When anyone tells you that Ukrainians should trade land for peace, remember: On that land, people have been subjected to arrest, torture and murder - and still are.
To mark the war's first anniversary I wrote about the nature of the Russian occupation, together with Nataliya Gumenyuk, who runs the Reckoning Project

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/02/russia-ukraine-war-potemkin-occupation-murder-torture/672841/

Incompetence and Torture in Occupied Ukraine

How Russian invaders unleashed violence on small-town residents

The Atlantic
Like their Soviet predecessors, the Red Army officers who occupied central Europe in 1944-45, the Russian army has targeted local mayors and councillors, as well as volunteers. Anyone who is active, anyone who is dedicated, anyone who is public-spirited or civic-minded. Unlike the Red Army, the modern Russian soldiers don't understand why they are there.
Failure and incompetence lead to violence; violence creates more resistance; and resistance, so hard for the invaders to comprehend, creates wider, broader, ever more random destruction. This is the logic of genocide, and it is unfolding right now, in our time, in the occupied Ukrainian territories that have not yet been liberated, in the towns where the torture chamber still exist and Russian soldiers still arrest people arbitrarily on the street. Just on the other side of the frontline.

@anneapplebaum

"The 2nd assumption made by those advocating off-ramps is that Russia, even if it were to begin negotiating, would stick to the agreements it signed...

But brazen dishonesty is now a normal part of Russian foreign policy as well as domestic propaganda."
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/05/why-ukraine-must-defeat-putin-russia/629940/

#Russia #Ukraine #RussiaUkraineWar
#Putin #PutinsWar

The War Won’t End Until Putin Loses

Offering the Russian president a face-saving compromise will only enable future aggression.

The Atlantic