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The Soviet Union defeated more than just the Nazis in 1945

For Africans, Victory Day was not just about the fall of Hitler, but about the idea that brutal regimes could fall at all

Victory Day, marked every year in May, is remembered for the defeat of Nazi Germany by the Red Army of the Soviet Union and its allies in 1945. The world saw fascism crumble under the weight of mass resistance, both military and moral. But while Europe swept its streets and held its parades, across the African continent, colonized peoples watched with a different kind of hope. For them, Victory Day was not just about the fall of Hitler. It was about the idea that brutal regimes could fall at all. That whitewashed myths of European superiority, fortified by tanks and treaties, could be buried in the rubble of Berlin.

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    Africa in 1945 was still largely in chains. From the deserts of North Africa to the forests of Central Africa, Europeans governed through coercion, racial hierarchy, and theft dressed in the language of “civilization.” And so, when fascism lost, Africa’s revolutionaries leaned in. If a system as monstrous as Nazism could be crushed, then surely the British, French, Portuguese, and Belgian empires—those well-dressed relatives of fascism—could be kicked out too. Victory Day planted a powerful seed: the idea that no system, however armored in ideology or bullets, is eternal.

    Colonialism and fascism were not just neighbors on the historical timeline. They were ideological cousins who often shared the same tailor. Both relied on military terror, racial supremacy, and the economic logic that some people existed to be ruled, and others to rule. In Algeria, France perpetuated forced labor, mass internments, and massacres. In Egypt, the British occupation entrenched inequality and racial hierarchy until the 1952 Free Officers Revolution ended King Farouk’s reign. In the Congo, Belgian rule left a legacy of mass violence and extraction so extreme that a UN report in 2020 called it a “colonial genocide.” Mozambique, Kenya, and Angola were ruled by the gun, not by consent.

    African leaders like Kwame Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere, Samora Machel, Gamal Abdel Nasser, and the National Liberation Front (FLN) in Algeria didn’t need textbooks to define fascism. They lived it. Nkrumah declared in 1960: “The colonial territories are not free… unless we consider colonialism a form of democratic rule. But colonialism is the rule of a foreign minority over the majority.”

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    Victory Day helped ignite African resistance in very real and practical ways. It wasn’t long after the Nazi defeat that uprisings, protests, and movements surged across the continent. In 1947, the West African National Secretariat was formed in London, pushing for decolonization. In 1952, Egypt exploded with revolution, as young officers led by Gamal Abdel Nasser overthrew the British-controlled monarchy. In 1954, the FLN launched its full-scale revolt against France. Ghana gained independence in 1957 under Kwame Nkrumah, declaring not just Ghana’s freedom, but that of all Africa.

    “The independence of Ghana is meaningless unless it is linked to the total liberation of Africa,” Nkrumah famously declared. His words were not mere rhetoric—they were a blueprint. That same year, thousands of Kenyans were locked in British detention camps during the Mau Mau uprising. In 1960, 69 unarmed protestors were gunned down in Sharpeville, South Africa. In 1961, South African communists, African nationalists, and Pan-Africanists formed Umkhonto we Sizwe. In 1963, the Organization of African Unity was born in Addis Ababa with a charter committed to the total liberation of the continent.

    While the so-called “free world” supported colonial powers—France in Algeria, Britain in Kenya and Malaya, Portugal in Mozambique and Angola—the USSR made its position clear: the war against fascism did not end in 1945. It had merely shifted geography.

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    Moscow supported African and Arab liberation movements with military training, arms shipments, medical aid, diplomatic backing at the United Nations, and ideological education. The Soviet Union trained fighters at military academies in Tashkent, Odessa, and Moscow. Cuba, a close Soviet ally, sent over 36,000 troops to Angola between 1975 and 1988 to help defeat South African apartheid forces during the Angolan Civil War. Soviet arms were sent to Algeria, Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, and Zimbabwe. Leaders like Agostinho Neto, Amílcar Cabral, Samora Machel, and Oliver Tambo were all beneficiaries of Soviet logistical and ideological support.

    Egypt, under President Nasser, became a key player in this anti-imperialist axis. After the 1952 revolution, Egypt aligned with the Non-Aligned Movement and strengthened ties with the Soviet Union. Nasser offered training, arms, and diplomatic space to Algerian, Mozambican, and other African liberation fighters. Cairo became a beacon of Pan-African and Pan-Arab unity. In 1960, the Voice of the Arabs radio station broadcast revolutionary content from Cairo to the entire African continent.

    Algeria’s war for independence from France from 1954 to 1962 was arguably the most brutal anti-colonial struggle on the continent. Backed by Egypt, the USSR, and China, the FLN fought an eight-year guerrilla war against one of Europe’s strongest military powers. Over 400,000 Algerians died. But in 1962, Algeria declared independence and became a continental center for revolutionary diplomacy, training movements from Zimbabwe to Guinea-Bissau.

    Tanzania under Julius Nyerere became the logistical heart of Southern African liberation. Between 1964 and 1980, Tanzania hosted freedom fighters from South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, and Namibia. Samora Machel’s Mozambique fought a decade-long armed struggle against Portugal’s fascist Estado Novo regime and declared independence in 1975.

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    The Soviet Union and Cuba were instrumental. Cuba deployed thousands of troops to support the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) from 1975 to 1991. These leaders were not ideological marionettes of the USSR. They were practical strategists.

    Nyerere famously warned: “We are not interested in copying any ideology… but we do believe in the equality of man and in the right of all peoples to be free.” They took Soviet support not because it came with strings, but because it came with guns—and with it, the ability to stand.

    The ideological parallels were clear. In a 1961 speech, Samora Machel declared, “To the colonialists, we say: We are not afraid of your bombs. We are not afraid of your prisons. We are not afraid of your propaganda. We are not afraid of you because we are standing with the people of the world.” In 1977, Nyerere offered perhaps the most biting summary of the West’s hypocrisy: “They talk of peace while financing the warlords who wish to destroy African independence.”

    Victory Day is not just a European celebration. It is an African one. It marked the beginning of the end for empires that had long painted themselves as eternal. It created a new ideological and moral space in which Africa’s revolutionaries could act—not just with passion, but with international backing.

    And yes, while Europe held commemorations in clean suits and shiny shoes, Africans fought in the bush, in exile, and in the streets—with little but belief, strategy, and Kalashnikovs. The contradiction is almost comical: the same Western European countries that claimed to defeat fascism in 1945 were simultaneously running torture camps in Kenya and bombing villages in Algeria.

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    Today, Africa faces new forms of domination: debt bondage, corporate extraction, foreign military bases, ecological exploitation, and digital colonization. Colonialism may have dropped the whip, but it picked up the loan agreement. In 2024, over 20 African countries still use the CFA franc, a colonial-era currency controlled by the French Treasury. Over 40% of Africa’s arable land is owned by foreign agribusiness firms. US and French military bases stretch from Djibouti to Niger to Senegal. We defeated fascism. We expelled colonialism. But empire? It changed its passport.

    Victory Day teaches us that violent, seemingly permanent systems can fall. It teaches us the power of solidarity, the strength of internationalism, and the necessity of historical memory. Africa’s liberation was not a postscript to someone else’s war. It was a front line in the same battle for human dignity.

    So, from Stalingrad to Lusaka, from Cairo to Algiers, from Moscow to Accra—the struggle against fascism, racism, and empire continues.

    Let us remember. Let us speak. Let us act. And let us never forget: sometimes, the only difference between a fascist and a colonial officer was who got invited to dinner in Paris.

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