President Trump and Vice President Vance berate President Zelensky at the White House, February 28, 2025 (OSV News photo/Brian Snyder, Reuters)
John Connelly is a historian of East Central Europe at the University of California at Berkeley. This essay appeared in Conmonweal. I urge you to subscribe. How I wish someone would read this essay out loud to Donald Trump. Among other things, it demonstrates the importance of learning history and the dangers of historical ignorance.
Connelly writes:
For decades pundits have been urging us to do something about this or that dictator because he was “Hitler.” A quarter century ago, David Brooks was equating Saddam Hussein with the Nazi leader, and a quarter century before that, newspapers portrayed Ho Chi Minh and Fidel Castro as their day’s equivalent of the Führer. The historical episode these writers had in mind was the 1938 Munich Agreement, when Chamberlain and Daladier surrendered Czechoslovakia’s fortified border areas in return for “peace.” Half a year later, Hitler helped himself to the rest of that undefended country, until then the last surviving democracy east of the Rhine. The lesson was that we must not appease dictators: it only encourages them.
In 2022, history finally produced an actual parallel to the attack on Czechoslovakia when Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, a functioning East European democracy. Yet, in contrast to 1938, this time the democracy fought back, and the West stood in united support—that is, until the pusillanimous and unprincipled acts of the Trump administration. The U.S. president has already gone far beyond anything Chamberlain might have dreamed of. Trump has not only appeased a dictator but adopted the dictator’s own language and reasoning, and he seems willing to award Putin vast Ukrainian territories before peace negotiations have even begun. As if all this weren’t strange enough, he also sent Vice President J. D. Vance to a conference in Munich to berate our allies for their allegedly undemocratic behavior. He then met with the leader of a party that has downplayed the importance of Hitler to German and world history and who opposes support of Ukraine.
The explosive exchange between President Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office prompted commentators to look for other historical parallels. Bartosz T. Wieliński, who writes for Poland’s Gazeta Wyborcza, recalled that the evening before Hitler sent his armies to seize Prague in March 1939, he summoned Czech president Emil Hácha to Berlin and threatened to lay waste to the Czech capital if Hácha did not accept “peace” on German terms. Luftwaffe chief Hermann Göring stood by nodding, nearly causing old Hácha to collapse. By contrast, writes Wieliński, president Zelensky has stood firm.
But an even more apt parallel occurred a few months later, in August 1939, when Hitler and Stalin decided to divide Poland and treat themselves to the spoils, including the country’s grain and oil. Careful historians could list many differences between now and then, but the underlying intention to expropriate a small country’s resources has a familiar ring, as does the imperial attitude behind it. Stalin’s transactional mentality continued after World War II, when he insisted that Poles repay the USSR for having cleared their lands of German troops by awarding it Polish oil and coal.
The United States of that period, led by men committed to defending freedom, behaved very differently. With much of Eastern Europe occupied by the Red Army, it invested huge sums (most in outright aid) to get Western Europe back on its feet and to sustain its democratic governments. The investments served the interests of peace because democratic states seldom go to war with each other.
The current administration relegates such thinking to the past, with Trump likening international affairs to a card game, with some holding stronger “hands” than others. Yet card games at least have rules, while what imperial powers do is help themselves to new cards as they see fit and knock over the card table whenever fair play displeases them. The best-known advocate of such behavior is the Nazi theorist Carl Schmitt, who wrote that different rules apply to great powers; he might be the only serious thinker who would justify Trump’s ambitions to seize Greenland or the Panama Canal.
The Trump team’s imperial attitude was on full display in the Oval Office meeting with Zelensky. Vice President Vance badgered Ukraine’s president to express more gratitude to the United States, even though he has done so profusely for years. What Vance seemed to expect was the sort of self-abasement that vassals once rendered to their lords. As long as humans can think and write freely, that fiasco will go down as a special disgrace for the United States, a low point in meanness and absence of compassion. It is we who should be grateful to Ukrainians—the same way we’re grateful to the men who landed in Normandy in June 1944 or to the soldiers of George Washington’s army. Like those heroes of yesteryear, today’s Ukrainians are putting their lives on the line for the sake of freedom.
That sort of argument may mystify the American right, but it also surprises some people on the left. I’ve heard colleagues in Berkeley denigrate the Ukrainian struggle as one driven by “nationalism” fueled by ancient ethnic chauvinism. In the midst of the Bosnian war, even the well-read and well-meaning Bill Clinton expressed frustration with such “Old World” nationalism, saying, “until those people over there get tired of killing one another, bad things will continue to happen.” Trump himself shows some of this impatience, portraying Zelensky as yet another Eastern European closed to reason.
But what’s happening in Ukraine is not difficult to understand. What we have been witnessing, in the years since 2014, is an East European democratic revolution much like our own, if not more dramatic. The colonists who took up arms in the 1770s were responding to everyday colonialism, of living under an empire that left them little voice in their own affairs and blithely exploited their lives and treasures. At some point, those Americans decided freedom was a cause worth dying for.
This was the sentiment an audience in Berkeley heard last September from Taras Dobko, the rector of the Ukrainian Catholic University. A missile had recently struck an apartment house in Lviv, wiping out a whole family, including Daria Bazylevych, a second-year cultural-studies major. For years, students and professors have been going off to fight and sometimes die, and now the hundreds of mourners at Daria’s funeral Mass recognized a consensus that has strengthened over time: human life is precious, but some things are more important than simple survival.
The Trump team’s imperial attitude was on full display in the Oval Office meeting with Zelensky.
The comparisons I have been invoking are approximate. The imperial aggressors Ukrainians face are endlessly more sinister than George III’s forces. But the similarities are nevertheless striking. Recall the early images from three years ago, just after Russian troops had crossed Ukraine’s borders. All kinds of people sought to repel the invaders—the young, the old, the tough, the nerdy, workers, students. The real issue was not territory on a map but how human beings on any territory are allowed to live their lives. These human beings were desperate not to fall under a regime of lawlessness, where human life is for sale and dignity is trampled by tyranny. Today’s Ukrainian patriotism is not about ethnicity. Many of the troops defending Ukraine are Russian-speaking; the religious communities represented among these troops range from Greek Catholic (Uniate) to atheist.
In the summer of 2022, President Zelensky, who is Jewish, demonstrated his acute historical vision by calling his country a “new nation.” Technically, the claim is wrong. Sources referred to a Ukrainian nation back in the seventeenth century. But the nation Zelensky means transcends that past. He is placing Ukraine in the small company of nations that define their identities by looking forward and not backward. The new Ukraine is a place and a people that seeks to create a future free from tyranny.
Here, Ukraine’s democratic revolution has precedents in European history, but they are few. There was 1789, when the French people walked onto the historical stage with the novel insistence that they had a right to self-rule. There was 1848, when peoples across Europe tried to follow the French example, but that movement soon came apart in ethnic bickering. And then there were the revolutions of 1989, when Europeans between France and Russia rose up against the Soviet empire. In world history, the closest parallel is indeed 1776, when North American colonists rebelled regardless of language and creed and dated their nation from the moment they determined to live freely.
But our day’s Americans can have short memories, a fact that frustrated Zelensky when he visited the Oval Office. For Trump and Vance, the indiscriminate torture and killing of hundreds of civilians committed by Putin’s soldiers just three years ago at Bucha are irrelevant to the challenges of “peace making.” Accusing Zelensky of “hating” Putin, as Trump did, is a bit like criticizing the Czechs or Poles for their animosity toward Hitler. Putin belongs to a small group of strongmen—including Pol Pot and Slobodan Milošević—who have presided over genocidal acts. Of course, sometimes one has to engage in diplomacy with such men, but the reports of U.S. diplomats becoming chummy over shared meals with Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, evoke disgust. Neville Chamberlain at least had the decency to appear uncomfortable in the presence of cynical despots.
American ignorance of the past can extend beyond facts to a misunderstanding of what America is about. Trump’s betrayal of Ukraine is, deep down, a betrayal of the United States. Last summer, Vance said that his ancestors are buried in Kentucky, and he hoped that seven generations of his family would find their final resting places there as well: even if they “would die fighting to protect it. That is the source of America’s greatness.” In fact, where our ancestors lie is irrelevant for our identities as Americans; their graves may be anywhere in the world. We are not a community of soil and blood.
But the sentiment Vance expressed is not unknown elsewhere. In 1984, I went on a field trip to eastern Poland with historians from Jagiellonian University in Krakow. My roommate on the trip, a young instructor, explained to me why Poles could not forget the territories that had once belonged to Poland yet now lay in Ukraine: “Remember, our graves are there.” Fortunately, when their country became free in 1989, the better angels in Polish society prevailed. As Timothy Snyder explained in The Reconstruction of Nations, émigré intellectuals determined that Poland needed peace and not more land. Eastern Europeans have suffered from territorial disputes for centuries, and that moment was a time to look forward and consign destructive bickering to history.
Hence the extraordinary incomprehension with which Poles and other Europeans view the Trump regime, which seems more intent on expanding America’s borders than on protecting existing ones in Europe. Washington now joins Moscow in calling Zelensky a “dictator.” That is why Europeans insist upon security guarantees for Ukrainians: as long as pernicious and demonstrably false ideas about Ukraine are taught as dogma to tens of millions of Russians, there can be no return to normal. An expansionist state backed by an aggressive ideology cannot be appeased; it can only be stopped.
Ukraine’s democratic revolution has precedents in European history, but they are few.
Today’s Ukrainian fighters live in trenches. They spend weeks in puddles of cold water, unable to rest properly, subsisting on terrible food. Like the men of D-Day or those who accompanied Washington to fight in wintry Princeton, they face not only death but discomforts that are difficult to imagine and usually forgotten in history books. Soldiers then and now have suffered these things so that their fellow citizens can say what they want in public, so that journalists can report without fear of retribution from civil authorities, so that teachers can speak freely in their classrooms without having to worry about being reported for indoctrinating their students with “Western ideology.” Growing threats to civil liberties under the Trump regime are of a piece with his admiration for Putin and with Vance’s meeting with neo-fascists in Munich. We are letting our freedoms slip away, and it’s not clear why.
Our founders, despite the checks and balances they built into the new republic, had gloomy forebodings. No matter how brilliantly conceived, they knew a constitution alone could not guarantee civic virtue. Perhaps Benjamin Franklin was right that the demos would one day succumb to corruption, but what would he say about voters who abandoned their God-given critical faculties and supported a man who, just four years earlier, had whipped up a mob to storm the Capitol to prevent the peaceful transfer of power? Video images show the attackers beating police with flagpoles.
For decades, I have been teaching students about interwar Germany’s last free elections in 1932, and when class is over we leave the lecture hall with pained incomprehension at those strange people back then. No longer. Germans of that time faced unemployment, destitution, street violence; they had suffered more in a war than we can imagine. Still, that July, far fewer than half of them voted for the radical right (37.2 percent). The numbers went down to 32 percent in November. His party in decline, Hitler was considering suicide when a coterie of conservatives schemed to bring him to power.
In November 2024, the United States was enjoying high employment, steady growth, and decreasing inflation, yet more than half of us voted for our own brand of right-wing populism. Yes, I am aware there are deep problems with housing, health care, and education, but that is no justification for casting a ballot that jeopardizes democracy. There was no reason to think that a second Trump administration would address those basic problems.
Is it not a kind of civic corruption for a nation to be blessed with abundant resources and fortuitous geography and not appreciate it? (Zelensky, ever the keen student of history, gently tried to remind Vance and Trump that Americans were protected by an ocean—a lesson that did not go over well.) Our conspicuously pious vice president might consider thanking the Almighty that we have peace-loving, democratic Canada on our northern border and not, like the Ukrainians, a rapacious, occasionally genocidal empire three times our size.
We are not in the 1930s. Our European allies have drawn lessons that make a return to Munich unlikely if not impossible. Unlike Czechoslovakia, Ukraine is not isolated, but an object of genuine neighborly concern. In Poland, France, and Austria, centrist forces have rallied to keep the far right out of power. The German elections suggest that when Elon Musk and J. D. Vance promote right-wing extremists abroad, it only drives Europe’s democrats closer together. Europeans display a wariness of neo-fascism that we, who have been spared direct experience of totalitarian rule, evidently lack.
Against the background of an Eastern Europe where nationhood has usually been about ethnicity, Ukraine’s brand of civic nationhood is a world-historical miracle. We don’t know what mysterious pool of ingredients permits democracies to arise and thrive, we know only that, unlike so many places where the United States has involved itself militarily, democracy has taken root in Ukraine. Unlike in 1938, when Czechs hoped that the West would sacrifice blood for their democracy, all that Ukrainians ask of other democracies is military aid, which in our case amounts to about four percent of the defense budget.
But even more important than our material support is their own faith: that some things, like freedom, are worth dying for, as Dobko reminded us in Berkeley. That belief can fade, and when it does, the effect can be contagious. In 1938, Czechs witnessed allies unwilling to stand for shared principles, and after World War II, Czechoslovakia—once the lone democracy east of the Rhine—became the sole European country to submit willingly to totalitarianism. Soviet troops left Czechoslovakian territory in December 1945, yet Czechs streamed into the Communist Party and the final seizure of power in 1948 was generated from below. It took democracy decades to recover.
Who would have thought an American president would make Neville Chamberlain look good? In 1938, the British PM sought peace to avert millions of deaths, while Trump seeks peace to advance “U.S. interests,” which he understands in purely material terms. Peace not for the sake of people, but of mineral rights. All talk of values like freedom or solidarity is anathema, and if “democracy” is invoked, it is only to aid its enemies. History writers of the future will pay close attention to what the United States does now. Far less is asked of us than was asked of the Western powers in 1938, and unless we change course, those historians will judge us far more severely than the men who once tried to appease Hitler.
John Connelly teaches the history of East Central Europe at the University of California, Berkeley, and is the author of From Peoples into Nations: A History of Eastern Europe(Princeton, 2020).

Yes, but 2025 is not 1938. Different in MANY ways–first of which is nuclear weapons. Hitler didn’t have them. Russia does. (Let’s remember Einstein’s words–“That changes everything.”) 2nd, whatever we may think of Putin’s Russia, it is NOT Nazi Germany. And Ukraine’s government did not arrive unscathed by questionable actions by our government. It was another “overthrow,” of many. (Most recent, Syria).
I’m not fond of Putin, but he’s not Hitler. Oh, one other big difference from 1938–we had a President Roosevelt. Now we have, er ah, you know who I mean.
(And I too studied history–though I’m not a PhD. I studied with people who’d been to Russia and studied with George Kennan. I taught advanced h.s. students. I served in our military).
Peace, Jack Burgess
LikeLike
It was another “overthrow,” of many.
You are clearly not educated in recent Ukrainian history. I highly recommend that you listen to Timothy Snyder’s superb course on the history of the country, here. Really, Jack, you shouldn’t be spreading these untruths.
Peace and knowledge,
Bob
(5) Tymothy Snyder: History of Ukraine | Yale Lectures – YouTube
LikeLike
Bob, I tend to read history rather than listen to it. (Try “Overthrow”) My brain (like millions of others) needs time to analyze the words a bit as we go. I use the internet–occasionally a library–to dig behind the headlines and claims of one person or another. If you use the internet in that way, you can find pictures of the popular but warlike Sen. John McCain addressing a crowd in Ukraine at the time of their “revolution.” There are also recordings of Under-Sec. of State Nuland discussing–and seeming to choose–the officers of the incoming Ukraine government. Besides that more recent history, there is a long, long history of US involvement in various “socialist” countries–trying to run them, or sadly, ruin them. Venezuela a current example. Syria’s recent developments too.
And, Bob, I wish these facts weren’t there, didn’t happen, but they did and are. So you can disparage my comments as you will, but please if you can, tell us why McCain and Nuland were in Ukraine. Why we helped drive out Assad. Why we continue to harass Venezuela. I’m a history teacher. I’m a veteran. I want to love our country. I’m not a communist, etc. But I can read and I can research online. Google Sen. McCain in Ukraine. Peace, Jack B.
LikeLike
I watched this interview with McCain and I was amazed at how prescient he was.
https://search.app/8aNCP3TNodpNuRnXA
He said that Putin’s goal is to restore the USSR. He was right.
As for your putting the word revolution in quotes, you suggest there was no real revolution.
If the Ukrainian people don’t want to be part of Putin’s empire, why do they continue to fight? Why have they resisted for three brutal years? When people are not motivated, they don’t fight. Look at Afghanistan, which collapsed in a day. Ukrainians are fighting with all they have to resist being Putin’s subjects. Do you think Zelensky, a TV comic, is a CIA plant? The Ukrainians elected him with a large majority.
LikeLike
We wonder why it is that people who voted for Trump don’t understand the lesson from history that’s so easy for us. Does it have anything to do with the way we have allowed the importance of studying history and the humanities to be diminished in favor of math and the sciences as if any subject matter is more important than another? Even something like teaching cursive writing has been under attack. Some may think this is not a good example of the problem but I think it is perfect.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Alas, our populace is largely ignorant. I live in Florida. I see this every day. From the U.S. Census Bureau, 2020: Approximately 22.5% of the U.S. population age 25 and older have completed four years of college1.
LikeLike
While a knowledge of history could be useful to Trump, I doubt it would change the course of our history. No doubt Trump’s ignorance is a problem, but the central problem with Trump is the content of his character. We know he cares about power and wealth, but not much else. He appears to be somewhat detached from the office he holds in his second term. He is happy to have Musk run the day to day of his dirty deeds while he surrounds himself with ambitious sycophants. Even in a matter of national security in the Hegseth debacle, Trump appeared unconcerned and dismissive of the possible dire consequences of this major security blunder. The lessons of history could be helpful if Trump actually was a patriot. Generally, someone with multiple military deferments during a time of war in not considered a patriot. His imperiorlist ambitions are mostly about greed, and the man has no tact or class. This administration is like watching some trashy TV reality show. I just wish we could change the channel.
LikeLike
“He appears to be somewhat detached from the office he holds in his second term.“
That’s because he ran to stay out of prison.
LikeLike
Apparently he works less than an hour a day. Signing executive orders that Stephen Miller wrote.
LikeLike
The only parts he seems to get interested in are petty culture war distractions and retribution against anyone that he perceives has “wronged him.”
LikeLike
Everyone “wronged him” because he has always been uncouth, crude, and stupid. Getting very rich did not help him because he was still uncouth, rude, and stupid. He hung out with mobsters. He will never be accepted among those who have education and money, because he is uncouth and vulgar
LikeLike
Maybe he is afraid he’ll blurt out a thank you to Putin for helping him get elected or worse.
LikeLike
The lesson from History Trump and the fascist authoritarian right has to learn is that the Reich did not last a thousand years . In fact barely over a decade . Eventually many if not most authoritarian states fall. It usually has not ended well for those authoritarians and their supporters.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Right, Joel. But Hitler’s Reich did not “fall”–it was pushed–as in massive bombing followed by massive invasion by Roosevelt & Churchill’s forces–the US, Britain, Canada, France, etc. My concern, though, is that too many Americans are counting on history to “repeat” itself. But in our current story, the US may be playing the fascist role. If so, who can overthrow a massive American fascist juggernaut?
LikeLike
I stopped reading at “Trump never learned”…
“People are capable of change when they are willing to do what it takes to change – malignant narcissists often aren’t, due to the nature of their disorder.“
https://psychcentral.com/blog/recovering-narcissist/2019/02/can-malignant-narcissists-and-psychopaths-change-why-you-shouldnt-count-on-it#2
I have been studying this freak of nature since 2016 to understand him. That learning started the day he came down that escalator announcing he was running for president. I started out be researching everything I could find about him before that day.
That learning has never stopped.
That is why I know there is only one thing the convicted rapist, fraud and felon has learned throughout his life and that is how to cheat, lie and get revenge on his enemies. All it takes to land on his enemies list is saying no to him or criticizing him about anything.
It it obvious, that Diaper Don the Porn Star’s John isn’t interesting in learning anything else.
His first and last teacher ,who had any influence on the January 6, 2021 traitor, was Roy Cohn.
The title of this Vanity Fair piece is “DEAL with the DEVIL”
https://archive.vanityfair.com/article/share/5baf1e07-19a9-4617-977d-55a24497704e
LikeLike
I am not afraid of the bully. He can’t touch me. Let him try.
LikeLike
I think it helps only a little to understand Trump’s psyche. We got all we needed to know about that in his first admin: needs flattery/ kowtowing; venal/ materialistic/ transactional; in awe of autocrats, modeling them whenever possible; motivated by revenge even to the most petty degree; unconcerned with whether his actions are constitutional or support democracy.
Why “only a little”? Because it seems pretty clear that he is not running the country. He has Project 2025 as a blueprint/ agenda; he has hired/ surrounded himself with younger assertive types in Cabinet as well as extra-Cabinet [Musk] whom he has mandated to see it through in the most politically-effective manner.
Ironically, it is similar to why Democrats supported Biden’s candidacy until the last possible moment. It was clear, despite terrific accomplishments in first term, that his energy was waning due to onset of affects of advanced age. But he was surrounded with a strong team whom we knew could continue executing his vision for another 4 yrs.
LikeLike
Ginny,
Exactly right.
Biden surrounded himself with a strong team of professionals of integrity.
Trump surrounded himself with incompetents who are deeply loyal to him. They will lie, cheat and steal to defend him. Then he has a cadre of evil people who are using Trump to achieve their own hateful or libertarian goals, like Stephen Miller, who hates immigrants and people of color, and Russell Vought, main author of project 2025, who wants no government at all.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent analysis. Makes you wonder what could have happened to our country that at least 30% of voters follow a leader who praises Putin and Orbán—and that 49.9% voted for him. Could it be that 9/11, the first foreign attack on our soil converted them to fear, and gradually eroded their trust in democracy in favor of a “strong leader”? Is it that are we truly so soft that a transiting period of economic stress caused by global pandemic—already abating—caused a shift back toward a leader during whose admin they were doing better economically? That is, until global pandemic arrived—but the existential fear of that experience caused them to pretend it didn’t “really” happen, & to blame economic downturn on admin in charge?
I’m not sure any of that explains 2024 election. I still hark back to Gallup’s usual just-pre-election survey of registered voters, asking them to list the “extremely” and “most important” issues influencing their candidate selection. “The economy” was far and away the most frequently listed issue, well above border concerns, size of govt, or any other issues Reps claim the majority “voted for.” It is not a stretch to assume they meant by “the economy” their difficulty in paying for food and housing. High inflation for whatever reason is typically an incumbency-killer with US voters. I suspect JQVoter was not well-informed on the democracy issues at stake, probably ascribing whatever they may have read about it to so much media hot air.
LikeLike
I live in a country where half of adults have the brains of a head of lettuce.
LikeLike
Don’t insult lettuce!
LikeLike