24-02-2025
MOSCOW: Driving into Tver, the first thing I notice are the soldiers.
They’re everywhere. On billboards, the sides of buildings, at bus stops. Portraits with the words “Hero of Russia”. Posters of troops with Kalashnikov rifles encouraging the public to “Love, be proud of and defend” Russia.
In other words, to sign up and go and fight in Ukraine. Three years after its full-scale invasion of its neighbor, Russia is seeking new recruits.
Despite all the military imagery around town, if you live in Tver it’s possible to convince yourself that life is normal. The front line is hundreds of miles away.
“Just look around,” Mikhail, a local teacher, tells me. “Cars are passing by and all the shops are open. No shells are falling from anywhere. We are not panicking. We can’t hear any sirens wailing. We do not run to any evacuation points.”
For many Russians their invasion of Ukraine what the Kremlin still calls a “special military operation” is something they only encounter on their TV screens but for people like Anna, it’s much more real.
“I know a lot of people who went off to fight,” Anna says when we get chatting on the street.
“Some of them never came home. I hope [the war] ends as soon as possible.”
Donald Trump claims that’s what he wants, too. Without inviting Ukraine to the negotiating table, the Trump administration has already entered direct talks with the Russian leadership.
What do Russians make of the US president and his overtures to Moscow?
“Trump is a dark horse,” believes Anna. “I’m not sure what to expect from him.”
‘We want Ukraine’s total capitulation’
Some of the people I talk to in Tver repeat the official narrative they have been hearing for the last three years on state TV: that their country is not the aggressor that Russia is defending Russians and Russian-speakers in Ukraine and liberating, not occupying, territory.
It doesn’t mean that Russian society as a whole buys into this alternative reality.
“In a society people always prefer to be in the mainstream,” believes Andrei Kolesnikov, a columnist for newtimes.ru and Novaya Gazeta. “If the mainstream is pro-war and the TV says that we are at war with the West, the average citizen will think like this. It’s easier not to think about the details. You want to live peacefully, so why not join the majority?
“Some researchers call this the foetal position. When you defend yourself from this unexplainable world you look like a baby. You say: ‘I can’t explain to myself what is happening. I believe you. You can feed me with words. I’ll accept it.’ This is typical for all societies of this kind: a bit authoritarian, a bit totalitarian.”
Larissa and her husband Valery willingly accept the official line.
“We’re all for the special military operation,” Larissa tells me. “We’re ready to volunteer and go there ourselves!”
They haven’t yet, clearly.
“We hope (Russia) will be victorious. We want Ukraine’s total capitulation.”
The police turn up. They’ve received a call informing them that “suspicious-looking people with a camera” are going around Tver. Meaning us.
They’re polite but want to know why we’re here. They take a statement from our driver. They check our vehicle. They ask me for an official explanation for our visit. I tell them we’re gauging the mood away from Moscow. We show our documents, which are in order while we’ve been talking to the officers, a camera crew from Russian state TV has pitched up and started filming us. (BBC)