Donald Heflin, professor at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Diplomacy and former diplomat, draws the clear parallel of Friday's meeting between Russian war criminal Vladimir Putin and the Malignant Fascist:
"The analogy a lot of people are using is the Munich Conference in 1938, where Great Britain met with Hitler’s Germany. I don’t like to make comparisons to Nazism or Hitler’s Germany. Those guys started World War II and perpetrated the Holocaust and killed 30 or 40 million people. It’s hard to compare anything to that.
But in diplomatic terms, we go back to 1938. Germany said, 'Listen, we have all these German citizens living in this new country of Czechoslovakia. They’re not being treated right. We want them to become part of Germany.' And they were poised to invade.
The prime minister of Great Britain, Neville Chamberlain, went and met with Hitler in Munich and came up with an agreement by which the German parts of Czechoslovakia would become part of Germany. And that would be it. That would be all that Germany would ask for, and the West gave some kind of light security guarantees.
Czechoslovakia wasn’t there. This was a peace imposed on them.
And sure enough, you know, within a year or two, Germany was saying, 'No, we want all of Czechoslovakia. And, P.S., we want Poland.' And thus World War II started." (our emphasis)
Putin knows the Malignant Fascist is desperate to change the subject from his Epstein scandal, a worsening economy, and the dire impacts of his Big Ugly Bill, so Putin will be in a position of power in the upcoming, hastily slapped-together meeting. We wouldn't be surprised if the MF comes out of the meeting waving a piece of paper essentially selling out Ukraine, like Chamberlain sold out Czechoslovakia and the rest of Europe in the 1930s.
(photo: Chamberlain and the MF)

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