General Valery Zaluzhny, commander-in-chief of Ukraine's armed forces, posted a photo to Twitter of himself wearing a swastika bracelet. Although Kiev dismisses accusations of Nazism within its ranks as "Russian propaganda," its soldiers are often photographed wearing the symbols of the Third Reich.
In a post on Thursday, Zaluzhny declared that Ukraine's struggle against Russia is on a scale that "the world has not seen since the Second World War." It was not immediately clear which side of the struggle he was referring to.
Adorning Zaluzhny's wrist in the photo is a bracelet made up of multiple tiles, at least one of which features a swastika. The photo itself has been circulating online since at least March.

However, he is not the first Ukrainian service member accused of wearing Nazi insignia. Apart from the notorious Azov regiment of the Ukrainian military (which originated as a neo-Nazi militia), regular Ukrainian service members have been seen wearing the 'death's head', or 'totenkopf', the symbol of the 3rd SS Panzer Division, and have also daubed swastikas on their vehicles.

Russian President Vladimir Putin cited the outsized influence of neo-Nazi groups on Ukraine's military and government as one of the factors influencing his decision to send troops into the country in February. In addition to protecting the Donbass region and demilitarizing Ukraine, Putin vowed to "denazify" the country.
Despite the evidence, Ukrainian officials and some Western media outlets have described accusations of nao-Nazism as "myths" and "Russian propaganda."




Anyone can hide behind any mask of deception.