An award-winning writer explains the cultural background to Putin’s ill-fated invasion of Ukraine.
As an independent journalist, Zygar, author of The Empire Must Die and All the Kremlin’s Men, has long been an outspoken critic of Putin and especially his invasion of Ukraine. After the Kremlin made opposition to the war illegal, the author fled his native Russia and went into exile in Germany, where he continues to work as a columnist. In this authoritative book, Zygar provides historical context for the invasion and rejects Putin’s claim that Ukraine has never been a legitimate political entity. The result is a sprawling text with hundreds of characters, stretching from the time of Peter the Great to the present. Zygar describes Russia’s impulse for empire building as akin to a drug. “Imperial history is our disease; it is inherently addictive,” he writes. Ukraine has often been the victim of this addiction, and it has been repeatedly attacked, occupied, and dismembered only to rebuild itself. The most remarkable aspect of the story is that over the centuries, the spark of Ukrainian independence has never been fully extinguished, and it caught fire when the Soviet Union collapsed. Putin believes that he is destined to reconstitute the Soviet empire, but Zygar argues convincingly that it will all end badly. As the author shows, Putin is increasingly isolated and paranoid, losing touch with reality. Zygar calls on Russians to come to genuine terms with their bloody history and reject the state-sanctioned version of events. The failure of the most recent invasion could be the trigger for this process. This is not an easy read, and sometimes the narrative seems like a quagmire of names and claims. Still, Zygar’s knowledge is undeniable, and the book is worth the effort for those who want to understand the bigger picture.
A brave, passionate book setting Russia’s invasion and Ukraine’s resistance into the broad sweep of history.