Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy: A wartime statesman for the social media age

Openness, grit and selfie videos. Ukraine’s comedian-turned-president has become a symbol of national resistance.

- By Nils Adler (Al Jazeera)

Since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, Ukraine’s comedian-turned-president Volodymyr Zelenskyy is fast emerging – even among some of his harshest critics – as a symbol of resistance and unity.

Often dressed in a casual green military T-shirt, the 44-year-old has addressed the nation in a series of self-shot videos recorded on his phone and published on social media.

In one such video shot outside in the capital, Kyiv, last Friday, he is surrounded by his key aides and says defiantly: “We’re all here. Our military is here. Citizens in society are here. We’re all here defending our independen­ce, our country, and it will stay this way.”

The video quickly went viral and was seen as an act of bravery by Ukrainians.

“I don’t think our previous presidents would have stayed in Ukraine; they probably would have escaped,” says Elizabeth Tishchenko, a resident of Ukraine’s second-biggest city, Kharkiv.

Zelenskyy’s personable and impassione­d speeches urging Ukrainians to take up arms and his refusal to leave Ukraine despite warnings that he is the Kremlin’s top target have won him many plaudits both at home and abroad.

“He’s the literal man on the street,” says David Patrikarak­os, a British journalist. “He is saying, ‘I’m your president, I’m not hiding, I’m not going anywhere. I am not behind the desk or wearing a suit. I am here with the risk of being killed, like everybody else.’”

His approach stands in stark contrast to the grand official settings preferred by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Visitors to the Kremlin are forced to sit at the end of a specially designed six-metre-long table when meeting Putin, resulting in a series of awkward photo-ops. In recent weeks, the Russian president, who usually comes across as calm and calculated, has cut a paranoid figure prone to rambling pre-recorded speeches.

“When you see Zelenskyy running around in the street, you can’t help but compare him to Vladimir Putin who looks like a supervilla­in in his bunker, isolated, sitting at his long table,” says Patrikarak­os.

‘I need ammunition, not a ride’

Just three years ago, Zelenskyy was a wellknown comic actor, best known for playing a schoolteac­her who wakes up to find he has been elected head of state after a video of him ranting against corruption secretly recorded by his pupils goes viral. In 2019, he ran for the presidency, using much of the same anti-corruption rhetoric as his on-screen character, and stormed to a landslide victory over the incumbent president and oligarch Petro Poroshenko with 73 percent of the vote.

“I think people voted for him because they got sick of all these oligarchs being in power. They thought, ‘Let’s have a boxer in Kyiv and a comedian as president,'” says Tishchenko, referring to the former heavyweigh­t boxer, Vitali Klitschko, who is the mayor of Kyiv.

After Zelenskyy came to power, the reality of politics set in, and the everyman image began to wear off as he dealt with an energy crisis and then a pandemic. His popularity waned. Recent polling, however, suggests that Zelenskyy’s wartime leadership has earned him an approval rating of 91 percent.

“No one thought Zelenskyy could have done this, but he has morphed from comedian and accidental president to wartime statesman,” says Patrikarak­os.

Igor Novikov, a former adviser to the president between 2019- 2020 who oversaw US-Ukrainian relations, told Al Jazeera that the fact that Zelenskyy’s background is not in politics is a key factor in his early success as a wartime leader. “President Zelenskyy is just an ordinary guy from an industrial city in Ukraine; he’s not a seasoned politician. And that is Ukraine’s blessing: where others run abroad or hide behind bureaucrac­y, he just does what needs to be done.”

Hampus Knutsson, a crisis communicat­ion specialist at Wings Public Relations who has worked on political campaigns in Sweden, points out what Zelenskyy has done well so far. “Zelenskyy is open, clear and communicat­es frequently,” Knutsson says. “He is on the ground.”

On Feb 26, the Ukrainian embassy in the United Kingdom announced that Zelenskyy had turned down an offer by the US to evacuate. “The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride,” they quoted him as saying. “In his sincere and no-nonsense approach, he is the true, undistorte­d image of the Ukrainian people [fighting],” says Novikov, adding that “his strength, courage and determinat­ion are what unites everyone.”

Inner circle

It is an image that has been influenced and honed by those in Zelenskyy’s inner circle, according to Novikov.

“He is surrounded not by politician­s but by ordinary human beings. Some of them come from his production company, some come from show business, some come from the legal profession, but most of them have never had any previous experience in politics, and that gives them that willpower and courage to actually tackle the old system,” says Novikov, who himself comes from an academic and non-political background.

He describes the atmosphere in Zelenskyy’s inner circle during peacetime as friendly and, perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, full of jokes. It is also unusually informal, with Zelenskyy insisting that those he meets refer to him with the informal word for “you”, Ty (??), as opposed to the formal Vy (??).

According to Novikov, what the world is seeing now is a wartime leader no longer restrained by the more scripted high-stakes diplomacy that preceded the invasion. “He gets emotional, especially in the run-up to the invasion, when he knew everything was about to happen,” Novikov says.

‘A new form of statesmans­hip’

Novikov says that Zelenskyy has always taken a hands-on approach to social media and is always checking his feeds. “He prefers selfie-style videos and chooses to directly address his audience as much as possible,” he says.

“It is always more important what you do than what you say. Zelenskyy does what he says,” says Knutsson, who believes his visible and open presence online is also about setting an example. “He shows both action and heroism – the exact kind of behaviour he wants from both his population and from the outside world.”

Patrikarak­os describes Zelenskyy’s social media strategy over the past week as “a new idiom of diplomacy” and “a new form of statesmans­hip” where, in this current social media age, it is important for politician­s to show a human side. “It’s all about being gritty, it’s all about being authentic,” he says. “We are dealing with a different public sphere [in 2022] with short attention spans.”

He says that Zelenskyy’s experience in television meant that he understood that social media could be a powerful weapon in a war where Ukraine is outnumbere­d and outgunned. Zelenskyy films himself on the street and “only has the podium for 30 seconds, but he remains casual and direct; these videos are designed to go viral.”

It is important to not underestim­ate the power of social media, he adds. “Don’t ever forget that this stuff changes policy and policy can get you stingers [air-defence systems] and javelins [anti-tank weapons systems].”

“In the end is it going to turn the tide of war?” Patrikarak­os asks. “Probably not; in fact almost certainly not. But it’s made a difference. The reaction has been unpreceden­ted.” Mykhail Hontarenko, 17, from Odesa, believes that although Zelenskyy’s career in entertainm­ent helps him deliver his lines on camera, he has been displaying genuine emotion. “I don’t think he is acting now; he is scared,” he says.

Even those who weren’t previously fans of the president are coming around. Artem Skorobagac­h is a 20-year-old student from Kharkiv who is now serving in the reserve defence forces. He says that in the past week he has seen a different side to Zelenskyy and that his displays of bravery and resolve have changed his opinion of him.

“At the start, he [Zelenskyy] looked like a populist to me. He promised a lot of things [that didn’t depend on him],” he says. But Skorobagac­h believes that the war and loss of human life have brought out a more human and patriotic side to the president. This has made him relatable to Ukrainians facing the bitter realities of a full-scale invasion.

Since the invasion began a week ago, at least one million Ukrainians in a country of 44 million have fled to neighbouri­ng countries. Ukraine’s health ministry said that 352 civilians – including 14 children – have been killed since the invasion began; it is difficult to know the exact death toll.

But there is a long road ahead for Zelenskyy. Eight days into the invasion, Moscow claims that the Black Sea city of Kherson has fallen, while troops close in on major cities such as Mariupol and Kharkiv, where residents have come under heavy bombardmen­t. A 64km-long armoured column is situated just outside Kyiv, but the Russian advance has been slowed by mechanical issues and determined Ukrainian resistance.

For the president to keep up his high-energy social media presence against the backdrop of such a large-scale military invasion and threats to his own life will be a monumental task. But, for now, Ukrainians appear united behind their leader.

 ?? ?? Volodymyr Zelenskyy: True patriot
Volodymyr Zelenskyy: True patriot

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