Boston Herald

Zelenskyy & Navalny are heroes for standing up to Putin

- Jeff Robbins is a Boston lawyer and former U.S. delegate to the United Nations Human Rights Commission

Joe Biden’s dramatic train trip through a war zone to stand with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kiev inspired most of the world, but not everyone. Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin hacks, who ardently wish not to join the thousands of Russians thrown into jail for opposing the former KGB agent’s corrupt autocracy, did not applaud Biden’s trip. Neither did America’s MAGA set, led by Putin fanboy Tucker Carlson. But most Americans saw Biden’s unprotecte­d trip through an area vulnerable to Russian missile attacks at any moment as a brave, historic move, one intended to physically demonstrat­e our solidarity with the Ukrainian people, who are suffering mass death and horrific hardship in order to resist subjugatio­n by a brutal Russian regime.

Biden was greeted in Kiev by the man who exemplifie­s Ukrainian courage in the face of relentless Russian war crimes. When the Russians invaded Ukraine a year ago, no one bet on Zelenskyy remaining alive, let alone walking the streets of his country’s capital. It is in no small measure thanks to Zelenskyy’s ability to inspire Ukrainians and non-Ukrainians alike that his country was able to repel Russia’s designs on Kiev and is holding the line against murderous assaults in the east. And he has exposed Putin as a tyrant, a war criminal and a crook.

But as for exposing Putin, someone else got there first, and he sits, deteriorat­ing in a Russian cell, condemned to spend what may be the rest of his life there as a consequenc­e of his own courage. Indeed, it isn’t easy to imagine anyone more courageous than Alexei Navalny, the Russian anti-corruption activist and opposition leader whose condemnati­on of Putin’s corruption and resourcefu­l organizing against Putin’s kleptocrac­y resulted in sham criminal conviction­s and confinemen­t in harsh conditions that will not end as long as Putin is in power.

Navalny, whose criticisms of Putin focused undesired attention on the embezzleme­nt-prone despot, made a documentar­y exposing Putin’s ripoff of his people, entitled “Putin’s Palace.” After previous attempts to assassinat­e Navalny failed, agents of Putin’s Federal Security Service poisoned him in Siberia in August 2020. Navalny nearly died, and the

Kremlin was extremely displeased that he did not. Instead, a German charity spirited the dissident, near death, to Berlin, where he was miraculous­ly nursed back to health.

While in Germany, Navalny had the notion that he could get one of the Russian agents who had poisoned him to admit that he had done so. It worked —and Navalny played the tape containing the admissions to an internatio­nal audience.

But that wasn’t all. Knowing that he would be arrested upon his arrival and sent to prison, Navalny neverthele­ss then boarded a flight home to Moscow — where he was arrested upon his arrival and sent to prison. That is where he sits, and that is where he may very well die.

HBO and CNN teamed up to produce a documentar­y about all of this, called “Navalny,” in which one can watch as, with minimal effort, Navalny induces a Russian goon to confess the poisoning, and as he then returns to Moscow on his mission to draw attention to Putin’s tyranny. “Navalny” is up for an Academy Award on March 13. As his daughter told the New York Times’ Nicholas Kristol last week, Navalny’s family and supporters hope the documentar­y is his “get out of death card,” one which will garner so much attention that Putin will feel obliged to keep her father alive rather than slowly kill him.

Back in America, the likes of Ted Cruz mock support for Ukraine. “A Ukrainian flag has become like a COVID mask,” Cruz said recently. “It’s a sign to show your virtue.” Some become heroes. Some become hacks. History has a way of judging these things.

 ?? DENIS KAMINEV, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? HBO and CNN produced a documentar­y, “Navalny,” spotlighti­ng Alexei Navalny’s post-poisoning return to Moscow on his mission to draw attention to Putin’s tyranny. It is up for an Academy Award. Here, Navalny looks at a camera while speaking from a prison via a video link, provided by the Russian Federal Penitentia­ry Service, during a court session in Russia last year.
DENIS KAMINEV, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HBO and CNN produced a documentar­y, “Navalny,” spotlighti­ng Alexei Navalny’s post-poisoning return to Moscow on his mission to draw attention to Putin’s tyranny. It is up for an Academy Award. Here, Navalny looks at a camera while speaking from a prison via a video link, provided by the Russian Federal Penitentia­ry Service, during a court session in Russia last year.
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