Russia’s year of war: Purge of critics, surge of nationalism

Feb 18, 2023, 9:36 AM | Updated: Feb 19, 2023, 12:00 am
Cars in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, drive past a building decorated with a huge l...

Cars in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, drive past a building decorated with a huge letter “Z,” which has become a symbol of the Russian military operation in Ukraine, along with a hashtag reading, "We don't abandon our own." The symbols serve as reminders of the conflict that has dragged on for a year. (AP Photo, File)

(AP Photo, File)

              People open champagne to congratulate newlyweds outside a registry office in St. Petersburg, Russia, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. The dominating sentiment among Russians throughout the year was that the fighting in Ukraine is "somewhere far away, it is not affecting us directly," according to Denis Volkov, director of Russia's top independent pollster Levada Center. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky, File)
            
              A couple sit in a bar in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023. Even after Russia sent troops to Ukraine, nightlife in Moscow and St. Petersburg goes on as usual, with restaurants and bars in the city centers often full. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)
            
              Workers hang a billboard with a portrait of a Russian officer honored for action in Ukraine and the words "Glory to the heroes of Russia" in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022. Similar billboards have gone up across Russia to commemorate servicemen who have fought in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Russian soldiers read letters written by schoolchildren in a gesture of support at an undisclosed location in a Russian-controlled part of the Donetsk region, in eastern Ukraine, Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2023. Schoolchildren are writing to soldiers in Ukraine or make drawings for them. (AP Photo/Alexei Alexandrov)
            
              President Vladimir Putin speaks at his annual televised New Year's message after a ceremony during his visit to the headquarters of the Southern Military District, at an unknown location in Russia, Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022. In Putin's view, an aggressive West wants to crush Russia amid its invasion of Ukraine. His narrative, along with increasingly repressive measures to stifle domestic dissent, has galvanized patriotic support among many of his countrymen. (Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)
            
              Emergency workers load debris of a warplane on a truck at the scene of a plane crash in a residential area in Yeysk, Russia, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022. A total of 15 people were killed in the city of Yeysk on the Sea of Azov, adjacent to Ukraine, after a military plane crashed there in October, hitting a residential building. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A visitor walks past boutiques closed in the GUM department store in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. Hundreds of Western brands have pulled their business from Russia following the invasion of Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A logo of a newly opened Stars Coffee in the former location of a Starbucks in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2023. Russian singer and 
entrepreneur Timur Yunusov, better known as Timati, along with Russian restaurateur Anton Pinskiy, bought the Starbucks stores following the company's withdrawal from Russia after troops were sent into Ukraine. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
            
              People line up to visit a newly opened restaurant in a former McDonald's outlet in Bolshaya Bronnaya Street in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023. Hundreds of Western brands have pulled their business from Russia after troops were sent into Ukraine. Some 
McDonald’s restaurants became Vkusno i Tochka ("Tasty — Period"), offering mostly the same menu. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
            
              Recruits hold their weapons during military training at a firing range in the Krasnodar region in southern Russia, Oct. 21, 2022. President Vladimir Putin announced a partial mobilization in September, the first since World War II, amid the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A woman looks at the graves of Russian soldiers at a cemetery in Volzhsky, outside Volgograd, Russia, Thursday, May 26, 2022. The Russian military has so far confirmed just over 6,000 deaths among its troops in Ukraine. Western estimates put the number much higher – in the tens of thousands. (AP Photo, File)
            
              The father and son of Russian army Sgt. Daniil Dumenko, 35, who was killed during fighting in Ukraine, mourn at a ceremony in Volzhsky, outside Volgograd, Russia, Thursday, May 26, 2022. The Russian military has so far confirmed just over 6,000 deaths among its troops in Ukraine. Western estimates put the number much higher – in the tens of thousands. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Recruits carry ammunition during military training at a firing range in the Rostov-on-Don region in southern Russia, Oct. 4, 2022. President Vladimir Putin announced a partial mobilization in September, the first since World War II, amid the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              An oil tanker is moored at the Sheskharis complex, part of Chernomortransneft JSC, a subsidiary of Transneft PJSC, in Novorossiysk, Russia, Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2022, one of the largest facilities for oil and petroleum products in southern Russia. Russia earned record oil revenues of about $325 billion in 2022 after the war in Ukraine sent oil prices sharply higher, to over $120 per barrel as Western buyers shunned Russian oil, even though it was initially not subject to sanctions. (AP Photo, File)
            
              People, most of them Russians, cross the border between Georgia and Russia at Verkhny Lars, in Georgia, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022. The Kremlin's announcement of a partial mobilization in September sent waves of panic throughout the country. Flights abroad sold out and long lines formed at border crossings. Estimates say the number of those who left the country out of fear of being drafted into the army is in the hundreds of thousands. (AP Photo/Shakh Aivazov, File)
            
              People walk next to their cars waiting to cross into Kazakhstan at the Mariinsky border crossing, about 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of Chelyabinsk, Russia, Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022. The Kremlin's announcement of a partial mobilization in September sent waves of panic throughout the country. Flights abroad sold out and long lines formed at the country's border crossings. Estimates say the number of those who left the country out of fear of being drafted into the army is in the hundreds of thousands. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Russian recruits take a train at a railway station in Prudboi, in Russia’s Volgograd region, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. President Vladimir Putin announced a partial mobilization, the first since World War II, amid the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A Russian recruit and his wife embrace at a railway station in Prudboi, in Russia’s Volgograd region, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. President 
Vladimir Putin announced a partial mobilization, the first since World War II, amid the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A police officer stands inside a police bus with detained demonstrators during am antiwar protest near Red Square with St. Basil's Cathedral, right, in the background in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Sept. 24, 2022. The Kremlin's crackdown against those critical of what it insists on calling a "special military operation" has been ruthless and unparalleled in the history of post-Soviet Russia. Most of those daring to take to the streets are swiftly arrested. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Riot police detain antiwar protesters in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered a partial mobilization of reservists in Russia amid the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Russian opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza is escorted to a hearing in a court in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. 
Kara-Murza is in jail facing charges of spreading false information about the Russian military as part of a crackdown on the opposition during the war in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Russian opposition activist and former municipal deputy of the Krasnoselsky district Ilya Yashin gestures, smiling, as he stands in a defendant’s cubicle in a courtroom, prior to a hearing in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Dec. 9, 2022. Yashin was charged with spreading false 
information about the Russian military and sentenced to 8 1/2 years in prison for speaking out against the war in Ukraine. (Yury Kochetkov/Pool Photo via AP, File)
            
              Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dmitry Muratov, editor-in-chief of the influential Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, left, and Sergei Sokolov, his 
deputy, sit in a courtroom prior to a hearing in the Basmanny District Court in Moscow, Russia, Monday, Sept. 5, 2022. The newspaper was 
stripped of its license in an ongoing crackdown on independent media. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Russian police detain an antiwar protester in St. Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Sept. 24, 2022. The Kremlin's crackdown against those critical of what it insists on calling a "special military operation" has been ruthless and unparalleled in the history of post-Soviet Russia. Most of those daring to take to the streets a swiftly arrested. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Police detain a demonstrator with a poster that reads "I'm against the war," in Moscow, Russia, on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022, after Russia's attack on Ukraine. The Kremlin's crackdown against those critical of what it calls a "special military operation" has been ruthless and 
unparalleled in the history of post-Soviet Russia. Most of those daring to take to the streets a swiftly arrested. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A demonstrator holds a sign reading “No war!” in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022. The Kremlin's crackdown against those critical of what it calls a "special military operation" has been ruthless and unparalleled in the history of post-Soviet Russia. Most of those daring to take to the streets are swiftly arrested. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Sasha Skochilenko, a 32-year-old artist and musician, stands in a defendant’s cage in a courtroom during a hearing in the Vasileostrovsky district court in St. Petersburg, Russia, on April 13, 2022. Skochilenko, an artist and a musician, was arrested after she replaced several price tags in a supermarket with antiwar slogans. She is facing up to 10 years in prison if convicted. (AP Photo, File)
            
              People are seen through a window inside a restaurant at Patriarshiye Prudy (Patriarch's Ponds), a hip district in Moscow, Russia, on 
Friday, Feb. 10, 2023. Despite the war in Ukraine, nightlife goes on in the capital with dining and drinking establishments often full in the city center. The word on the wall reads "Patriki" which means Patriarch's Ponds. (AP Photo, File)
            
              A billboard in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday Nov. 16, 2022, shows a picture of a Russian soldier awarded a medal for his actions in Ukraine. Similar billboards have been placed all around the Russian capital to honor servicemen who have fought in Ukraine. (AP Photo, File)
            
              Cars in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, drive past a building decorated with a huge letter “Z,” which has become a symbol of the Russian military operation in Ukraine, along with a hashtag reading, "We don't abandon our own." The symbols serve as reminders of the conflict that has dragged on for a year. (AP Photo, File)

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Moscow’s nights display few signs of a nation at war.

Cheerful crowds packed restaurants and bars in the Sretenka neighborhood on a recent Saturday night, watched by officers marked as “tourist police.” Nearby, a top-hatted guide led about 40 sightseers to a 300-year-old church.

There’s only an occasional “Z” — the symbol of Russia’s “special military operation,” as the Ukraine invasion is officially known — seen on a building or a shuttered store abandoned by a Western retailer. A poster of a stern-faced soldier, with the slogan “Glory to the heroes of Russia,” is a reminder the conflict has dragged on for a year.

Western stores are gone, but customers can still buy their products — or knockoffs sold under a Russian name or branding.

The painful, bruising changes to Russian life require more effort to see.

A broad government crackdown has silenced dissent, with political opponents imprisoned or fleeing abroad. Families have been torn apart by the first mobilization of reservists since World War II. State TV spews hatred against the West and reassuring messages that much of the world still is with Russia.

And Russia’s battlefield deaths are in the thousands.

QUASHING THE CRITICS

“Indeed, the war has ruined many lives — including ours,” Sophia Subbotina of St. Petersburg told The Associated Press.

Twice a week, she visits a detention center to bring food and medicine to her partner, Sasha Skochilenko, an artist and musician with serious health issues. Skochilenko was arrested in April for replacing supermarket price tags with antiwar slogans.

She is charged with spreading false information about the military, one of President Vladimir Putin’s new laws that effectively criminalize public expression against the war. The crackdown has been immediate, ruthless and unparalleled in post-Soviet Russia.

Media cannot call it a “war,” and protesters using that word on placards are hit with steep fines. Most who took to the streets were swiftly arrested. Rallies fizzled.

Independent news sites were blocked, as were Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. A prominent radio station was taken off the air. The Novaya Gazeta newspaper, led by 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dmitry Muratov, lost its license.

Skochilenko, who says she is not an activist but simply someone horrified by war, faces up to 10 years in prison.

Prominent Putin critics either left Russia or were arrested: Ilya Yashin got 8½ years, Vladimir Kara-Murza is jailed awaiting trial and Alexei Navalny remains in prison.

Entertainers opposing the war quickly lost work, with plays and concerts canceled.

“The fact that Putin has managed to intimidate a significant part of our society is hard to deny,” Yashin told AP from jail last year.

PUSHING THE GOVERNMENT LINE

The purge of critics was followed by a splurge of propaganda. State TV suspended some entertainment shows and expanded political and news programs to boost the narrative that Russia was ridding Ukraine of Nazis, a false claim Putin used as pretext for the invasion. Or that NATO is acting via puppets in Kyiv but that Moscow will prevail.

“A new structure of the world is emerging in front of our eyes,” proclaimed anchor Dmitry Kiselev in a December rant on his weekly show. “The planet is getting rid of Western leadership. Most of humanity is with us.”

These messages play well in Russia, says Denis Volkov, director of the country’s top independent pollster Levada Center: “The idea that NATO wants to ruin Russia or at least weaken … it has been ?ommonplace for three-fourths (of poll respondents) for many years.”

The Kremlin is pushing its narrative to the young. Schoolchildren were told to write letters to soldiers, and some schools designated “A Hero’s Desk” for graduates fighting in Ukraine.

In September, schools added a subject loosely translated as “Conversations about Important Things.” Lesson plans for eighth to 11th graders seen by AP describe Russia’s “special mission” of building a “multipolar world order.”

At least one teacher who refused to teach the lessons was fired. Although not mandatory, some parents whose children skip them face pressure from administrators or even police.

A fifth grader was accused of having a Ukraine-themed photo on social media and asking classmates about supporting the war, and she and her mother were detained briefly after administrators complained, said her lawyer, Nikolai Bobrinsky. When she skipped the new lessons, authorities apparently decided to make “an example” of her, he added.

SURVIVING SANCTIONS

The sanctions-hit economy outperformed expectations, thanks to record oil revenues of about $325 billion after the war sent energy prices soaring. The Central Bank stabilized the plummeting ruble by raising interest rates, and the currency is stronger against the dollar than before the invasion.

McDonald’s, Ikea, Apple and others left Russia. The golden arches were replaced by Vkusno — i Tochka (“Tasty — Period”), while Starbucks became Stars Coffee, with essentially the same menus.

Visa and Mastercard halted services, but banks switched to the local MIR system, so existing cards continued to work in the country; those traveling abroad use cash. After the European Union banned flights from Russia, airline ticket prices rose and destinations became harder to reach. Foreign travel is now available to a privileged minority.

Sociologists say these changes hardly bothered most Russians, whose average monthly salary in 2022 was about $900. Only about a third have an international passport.

Inflation spiked nearly 12%, but Putin announced new benefits for families with children and increased pensions and the minimum wage by 10%.

MacBooks and iPhones are still easily available, and Muscovites say restaurants have Japanese fish, Spanish cheese and French wine.

“Yes, it costs a bit more, but there’s no shortage,” said Vladimir, a resident who asked not to be fully identified for his own safety. “If you walk in the city center, you get the impression that nothing is happening. Lots of people are out and about on weekends. There are fewer people in cafes, but they are still there.”

Still, he admitted the capital seems emptier and people look sadder.

‘IN THE TRENCHES, OR WORSE’

Perhaps the biggest shock came in September, when the Kremlin mobilized 300,000 reservists. Although billed as a “partial” call-up, the announcement sent panic through the country since most men under 65 — and some women — are formally part of the reserve.

Flights abroad sold out in hours and long lines formed at Russia’s border crossings. Hundreds of thousands were estimated to have left the country in the following weeks.

Natalia, a medical worker, left Moscow with her boyfriend after a summons was delivered to his mother. Their income was cut in half and she misses home, but they’ve decided to try it for a year, said the woman, who asked that her last name and location not be revealed for their safety.

“Between ourselves, we’re saying that once things calm down, we will be able to come back. But it wouldn’t resolve the rest of it. That huge snowball is rolling downhill, and nothing will be back (as it was),” Natalia said.

Draftees complained of poor living conditions at bases and shortages of gear. Their wives and mothers claimed they were deployed to the front without proper training or equipment and were quickly wounded.

A woman who is contesting her husband being drafted said her family life fell apart after she suddenly had to care for her children and frail mother-in-law.

“It was hard. I thought I’d lose my mind,” said the woman, who spoke on condition of anonymity because his legal case is continuing. Her husband came home on leave — suffering from pneumonia — and needs psychological care because he jumps at every loud sound, she said.

Vasily, a 33-year-old Muscovite, learned authorities tried twice this month to deliver a summons to a former apartment where he is officially registered. Although not sure if the summons was to draft him or to clear up his enlistment records, especially after a September attempt to deliver call-up papers, he doesn’t intend to find out.

“All my friends who went (to the enlistment office) to figure it out are in the trenches now, or worse,” added Vasily, who withheld his last name for his own safety.

Volkov, the pollster, said the dominating sentiment among Russians is that the war is “somewhere far away, it is not affecting us directly.”

While anxiety over the invasion and mobilization came and went over the year, “people started feeling again that it indeed doesn’t affect everyone. ‘We’re off the hook. Well, thank god, we’re moving on with our lives.'”

Some fear a new mobilization, which the Kremlin denies.

LIVES LOST

As the war became bogged down by defeats and setbacks, families got the worst news possible: a loved one was killed.

For one mother, it was too much to bear.

She told AP she became “hysterical” and “started shaking” when told her son was missing and presumed dead while serving on the Moskva, the missile cruiser that sank in April. The woman, who at the time spoke on condition of anonymity because she feared reprisal, said she found it hard to believe he was killed.

The military has confirmed just over 6,000 deaths, but Western estimates are in the tens of thousands. Putin promised generous compensation to families of those listed as killed in action — 12 million rubles (about $160,000).

In November, he met with a dozen mothers, which Russian media said were hand-picked among Kremlin supporters and officials, and told one of them her son’s death wasn’t in vain.

“With some people … it is unclear why they die — because of vodka or something else. When they are gone, it is hard to say whether they lived or not — their lives passed without notice,” he told her. “But your son did live – do you understand? He achieved his goal.”

___

Associated Press writer David McHugh in Frankfurt, Germany, contributed.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of the Ukraine war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Russia’s year of war: Purge of critics, surge of nationalism