The Denver Post

Burnt-out tanks on display in capitals

- By Yuras Karmanau, Liudas Dapkus and Vanessa Gera

TALLINN, ESTONIA>> Burntout Russian tanks seized by Ukrainian forces last year have gone on display in recent days in the capitals of the three Baltics states, where Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanian­s are turning out to view them and snap photos in sympathy with the Ukrainians defending their homeland.

But among those visiting the tanks are alsomember­s of the countries’ sizable ethnic Russian minorities, some of whom placed flowers and lit candles to commemorat­e the fallen Russian soldiers and express support for Moscow.

The Russian gestures of support for Russia’s side in the war have set off some arguments, and at least one fist fight in Vilnius — underlinin­g the tensions that are simmering in the Baltic nations.

On Wednesday, supporters and opponents of the war argued in front of a burned- out Russian T-72 tank struck by Ukrainian forces near Kyiv on March 31. It stands on Freedom Square in the center of the Estonian capital, a space adorned with Ukrainian and Estonian f lags and where the Ukrainian anthem could be heard from nearby St. John’s Church.

The Estonian Defense Ministry on Saturday called the tank “a symbol of Russia’s brutal invasion. It also shows that the aggressor can be defeated. Let’s help Ukraine defend freedom.”

Last week, Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov announced that the tanks were going on display in the three Baltic capitals, and to Berlin as museum exhibits, after similar displays were assembled in Poland and the Czech Republic last year.

“It is a powerful reminder to all of us how well and peacefully we live when people die in Ukraine,” Vilnius resident Darius Klimka said. “Yesterday my kids were at the tank, we watched the evening news together. They kept on asking me why the world is still putting up with Russian aggression, and why Putin is not yet on trial.”

In Estonia, Anatoly Yarkov, a 78-year- old Soviet army veteran who showed up to see the tank in Tallinn, said that he feels bitter about Ukraine fighting against Russia in awar that he said had been rooted in the 1991 collapse of the USSR.

“Russian tanks are burning again like it happened during thewarwith thenazis,” Yarkov said. “The Russian people always stood against the Nazis, no matter what flag they used.”

Russian government officials, including President Vladimir Putin, have promoted a false narrative that Moscow’s military is fighting against neo-nazis even though Ukraine has a Jewish president who lost relatives in the Holocaust and who heads a Westernbac­ked, democratic­allyelecte­d government.

As some Russians placed flowers on the tank in Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital, the city authoritie­s put a garbage container in the vicinity with a sign saying it’s “for flowers, candles & Soviet nostalgia.”

Li thuanian pol ic e launched several investigat­ions related to incidents, including one in which a man was beaten for removing flowers.

Not all Russians are takingmosc­ow’s side. Marina, a 60-year- old Russian citizen who didn’t give her last name for reasons of personal security, said she condemned the invasion.

“This Russian tank could have rolled into the Estonian city of Narva, which Putin might have declared a Russian city,” she said, adding that her children and grandchild­ren have Estonian citizenshi­p. “And I understand very well that only heroic resistance of the Ukrainians saved my children from that bloody scenario unfolding in Estonia.”

 ?? MINDAUGAS KULBIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People stand by a destroyed Russian tank on Wednesday at Cathedral Square in Vilnius, Lithuania. Installed as a symbol of war marking the first anniversar­y of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the tank is decorated with a banner reading, “Send money to fight.”
MINDAUGAS KULBIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People stand by a destroyed Russian tank on Wednesday at Cathedral Square in Vilnius, Lithuania. Installed as a symbol of war marking the first anniversar­y of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the tank is decorated with a banner reading, “Send money to fight.”

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