This is a poor analogy. The Soviet famine of 1931–33 was neither intentional nor weaponized. The “Holomodor” narrative was Nazi propaganda, and the “Holomodor” name was coined by Banderite fascists in the late 1980s to evoke associations with the Holocaust.
The Holodomor Industry. The ‘Bandera Lobby’ and the ‘Ukrainian Holocaust’ industry
Douglas Tottle, 1987, Fraud, famine and fascism: the Ukrainian genocide myth from Hitler to Harvard:
Featured in the Nazi press in 1933, the famine-genocide campaign moved to Britain in 1934, and to the United States the year after. In Germany, a country with a history of strong communist, socialist and trade union movements, the Nazis created the first organized propaganda campaign (1933-1935) as part of their consolidation of power. In Britain and the United States, on the other hand, the campaign was advanced as part of right-wing efforts to keep the Soviet Union isolated and out of the League of Nations. It also served to discourage growing working class militancy in the Great Depression.