New York Times bestselling author of Collusion and The Snowden Files Luke Harding’s personal, frontline reporting on Russia’s harrowing invasion of Ukraine, the biggest news event of 2022 and an inflection point in international politics
In a damning, inspiring, and breathtaking narrative of what is likely to be a turning point for Europe—and the world—Guardian correspondent and New York Times bestselling author Luke Harding reports firsthand on the first year of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. When, just before dawn on February 24, 2022, Vladimir Putin declared war on its neighbor, Harding was there, on the ground in Kyiv. The destruction brought by Russia was harrowing. Refugees sheltered in metro stations or fled to other parts of Europe. Among the unarmed Ukrainians who remained, some were summarily shot for the simple crime of carrying a cell phone. But this senseless violence was met with astounding resilience—from, among others, the country’s embattled leader Volodymyr Zelenskiy—and the courage of a people prepared to risk everything to preserve their nation’s freedom.
Here are piercing portraits of the leaders on both sides of this monumental struggle, a fascinating look into the war’s possible future, a haunting depiction of the atrocities in Bucha and elsewhere, and an intimate glimpse into the ordinary lives being impacted by the biggest conflict in Europe since the Second World War. Harding captures this crucial moment in history with candor, insight, and an unwavering focus on the human stories that lie at its heart.
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LUKE HARDING is a journalist, writer, and award-winning foreign correspondent with The Guardian. He is the author of seven previous nonfiction books: Shadow State, Collusion, A Very Expensive Poison, The Snowden Files, Mafia State, WikiLeaks, and The Liar (the last two co-written by David Leigh). Two have been made into Hollywood movies. His books have been translated into thirty languages. Harding lives near London with his wife, the freelance journalist Phoebe Taplin, and their two children.
THREE
Servant of the People
Bankova Street, Kyiv
February 26, 2022
I’m here.—V olodymyr Zelenskiy
One winter evening, I walked up Hrushevskoho toward a row of government buildings. The Kyiv street is named after Mykhailo Hrushevsky, a historian whose bearded visage appears on Ukraine’s fifty-hryvnia note. Hrushevsky was head of the Central Rsada, the 1917–1918 parliament that proclaimed Ukraine’s independence from Bolshevik Russia, and he was a revered patriot and intellectual.
Subsequent Ukrainian leaders did not always match up to the saintly Hrushevsky. During the years following the country’s modern independence, the whiff of scandal was never far away. The accusation, inevitably, was corruption. And in the case of the gangster-like Yanukovych—who was caught cheating in the 2004 presidential election and who returned as president in 2010—selling out to Moscow.
There were other structural issues characteristic of post-Soviet states. Ukraine’s oligarchs were so powerful, so unbudgeable, they constituted a permanent shadow government. The courts, prosecutor’s office, and anti-corruption bureau were susceptible to political influence. The culture of paying bribes was entrenched. Large private fortunes were hidden offshore.Reform was elusive.
I passed the Verkhovna Rada, the Supreme Council or parliament, and stopped at number 5. It was a damp, cold, foggy day in late January. I showed my passport to a policeman in a dark blue uniform and entered through an ornamental gate. There was a formal garden with a sweeping view over the black Dnipro, and on the left, a turquoise neoclassical palace stood, brightly lit.
This was the Mariinskyi, the Ukrainian president’s official residence, constructed in the eighteenth century for the tsar, and subsequently used by governors and as a museum.
I had come to see the palace’s latest incumbent, who had been elected in a landslide nearly two years previously. With the threat of invasion hanging in the air, the president’s press team had invited a group of foreign journalists for a briefing. Aides escorted us down a long corridor into a ceremonial reception room, decorated in French empire style with a lozenge-pattern floor. There was no lectern; a chair had been placed informally on a dais in front of blue-and-yellow flags.
Exactly on time the president walked in. Of medium height, five feet five inches, perhaps, boyish looking, he was dressed in a black suit and tie with a white shirt. The cameras clicked. Three days earlier, he had celebrated his forty-fourth birthday. He arrived with a self-deprecating remark. At the time, Covid was racing around Kyiv. “Can I be without mask?” he asked his audience in English.
He nodded, gave us a ceremonial mini bow, and sat down with an “Oof.”
Enter Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
I half expected him to remove a bicycle clip from his right ankle. Or to leap onto a stage and do a small theatrical kick in the air. This, of course, was the real president. But close-up it was hard to distinguish him from his alter ego, Vasiliy Petrovych Holoborodko, the fictional president from the hit Ukrainian TV comedy series Servant of the People. Holoborodko had done all of these things and more.
Where, I wondered, did Holoborodko end and Zelenskiy begin?
Between 2015 and 2019, Zelenskiy had played Holoborodko on the nation’s TV sets. The actor was already well known as a versatile comedian and performer. He appeared in the popular show Vecherniy Kvartal, or Evening Quarter, and in 2006 won his country’s version of Dancing with the Stars. Servant of the People made him a household name. Zelenskiy’s character is a secondary-school history teacher who one day rants about impunity and misrule, themes familiar to every Ukrainian. A student secretly films Holoborodko’s classroom outburst, and the clip goes viral online.
Holoborodko stands reluctantly for election after his students crowdfund his entry fee. He wins. As president, Holoborodko is a self-effacing everyman, a genuine and likable guy, unspoiled by fame. He cycles to work, turns up for his inauguration in a taxi, and squabbles with his ex-wife and his family. In office, he is decent and true to himself, an outsider and naif who unexpectedly finds himself bearing great responsibility.
Zelenskiy’s friends from Kvartal-95, the production studio he founded, wrote the script. It was a classic fairy tale, a sort of Cinderella with oligarchs. Some of it was shot at the Mezhihirya estate outside Kyiv, where Yanukovych built himself a lavish Swiss-style chalet, together with a replica galleon and private zoo. The show was genuinely funny, a collective tonic during a traumatic period of revolution and war in the Donbas.
In 2018, during season three, the show received a cosmic twist, as if penned by the same capricious postmodern gods who gave America and the rest of humankind Donald J. Trump.
Zelenskiy announced he was going to run for president. Actual president— as in, doing the job for real. He registered Servant of the People as a political party. When I arrived in Kyiv in March 2019 on a study trip with the German Marshall Fund of the United States, Zelenskiy was leading in the polls. I met his campaign team in a modern office in the Pechersk district, close to the United Arab Emirates embassy. They were agreeable, new faces. About politics they knew little.
Like Vasily Petrovych, Zelenskiy wished to clean up public life. His campaign chief, Ivan Bakanov—later the head of the SBU intelligence bureau—said the candidate wanted to turn Ukraine from a “monster state” into a “service state.” That meant repatriating offshore wealth and canceling immunity from prosecution for politicians.
On Russia, Bakanov admitted that Ukraine had an “existential problem.” “We are the victim of bullying,” he told me. Zelenskiy’s solution was to sit down with Putin. As president, he would end the grinding war in the east with Moscow. This peace message worked. In the spring 2019 election, Zelenskiy trounced sitting president Petro Poroshenko, winning 73 percent of the vote.
That was the high point.
Zelenskiy hoped Putin might be appeased. In his first months in office Zelenskiy refused to call the Russian president an aggressor. His new government toyed with the idea of offering possible concessions to Moscow. One was the resumption of the supply of water from southern Ukraine to occupied Crimea, which was stopped when Russia annexed the peninsula in 2014.
This appeasement strategy bore a few results. There were prisoner exchanges in late 2019 and a series of short-lived cease-fires across the “line of control.” Ukrainian forces pulled back. But it gradually became apparent that de-escalation wasn’t really happening. Instead the Russian side accepted Zelenskiy’s concessions and carried on shooting. More Ukrainian soldiers died.
Meanwhile, attitudes in Moscow toward Zelenskiy were beginning to harden. There was frustration that he would not yield to Russian demands in the Minsk agreements—the negotiating process between the two countries, which began in 2014, guaranteed by France and Germany. Putin demanded political recognition of the Donbas separatist enclaves, followed by the withdrawal of heavy weaponry and a cease-fire; Zelenskiy wanted the reverse sequence.
In the face of hardball tactics Zelenskiy took a tougher anti-Kremlin stance. In February 2021—weeks before Putin’s fateful Siberian holiday with Shoigu—Ukraine’s national security council closed down three TV channels controlled by...
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