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A nasty war of words - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Everything about the war in Ukraine comes as a shock. We are ignorant of the possibilities of human duplicity, greed, selfishness, etc but when we stare them in the face they always look uglier than we could have imagined.

Reports from the frontline speak about the propaganda war that is being fought in Ukraine alongside the vicious military engagement, and as the war grinds into its second month, what each side, and the NATO allies, too, are telling their people is jaw-droppingly Orwellian in its intent to misinform and condition thinking.

Top marks for shamelessness goes to the Russians. It was like watching a tragi-comedy last week to see President Putin address a stadium full of Russians at a music concert to mark the eighth anniversary of the annexation of Crimea. Many people there, dutifully captured on camera, their gleeful faces sporting the colours of the Russian flag, were forced to attend.

What their heroic leader told them was mind-boggling. There was no war in Ukraine, no pulverising of cities, attacks on civilians, nuclear threats, mass exodus, terrible losses among Russian soldiers, no admission of embarrassment that Russian might could not quell its smaller neighbour’s fervour for independence.

Rather, Russia was preventing genocide in Crimea. He quoted the Bible’s admonishment to sacrifice ourselves for our friends as justification for Russia”s low-grade involvement that is causing some inconveniences at home.

As breathtakingly incredible is the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who regularly tells the world’s cameras the opposite of everything we know to be true because we have seen it via several international news outlets in real time and we have heard the voices of the dispossessed as they run from damnation.

Barefaced state lying continued last week with prominent government critic and opposition party leader Alexei Navalny receiving another nine-year sentence in a phony trial, accused of fraud and contempt of court. He was gaunt but defiant, having already survived a nerve-gas attack in 2020 and returned to Russia, determined to fight Putin’s regime, which he had been investigating for fraud. Tit for tat.

Ukrainian President Zelensky, meanwhile, has become the darling of the West. He will probably get a Nobel Peace Prize if he survives. Once a professional comedian, his acting powers have not deserted him. He adapted rousing speeches of great wartime leaders such as Winston Churchill and rallied his people to fight, managing successfully to tap into their desire to live lives free of oppression and the dictates of an increasingly megalomaniac autocrat.

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Who knows just how exaggerated the casualty figures Ukraine publishes are, or how many enemy fighters and generals have really been felled? Certainly, the UN casualty figures can only be a conservative estimate.

Zelensky’s efforts to push his reluctant Western friends into action to increase support for Ukraine are getting more frantic as the

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