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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 am sorry calling a spade a spade offends the.

Was not aware this is an echo chamber. My bad.

But hey if you want to trivialize one of the worst monsters in history for your false equivalence that is your right.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I understand. Your intelligence exceeds that of analysts and journalists. You are by far the most brilliant human on the planet.
@CorvusBlackthorne Lol. Now you are pretending to be a journalist and analyst like MarkPaul. lol
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow No, I am quoting them. However, I can understand how the distinction would be meaningless to one with your intellect.
@CorvusBlackthorne You are pretending what they said supports your false equivalence. It doesn't. Analogues and surface level false equivalences are objectively not the same thing.


And of course as always you have to go for personal attacks.

And an appeal to authority fallacy is also a weird strategy anyway.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I am clarifying. You libelously claimed I was pretending to be a journalist. You have me confused with @MarkPaul.
[quote]You are pretending what they said supports your false equivalence. It doesn't. Analogues and surface level false equivalences are objectively not the same thing.[/quote]
I think you mean analogies, not analogues. And I am led to wonder whether you read the article I took such pains to quote, since you seem to understand nothing of it.
[quote]And of course as always you have to go for personal attacks.[/quote]
I learned at the feet of the master.
[quote]And an appeal to authority fallacy is also a weird strategy anyway.[/quote]
Appeal to authority fallacy does not preclude the possibility that a journalist with experience in reporting global politics might know more than a mere armchair observer such as yourself.
@CorvusBlackthorne

[quote]@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I am clarifying. You libelously claimed I was pretending to be a journalist. You have me confused with @MarkPaul.[/quote]

Apparently you can't take a joke either.


I read the article and your attempt to pretend your false equivalence because you can't think of a more clever way of saying "Putin bad" than trivializing one of the worst monsters and atrocities of the last 100 years is the same is just silly.

[quote]I learned at the feet of the master.[/quote]

And blaming me for your behavior. Wish I was surprised.



And your last point might actually hold water if they were referring to what you are doing here. That is not the case.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow [quote]Apparently you can't take a joke either.[/quote]
As a general rule, jokes tend to be humorous. Your statement was not.

[quote]I read the article and your attempt to pretend your false equivalence because you can't think of a more clever way of saying "Putin bad" than trivializing one of the worst monsters and atrocities of the last 100 years is the same is just silly.[/quote]
And we come down to that. You don't like the fact that I am saying Putin is a bad person.

Is the Hitler analogy perfect? Of course not. But the fact of the matter is, Putin has chosen to invade a neighboring country and relocate the persons who live there, most likely to some sort of concentrated encampments. Sound familiar? "History doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes."

[quote]And your last point might actually hold water if they were referring to what you are doing here. That is not the case.[/quote]
Apology. Did I quote the wrong article? I meant to copy and paste the one that analyzes the behavior of comparing insane European expansionists to one particularly infamous insane European expansionist.
@CorvusBlackthorne Says the guy who thought implying I was a sexist and a racist was hilarious.


No, I don't like the fact you are trivializing one of the worst human monsters because you are not clever enough to come up with a legitimate comparison.



By your definition every American president since Eisenhower is also Hitler. It is idiotic.


And you are seriously gone to double down on your bullshit by making up concentration camps?


[quote] "History doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes."[/quote]


Cute statement. Too bad you have proven you have no idea what it means.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow [quote]Says the guy who thought implying I was a sexist and a racist was hilarious.[/quote]
I was not implying. I was inferring. The message was there for anyone to see.
[quote]No, I don't like the fact you are trivializing one of the worst human monsters because you are not clever enough to come up with a legitimate comparison.[/quote]
No one is trivializing Hitler. He was responsible for one of the greatest atrocities of the twentieth century. And it is my considered opinion that if Putin is not stopped, he will be responsible for one of the greatest atrocities of the twenty-first.
[quote]By your definition every American president since Eisenhower is also Hitler. It is idiotic.[/quote]
A rather pathetic attempt at a reductio ad absurdum, which mutates rather grotesquely midsentence into a straw man.
[quote]And you are seriously gone to double down on your bullshit by making up concentration camps?[/quote]
Well, I don't know where [i]you[/i] think Ukrainian prisoners of war are going. Perhaps you think Vladimir is providing them housing on a sunny hill covered in flowers and populated by unicorns?
@CorvusBlackthorne Playing word games now I see.

Childish.


And trivializing Hitler is exactly what this kind of idiotic false equivalences aer.



And no my comparison is accurate because you set the bar so low literally any leader who has invaded another country fits your definition of Hitler.

I am not the one who set the bar so low as to trivialize Hitler and the second world war as to render it utterly meaningless.


Ummm prisoner of war camps have been a thing for as long as war has been a thing. Did the prisoners returned to Ukraine just materialize out of thin air?


Most are pretty horrible but to claim that equates to concentration camps is as idiotic as that nazi on here earlier claiming the gulags were worse than the death camps.

It is idiotic and childish ways of thinking. I expect that of that nazi idiot. I figured you were capable of more high level thinking than that.



But you seem hell bent to make any ridiculous argument to desperately pretend your false equivalence was actually 4D chess.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow [quote]And trivializing Hitler is exactly what this kind of idiotic false equivalences aer.[/quote]
You may wish to have that crystal ball checked. It seems to be malfunctioning.
[quote]And no my comparison is accurate because you set the bar so low literally any leader who has invaded another country fits your definition of Hitler.[/quote]
Insisting that a straw man is an accurate comparison does not make it so. What I said was that Putin is an insane European expansionist who has chosen to invade a neighboring country. It is not my fault your reading comprehension skills are so shoddy.
[quote]Ummm prisoner of war camps have been a thing for as long as war has been a thing.[/quote]
So you agree that prisoners of war are concentrated in encampments, yes?
[quote]Most are pretty horrible but to claim that equates to concentration camps is as idiotic as that nazi on here earlier claiming the gulags were worse than the death camps.[/quote]
You are conflating again. The United States put Japanese-American citizens into concentration camps as well. That does not necessarily mean Japanese prisoners were tortured, merely that they were concentrated in encampments.
[quote]But you seem hell bent to make any ridiculous argument to desperately pretend your false equivalence was actually 4D chess.[/quote]
@CorvusBlackthorne Back to pretending you didn't make the bad arguments you made and now inventing new definitions of concentration camps to double down on your false equivalence.


Yikes.


Pretty sad when your ego is so huge you have to make worse and worse arguments instead of considering even the possibility that you are wrong.
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I am not the one so desperate to get in the last word that I inadvertently project my own fragile ego onto others.