In a nine-minute video posted Thursday, former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pleads with the Russian people to see the truth about the war in Ukraine, invoking his father’s Nazi past to illustrate the power of lies.
Schwarzenegger in the now-viral video says he’s sending the message through different channels in an attempt to punch through propaganda and reach Russian citizens and Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine. He noted a long history with Russia, traveling there to film movies and meet bodybuilding fans — as well as his adoration for a Soviet-era weightlifter.
The message arrives as Russia’s war on Ukraine enters its fourth week, with no sign of a respite.
“No one likes to hear something critical of their government, I understand that,” Schwarzenegger says, alongside Russian subtitles, “But as a longtime friend of the Russian people, I hope that you will hear what I have to say.”
In the video, the Austrian-born action movie star debunks claims he attributes to the Russian state that the war was started to “de-Nazify” Ukraine. He adds that the Russian government lied to its people and even its own soldiers, calling out the brutality of the country’s actions.
Rescuers on Thursday were pulling out survivors from the rubble of a nighttime airstrike on a theater where more than 1,000 people had sheltered in the besieged port city of Mariupol. Ukrainian officials were also assessing the war’s toll in Chernihiv, northeast of Kyiv, where at least 10 civilians were reportedly killed while waiting in a bread line.
Pentagon officials, in what they call a conservative estimate, say more than 7,000 Russian troops have died in the war — far more than the 500 officially recognized by Moscow. Kyiv has so far acknowledged the deaths of 1,300 Ukrainian troops.
“When I see babies being pulled out of ruins, I think that I’m watching a documentary about the horrors of the Second World War, not the news of the day,” he says.
His father, who fought with the Nazi army, was injured in Leningrad — now St. Petersburg — during World War II.
When he arrived, “he was all pumped up on the lies of his government,” Schwarzenegger said.
But by the time he left, “he was broken, physically and mentally” he said, adding, “I don’t want you to be broken like my father.”
(Excerpt) Read more in: LATimes