Deconstructing Stephen F. Cohen
By Jonathan Gallant
May 8, 2022
In 1938, it was possible to construct a 
semi-plausible argument against "demonizing" Hitler and the Nazis. After all, 
their popularity in Germany rested on the Nazis' economic revival of the 
country, and on the perceived unfairness of the Versailles Treaty at the end of 
World War I; it could be that correction of some of that unfairness might 
mollify German public opinion. Moreover, the issue of Czechoslovakia was 
complex, the Sudeten Germans did feel that they were not receiving enough 
respect from the Czech government. And, however crazy Nazi propaganda seemed, 
surely social factors and economic costs would prevent Germany from attempting 
anything as sociopathic as invading sovereign nations in Europe. Such 
theses were advanced in support of appeasing Nazi Germany, leading Neville 
Chamberlain to sign over the Czech Sudetenland to Germany at Munich in the hope 
of gaining "peace in our time".
How would papers advancing these 
arguments look 20 months later, after the Nazis had taken over the 
rest of Czechoslovakia in March of 1939, invaded Poland that September, and 
invaded Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, and Belgium in the spring of 1940? 
Surely, by that time such arguments would have met nothing but bitter laughter. 
In May 1940, Neville Chamberlain was honorable enough to resign as Prime 
Minister, events having proved that what had seemed semi-plausible to him 20 
months earlier was, in fact, clearly nonsense, and demonstrably had been all 
along.
In late 2018, Stephen F. Cohen, the 
Nation magazine's favorite Russianologist, published "War 
with Russia? From Putin and Ukraine to Trump and Russiagate". 
The book makes semi-plausible 
arguments against "demonizing" Vladimir Putin. It explains that his popularity 
in Russia rests on the economic revival of the country; that its recent 
sociopolitical character was not all Putin's fault; that many Russians feel that 
their nation does not receive enough respect from the US, western Europe, 
and NATO; and that social factors and high economic costs would surely prevent 
Russia from attempting anything as sociopathic as invading a sovereign nation 
in Europe. As for the "demonization" of Putin, the book offers the following 
soothing advice:
	
	Various 
	accusations against Putin, like the late Senator John McCain’s allegation 
	that: “Putin [is] an unreconstructed Russian imperialist and KGB apparatchik 
	…. His world is a brutish, cynical place …. We must prevent the darkness of 
	Mr. Putin’s world from befalling more of humanity” provide ideological 
	underpinning for US aggression.
Stephen F. Cohen died just as the book 
was published, so we don't know what he would say about it today, after Putin 
lied his head off about the Russian troops surrounding Ukraine, then sent them 
into Ukraine in a blatant. aggressive attempt to conquer the country for the 
Russian Imperium.  An emeritus professor of History, Cohen had some regard for 
facts, and might perhaps have disavowed those arguments which events had just 
falsified, in the same way that Neville Chamberlain resigned from office. But 
who, today, would go so far as to recommend Cohen's arguments of 
2018, already demolished by the facts of 2022? It would be like recommending 
discussions of the flat earth after the Magellan/Elcano expedition and 
Sir Francis Drake's Golden Hind had returned from circumnavigating the 
globe. Who would do such a thing, going beyond confirmation bias into 
fantasyland?
Well, the answer is simple: Counterpunch 
does such a thing. In a May 6, 2022 
article, Counterpunch 
enthusiastically endorses the 2018 book by Stephen F. Cohen.
Jonathan Gallant is 
professor emeritus of genetics, University of Washington Medical Center
This article was 
originally posted on the Euston-USA Google Group