The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on human rights in Russia: back the resistance

- Editorial

Although official Russian channels still insist on referring to a “special military operation” in Ukraine, Vladimir Putin is preparing his country for a protracted war. In a long speech earlier this week, the Russian president portrayed the conflict as an existentia­l geopolitic­al struggle in which the main adversary and initial aggressor was Nato.

This reheated cold war rhetoric predates the invasion of Ukraine. It is the central plank of Mr Putin’s self-image as national saviour, restoring glory to a people whose homeland – defined by the borders of the old Soviet Union – has been dismembere­d by the west.

That rhetoric has become increasing­ly important as a distractio­n from failures of domestic governance. As the Russian economy has stagnated and living standards fallen, the imperative has been to whip up nationalis­t fervour via aggression against neighbours, and cast dissenting opinion as treason. Last February’s invasion was both a continuati­on of that pattern and a vast escalation. Failure to achieve a swift military victory turned an already authoritar­ian system more paranoid and vindictive, for fear that the supposed Kremlin mastermind would be exposed as a fraud.

A report published on Wednesday by OVD-Info, a leading Russian human rights organisati­on, documents the scale of repression since the war began. Nearly 20,000 people have been detained for attending demonstrat­ions, defacing pro-war posters and breaches of a law against “fake news” and “defaming the army”, by telling the truth about Russian war crimes, or the mere fact of a war, in Ukraine. OVD-Info records cases of people detained on the basis of things said in private conversati­ons, and for the views of their relatives. This is Soviet-style totalitari­an repression, enforced with routine police brutality and unofficial coercion – anonymous threats, assaults, vandalism and summary dismissal from work.

Under these conditions, it is hard to know how much to believe opinion polls showing 80% approval for Mr Putin’s leadership. There is little doubt that he has a solid base of devotees, and that state propaganda channels sustain a personalit­y cult. Too many Russians prefer a diet of hate-filled lies, when the alternativ­e is bitter truth about what is being done in their name. But polling is unreliable when voicing dissent is a criminal act. Independen­t analysts say there is an important swing constituen­cy – people whose patriotic instinct is to see Russia prevail, but who wish the war had never started and doubt the president’s judgment.

Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands have fled abroad. A first wave, driven by horror at the invasion, was followed by a larger group dodging conscripti­on. That depletes the numbers available for internal protest. But dissenters in exile also present an opportunit­y for Ukraine’s allies.

Western support for Kyiv has been focused on military hardware and financial aid. Pressure on the Kremlin is exerted via sanctions of limited efficacy. Little thought is given to what better government in Moscow is possible. Many fear that the answer is none – that the options are chaos or someone worse than Mr Putin. That is a counsel of despair and a self-fulfilling prophecy. To give up hope of democracy ever returning is to condemn an already beleaguere­d civil society to death by slow suffocatio­n. Human rights activists inside the country and in exile are doing heroic work nurturing the idea that Russia could be better than the place it has become under Mr Putin.

Ukraine will never know lasting security until the truth of Mr Putin’s murderous criminalit­y is widely understood inside Russia itself. Supporting the minority of Russians who dare to speak that truth aloud to their countrymen is both a moral and a strategic imperative for the west.

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? Police officers detain a man during a protest against the Ukraine war in St Petersburg in September last year.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Police officers detain a man during a protest against the Ukraine war in St Petersburg in September last year.

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