14 BriefingThewarinUkraine TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
lytakenbyRussiansecurityforces.Sixof
the 43 were found dead; 18 were never
foundatall.
Khersonmaybeseeingsomethingsim
ilar.OnMarch7thlocalmediasaidOlek
sandrTarasov,anactivist,hadbeenreport
edmissingfollowingthatevening’sprot
est.Heemerged 24 hourslater,apparently
distressed,andsaidina bizarre“confes
sion”thathehadbeenworkingasa provo
cateurforUkraine’ssecurityservices.
Occupationneednotmeanterror.But
PhilipIngram,onceacolonel inBritish
militaryintelligence,saysa successfuloc
cupyingforceneedscivilengineers,medi
calsupportandcivilaffairsstaff,andthis
hasneverbeenanareainwhichRussian
forces have excelled. “They are notde
signed,froma militaryperspective,tooc
cupyandrebuild,”hesays.“Justholdand
destroy.”LocalsinKhersonreporttheoc
cupierstobehungry,lootingand“outof
control”.
Many Ukrainians with proRussian
sympathiesusedtothinkthata rapproche
mentbetweenthetwocountrieswaspos
sible.“Forallofmyfriendsthathopeisal
readydead,”saysAndriiYatskevich,a sail
orfromKherson.ViktorMerinkov,thedi
rector of a boarding school for deaf
childreninthecity,saysthat“Asfaraslo
calsareconcerned,Russiahasbecomea
bywordforfascistinvaders.”HiswifeVa
lentinainterruptstourgehimtotemper
hislanguage;thecouplehaveresponsibil
ityforeightchildrennowstrandedinthe
city,sheremindshim.n
Mariupol
Berdyansk
Mykolaiv Melitopol
Belgorod
Odessa Kherson
Dnipro
Chernihiv Konotop
Sumy
Okhtyrka
Kharkiv Novopskov
Lviv
Warsaw
Kyiv
Chisinau
Black
Sea
Seaof
Azov
UKRAINE
BELARUS
P OLAND
SLOVAKIA
MOLDOVA
RUSSIA
Crimea
Do
nba
s
Controlled
byRussian-
backed
separatists
Ukrainianterritory
annexedbyRussia
Luhansk
Donetsk
150 km
ClaimedRussian-controlled
AssessedRussianadvances*
AssessedRussian-controlled
Russianunitmovements†
ClaimedUkrainiancounteroffensives
March th
*Russiaoperatedinorattacked,but
doesnotcontrol †March6th
Sources:InstitutefortheStudyofWar;
RochanConsulting;TheEconomist
TheupperestimateofRussiantroop
casualtiesatMarch8th.Source:DIA
The second week of war: The military situation Russia’s domestic deterioration
4,
Russian forces continued to make more
progress in the south than the north,
andremained unable to achieve air
superiority. A number of cities suffered
ferocious artillery bombardment,
however few were taken.
Almost all independent Russian
media have been shut down. Western
companies, including iconic ones such
as Adidas and McDonalds, shuttered their
Russian outlets. Roubles can no longer be
exchanged through official channels.
Russia’s situation
The great leap backward
T
he pantsir-s1is an impressive beast,
almost 17 tonnes of topnotch hardware
capable of shooting down planes tens of
kilometres away. The specimen photo
graphed not far from Kherson, though, was
a sorry spectacle; its missiletubes bristled
like porcupine quills, but it was axledeep
in mud—one of nearly 1,000 pieces of Rus
sian equipment destroyed, damaged,
abandoned or captured by Ukraine over
two weeks of war.
Seeing the Pantsir on social media,
Trent Telenko, a former auditor in Ameri
ca’s defence bureaucracy, noticed a telltale
detail which spoke of very poor mainte
nance: its tyres were in terrible nick. Worse
still, they were cheap Chinese knockoffs
of the tyres you might have expected on
such a vehicle, observed Jon Hawkes of
Janes, a defenceintelligence firm; they
would have been unable to support the ve
hicle fully loaded.
There were however limits to the visi
bility of these synecdocheinviting de
fects. No such pictures were to be seen in
Russian media, any more than the word
“war” was to be read there. Russia’s Presi
dent, Vladimir Putin, has not used the
word; norhas he declared a state of emer
gency. In a plainlyweirdbutpurportedly
normal event televised on March 5th he
told a group of Aeroflot flight attendants
that the special operation to demilitarise
Russia’s brother country was going to plan
and would soon be complete. Russian forc
es were using precision weapons and only
hitting military targets. The damage to ci
vilian buildings was the work of evil Ukrai
nian Nazis shelling their own cities. To
make sure this important message is not
distorted, a law passed on March 4th
makes dissemination of any information
at odds with the official version of the con
flict punishable by a prison sentence of up
to 15 years. As George Orwell knew, when
War is to be Peace, Ignorance is Strength.
Almost all independent media have
shut down, and the government is block
ing access to some social media. Neverthe
less, accurate news seeps in via Telegram,
an encrypted messaging service, foreign
sites accessed through virtual private net
works and, the simplest expedient, phone
calls with relatives in Ukraine. When their
Vladimir Putin’s war is a turning-point in Russian history