Why Vladimir Putin has already lost this war
Yuval Noah Harari
The Russians may yet conquer Ukraine. But Ukrainians
have shown in the past few days that they will not let them hold it
Mon 28 Feb
2022 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/feb/28/vladimir-putin-war-russia-ukraine
Less than a
week into the war, it seems increasingly likely that Vladimir Putin is heading
towards a historic defeat. He may win all the battles but lose the war. Putin’s
dream of rebuilding the Russian empire has always rested on the lie that
Ukraine isn’t a real nation, that Ukrainians aren’t a real people, and that the
inhabitants of Kyiv, Kharkiv and Lviv yearn for Moscow’s rule. That’s a
complete lie – Ukraine is a nation with more than a thousand years of history,
and Kyiv was already a major metropolis when Moscow was not even a village. But
the Russian despot has told his lie so many times that he apparently believes
it himself.
When
planning the invasion of Ukraine, Putin could count on many known facts. He
knew that militarily Russia dwarfs Ukraine. He knew that Nato would not send
troops to help Ukraine. He knew that European dependence on Russian oil and gas
would make countries like Germany hesitate about imposing stiff sanctions.
Based on these known facts, his plan was to hit Ukraine hard and fast,
decapitate its government, establish a puppet regime in Kyiv, and ride out the
impotent rage of western sanctions.
But there
was one big unknown about this plan. As the Americans learned in Iraq and the
Soviets learned in Afghanistan, it is much easier to conquer a country than to
hold it. Putin knew he had the power to conquer Ukraine. But would the
Ukrainian people just accept Moscow’s puppet regime? Putin gambled that they
would. After all, as he repeatedly explained to anyone willing to listen,
Ukraine isn’t a real nation, and the Ukrainians aren’t a real people. In 2014,
people in Crimea hardly resisted the Russian invaders. Why should 2022 be any
different?
With each
passing day, it is becoming clearer that Putin’s gamble is failing. The
Ukrainian people are resisting with all their heart, winning the admiration of
the entire world – and winning the war. Many dark days lie ahead. The Russians
may still conquer the whole of Ukraine. But to win the war, the Russians would
have to hold Ukraine, and they can do that only if the Ukrainian people let
them. This seems increasingly unlikely to happen.
Each
Russian tank destroyed and each Russian soldier killed increases the
Ukrainians’ courage to resist. And each Ukrainian killed deepens the
Ukrainians’ hatred. Hatred is the ugliest of emotions. But for oppressed
nations, hatred is a hidden treasure. Buried deep in the heart, it can sustain
resistance for generations. To re-establish the Russian empire, Putin needs a
relatively bloodless victory that will lead to a relatively hateless peace. By
spilling more and more Ukrainian blood, Putin is making sure his dream will never
be realised. It won’t be Mikhail Gorbachev’s name written on the death
certificate of the Russian empire: it will be Putin’s. Gorbachev left Russians
and Ukrainians feeling like siblings; Putin has turned them into enemies, and
has ensured that the Ukrainian nation will henceforth define itself in
opposition to Russia.
Nations are
ultimately built on stories. Each passing day adds more stories that Ukrainians
will tell not only in the dark days ahead, but in the decades and generations
to come. The president who refused to flee the capital, telling the US that he
needs ammunition, not a ride; the soldiers from Snake Island who told a Russian
warship to “go fuck yourself”; the civilians who tried to stop Russian tanks by
sitting in their path. This is the stuff nations are built from. In the long
run, these stories count for more than tanks.
The Russian
despot should know this as well as anyone. As a child, he grew up on a diet of
stories about Russian bravery in the siege of Leningrad. He is now creating more
such stories, but casting himself in the role of Hitler.
The stories
of Ukrainian bravery give resolve not only to Ukrainians, but to the whole
world. They give courage to the governments of European nations, to the US
administration, and even to the oppressed citizens of Russia. If Ukrainians
dare to stop a tank with their bare hands, the German government can dare to
supply them with some anti-tank missiles, the US government can dare to cut
Russia off Swift, and Russian citizens can dare to demonstrate their opposition
to this senseless war.
Unfortunately,
this war is likely to be long-lasting. But the most important issue has already
been decided. The last few days have proved to the entire world that Ukraine is
a real nation, that Ukrainians are a real people, and that they definitely
don’t want to live under a new Russian empire. The main question left open is
how long it will take for this message to penetrate the Kremlin’s thick walls.
Yuval Noah
Harari is a historian and author of Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
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