The Prague Post - 'Existential war': Putin steels Russia for long conflict

EUR -
AED 4.025463
AFN 78.167263
ALL 98.12143
AMD 428.757986
ANG 1.961978
AOA 1003.890567
ARS 1175.713524
AUD 1.813886
AWG 1.97271
AZN 1.867466
BAM 1.936199
BBD 2.20454
BDT 132.676823
BGN 1.958043
BHD 0.412787
BIF 3245.627521
BMD 1.09595
BND 1.459914
BOB 7.546156
BRL 6.405394
BSD 1.091778
BTN 93.147556
BWP 15.205732
BYN 3.573557
BYR 21480.619234
BZD 2.193157
CAD 1.559373
CDF 3148.664634
CHF 0.943954
CLF 0.027517
CLP 1055.952075
CNY 7.980215
CNH 7.994999
COP 4617.818039
CRC 552.257949
CUC 1.09595
CUP 29.042674
CVE 109.162859
CZK 25.256829
DJF 194.772658
DKK 7.461451
DOP 68.94317
DZD 146.132916
EGP 55.406831
ERN 16.439249
ETB 143.898803
FJD 2.537019
FKP 0.835862
GBP 0.850563
GEL 3.01429
GGP 0.835862
GHS 16.972364
GIP 0.835862
GMD 79.061399
GNF 9475.528482
GTQ 8.431346
GYD 229.254251
HKD 8.520633
HNL 28.031641
HRK 7.531044
HTG 143.343408
HUF 399.350875
IDR 18351.104812
ILS 4.100568
IMP 0.835862
INR 93.526347
IQD 1431.866134
IRR 46399.220938
ISK 143.095054
JEP 0.835862
JMD 172.167596
JOD 0.777072
JPY 161.061946
KES 141.638659
KGS 95.010491
KHR 4352.669558
KMF 487.859474
KPW 986.276181
KRW 1590.633299
KWD 0.337131
KYD 0.911348
KZT 550.076373
LAK 23680.10477
LBP 98136.316246
LKR 323.507761
LRD 218.95043
LSL 20.538045
LTL 3.236056
LVL 0.66293
LYD 5.285164
MAD 10.429775
MDL 19.620603
MGA 5076.303289
MKD 61.658793
MMK 2300.996619
MNT 3841.00944
MOP 8.779153
MRU 43.466064
MUR 49.724333
MVR 16.922669
MWK 1898.189804
MXN 22.386696
MYR 4.868891
MZN 70.012133
NAD 20.538045
NGN 1683.513946
NIO 40.281534
NOK 11.790932
NPR 149.712299
NZD 1.95777
OMR 0.421888
PAB 1.09595
PEN 4.018131
PGK 4.500209
PHP 62.527367
PKR 306.85129
PLN 4.192283
PYG 8698.556163
QAR 3.989667
RON 4.936776
RSD 116.170962
RUB 92.150642
RWF 1553.16187
SAR 4.110221
SBD 9.314783
SCR 15.702833
SDG 657.983462
SEK 10.947921
SGD 1.46277
SHP 0.861245
SLE 24.933268
SLL 22981.523891
SOS 624.338542
SRD 40.073149
STD 22683.951476
SVC 9.589967
SYP 14248.902271
SZL 20.538045
THB 37.379899
TJS 11.927797
TMT 3.83338
TND 3.348431
TOP 2.639392
TRY 41.641737
TTD 7.399933
TWD 36.251121
TZS 2908.99992
UAH 45.246584
UGX 4002.449729
USD 1.09595
UYU 46.363411
UZS 14146.542876
VES 76.763752
VND 28281.398907
VUV 135.466285
WST 3.094836
XAF 650.479299
XAG 0.037037
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.967025
XDR 0.826303
XOF 650.479299
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.477062
ZAR 20.929909
ZMK 9864.868719
ZMW 30.641924
ZWL 352.89544
  • RBGPF

    1.0200

    69.02

    +1.48%

  • JRI

    -0.8600

    11.96

    -7.19%

  • BCC

    0.8100

    95.44

    +0.85%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.68

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -3.4600

    65.93

    -5.25%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    22.71

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    -3.2800

    48.16

    -6.81%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • VOD

    -0.8700

    8.5

    -10.24%

  • RIO

    -3.7600

    54.67

    -6.88%

  • RYCEF

    -1.5500

    8.25

    -18.79%

  • GSK

    -2.4800

    36.53

    -6.79%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.83

    +0.7%

  • AZN

    -5.4600

    68.46

    -7.98%

  • BTI

    -2.0600

    39.86

    -5.17%

  • BP

    -2.9600

    28.38

    -10.43%

'Existential war': Putin steels Russia for long conflict
'Existential war': Putin steels Russia for long conflict / Photo: Olga MALTSEVA - AFP

'Existential war': Putin steels Russia for long conflict

When Russia introduced patriotism classes in primary and secondary schools last September, Tatyana Chervenko decided she was not going to peddle Kremlin "propaganda" to her eighth-grade students in Moscow.

Text size:

The 49-year-old used some of the classes to teach maths instead and ignored talking points pushed by the Kremlin about the conflict raging in Ukraine.

Chervenko was motivated by her concern that authorities were using Soviet-style tools to foster patriotism and militarise society -- just weeks before the Kremlin announced the first army call-up since World War II.

Her act of protest did not go unnoticed.

The school administration formally reprimanded her twice, and in October masked men showed up at her work, bundled her into a police vehicle and detained her for several hours.

In December, after resisting mounting pressure from her employers, Chervenko was fired.

"They want to produce little soldiers. Some little soldiers will go to war, other little soldiers will make ammunition and a third group will develop software to support those efforts," Chervenko told AFP.

"They are playing a long game."

- 'Radical transformation' -

Political analysts and sociologists say that one year after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops into Ukraine, the Kremlin is putting society on a war footing and digging in for a years-long conflict.

Putin delivered his New Year's Eve address this year surrounded by uniformed personnel, and rallied Russians behind the offensive in Ukraine and confrontation with the West.

Sociologist Grigory Yudin said the Kremlin was preparing Russians for a "major, existential war" and the education system was being leveraged to meet that goal.

"We are talking about a radical, complete transformation of education to mobilise Russian youth for war," Yudin told AFP.

"Right now education has two functions -- propaganda and basic military training."

The patriotism classes -- dubbed "Important Conversations" -- combine World War II revisionism, lessons on Russian values and the Kremlin's narrative about Moscow's troops "protecting" compatriots in Ukraine.

Schools have also been ordered to play the national anthem and hoist the flag at the start of each week.

The education ministry is expected in September to introduce courses in high schools and universities on handling Kalashnikov assault rifles and grenades, in an echo of Soviet times when these were curriculum staples.

Across Russia, schoolchildren are also being encouraged to send letters to Russian soldiers in Ukraine and make camouflage nets and candles for the trenches.

The government's sweeping campaign to boost patriotism within society is targeting adults, too.

Billboards hailing Russian soldiers and the letter Z -- Moscow's symbol for the assault -- are omnipresent across the country.

Putin has ordered cinema screenings of documentaries dedicated to the offensive in Ukraine.

And military journalists working for state media have gained celebrity status. One was selected to sit on the Kremlin's human rights council.

- 'Death cult' -

For years, Putin used World War II as a rallying cry for his political agenda, giving the Soviet Union's victory over Nazi Germany a cult-like status.

Now, state television and the Orthodox Church are building on that army pride and taking it to new heights.

"There is a glorification of war and elements of a death cult," Yudin said.

In September -- when Putin called up hundreds of thousands of reservists -- the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, said during a sermon that dying in Ukraine "washes away all sins".

One of the country's leading propagandists, Vladimir Solovyov, told Russians to stop fearing death.

"Life has been greatly overrated," he said on state television in January. "Why fear what's inevitable?"

For Andrei Kolesnikov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, these developments point to Russia's creeping return to totalitarianism.

The Kremlin's logic, Kolesnikov told AFP, is that "future generations should obediently implement the will of the state".

"This is no longer just an authoritarian state," he warned.

Sociologists say that the Kremlin's patriotic push is winning over many Russians, despite government plans to slash social spending and allocate an estimated third of the budget to defence and security this year.

- 'Military way of life' -

Putin supporter Nikolai Karputkin says he backs "the special military operation" in Ukraine, the Kremlin's official name for the conflict.

"We are at war with the West, with Western values, which they are trying to impose on us," Karputkin told AFP at a military-themed leisure park outside Saint Petersburg.

The 39-year-old -- who brought his family to the park, where children and their parents can ride battle tanks and handle weapons -- said he was also in favour of basic military training in schools.

"We have to boost patriotism," he said. "This is a good thing."

"We have to defend the traditional values and the sovereignty of our motherland."

Yudin, the sociologist, said Russian authorities would promote military and patriotic sentiment as long as they deemed necessary.

"The military way of life will last as long as Putin and his team are in the Kremlin," said Yudin.

"If they stay there for 20 years, then Russia will fight for 20 years."

X.Kadlec--TPP