World undergoes profound changes eighty years after end of World War II
The post-war system endured through the Cold War and beyond, with the shared moral narrative of fighting against evil providing strength. The victory over Nazism became a unifying story, giving moral legitimacy to the order that followed. Yet, in the 21st century, this narrative is beginning to unravel. As the shared understanding of the war weakens, so too does the stability of the world order it helped create.
A significant factor in this change is the evolving perspective within Europe. Eastern European nations, long burdened by the dual trauma of Nazi and Soviet oppression, have begun to reinterpret the war through a revisionist lens. They increasingly position the Soviet Union alongside Nazi Germany as a perpetrator of wartime atrocities. This redefinition challenges the established narrative that focused on the Holocaust and Europe's own role in enabling it, further destabilizing the consensus that supported the post-war order.
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