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US writer Anne Applebaum appeals for arms for Ukraine as she accepts German Peace Prize

Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Anne Applebaum appeals for arms for Ukraine as she accepts German Peace Prize
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Anne Applebaum appeals for arms for Ukraine as she accepts German Peace Prize Copyright  AP Photo/Martin Meissner
Copyright AP Photo/Martin Meissner
By Euronews with AP
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Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Anne Applebaum was awarded this year's Peace Prize of the German Book Trade. During her acceptance speech, she argued that "‘I want peace’ is not always a moral argument."

Prominent American journalist and Pulitzer Prize winner Anne Applebaum urged continued support for Ukraine as she accepted a prestigious German prize yesterday, arguing that pacifism in the face of aggression is often nothing more than appeasement.

Applebaum made her appeal to an audience in Frankfurt, where she was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade.

She was joined by her husband, Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski, who like his wife is a strong voice on the international stage for supporting Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia’s brutal invasion.

“If there is even a small chance that military defeat could help end this horrific cult of violence in Russia, just as military defeat once brought an end to the cult of violence in Germany, we should take it,” Applebaum said.

“Some even call for peace by referring solemnly to the ‘lessons of German history,” Applebaum noted, according to a transcript of her speech published by the prize organization. “As I am here today accepting a peace prize, this seems the right moment to point out that ‘I want peace’ is not always a moral argument. This is also the right moment to say that the lesson of German history is not that Germans should be pacifists."

She added: "On the contrary, we have known for nearly a century that a demand for pacifism in the face of an aggressive, advancing dictatorship can simply represent the appeasement and acceptance of that dictatorship.”

Applebaum argued that the “real lesson” from German history should be that Germans "have a special responsibility to stand up for freedom and to take risks in doing so.”

Following pacifism to its logical conclusion, Applebaum argued, would "mean that we should acquiesce to the military conquest of Ukraine, to the cultural destruction of Ukraine, to the construction of concentration camps in Ukraine, to the kidnapping of children in Ukraine.”

American journalist and historian Anne Applebaum delivers a speech after she was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association - 20 October 2024
American journalist and historian Anne Applebaum delivers a speech after she was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association - 20 October 2024 Martin Meissner/AP

Applebaum writes for The Atlantic magazine. She has written books that focus on totalitarianism in Eastern Europe, including “The Gulag", “The Iron Curtain” and “Red Famine,” about dictator Joseph Stalin's war on Ukraine. She recently published “Autocracy, Inc. The Dictators Who Want to Run the World.” In 2004, she was awarded the prestigious Pulitzer Prize.

The prize jury said Applebaum’s analyses of communist and post-communist systems in the Soviet Union and Russia reveal “the mechanisms by which authoritarians grab hold of power and maintain their control.”

The laudation for Applebaum was delivered by the Russian historian Irina Scherbakova, a founding member of the human rights organization Memorial, which is now banned in Russia and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2022.

Anne Applebaum, left, is awarded with the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade by Karin Schmidt-Friderichs, head of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association
Anne Applebaum, left, is awarded with the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade by Karin Schmidt-Friderichs, head of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association Martin Meissner/AP

The Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, which is endowed with €25,000 was awarded in St. Paul's Church in Frankfurt — which is considered the birthplace of German parliamentary democracy — at the end of the Frankfurt Book Fair.

The prize has been awarded since 1950. It honours individuals who have contributed to turning the idea of peace into reality through literature, science or art.

Last year’s prize was awarded to British-Indian writer Salman Rushdie for his perseverance despite enduring decades of threats and violence. 

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