “denazification” and Zelensky’s invocation of western traumas like the Blitz, 9/11, and Pearl Harbour have undoubtedly helped rally their audiences. Such examples evoke strong imagery and narrative, and supposed real world evidence, in support of positions.

This is common to all conflicts. Partisans promote their preferred comparisons, especially for international consumption. One of the most well known warring analogies comes from one of the most intractable conflicts: Israel-Palestine. Israelis liken the threats they face to Nazism, and fear another Holocaust. Palestinians, however, regard the Israeli occupation and settlement of Palestine as apartheid and ethnic cleansing. Israel-Palestine, in turn, acts as an analogy for other groups in conflict – an archetype of besiegement for some, and of oppression for others.

Peace analogies

Analogies have also been useful in ending conflicts. Comparisons help peacemakers explain and legitimise what they are trying to achieve. In recent decades, South Africa has probably been the most referenced international peace analogy. It is now standard in any peace negotiation process for international comparisons and ideas borrowed from transitions elsewhere to be involved. A recognised likeness helps create relationships of solidarity between people pursuing peace in different countries.

A remarkable example of analogy in peacemaking comes from Northern Ireland. For decades, the Irish nationalist leader John Hume lobbied in Dublin, London, Washington and Brussels for a peaceful solution to the Northern Ireland conflict. In speech after speech, he repeated the example of Franco-German reconciliation in the context of European integration. If they can do it, Hume said, why can’t we in Northern Ireland? This analogy was the rhetorical centrepiece of arguments which ultimately gained wide acceptance in the 1998 Good Friday Agreement.

Does the historical accuracy of an analogy matter? Perhaps not, if an audience is disposed to accept it. But like all political communication, especially in war, analogies should be held up to scrutiny. They can reduce complex events to a simple morality tale. They may result from “confirmation bias” – people finding the lessons they want to in other situations - or outright manipulation. The comparisons mentioned at the outset of this article, for example, range from the insightful and constructive, to the absurd and dangerous.

In any case, for good or ill, analogies are inescapable and will continue to frame what unfolds in Ukraine. “Comparison is so fundamental to our cognition”, writes sociologist Reza Azarian, “that thinking without comparison is almost unthinkable”.

Article written by David Mitchell, Trinity College Dublin
Published: March 29, 2022 1.51pm BST

Source: https://theconversation.com/amp/putin-is-hitler-why-we-use-analogies-to-talk-about-the-ukraine-war-and-how-they-can-lead-to-peace-180253
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I don't really like saying X is X when it's not exactly the two same things. It makes it too easy for bad faith actors to defend the person. Reminds me of how people would say Trump is a Nazi, then his defenders would say he's not a Nazi because he's not anti-semitic. And yeah, that's true. Trump shouldn't be called a Nazi, even if he is authoritarian and reactionary. Criticism should be accurate.

But we can definitely use historic examples to show how bad something is. Like comparing Israel's apartheid to South Africa's apartheid.
@BohemianBabe Seems there are different rules when the person being compared is the American enemy of the week. In that case no critical or nuanced thinking is required.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Not really. Like I said, Trump was called a Nazi too.
@BohemianBabe Yes, but people point out it is bullshit. You get dog piled if you claim the comparison is nonsense if it is President Xi, the Kims, or Putin.

I mean shit I could make a more solid case for George W Bush being a more valid comparison to some of these people.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I ain't know about all that. I've seen tons of people compare Putin to the Nazis but haven't seen any of them get dog piled.
@BohemianBabe You misunderstand. You get dog piled for claiming accurately that that is an objectively false comparison.


People will call you out for being silly if you call Trump Hitler but not Putin.

Even though both examples are objectively wrong.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Yeah, I miswrote that. I meant that also when making those comparisons, you can disagree without getting dog piled. Kyle Kulinski said it was wrong to make the Putin-Nazi equation, he didn't get any kind of backlash.
Maybe some people who have lost all sense of nuance will get mad, but I think those people are rare.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I think my expertise is callled for here and can really help. Both Cry-Baby-trump and Putin are cut from similar cloth. And, while neither of them comes in line with the atrocities Hitler was able to choreograph, both aspire to that level of notoriety.
@BohemianBabe OP came after me for daring to point out this was a false equivalence and several others have here too.

And every time I offer even mild criticism of such false comparisons I get called an apologist.

I would suggest youtube has a more critical audience than this place and that is kind of a scary thought.
@MarkPaul Again, you have no expertise.
@MarkPaul Both are Fascists and that's not hyperbole. And both would commit Nazi-level atrocities if they could.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow So, now you're going there...
@MarkPaul You having no expertise in anything is objectively true.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@BohemianBabe Yes! If they could. But, maybe it's the times. Maybe it's their civilized upbringing. But, they can't.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Everyone has an expertise in something. Why are you so anti-humanity? Has your capitalist-supported life really bad that traumatic?
@MarkPaul I stand corrected. You are an expert in making shit up and lying. But even that is mediocre.
@MarkPaul And good job proving you don't know how capitalism works.
@MarkPaul Well for Trump it's that he failed to sieze power and become a dictator like Hitler and Lenin did. For Putin, Russia just doesn't have the military power that Nazi Germany did. Ukraine is one of the poorest countries in Europe, still recovering from the Iron Curtain days. And Russia is still failing to snatch them up like the Nazis did to Poland and France.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I suppose only you and those who cheer you know how things work. Thanks for proving my point you are just like your mentor, Cry-Baby-trump. No one knows anything; only you know things. Did your uncle work at MIT too?
@BohemianBabe None of these figures are the same. It is not about military power. Nazi Germany and modern Russia are fundamentally different as are their leaders. Putin is a gangster and a garbage human but not a fascist. These words have definitions. Hitler was a fanatical ideologue. Same with Mussolini. In 20 plus years Putin has only ever cynically experimented with ideology as a means to an end. His career and behavior for 20 plus years is closer to a mafia don. There have been some speculation that the man has become senile or otherwise mentally ill in the last couple years which would explain why when dealing with his foreign policy problem with Ukraine he picked the stupidest possible option. And he is alot of horrible things but stupid was not one of them. You don't run a gangster state for 20 years being an idiot. Many analysts at the time got it wrong because nobody expected something so amateur hour.


And actually Ukraine and most of Eastern europe are recovering from 90s Chicago School capitalism, not the USSR. So is Russia. In fact part of what kept Putin in power was the myth that he saved the Russian people from Western capitalists.

And these false equivalences are of no use to anyone.

You start off by criticizing such false equivalences and now double down on them. Seems a bit all over the place.


Sadly I think it makes things even harder to predict because ideologues are predictable. People in power losing their minds....not so much.
CorvusBlackthorne · 100+, M
@BohemianBabe I'm afraid @PicturesOfABetterTomorrow has presented a rather skewed version of reality, as usual. You see, @LordShadowfire made a comment referring to Putin as Hitler, and @PicturesOfABetterTomorrow chose to attack him for it. The argument became so heated that @LordShadowfire felt obliged to report one of @PicturesOfABetterTomorrow's replies, thus triggering an automatic block. That is hardly the same thing as everyone ganging up on @PicturesOfABetterTomorrow.
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@CorvusBlackthorne Lol no. This is not even remotely the first case of this and you are not the only person who has chosen to go after me for daring to point out such cartoonish comparisons are not helpful.
CorvusBlackthorne · 100+, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow You attack users who are not even addressing you for daring to compare Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler.
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@CorvusBlackthorne It's reminiscent of how he berated anyone who claimed Putin was going to invade Ukraine.
@CorvusBlackthorne More projection there. Look in the mirror.