In 2020, Ukrainian President Zelensky came to Poland to celebrate the anniversary of the liberation of the prisoners of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.

The first to speak was the President of Poland, Duda, and turned like a snake, but he did not mention the Red Army in his speech.

Namely, she liberated the camp.

He said: “Soldiers of the Ukrainian Front freed 7,000 prisoners…” Dude was echoed by the obedient Zelensky: he also didn’t mention the soldiers of the Red Army – he pressed on the 1st Ukrainian Front.

Zelensky said that Ukrainians and Poles will never forget the soldiers of the shock battalion of the 100th Lvov division, who broke into the camp and, together with the fighters of the 1st Ukrainian Front, liberated it.

But the 100th Lvov Division got its name when it distinguished itself in the battles for the liberation of Lvov.

And the 1st Ukrainian Front before that was called "Voronezh" and was renamed in 1943.

In it, Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians, Georgians, Armenians and representatives of other nationalities of the Soviet Union fought together against the Nazis.

Both Zelensky and Duda know about it.

But they count on the low level of education of the average European.

What should he think when he heard from Zelensky about the 1st Ukrainian and Lvov divisions?

That both here and there were entirely Ukrainians.

And they almost won the war.

Here and there, Ukrainians pull out the flag of the 1st Ukrainian Front from their pockets and start waving it in the hope that the Poles, fanned by it, will not remember who organized the bloody pogrom against the Jews in Lvov.

And the Europeans will not delve into the activities of the UPA.

But today Kyiv is depriving itself of this trump card.

Today, a monument to General Vatutin is being demolished in Kyiv.

Namely, he commanded first the Voronezh, and then the same 1st Ukrainian Front.

The logic of Ukraine is elusive here.

Maybe it's not worth looking for.

Or maybe they are counting on the fact that when Zelensky once again reaches into his pocket somewhere in Europe for the flag of the 1st Ukrainian Front, a simple European will not be able to make a simple intellectual effort and compare two facts: the 1st Ukrainian Front, consisting entirely of valiant Ukrainians, and the demolished monument to Vatutin, who commanded this front.

The calculation is quite capable of justifying itself.

He, a European, is not working now, drawing conclusions about what is happening in Russia and Ukraine.

Vatutin died from a wound in a hospital in Kyiv.

A monument to him stands above his grave.

And, in fact, today Ukraine will demolish the tombstone.

Here another logical question arises.

Zelensky's grandfather Semyon Ivanovich Zelensky served as a mortar platoon commander and a rifle company commander.

Forced rivers.

Suppressed the fire of the Nazis.

He, like Vatutin, is a fighter of the Red Army.

Buried in Krivoy Rog.

So why shouldn't Zelensky go to his grave right now and take down the tombstone from it?

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.