Lucian Kim Profile picture
May 27 15 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Having just returned from Kyiv, I’d like to share some main takeaways from my meetings with political and military actors, people both supportive and critical of the Zelensky administration, as well as ordinary Ukrainians I met along the way. Image
Most remarkable is Ukrainians’ resilience and unity in the third year of a relentless, unprovoked attack by Russia. Although there is grumbling—Ukraine is a democracy—there is broad consensus for the need to keep fighting and awareness of the dire consequences of losing the war. Image
People in Kyiv take constant air raid alarms with sangfroid. They are confident in the air defenses around the capital. But one old acquaintance said she thinks a second Russian attack on Kyiv is possible—something she wouldn’t have said a year ago. Image
It doesn’t take long for people to express frustration with the government and voice the suspicion that someone must be profiting from the war. But even if Zelensky is losing popularity, Ukrainians understand that this is no time for elections.
Under fire and partial occupation, Ukraine cannot hold new elections. Millions of people are displaced from their homes. There is no way to guarantee security. The main peril is that a divisive election campaign could tear apart the country from the inside. Image
The Kremlin is spreading the idea that Zelensky is illegitimate—ridiculous considering Putin has just tricked his way into a fifth term. A fierce political opponent of Zelensky told me elections cannot be held until 3 months after a total ceasefire and the lifting of martial law.
Surprisingly, there is little nervousness about the prospect of a second Trump presidency. Given how disdainfully Trump treated Ukraine in 2019, I find that naive. But many Ukrainians are fed up with the Biden administration’s caution and think Trump could shake things up.
Everyone in Kyiv is talking about Andriy Yermak, Zelensky’s powerful chief of staff. At one dinner party, Yermak was ridiculed as “the real first lady” (among other things). Defenders of the presidency say Yermak is a scapegoat and the man who gets things done.
There is friction between Zelensky’s office and the State Department. US diplomats are seen as being stuck on conventional talking points (civil society, anti-corruption) when Ukraine is in an existential struggle. Not surprisingly, Yermak prefers going straight to Jake Sullivan.
In an effort to step back into the global limelight, Zelensky is placing inflated hopes on a Swiss peace conference next month. Although his administration sees it as a way for Ukraine to regain agency, the conference most likely will end in big declarations and little deeds.
The US is curbing Ukraine’s expectations ahead of NATO’s 75th anniversary summit in Washington. Ukrainians joke that NATO stands for “No Action, Talk Only.” Pragmatic Ukrainians say a bilateral security agreement with the US is the best Ukraine can hope for in Biden’s first term.
I heard grudging respect for Russia’s ability to switch to a war footing and adapt to a changing battlefield. Some expressed frustration that Ukraine’s economy had not been put on “military rails,” others that red tape was hampering Ukrainians’ amazing ability to self-organize. Image
Putin killed the Russian language in Kyiv. In 20 years of traveling there, I always heard more Russian on the street than Ukrainian. On this visit, I heard very little, especially among young Ukrainians. I promise to start learning Ukrainian—you guys let me be lazy. Image
Mobilization affects all Ukrainians. Everyone lives in the shadow of war when a father, son, brother, husband or friend could be called up. My best Ukrainian friend takes it fatalistically—even though he travels abroad for work and has had many chances to dodge the draft. Image
Many people believe Ukraine has to muddle through to the start of next year, when things have a chance of looking up. “Everything is going to be ok,” my old Ukrainian acquaintance said. “The question is at what cost.” END Image

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More from @Lucian_Kim

Mar 21
Just submitted my 375-page, peer-previewed book manuscript to @ColumbiaUP. It was a little harder to conceive than a real baby, but now it's just 9 months away from delivery. Image
This book is based on my almost 20 years reporting from Ukraine and Russia. It is an accessible but detailed history of Putin's transformation into an embittered tyrant who saw it as his historical mission to reconquer Ukraine.
I witnessed the events I discuss, from the Orange Revolution and Russia's invasion of Georgia to the arrival of Russian troops in Crimea and the Russian-backed insurgency in the Donbas. I watched as Russia, which I first visited in 1991, turn into a full-blown dictatorship.
Read 10 tweets
Jan 29, 2023
New: Dalai Lama's representative in Russia, Telo Tulku, resigns as leader of Buddhists in Russia's Kalmykia leader after Russian officials brand him a "foreign agent" for opposing Putin's war and openly supporting Ukraine. khurul.ru/2023/01/28/obr…
Telo Tulku, also known as Erdne Ombadykow, was born to a Kalmyk immigrant family in US, told his parents at age 4 he wanted to become a monk and was educated in India. In 1991 he made his first trip to Kalmykia, a southern Russian region where Buddhism is the traditional faith.
Telo Tulku became the spiritual leader of Kalmykia's Buddhists in 1992. He has restored temples destroyed by Communists and organized the Dalai Lama's 2004 visit to Russia. khurul.ru/shadzhin-lama-…
Read 4 tweets
Oct 19, 2022
My latest for @ForeignPolicy in 5 tweets:
On the surface, Ramzan Kadyrov sends the message that Chechnya, once Russia's most rebellious region, is now its most loyal. In fact, the outsize role Kadyrov has come to play only highlights Russia's fragility. foreignpolicy.com/2022/10/19/che…
That's not to say Russia's regions are about to break with Moscow. Putin's vaunted "power vertical" holds regional leaders on a tight leash by keeping them dependent on financial and political support.
But the more manpower and money Putin expends on the war in Ukraine, the looser his grip on Russia's far-flung provinces becomes. If Putin's empire-building project fails, Chechnya could once again become a source of instability for the Russian state.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 30, 2022
Putin's "elite" gathers in Kremlin to hear him declare 4 Ukrainian regions Russian territory. Hours earlier, Russian missiles struck the capital of Zaporizhzhia, one of those regions, reportedly killing at least 20 people. Image
Putin starts his speech after making his "elite" squirm 18 minutes, justifies illegal annexation of territories with passing reference to UN Charter, then jumps to his most dangerous hobby: history. Image
Putin demands Ukraine now cease fire and negotiate, adding that the return of occupied Russian territory is not on the table. Applause.
Read 10 tweets
Sep 10, 2022
In 2014, I spent several days in Izium, Ukraine, after Russian proxy forces withdrew from nearby Sloviansk, the first target of the Russian-backed insurgency. Izium was sleepy and peaceful. Image
But there were reminders of past conflicts, like a Soviet monument to 94 Bolshevik fighters killed by White forces in 1919... Image
... or a memorial to the Red Army soldiers who gave their lives beating back German invaders in WW2. Image
Read 5 tweets
May 12, 2022
Not without reason is Putin often called a master tactician but poor strategist. From a strategic point of view, Putin's attack on Ukraine has thrown back Russia to its weakest position since World War II.
My latest piece for @kennaninstitute: wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/russ…
Strategically, the status quo ante was favorable to Russia, since the simmering conflict was draining Ukraine's scarce resources and hobbling its aspirations to join the EU and NATO. The US, Germany and France were uninterested in inflaming tensions with Russia over Ukraine.
Russia's isolation in its own neighborhood has nothing to do with NATO; its lack of true allies is a strategic disaster entirely of Putin's own making. Ukraine is the most egregious example of how Russia's postimperial phantom pains have clouded the Kremlin's strategic thinking.
Read 7 tweets

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