It’s a theory of World War II that one can also find in the pages of the American Conservative:
As the Kremlin presses a campaign to recast Russia’s 20th century history in a more favorable light, a research paper published Thursday on the Defense Ministry’s Web site blamed Poland for starting World War II. The paper, titled “Fictions and Falsifications in Evaluating the USSR’s Role On the Eve of World War II,” recounts how in the run-up to Germany’s invasion of Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, Hitler demanded that Poland turn over control of the city of Danzig as well as a land corridor between Germany and the territory now known as Kaliningrad. “Everyone who has studied the history of World War II without bias knows that the war began because of Poland’s refusal to satisfy Germany’s claims,” he writes. Kovalyov called the demands “quite reasonable.” He observed: “The overwhelming majority of residents of Danzig, cut off from Germany by the Treaty of Versailles, were Germans who sincerely wished for reunification with their historical homeland.”
Consider this a sneak-peak of Ketchum’s press strategy for when Russian tanks start rolling into the Ukraine.
