The Oklahoman

Patriotism, unease mix in Russia

Poll: 82% of population concerned by military campaign in Ukraine

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Red Soviet flags and orange-andblack striped military ribbons are on display in Russian cities and towns. Neighborho­ods are staging holiday concerts. Flowers are being laid by veterans’ groups at monuments to the Great Patriotic War, as World War II is known in the country.

At first glance, preparatio­ns for Monday’s celebratio­n of Victory Day, marking the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, seem to be the same as ever.

But the mood this year is very different, because Russian troops are fighting and dying again.

And this invasion, now in its 11th week, is going on in neighborin­g Ukraine, against what the government has falsely called a campaign against “Nazis.”

The pride and patriotism usually associated with Russia’s most important holiday, marked by a huge parade of soldiers and military hardware through Red Square, is mixing with apprehensi­on and unease over what this year’s Victory Day may bring.

Some Russians fear President Vladimir Putin will use it to declare that what the Kremlin has previously called a “special military operation” in Ukraine will now be a full-fledged war, bringing with it a broad mobilizati­on of troops to bolster Russia’s forces.

“I can’t remember a time when the May 9 holiday was anticipate­d with such anxiety,” historian Ivan Kurilla wrote on Facebook.

Ukraine’s intelligen­ce chief, Kyrylo Budanov, said Moscow was covertly preparing such a plan. British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace told LBC Radio that Putin was “laying the ground for being able to say, ‘Look, this is now a war against Nazis, and what I need is more people.’”

The Kremlin denied having such plans, calling the reports “untrue” and “nonsense.”

Asked by The Associated Press on Friday whether mobilizati­on rumors could dampen the Victory Day mood, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said “nothing will cast a shadow” over “the sacred day, the most important day” for Russians.

Still, human rights groups reported a spike in calls from people asking about laws concerning mobilizati­on and their rights in case of being ordered to join the military.

“Questions about who can be called up and how have started to flow on a mass scale through our hotline about the rights of conscripts and the military,” said Pavel Chikov, founder of the Agora legal aid group, on the messaging app Telegram.

Russian state TV has ramped up the patriotic rhetoric. In announcing the military operation Feb. 24, Putin declared it was aimed at the “demilitari­zation” of Ukraine to remove a perceived

military threat to Russia by “neo-Nazis.”

A recent TV commentary said Putin’s words were “not an abstract thing and not a slogan” and praised Russia’s success in Ukraine, even though Moscow’s troops have gotten bogged down, making only minor gains in recent weeks.

Ukraine, which has a democratic­ally elected Jewish president who lost relatives in the Holocaust, and the West have condemned the remarks as a fictitious cover for a blunt act of aggression.

But many Russians fed a steady diet of the official narrative have cheered on their troops, comparing them to “our grandfathe­rs” who fought the Germans.

Popular support in Russia for the war in Ukraine is difficult to gauge in a country that has seen a steady crackdown on journalist­s in recent years, with independen­t media outlets shut down and state-controlled television providing a pervasive influence.

A recent poll by the independen­t Levada Center found that 82% of Russians remain concerned by the military campaign in Ukraine. The vast majority of them – 47% – are worried about the deaths of civilians and Russian soldiers in the war, along with the devastatio­n and suffering. Only 6% of those concerned by the war said they were bothered by the alleged presence of “Nazis” and “fascists” in Ukraine.

“A significant part of the population is horrified, and even those who support the war are in a permanent psychologi­cal militant state of a perpetual nightmare,” said political analyst Andrei Kolesnikov.

A government campaign encouragin­g support for the military is using the distinctiv­e black-and-orange St. George’s ribbon that is traditiona­lly associated with Victory Day. The letter “Z” has become a symbol of the conflict, decorating buildings, posters and billboards across Russia, and many forms of it use the ribbon’s colors and pattern.

Rallies supporting the troops have taken place in recent days at World War II memorials, with participan­ts singing wartime songs from the 1940s.

One official has suggested that Victory Day marchers display photos of soldiers now fighting in Ukraine. Normally on the holiday, Russians carry portraits of their relatives who took part in World War II to honor those in the so-called “Immortal Regiment” from a conflict in which the Soviet Union lost a staggering 27 million people.

 ?? AP ?? Russian National Guardsmen march through a street with the letter Z on Thursday in Sevastopol, Crimea. “Z” has become a symbol of the Russian military, which honors Victory Day on Monday.
AP Russian National Guardsmen march through a street with the letter Z on Thursday in Sevastopol, Crimea. “Z” has become a symbol of the Russian military, which honors Victory Day on Monday.
 ?? MUSA SADULAYEV/AP ?? A car drives past a billboard of Russian President Vladimir Putin that reads: “For Russia” in Grozny on Saturday. Red Soviet flags and orange-and-black striped military ribbons are on display in cities and towns.
MUSA SADULAYEV/AP A car drives past a billboard of Russian President Vladimir Putin that reads: “For Russia” in Grozny on Saturday. Red Soviet flags and orange-and-black striped military ribbons are on display in cities and towns.

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