© 2020 – 2023 AEA3 WEB | AEAƎ United Kingdom News
AEA3 WEB | AEAƎ United Kingdom News
News

A key reason Putin’s bloody invasion is faltering? He’s no match for Zelenskiy’s iPhone | Jonathan Freedland

The leader’s messages to his people – and the west – have been central to the heroic fightback. But now more than ever, we must stay engaged

Ukraine has so many nightmares to contend with, but here’s one more: that Ukraine becomes Bosnia. By Bosnia I don’t mean the country itself so much as the war of a quarter-century ago and the way that conflict came to be seen from afar. For much of the 1990s, war in the Balkans was background noise, even to those who were just an hour or two’s flight away. Every now and then an especially horrible episode might propel it to the top of the news; otherwise, Bosnia was a permanent fixture on the inside pages and halfway through the TV bulletin. Bridget Jones confessed to her diary that she felt guilty for not talking or thinking about it, but it just slipped out of view. Besides, you knew the war would still be there tomorrow.

That is the danger Volodymyr Zelenskiy faces now: that his struggle against Russian invasion becomes a long, slow war of attrition and so, with time, the world’s attention starts to wander. The war would go on; it would still be there on page 14. But newer stories would edge it aside. Soon, yellow and blue would be last season’s colours.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist. To listen to Jonathan’s podcast Politics Weekly America, search “Politics Weekly America” on Apple, Spotify, Acast or wherever you get your podcasts

Continue reading…

Related posts

‘It was humiliating’: police apologise for handcuffing undressed student in raid

AEA3

Australian gardener becomes first person to survive deadly flesh-eating bacteria

AEA3

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s bail revoked over witness tampering claim

AEA3

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This