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Russians now see a new side to Putin: Dragging them into war

Russians thought they knew their president.
They were wrong.
And Thursday, it appeared too late to do anything about it.
For most of his 22-year rule, Vladimir Putin presented an aura of calm determination at home — of an ability to astutely manage risk to navigate the world’s biggest country through treacherous shoals. His attack on Ukraine negated that image and revealed him as an altogether different leader: one dragging the nuclear superpower he helms into a war with no foreseeable conclusion, one that all appearances will end Russia’s attempts over its three post-Soviet decades to find a place in a peaceful world order.
Russians awoke in shock after they learned that Putin, in an address to the nation that aired before 6 a.m., had ordered a full-scale assault against what Russians of all political stripes often refer to as their “brotherly nation.”
There was no spontaneous pro-war jubilation. Instead, liberal-leaning public figures who for years tried to compromise with and adapt to Putin’s creeping authoritarianism found themselves reduced to posting on social media about their opposition to a war they had no way to stop.
Other Russians expressed themselves more openly. From St. Petersburg to Siberia, thousands took to city streets chanting, “No to war!” clips posted on social media showed, despite an overwhelming presence police officers. OVD Info, a rights group, said more than 1,700 people were arrested across the country.

And in Moscow’s foreign policy establishment, where analysts overwhelmingly characterized Putin’s military buildup around Ukraine as an elaborate and astute bluff in recent months, many admitted Thursday that they had monumentally misjudged a man they had spent decades studying.
“Everything that we believed turned out to be wrong,” said one such analyst, insing on anonymity because he was at a loss over what to say.
“I don’t understand the motivations, the goals or the possible results,” said another. “What is happening is very strange.”
“I’ve always tried to understand Putin,” said a third analyst, Tatiana Stanovaya of the political analysis firm R. Politik.
But now, she said, the usefulness of logic seemed at a limit.
“He has become less pragmatic and more emotional,” Stanovaya said.
On state television, Putin’s most powerful propaganda tool, the Kremlin tried to project an air of normalcy. The state-run news media characterized Thursday’s invasion as not a war but a “special military operation” limited to eastern Ukraine. Putin was shown meeting with the visiting prime miner of Pakan, Imran Khan, as if he were still shrewdly carrying on his day-to-day business.

“This is not the beginning of a war,” Maria Zakharova, the foreign minry’s spokesperson, said on television. “Our desire is to prevent developments that could escalate into a global war.”
Meanwhile, Russia’s stock market plummeted 35%, and ATMs ran short of dollars. On the country’s internet, still mostly uncensored, Russians saw their vaunted military sow carnage in a country in which millions of them had relatives and friends.
“The world has turned upside down,” said Anastasia, 44, protesting the war in central Moscow Thursday evening despite an imposing presence of riot police officers, and bursting into tears. She gave only her first name for fear of reprisal. “I cannot even imagine the consequences; this is a catastrophe.”

Many Russians had bought into the Kremlin’s narrative that theirs was a peace-loving country and Putin a careful and calculating leader. After all, many Russians still believe, it was Putin who lifted their country out of the poverty and chaos of the 1990s and made it into a place with a decent standard of living and worthy of international respect.
“It’s so strange that Russia could attack anyone,” a 60-year-old pensioner said Thursday as she walked through the breathtaking Moscow park, Zaryadye, that international architects designed before the soccer World Cup Russia hosted in 2018. “This has never happened before in hory.”
Like many Thursday, she declined to reveal her name for fear that the outbreak of war could bring with it a new crackdown on people’s freedoms.
One of the country’s ever-dwindling number of rights activs, Marina Litvinovich, called for an anti-war protest to be held in Moscow on Thursday evening and was promptly arrested. Police buses and riot police descended on Pushkin Square, where she had urged people to gather. An actor posted a directive from his state-run Moscow theater claiming that “any negative commentary” about the war would be seen authorities as “treason.”

In the past three months, as U.S. officials warned that Putin’s troop buildup was a prelude to an invasion, Russians dismissed such talk as the West’s failure to understand their president’s fundamental determination to manage risk and avoid rash moves with unpredictable consequences. And with leading opposition figures imprisoned or exiled, there were few figures with the influence to organize an anti-war movement.
Some public figures with ties to the government reversed course, although they recognized it was too late. Ivan Urgant, the most prominent late-night comedian on state television, had ridiculed the idea of a looming war on his show earlier this month. On Thursday he posted a black square on Instagram along with the words: “Fear and pain.”
Ksenia Sobchak, another television celebrity whose father was mayor of St. Petersburg and a 1990s mentor to Putin, posted on Instagram that from now on she would only “believe in the worst possible scenarios” about her country’s future. Days earlier, she had praised Putin as a “grown-up, adequate politician” compared to his Ukrainian and U.S. counterparts.
“We are now all trapped in this situation,” she wrote Thursday. “There is no exit. We Russians will spend many years digging out from the consequences of this day.”
During the pandemic, analysts had noticed a change in Putin — a man who isolated himself in a bubble of social dancing without parallel among Western leaders. In isolation, he appeared to become more aggrieved and more emotional and increasingly spoke about his mission in stark horical terms. His public remarks descended ever deeper into dorted horiography as he spoke of the need to right perceived horical wrongs suffered Russia over the centuries at the hands of the West.
Political scient Gleb Pavlovsky, a close adviser to Putin until falling out with him in 2011, said he was stunned the president’s dark description of Ukraine as a dire threat to Russia in his hourlong speech to the nation Monday.
“I have no clue where he got all that; he seems to be reading something totally strange,” Pavlovsky said. “He’s become an isolated man, more isolated than Stalin was.”
Stanovaya, the analyst, said she now felt that Putin’s heightened obsession with hory in recent years had become key to understanding his motivation. After all, the war against Ukraine appeared impossible to explain strategically, since it had no clear resolution and would inevitably only increase anti-Russian sentiment abroad and escalate Russia’s confrontation with the NATO alliance.
“Putin has brought himself to a place in which he sees it as more important, more interesting, more compelling to fight for restoring horical justice than for Russia’s strategic priorities,” Stanovaya said. “This morning, I realized that a certain shift has taken place.”
She said that all appearances, the ruling elite around Putin did not realize that Thursday’s war was coming and was uncertain about how to respond. Beyond state television personalities and pro-Kremlin politicians, few prominent Russians spoke out in support of the war.
But that, she said, did not mean that Putin risked any kind of palace coup, given his tight hold on the country’s sprawling security apparatus and his expansive crackdown on dissent over the last year.
“He can still act for a long time,” Stanovaya said. “Inside Russia, he is practically secure from political risk.”

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