The Economist - USA (2022-03-12)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist March 12th 2022 13
BriefingThe war in Ukraine

K


herson is aboutas far up the Dnieper
from  the  Black  Sea  as  Bordeaux  is  up
the Gironde from the Bay of Biscay; its pop­
ulation,  280,000,  is  a  bit  larger.  It  is  nor­
mally a sleepy, provincial place. On Febru­
ary  24th,  though,  when  Russian  tanks
rolled  out  of  Crimea,  120km  to  the  south­
east, it became a vital objective in Russia’s
attempt to take control of a corridor along
Ukraine’s  entire  coast.  When,  having  en­
countered  more  resistance  than  they  ex­
pected,  some  of  those  tanks  reached  the
centre  of  Kherson  on  March  1st,  Russian

state media heralded the fall of the city as
the campaign’s first “liberation”.
Kherson’s citizens were having none of
it.  They  waved  Ukrainian  flags,  shouting
and  screaming  at  the  Russians  to  leave.
Some  of  them  stood  in  the  way  of  tanks.
The  city’s  mayor  and  the  governor  of  the
Kherson oblast, both in effect hostages, in­

sisted  that  they  would  take  orders  only
from Kyiv. A week into the occupation they
were sticking to their guns.
Across Ukraine, from Berdyansk on the
Azov  Sea  to  Sumy  in  the  north­east,  Rus­
sian forces have met resistance when they
advance  and  obstreperousness  when  they
think  they  have  gained  control.  They  and
their  leaders  expected  something  more
welcoming.  The  fsb,  a  successor  to  the
kgb, told Russia’s president, Vladimir Pu­
tin,  that  it  had  thoroughly  penetrated
Ukraine’s political and military leadership,
and laid the groundwork for a pro­Russian
regime—a key reason for the Kremlin’s war
optimism. But the fsbgrossly exaggerated
its networks of agents in Ukrainian cities. 
Mr  Putin  can  hardly  have  believed  the
taradiddles  he  peddled  about  Ukraine’s
drug­addled  neo­Nazi  elite  perpetrating
genocide and ordinary Ukrainians desper­
ate  for  rescue  by  their  Russian  brothers.
Videos  of  prisoners  of  war  show  that  at
least some of the rank and file seem to have
bought  such  stories.  But  they  found  no
welcome anywhere. The mood is generally
one of contempt.
In  Kherson unabashed  pro­Ukrainian
rallies  have  continued  daily.  Alexander
Mogilinkov,  one  of  thousands  to  attend
them, said by phone on March 8th that the
violence  of  the  Russian  army  had  at  that
time galvanised people. Protesters are ner­
vous,  he  says,  and  they  face  a  new  threat
they do not understand. But they are even
more fearful of the repression and poverty
that  Mr  Putin  has  imposed  on  the  nearby
regions  of  Donetsk  and  Luhansk,  which
have been controlled by Russia since 2014. 
Initially flummoxed, on March 9th Rus­
sian forces detained over 400 protesters in
what Ukrainian authorities said represent­
ed  the  beginning  of  a  new  repressive  re­
gime.  The  mayor  of  Novopskov,  a  town
near  Donbas,  told  the  bbcthat  daily  prot­
ests  there  stopped  when  Russian  soldiers
shot  three  protesters  and  beat  another  on
March  5th.  There  have  been  reports  from
elsewhere  of  tanks  being  deliberately
rammed  into  houses,  hostage  taking and
sexual violence. European intelligence of­
ficials say that the fsbhas drafted plans for
public executions to break morale. 
In Crimea the intelligence services have
a  tried  and  tested  approach  for  dealing
with opposition. Anton Naumlyuk, a Rus­
sian journalist who has reported from the
annexed  peninsula  since  2016,  says  it  dif­
fers little from schemes used by Tsarist po­
litical police to sniff out revolutionaries at
the  start  of  the  20th  century.  “First,  they
map networks to understand who the real
opinion leaders are, and they target them.
If people co­operate, fine. If not, they start
to  disappear.”  Crimea  sos,  a  non­govern­
mental organisation, says 36 of 43 men kid­
napped in Crimea since 2014 were definite­

VINNITSYA
Russians who expected their invasion of Ukraine to be welcomed were quickly
disabused. Now things are turning nastier

Occupation? No thanks!


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14 The great leap backward
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