Aleksandr Shchipkov's book «Unfinished Nazism» inaugurates the next phase in the discourse on Nazism – a malignant anti-human phenomenon that disregards all moral, spiritual, and ethical principles.
The author compares Nazism of the 20th and 21st centuries, contrasting its Hitlerite version with the modern neo-Nazism cultivated by Washington and London. Such a comparison is relevant in contemporary times, particularly as the West enters a new phase of confrontation with Russia. The Anglo-Saxons unabashedly impose neo-Nazi ideology on Europeans, aiming to achieve their strategic goal of dismembering our country, dismantling the Russian world, and eradicating the peoples inhabiting Russia. The ideologies of the «blackshirts» and «browns» are being adopted by the architects of the «color revolutions», who promote xenophobia to forcibly oust legitimate governments and sow chaos in previously stable regions.
The book explores the role of colonialism in shaping Nazi racial ideology. Additionally, it delves into the development of a technocratic doctrine propagated by pseudo-scientists abroad, promoting the notion that progress is devoid of moral considerations.
To justify global inequality and maintain a unipolar world, Atlantists do not hesitate to invoke notions of racial, ethnic, cultural, and economic superiority, depriving entire peoples of opportunities for independent socio-economic and cultural-civilizational development.
By fomenting ethnic discord and providing full support to extremists, chauvinists, and all forms of radicalism, the West poses a genuine threat to democratic and universal values, as well as to security, social stability, and societal unity.
The approach advocated by Russia is grounded in fostering intolerance towards any manifestation of discrimination, as well as in preventing the justification and rehabilitation of Nazi and fascist atrocities. It is imperative to halt all efforts aimed at disseminating nationalist ideologies. We are profoundly troubled by the actions of certain unfriendly states that glorify the Nazi movement, portray notorious criminals as participants in national liberation movements, and actually justify genocide.
Aleksandr Shchipkov's monograph reaffirms the significance of ongoing scientific research aimed at combating the ideologies of neo-Nazism, and at fostering critical thinking that repudiates all efforts to propagate inhumane ideologies and manipulate ethnic myths.
N.P. Patrushev,
Secretary of the Security Council
of the Russian Federation
2024 год