The Daily Telegraph

For Moscow, the invisible war is finally hitting home

- By Special Correspond­ent in Moscow The author of this dispatch remains anonymous because of reporting restrictio­ns

Until this week, Putin’s Ukraine war had been almost completely invisible to most Muscovites. Prominent “Z” signs – the war’s symbol – had disappeare­d from awnings, shop windows and even private cars in Russia’s capital by April. Closed-down branches of Mcdonald’s and Starbucks were replaced by local lookalike clones. Restaurant­s, cafés and nightclubs continued a roaring trade. After a short period of panic buying at the beginning of the war, supermarke­t shelves were full – including many sanctions-busting imported goods – and the ruble even rose to new heights.

Citywide festivitie­s continued as normal, and with the exception of a handful of shows deemed “unpatrioti­c” by a new duma committee, the theatres were packed too. “Moscow is an enchanted kingdom where everything is completely, completely normal and nothing bad is happening anywhere,” joked one prominent Moscow theatre producer. “Definitely in no way the capital of a country fighting the biggest war of the 21st century.”

On Wednesday that illusion came crashing down in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s belligeren­t speech announcing partial mobilisati­on.

For millions of Russians who had wilfully ignored the conflict, the war in Ukraine suddenly went from nearinvisi­ble to urgent and personal.

Though Mr Putin and Sergei Shoigu, his defence minister, went to great lengths to emphasise that the call-up of what could now be a million military reservists concerned just “people with military experience” and that “students have no need to worry”, the sudden call to arms of mostly unwilling men came, in the Russian phrase, like a thundercla­p from a clear sky.

“Every Russian knows that when the government says it definitely isn’t going to do something, it’s about to do it,” said Irina Bukova, 43, a Moscow psychologi­st whose 48-year-old partner did his compulsory military service in the early 1990s.

“They say the mobilisati­on is just of former profession­al soldiers. But everyone is talking about how the next step will be of anyone who ever had military training of any sort.”

According to Ms Bukina, one neighbour reported that her recently graduated architect son and all his classmates – who had compulsory military training as sappers at university – had got call-up papers.

Introducin­g even partial mobilisati­on has been a move that the Kremlin had strenuousl­y avoided until now, with Mr Putin making a solemn promise on Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8 that conscripts “do not and will not participat­e in hostilitie­s”.

But a nationwide recruiting campaign, both by the Russian Army and by the Kremlin-affiliated Wagner Group private military firm, has clearly failed to produce sufficient volunteers – despite offering signing bonuses equivalent to several months’ pay and actively recruiting thieves and

‘I am not afraid of anything any more. I will not give my children to fight this bloody war!’

murderers from Russian prisons. The Kremlin’s attempt to fight the war with an army of expendable­s had failed.

On Moscow’s Old Arbat street, a crowd of about two hundred mostly young people assembled for a protest.

Many wore masks to avoid being spotted by facial-recognitio­n cameras.

“No to War!” they chanted in unison – before riot police moved in with lightning speed to bundle them into waiting buses. “I am not afraid of anything any more,” said Maria, a middle-aged woman who had joined the protest, adding: “I will not give my children to fight this bloody war!”

Another young woman, who clung to two male friends as police dragged them away, shouted: “Putin is a traitor! He has ruined Russia!”

According to the Ovd-info human right organisati­on, some 1,300 people were detained at protests in more than 30 Russian cities with most being released after paying fines of up to £700. But many military-age male protesters were not so lucky. Several opposition activists, including Kirill Goncharov, a senior member of the Yabloko party, have published photos of call-up papers ordering them to report to local draft offices.

Conscripts are, for the moment, still not eligible for front-line military service in Ukraine – but army service is clearly being used as a punishment for dissent. “It was only to be expected that [authoritie­s] started using mobilisati­on from day one to put pressure on the protesters,” said Pavel Chikov, head of the Agora associatio­n of human rights lawyers.

Vladimir Solovyov, a Kremlin propagandi­st, promised on his Telegram channel that all opponents of the regime would find themselves immediatel­y in uniform.

The police “will check documents [on] the spot, identify them, detain them and send them to … military registrati­on and enlistment offices”.

Russian social media coined a term for Mr Putin’s call up – “mogilizats­ita”, a mash-up of the Russian word mogila, or grave, and mobilisati­on.

Unusually long lines to leave Russia were reported overnight and yesterday morning at once-sleepy border crossings, including those with Mongolia and Kazakhstan in the east and Georgia in the south, where hundreds of cars were pictured stuck in a night-time massive traffic jam.

In the Chelyabins­k region, which borders Kazakhstan, dozens of men were seen standing near their cars in the vast steppe just after dawn.

At Moscow airports, border guards reportedly conducted spot checks on young men, quizzing them about their eligibilit­y to be called up.

Mr Putin’s sudden decision to reverse six months of so-called “hidden mobilisati­on” and go public with a nationwide, if so far partial, call-up, took not just ordinary Russians but political insiders by surprise.

“I believe many people [in the Russian elite] were taken aback,” said one former senior Kremlin official who worked with Mr Putin until 2016.

“Politicall­y, this is a move that you would not make unless you were desperate. That is a change of message. Everything is not going to plan.”

Indeed, Mr Putin himself in recent speeches in Vladivosto­k and Samarkand had gone out of his way to be as boring and low-key as possible, talking about the “challenges” to the Russian economy but not explicitly mentioning the war at all.

Though the protests against mobilisati­on were small, the sudden rise in visibility of the war is likely to send politicall­y dangerous shock waves through Russian society.

Though a large majority of Russians still claim to support Mr Putin, private Kremlin polling leaked in July showed that Russians were evenly split between supporting a continuati­on of the conflict or making peace. Some 15 per cent of respondent­s were strongly in favour of what the Kremlin calls the “special military operation”, a similar number strongly against, with a 35-35 per cent divide between those who were mildly for and middle opposed.

After Mr Putin’s partial mobilisati­on, one thing is clear – the Kremlin plan to keep the war low-key and fight it using expendable volunteers, colonial troops from ethnic minority provinces, such as Buryatia and Chechnya, and prisoners has failed.

 ?? ?? Cars wait at the border checkpoint between Russia and Finland, near Vaalimaa. The Nordic country has said it is preparing a national solution to ‘limit or completely prevent’ tourism from its neighbour, following the invasion of Ukraine
Cars wait at the border checkpoint between Russia and Finland, near Vaalimaa. The Nordic country has said it is preparing a national solution to ‘limit or completely prevent’ tourism from its neighbour, following the invasion of Ukraine

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