In the grand theatre of European diplomacy, Ukraine’s President Zelensky finds himself cornered over a name: the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS, a formation of Galician volunteers that has inflamed Polish memory of wartime atrocities. The British, ever the pragmatists, now broker peace, hoping to mend fences between Kyiv and Warsaw. But this is not merely a diplomatic spat; it is a symptom of a deeper historical rot.
We have seen this before. The late Roman Empire, struggling to hold its frontiers, often appeased barbarian chieftains by renaming legions or reclassifying provinces. The result?
A slow erosion of moral clarity, a forgetting of what these symbols meant. Today, Ukraine asks Poland to understand that some names are inconvenient compromises. But history teaches us that when nations begin to rename their past, they soon forget how to defend their future.
Zelensky should read his Gibbon. The price of peace is not always worth the currency of dishonour.








