The ‘Prague Declaration’ and its preceding and derivative European resolutions are based on 'Double Genocide': the proposed 'equivalence' of Nazi and Soviet crimes as revisionist history for the European Union.
The ‘Prague Declaration’ includes the following demands of the European Union:
‘recognize Communism and Nazism as a common legacy’
‘recognition that many crimes committed in the name of Communism should be assessed as crimes against humanity serving as a warning for future generations, in the same way Nazi crimes were assessed by the Nuremberg Tribunal’
‘ensuring the principle of equal treatment and non-discrimination of victims of all the totalitarian regimes’
‘a day of remembrance of the victims of both Nazi and Communist totalitarian regimes’
‘adjustment and overhaul of European history textbooks so that children could learn and be warned about Communism and its crimes in the same way as they have been taught to assess the Nazi crimes’
Lithuania's major news portal Delfi.lt attacks Israel's president Shimon Peres for differentiating Nazi and Soviet crimes, providing this graphic (14 November 2009).