Matthew Parris’s Ukrainian revisionism
The Spectator columnist seems to have a very short memory.
ByDiscover the latest New Statesman content on Russia, exploring the politics, culture and economy of the nation. Insightful coverage and analysis of the war in Ukraine and Putin’s presidency.
The Spectator columnist seems to have a very short memory.
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The war in Ukraine is among the biggest tests the EU has faced – but instead of showing leadership, Olaf…
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Ukraine’s national security adviser on German betrayal, the coming Russian onslaught and why the West is scared.
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The group’s founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has used the Ukraine war to establish himself in Russian politics.
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Russian defeat in Ukraine could bring democracy to the country
It is Kyiv – not the West – which has set Ukraine’s war aims.
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Berlin is consciously and deliberately stalling on sending Kyiv battle tanks.
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Predictions for a tumultuous year ahead.
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A helicopter crash kills three Ukrainian officials, while China tries a new approach to diplomacy
Chairing a workshop with French and German politicians, I find that decline is not only a British phobia.
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They are the first senior government figures to be killed or injured since Russia’s brutal invasion began.
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Despite repeated military failures, Vladimir Putin is signalling that he is prepared to destroy Ukraine rather than back down.
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Yet pressure is increasing on Germany to send Kyiv tanks.
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While the Tories say “try not to need an ambulance”, Labour says “don’t expect us to fix everything”.
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Russia is stuck with a form of warfare that depends on artillery barrages and indifference to casualties.
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The Ukrainian novelist writes about ringing in 2023 amid drone attacks.
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Kyiv’s lionisation of 20th-century nationalists linked to atrocities is alienating allies and playing into Russian propaganda.
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The New Statesman’s writer at large identifies important global trends for the year ahead – and makes some predictions.
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Russia can’t win its self-evidently stupid war – and working out what will happen next is almost impossible.
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The New Statesman’s Writer-at-Large reviews what he got right and wrong about the past year.
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