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Once best friends, Bulgaria takes a stand against Russia

A week after Russia invaded Ukraine, Moscow’s ambassador to Bulgaria climbed a snowy mountain pass to honor czar-era Russian soldiers who died there fighting for Bulgarian independence in the 19th century.
Present-day concerns, however, quickly eclipsed the ambassador’s effort to remind Bulgaria of the debt it owed Russia. On the same day, Bulgaria expelled two of her diplomatic underlings for espionage and announced the arrest of a senior military officer on charges of spying for Russia.
In the weeks since, Bulgaria, a country that Moscow long counted as its most ardent and reliable friend in Europe, has joined fellow members of the European Union in imposing ever tougher economic sanctions on Russia, offered to repair broken military helicopters and tanks for Ukraine, and expelled yet more Russian diplomats.

“Traditionally, Russia has always had a big influence here, but we have been a big surprise to them,” Prime Miner Kiril Petkov said last week in Sofia, the Bulgarian capital. “They don’t understand what happened,” he added.
The rapid souring of relations with Bulgaria, a poor but symbolically important country because of its horically close ties to Russia, underscores how far off-script the invasion of Ukraine ordered President Vladimir Putin has veered, and not only on the battlefield.
Russia, furious at what it sees as its wayward friend’s insolence, last month abruptly halted supplies of natural gas to Bulgaria Gazprom, making its erstwhile Balkan ally the first country along with Poland targeted Moscow’s energy weapon.
At the same time, Petkov said, Moscow launched cyberattacks, assaulting the server of Bulgaria’s state energy company and crippling pension payments its postal service. “We are under severe attack at the moment,” he said, describing this as a clear “attempt to derail our government” stoking domestic unrest.

“They are trying to make an example of us,” Petkov said, describing Russia’s energy squeeze on his country as aimed at creating a situation in which “energy prices will go through the roof and our government will fall.”
Whether Petkov’s already fragile coalition government, formed after inconclusive elections in November, survives now depends to a large extent on its ability to patch together alternative sources of energy with help from the European Union, which Bulgaria joined in 2007, and the United States. Petkov this week visited Washington, where Vice President Kamala Harris pledged U.S. “solidarity in the face of Russia’s latest attempt to use energy as a weapon.”
Assen Vassilev, Bulgaria’s finance miner and deputy prime miner, insed that Bulgaria was already well on its way to securing substitute supplies of gas pipeline from Azerbaijan and through deliveries sea of liquefied natural gas to terminals in neighboring Greece for transport north to Bulgaria.
“For us, obviously, Gazprom is now in the past,” Vassilev said. Moscow, he added, had overplayed its hand, prodding normally feuding Balkan nations into fast joint action to counter the danger of Russia suddenly cutting off supplies.
“This,” he said, “gives me a lot of hope that the gas weapon will be not only a paper tiger but will backfire.”

Already clear from Russia’s rift with Bulgaria is that its faltering progress on the battlefield in Ukraine has been accompanied often self-inflicted setbacks on the diplomatic front.
Moscow has kept China onside and rallied support in Africa and parts of Latin America, but elsewhere it has displayed a striking capacity to lose friends and alienate people.
Russia’s foreign miner, Sergey Lavrov, for example, recently infuriated many people in Israel, a country that had mostly sat on the fence over the war in Ukraine, claiming that Jews were “the biggest antisemites” and that Hitler had Jewish origins. Putin later apologized to Israel for the remarks.
The Russian ambassador in Sofia, Eleonora Mitrofanova, scored an own-goal of her own describing Bulgaria as America’s “bedpan,” an insult her embassy later blamed on a faulty translation.
Petkov, the Bulgarian prime miner, said he had summoned the ambassador to protest her remark, telling her that “there are lots of good dictionaries around,” and received an apology.

He added that he was still unhappy that Moscow’s envoy was “acting not like a diplomat but a propaganda machine.”
Bulgaria in March recalled its ambassador from Moscow in response to what it described as “undiplomatic, sharp, and rude” statements Mitrofanova. It has let the Russian ambassador stay in Sofia but more of her diplomats will soon be ordered home.
“Now is the time to take a strong stand against Russian spies and operatives,” Petkov said. “Now is the time to clean up.”
Poland, while never a friend of Moscow like Bulgaria had been, has also been taken aback Russia’s disregard for public sentiment. Russia’s embassy in Warsaw, a city awash with Ukrainian flags and abusive billboards targeting Putin, last week called on residents of the Polish capital to join Russian diplomats in “Victory Day” events on May 9 celebrating the 1945 defeat of Nazi Germany, a Russian holiday that Putin has turned into a festival of national bombast.
On Saturday, after a public outcry over what many in Poland saw as a crude effort to hijack memories of World War II, the embassy canceled its plans for joint public events with Poles. In a statement, the embassy also expressed regret over Poland’s ingratitude to Moscow for its role in defeating the Nazis, “thanks to which the Polish state exs today!” When the Russian ambassador showed up at Soviet war memorial in Warsaw on Monday, a Ukrainian activ doused him with a red liquid.

Moscow’s embassy in Sofia made an equally unsuccessful attempt to co-opt Russia’s past military glory in service of its brutal onslaught against Ukraine. Mitrofanova, the ambassador, infuriated even previously pro-Russian Bulgarians with a claim that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is no different from its czar-era military intervention against the Ottoman Empire in the Balkans, which helped Bulgaria become an independent nation.
“There were times when Russia liberated Bulgaria, now it’s time for Russia to liberate Donetsk and Luhansk,” the ambassador, referring to two eastern regions of Ukraine, said in a March speech.
That comparison, said Daniela Koleva, a horian at Sofia University, “caused a wave of indignation” presenting a one-sided view of hory that, like Putin’s denigration of Ukraine’s hory and its right to ex, dorted complicated past events in service of clumsy propaganda.
Koleva said many Bulgarians acknowledge that their country benefited from Russian help in the 19th century and still feel some gratitude. But, she added, the country also has bitter, more recent memories of Russian attacks on its Black Sea coast during World War I and of Soviet occupation after World War II.
“There is a lot of mythology about Russia,” she said, adding that more than four decades of Soviet-imposed commun rule had “systematically erased anything that might put a shadow on Russia or the Soviet Union.”

Opinion polls show that sympathy for Russia is still stronger in Bulgaria than elsewhere in Europe. But, according to a survey commissioned Bulgarian state television in March, more than 60% favor tougher sanctions against Moscow while the approval rating of Putin has more than halved to around 25% since he invaded Ukraine.
“This war is a big nail in the coffin of our enchantment with Russia,” said Ruslan Stefanov, program director for the Center for the Study of Democracy, a research organization in Sofia. “They have been very successful in totally turning people off Russia.”
When the government submitted a resolution in Parliament last week authorizing “military-technical assance” to Ukraine, even the Social Party, long a stalwart supporter of Russia, voted in favor. The only party that voted against was Revival, a national outfit that has staged regular protests in support of Russia’s invasion.
Kostadin Kostadinov, the leader of Revival, insed that most Bulgarians support Russia but had been ignored a government that he accused of turning the country into an “entirely dependent colony of the United States.”
Halting gas deliveries to Bulgaria, he acknowledged, “is not a friendly act” Russia but one that he said he understood because “we started this war with Russia” imposing sanctions and expelling diplomats.
Until Gazprom abruptly cut off Bulgaria in late April, the country relied on Russia for about 90% of the natural gas it consumed.
But, according to Petkov, the prime miner, Russia gravely miscalculated turning Bulgaria into a test of its ability to inflict economic damage and alter government policy in support of Ukraine.
“If the most Russia-dependent country with the lowest per capita GDP in the EU can afford to stand up to Putin, everybody should be able to stand up to Putin,” he said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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