Here we go again. Another Eastern European dust-up over a Second World War-era Ukrainian nationalist unit, and Britain, ever the meddler, is offering to hold the umbrella. Zelensky, the man who has turned wartime leadership into a global brand, is now being urged to kiss and make up with Warsaw over the memory of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). The UPA, for those who slept through history, was a force that fought both Nazis and Soviets, but also collaborated with the former and engaged in ethnic cleansing of Poles. Cute.
Let us be honest: this spat is not about history. It is about power. Poland, the current champion of anti-Russian sentiment in the EU, demands total ideological purity from its allies. Ukraine, in its desperate struggle for survival, cannot afford to alienate its most vocal backer. And Britain, fresh from its own bout of historical navel-gazing over empire and statues, fancies itself the arbiter of these delicate European memory wars.
But here is the rub: historical truth is rarely clean, and international politics hates embarrassment. The UPA is a symbol of Ukraine’s long and painful journey to nationhood, warts and all. To whitewash it is to betray the complexity of the past. To condemn it outright is to hand Putin a propaganda gift: ‘See, even your friends admit your Nazi bogeyman is real.’ Zelensky knows this. So does Warsaw. And London, of course, wants a quiet life for its defence commitments.
What we are witnessing is the predictable outcome of decades of intellectual decadence. We treat history as a marketing tool, not a lesson. We demand that allies be saints, not survivalists. The Victorians understood that national identity was a tapestry of glory and shame, not a clean Instagram grid. But today, in our brittle age of perpetual outrage, we prefer our allies sanitised and our enemies caricatured.
So by all means, let Britain play diplomat. Let Zelensky issue a carefully worded apology for things that happened eighty years ago. Let Poland bask in the role of historical purity. But do not mistake this for progress. It is a necessary fiction, a diplomatic gloss over the grim reality that nations are built on blood, compromise, and inconvenient truths. And until we grasp that, we will keep re-fighting old wars in new, increasingly absurd ways.








