Boston Sunday Globe

Kremlin faces rising domestic pressures

Attacks in Crimea changing Russia’s invasion narrative

- By Anton Troianovsk­i, Marc Santora, and Dan Bilefsky

Nearly six months into the war in Ukraine, the Kremlin still refers to its invasion as a “special military operation” while trying to maintain a sense of normalcy at home.

But a series of Ukrainian attacks in Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula that President Vladimir Putin illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014, is puncturing that narrative.

And as Ukrainian attacks mount in the strategica­lly and symbolical­ly important territory, the damage is beginning to put domestic political pressure on the Kremlin, with criticism and debate about the war increasing­ly being unleashed on social media and underscori­ng that even what the Russian government considers to be Russian territory is not safe.

On Saturday, a drone slammed into the headquarte­rs of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in Crimea, sending a plume of smoke over the port city of Sevastopol. Separately, in western Crimea, Russian troops launched anti-aircraft fire at unidentifi­ed targets, the region’s Russian governor said.

Local Russian officials blamed the drone attack on Ukraine and urged residents and beachgoers not to panic, while insisting there had been no injuries and that Russian air defenses were functionin­g properly.

But as images of anti-aircraft fire streaking through the blue Crimean sky ricocheted through social media, the visceral reality of war was becoming more and more apparent to Russians — many of whom have rallied behind the Kremlin’s line, hammered home in state media, that the “special military operation” to save Ukraine from Nazi domination is going smoothly and according to plan.

“People are beginning to feel that the war is coming to them,” Andrei Kortunov, director general of the Russian Internatio­nal Affairs Council, a research organizati­on close to the Russian government, said in a phone interview. “I think this is serious.”

Ukraine has been engaged in a campaign to target Russian forces on the Crimean Peninsula. The attacks in Crimea appear to have begun in earnest on Aug. 9 with a strike on the Saki air base in which eight fighter jets were destroyed.

Kortunov said the Kremlin is likely to view the Ukrainian attacks not as a military threat but as “irritating,” showing Ukraine’s ability to threaten Russian lives deep behind the front lines. But it remained unclear how — or if — Putin would respond to the attacks, even as pro-Kremlin commentato­rs called for retaliator­y strikes.

Russia continues to retain military superiorit­y, and the recent strikes in Crimea haven’t resulted in territoria­l gains for Ukraine. But they neverthele­ss appear to have dealt a psychologi­cal blow to Russia, undercutti­ng the previous perception of Russian invincibil­ity in a peninsula that exerts a strong hold on the Russian psyche.

Crimea is more than a pivotal military base. A sun-splashed resort and staging ground for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Crimea has particular symbolic resonance for Putin, who has called it Russia’s “holy land.”

Crimea is where czars and Politburo chairmen kept vacation homes, and where Putin is said to have built a palatial, multibilli­on-dollar estate. As home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, it also helps Russia exert control over the sea, including a naval blockade that has crippled Ukraine’s economy.

On the social network Telegram, one of Russia’s bestknown state television hosts, Vladimir Solovyov, shared a post describing the attacks in Crimea and in Russian regions near the Ukrainian border as “some kind of surrealism.”

“Are we fighting or what are we doing?” the post asked. “Tough, cardinal measures must be taken, every day we pay for half-measures with human lives.”

While the military impact of the attacks may be minimal, there are mounting signs that local people are becoming unsettled by them, prompting officials to issue reassuranc­es about their safety.

“I understand that many are worried,” the Russian governor of Sevastopol, Mikhail Razvozhaye­v, said on his social media page on Saturday. “But that is exactly what the Ukrainian Reich” — a reference to Russia’s false characteri­zation of Ukraine as a Nazi state — “wants to achieve.”

In an interview over a messaging app on Saturday, one resident of Sevastopol said she had never imagined that she would live to see the events of the last six months. She said that her solution was to try to continue living her life and to avoid the news.

“When you read the news, chaos erupts in your head,” said the woman, Elena, 34, who requested her last name be withheld for her security. “You get the feeling that all around you everything is exploding and burning and that you are in hell.”

In a reflection of the challenges Moscow is facing, the Russian state news media also reported Friday that the Kremlin had replaced the commander of the Black Sea Fleet after a series of setbacks that include the loss of its flagship vessel, Moskva, in April.

The war also continued to reverberat­e outside Ukraine, including in ongoing concerns that the Kremlin was using Russia’s vast energy resources as a weapon to punish the West.

The Russian energy giant Gazprom said it would close the taps of its Nord Stream pipeline to Germany from Aug. 31 to Sept. 2 to replace a turbine with the help of its manufactur­er, Siemens. Gazprom has said Western sanctions have slowed repairs, reducing gas flows by up to 60 percent. But Berlin has accused Gazprom of playing politics on Moscow’s behalf.

“The Russian side’s justificat­ion is simply a pretext,” Robert Habeck, Germany’s economy minister, told reporters in Berlin in June. “It is obviously the strategy to unsettle and drive up prices.”

 ?? ANDREW KRAVCHENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ukrainians visited an area in Kyiv Saturday where destroyed Russian military vehicles have been displayed,
ANDREW KRAVCHENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ukrainians visited an area in Kyiv Saturday where destroyed Russian military vehicles have been displayed,

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