{"id":15150,"date":"2024-01-20T05:14:29","date_gmt":"2024-01-20T13:14:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=15150"},"modified":"2025-11-15T23:31:09","modified_gmt":"2025-11-16T07:31:09","slug":"issue-of-the-week-war-human-rights-population","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=15150","title":{"rendered":"Issue of the Week: War, Human Rights, Population"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/planetearthfdn.org\/news\">Back to News<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17-1124x844.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-288636\" style=\"aspect-ratio:1.3314967860422406;width:842px;height:auto\"\/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\"><em>Behind The New Iron Curtain<\/em>, Harper&#8217;s Magazine, January 2024<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>The cover story in the January edition of Harper&#8217;s Magazine is instantly captivating by reminding that we pay scant attention to the internal realities and culture which, and human beings who, constitute the largest nation on earth&#8211;and the one that has very possibly lit the fuse of a world war three that has already started and that threatens to burn down the world. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We noted in the last post&#8211;as we shared <a href=\"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=15124\">pondering how we would begin the year in our commentaries<\/a>&#8211;the relationship between the Russian aggression against Ukraine, the expanding Middle East War, and the global confrontation between democracy and dictatorship, human rights and human brutality. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We have spent some time, although not enough, on the increasing isolationism in the US and other democratic nations, that may be coming to a tipping point&#8211;one which will tip the same way it did in helping to create World War Two. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But we certainly have not&#8211;no one has really&#8211;spent time looking at what&#8217;s happening inside Russia, and the perspective from there, inside out. When you read this piece, you realize how incomprehensible this has been. And the more you read, the hungrier you become for information, which in turn instructs about a thousand years of history and where it has landed at this critical moment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>You have to read this brilliant piece. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It reminds of how the Russian history and the Russian soul have impacted world history in ways most wonderful and most terrible. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And by the end, it reminds of the warning, indeed the apparent inevitability, of Oppenheimer&#8217;s last words to Einstein we quoted in our last <a href=\"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=15124\">Issue of the Week<\/a>&#8211;that he believed the feared incineration of the planet by even testing the atomic bomb was ultimately a fear that would be realized. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If anything, because it&#8217;s in real time now, the end of this article may be even more stunning. The most terrible of possibilies proclaimed as a moral goal.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With a tiny ray of light, making it both worse, and elucidating a reason for hope, at the same time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here it is:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/archive\/2024\/01\/behind-the-new-iron-curtain\/\">&#8220;Behind the New Iron Curtain&#8221;<\/a>, Harper&#8217;s Magazine<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By&nbsp;Marzio G. Mian,Translated by&nbsp;Elettra Pauletto, January 2024 Issue<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Caviar, counterculture, and the cult of Stalin reborn<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_10-1-900x0-c-default.jpg\" alt=\"\" style=\"\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The east bank of the Volga River. All photographs from Russia by Alessandro Cosmelli, July 2023 \u00a9 The&nbsp;artist<a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"mailto:?&amp;subject=Behind%20the%20New%20Iron%20Curtain&amp;body=https%3A%2F%2Fharpers.org%2Farchive%2F2024%2F01%2Fbehind-the-new-iron-curtain\" target=\"_blank\"><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Russia has become, to observers in the West, a distant, mysterious, and hostile land once again. It seems implausible, in the age of social media, that so little should be known about the country that has shattered the international order, but the shadows surrounding Russia have only grown since the days of the Soviet Union. Of course, it is one thing to observe the country from the outside; it is another to try to understand how Russians experience the war and react to sanctions from within, and what they hope the future holds. If Russia seems to have become another planet, it is largely because its regime has also waged war on foreign journalists, preventing them from straying beyond established perimeters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Over the summer, hoping to do precisely that, I spent a month traveling down the Volga River. In a land of great rivers, the Volga is&nbsp;<em>the<\/em>river. They call it&nbsp;<em>matushka,<\/em>&nbsp;the mother; it flows from the Valdai Hills to the land of the Chuvash, the Tatars, the Cossacks, the Kalmyks, and into the Caspian Sea. It\u2019s where Europe and Asia meet or part, are bridged or blocked, depending on whether the compass of Russian history is pointing east or west. It\u2019s where it all started, after all, where the empire took root: Along the river one finds many of the cities that have established Russian culture and faith\u2014from Ulyanovsk, the birthplace of Lenin, to Stalingrad (now called Volgograd), the site of the infamous World War II siege. This is a history that weighs heavily on Russian identity today, as the country continues to look backward, sifting its vaunted past for new myths of grandeur. It seems prepared to resist and to suffer, acts at which Russians have always excelled, and to have resigned itself to a future of isolation, autocracy, and perhaps even self-destruction.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Before starting down the river, I met with Mikhail Piotrovsky, who is an old acquaintance and the director of the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, in his office on the museum\u2019s ground floor, where he has carved out a space for himself among piles of books, stacks of paper, and various sculptures. The photographs crowding the room, of him with eminent Western leaders\u2014a smiling Tony Blair and Queen Elizabeth\u2014are now themselves relics, not unlike the tapestry of Catherine the Great hanging above his&nbsp;desk.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I asked him about the river. \u201cThe Volga was everything, and is still everything,\u201d he told me. \u201cBecause it makes you aspire to greatness. It has a sort of intimacy, sheltering and bright skies, not like the wide-open spaces of the steppe or Siberian rivers, which make you feel like a speck in the&nbsp;cosmos.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Piotrovsky is an illustrious scholar of Arabic studies. I\u2019ve known him for years, but we would normally talk about Canaletto and Byzantium, the great Islamic explorers and his beloved Sicilian wines. This time I found him in full war fervor. And, I was convinced, it was not only to defend his prestigious position: At his age, seventy-nine, he could easily keep his head down and carry on quietly, like most Russians have elected to do. He spoke with his usual calm but looked feverish, as if something were devouring him from the&nbsp;inside.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_11-1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"532\" height=\"699\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_11-1.jpg 685w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_11-1-228x300.jpg 228w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288642\">Map by Mike&nbsp;Hall<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Piotrovsky, who is mild-mannered and cerebral, and who wore his jacket loosely over hunched shoulders, seemed to have become a warrior. \u201cRussia is many people, but one nation,\u201d he asserted. \u201cRussia along the Volga was able to incorporate everyone. Islam is just as much a religion of Russian tradition and identity as is Christian Orthodoxy. In Europe, in America, you speak of nothing but multiculturalism, but your cities are bursting with hate. For us, it didn\u2019t take much to include everyone, because we\u2019re an imperial civilization.\u201d Then he grew more animated. \u201cLook at the Hermitage!\u201d he said, opening his arms to the room around us, widening his eyes. \u201cIt\u2019s the encyclopedia of world culture, but it\u2019s written in Russian because it\u2019s our interpretation of world history. It may be arrogant, but that\u2019s what we&nbsp;are.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He took a deep breath, and began to talk of Stalingrad, his Jerusalem. \u201cI don\u2019t call it Volgograd, but Stalingrad,\u201d he clarified for my sake. \u201cIt is our reference point now more than ever, an unparalleled symbol of resistance, our enemies\u2019 worst nightmare. During the Great Patriotic War, we used it to defend the Volga as a vital corridor.\u201d He continued to press the analogy: \u201cAnd it\u2019s been the same in the last few months. The Volga and the Caspian feed our trade with Iran to oppose the sanctions, while we use them to export oil to India and import what we need.\u201d He removed his glasses and cleaned them with his jacket. \u201cStalingrad is a lucky charm, it\u2019s destiny. If the Nazis had taken it, they would have cut off the Volga and conquered all of Russia. A very material thing that became spiritual. A warning. Whosoever tries it will meet the end of all the others\u2014Swedes, Napoleon, the Germans and their allies.\u201d He went on. \u201cRussians are like the Scythians: they wait, they suffer, they die, and then they&nbsp;kill.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I would think back to this meeting often over the course of my trip; following the river, I recalled the odd look in Piotrovsky\u2019s eyes and felt the echo of his words. In fact, when I visited a sturgeon farm in Astrakhan, in the Volga Delta, I saw that his view was, in certain respects, correct. Olesia Sergeeva, a biologist who heads the company that owns the farm, reiterated the importance of the ongoing trade between Iran and Russia. In her own small way\u2014I mean this only as a figure of speech; Sergeeva supplies the Kremlin with caviar\u2014she skirted the sanctions, buying feed from Iran instead of Europe, as she had done before. She spoke of this as if it were public knowledge. \u201cEverything passes through here,\u201d she said. \u201cThey\u2019re building new docks on the delta for container ships and oil tankers.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Sergeeva took me to see the Jewish, Armenian, and Iranian neighborhoods of Astrakhan. An exhibition of photographs highlighting the civilian volunteers supporting the military was being set up outside of a park. At sunset, the elegant riverfront was swarmed with families and groups of young people talking and laughing in hushed tones. Couples sat on railings eating watermelon while food stalls projected multicolored lights on the Volga. There was a fin de si\u00e8cle quality to the atmosphere, curls of smoke emanating from shashlik grills, a warm breeze delivering the lament of a distant violin. No military uniforms in&nbsp;sight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The caf\u00e9 fa\u00e7ades and the wrought-iron balconies reminded me of New Orleans. Sergeeva pointed out the renovations along the canal that runs through the old town, indicating the nineteenth-century wooden villas that will soon become hotels and luxury homes. \u201cThey seemed destined to crumble,\u201d she said. \u201cBut now that money is going around, Astrakhan is once again the gateway to European Russia, Central Asia, and India. This is how it is for now. Later, we\u2019ll&nbsp;see.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the delta, which fans out for sixty miles before reaching the Caspian Sea, pairs of fighter jets zoomed by at low altitude. I tried catching a glimpse of customs at the commercial port, but I couldn\u2019t see past the checkpoints, and the tourist port was closed. Even the ferry was no longer in service. But one could still see cranes loading and unloading a dozen cargo ships, and three barges waiting at the widest point. Sixty-three miles long, the Volga\u2013Don Canal was built under Stalin with the labor of seventy-five thousand prisoners, and opened in 1952. It is part of the waterway that connects the Volga to Rostov on the Don River, from which one can reach Mariupol, which is now controlled by the Russians. South of Volgograd, I tried taking a dirt road leading to the mouth of the canal but was intimidated by the presence of a helicopter hovering some three hundred feet above me. I decided instead to gather wild strawberries.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Astrakhan, it was rumored that the Iranians had invested billions in the development of the Caspian-Volga-Don corridor. There was talk of trafficking agricultural products and oil, but also turbines, spare mechanical parts, medicine, and nuclear components. I couldn\u2019t verify this, but it was clear that Astrakhan is central to the anti-Western economic bloc\u2019s efforts to turn&nbsp;east.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_12.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"555\" height=\"417\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_12.jpg 1425w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_12-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_12-1124x844.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_12-768x577.jpg 768w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288631\">Industrial harbor entrance, Astrakhan<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Sergeeva\u2019s caviar is refined and humanely produced. She explained that this was the result of a process that she had invented: she extracts the eggs from the sturgeon with a small incision, without killing it. This procedure can be performed three times on the same fish. She has endeavored to ensure that the production and sale of her caviar remains the same as it was before the war. \u201cIn Russia it\u2019s not a real party unless there\u2019s caviar,\u201d she said\u2014even, apparently, in the current situation. She told me that since Russia had banned wild sturgeon harvesting in the Caspian, farms in this Volga region have proliferated, their numbers rising from three to sixty in the past five&nbsp;years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Sergeeva is well-traveled and known widely for her aquaculture expertise. She could get a job anywhere, it seemed to me, so why stay? \u201cI was born here, I studied here, my husband is Russian, my son is Russian, I\u2019m Russian,\u201d she said. \u201cI wouldn\u2019t say I\u2019m a patriot, and I don\u2019t want to express my thoughts on Putin and the war. But I can assure you that my life hasn\u2019t changed. Not in the least.\u201d She blushed as she spoke, as if the subject were uncomfortable. \u201cThe Russians are reacting to the sanctions in an extraordinary way, even with a weak ruble and the inevitable inflation. The prices of essential goods have held steady. And now we\u2019re consuming better and healthier products than before the war, even exceptional cheeses.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I had never imagined that the rise of hyperlocal food would be one of the recurring themes of this trip. But it appears that the Western sanctions and war economy have intensified a traditional Russian gastronomy movement. Western products had piqued the palates of average urban Russians, and local producers were trying to fill their vacuum, proudly offering Russian-made Camembert and prosciutto, as if to provide some material evidence of&nbsp;<em>Russkiy Mir,<\/em>&nbsp;Putin\u2019s ideology of Russian supremacy. As I dined along the Volga, menus often specified the farms from which ingredients had been sourced. Restaurants served&nbsp;<em>svekolnik<\/em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>okroshka,<\/em>&nbsp;simple cold summer soups, exalting the quality of local radishes grown without Western fertilizers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And fishing has largely ceased in Rybinsk, the city once known as the fishery of the tsar. Instead, the area has reinvented itself as something like the oven of Moscow. Every day, trucks set off for the capital full of warm loaves. Bakeries abound: wheat and rye farming in the region has increased by 40&nbsp;percent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Among the first to fire up an oven was fifty-four-year-old Andrei Kovalev, who knew nothing about baking bread until three years ago. \u201cI learned to use&nbsp;<em>zakvaska<\/em>, a bread starter,\u201d he told me in his large bakery in the Red Square of Rybinsk, where a statue of Lenin replaced one of Alexander&nbsp;II and has loomed ever since. Kovalev was popular among the locals\u2014he hands out samples to passersby, sporting a beard and a rough tunic made of linen and burlap. He saw opening a bakery as a political act, one salvaging rural Russian values \u201cagainst consumerism copied from America,\u201d as he put it. \u201cOver the past thirty years people hated Russian bread,\u201d he said, \u201cthey thought it was beneath them. They wanted baguettes, the little brats! Mine are old recipes, from long before the perestroika, from back when we were&nbsp;happy.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_13-1-1400x0-c-default.jpg\" alt=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_13-1.jpg\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>A Communist Party sign, Mari El Republic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/archive\/2024\/01\/behind-the-new-iron-curtain\/#gallery-1-1706008877\"><\/a>Had it not been for a massive poster looming over a lonely intersection in the steppe, showing Sergei Kazankov alongside Lenin and Stalin, I might have missed another quite surreal thing: Soviet Union revivalism. Using a VPN to protect my online searches, I learned that Kazankov had been reelected to the State Duma in 2021 as a Communist, that he was sanctioned for supporting the invasion of Ukraine, and that his father, Ivan Kazankov, has long been a Communist power broker. Sergei himself had been the director of a meat-processing plant and agricultural combine in the Zvenigovsky District, owned by his&nbsp;father.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By this point I was traveling across the Mari El Republic, some ninety miles from Kazan, the capital of the Republic of Tatarstan. More specifically, I was in the Zvenigovsky District, which lends its name to Kazankov\u2019s company, Zvenigovsky LLC, which has become known in town as the last&nbsp;<em>sovkhoz,<\/em>&nbsp;or large-scale collective farm. I had only to make a small detour, cross a field of sunflowers, and get directions at a gas station (\u201cwhen you see the monument to Marx you\u2019re practically there\u201d) to arrive at its building, which, on first glance, seemed like a memorial to the old Soviets. The red flag of the USSR fluttered above the white and yellow complex. According to the company, it\u2019s the same size as the one lowered from the Kremlin on December 25, 1991, when Communism fell. The walls of the plant were covered in red inscriptions marked by the exclamation points the Bolsheviks had so loved to use: \u201cHonor and glory to the workers of the Zvenigovsky combine!\u201d; \u201cComrades, let us fight for our village, let us fight for Russia!\u201d; \u201cNow and forever, war on Fascism!\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The road to the entrance was lined with modern Stakhanovite-esque photographs, presenting, for instance, one worker as the best sausage stuffer, another as the best tractor driver, and a final one, sporting a mustache and a Nike T-shirt, as the mechanic of the year. Trucks and vans marked with a hammer and sickle poured out of the gates. A statue of Stalin presided over it all, his pants tucked into his boots from his place on a four-tiered pedestal. Off to the side, a metallic Lenin looked on, his brow furrowed; his dais had only two tiers, and was partially covered by the branches of a birch&nbsp;tree.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The entrance to the management building, a stolid modernist structure, was dominated by bronze letters reading&nbsp;cccp. The security guards at reception wore fatigues. I would soon realize this was one of Russia\u2019s most successful agricultural producers, delivering tens of thousands of tons of meat and dairy to the market each year. The business, established in 1995, well after the USSR was dead and gone, identified itself as a Communist-Stalinist enterprise.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ivan Kazankov is eighty-one years old and has a gray, wolf-like gaze. He\u2019s tall and robust, a wide red tie resting on his belly. He showed interest in my unexpected visit without too much reservation: you could tell he\u2019s a real boss, one who doesn\u2019t answer to anybody\u2014a top dog of this agrarian Stalingrad, this rural empire on the Volga, paradoxically inspired by the greatest peasant exterminator in history. His office seemed to have been designed with the express purpose of disorienting anyone hoping to understand Russia in 2023: busts of Stalin standing alongside Russian Orthodox icons, a portrait of Nicholas&nbsp;II looming over a Soyuz statuette, a picture of Vladimir Putin hanging next to an image of St.&nbsp;Andrew, the patron saint of Russia. To the chaos of this pantheon was added a general sense of opacity about the nature of the combine itself, which at first was presented to me as a \u201cstate-run agricultural coop, exactly like in the days of the USSR,\u201d but had turned out to be a private family holding. Ivan had made his daughter director after his son left to join the Duma. \u201cWhat matters is that it runs as before,\u201d he explained. \u201cProfits are used to increase the salaries of the four thousand employees and grow the business.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Kazan, they would later tell me that amid the robbery and corruption of the Nineties, when hardened racketeers pilfered Soviet industrial and military equipment, Kazankov had taken his own modest cut. He had gotten his hands on a run-down farm and deftly transformed it into this industrial colossus that had adapted the socialist combine production system to the wild post-Soviet market. The sausage oligarch Kazankov knows just how much Russian consumers still suffer the loss of state collectivism.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Since then, the company\u2019s net worth has become the stuff of legend. But Kazankov, too, is a great supporter of Western sanctions: \u201cThey\u2019re an incredible developmental tool for Russia,\u201d he told me. \u201cThe West should have imposed them back in the Nineties. We\u2019d be the engine of the world by now. Too bad.\u201d For him, the sanctions are pure adrenaline, and to prove it he added that his company has copied Italian, German, and Israeli \u201cproduction means\u201d to the letter: \u201cWe doubled processing in one year and we supply almost a thousand supermarkets in all of Russia.\u201d Ivan believes that his \u201cfull-circle communist company\u201d is the ideal model for \u201crebuilding a new Soviet Union with healthy local food from our&nbsp;lands.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He offered to show me their newest stable, about ten miles away, where he had replicated Israeli dairy plants. The herd there grazed in large, well-defined clearings. His driver ferried us around in a brand-new armored Mercedes that I assumed had been imported from Kyrgyzstan, a preferred route for German contraband. For the excursion, Kazankov donned a baseball cap that seemed designed to make him appear younger, with&nbsp;cccp&nbsp;stitched in red on the front and a hammer and sickle on the side. He said he was thinking of branding the cows in the same fashion. \u201cWe grow fodder and cereal on thousands of hectares of land,\u201d he explained, watching his property from the tinted window. \u201cWe raise dairy cows and pigs and take care of them all the way until the packaging of the finished product, which are meats, cheeses, kefir. Even ice cream, good like the ice cream from my childhood. Gorbachev and Yeltsin ruined ice cream, the cowards.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The fighting in Ukraine, it seemed, would lead to a mountain of rubles for Kazankov. \u201cCheese production has grown eighty&nbsp;percent,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re filling in for French and Italian cheeses. We\u2019re still buying cows.\u201d He told me that meat production generally has thrived. What was his opinion on the war? \u201cObviously we\u2019ll win,\u201d he said, \u201cbecause we know how to fight and because we can\u2019t lose. If we have to, we\u2019ll use atomic weapons, we\u2019ll destroy the earth, we\u2019ll destroy everything.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17-1124x844.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"771\" height=\"579\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17-1124x844.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17-768x577.jpg 768w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_17.jpg 1313w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288636\">Ivan Kazankov\u2019s office, Mari El&nbsp;Republic<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While in Kazan, I was invited to lunch by Farid Khairutdinov, a forty-eight-year-old businessman who had been referred to me as a \u201cvery influential Tatar in town.\u201d Messaging over an encrypted channel, he had promised me an interesting conversation. When I arrived at Tatarskaya Usadba, a renowned local restaurant, I found him waiting for me in a private room with Mansur Hazrat Jalaletdinov, a mullah at the Marjani Mosque, the only one active in Kazan until 1990, after which about a hundred more sprang up. Khairutdinov told me that they had recently, at this very table, hosted Dmitry Medvedev, the former Russian prime minister and president, now deputy chairman of the Security Council. He then explained that he considered me \u201can enemy,\u201d and said that no one wanted to meet with me or answer any of my questions. I was better off visiting a museum, he added. He had served in the FSB, he reminded me, and the mullah nodded along, clearly&nbsp;pleased.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That said, in a demonstration of Russian Tatar hospitality, they offered me an unforgettable lunch: twelve courses and three hours of conversation that was as absurd as it was instructive. They claimed that, in the Tatar language, \u201cthere is no word for retreat\u201d; that the Tatars had been the best archers under Peter the Great; and that Mikhail Kutuzov, the general who defeated Napoleon, had been a Tatar. I pointed out that Kutuzov was the one who put down the Tatar resistance in Crimea in the late eighteenth century. \u201cIn fact, he lost an eye,\u201d said Khairutdinov, and the mullah nodded. \u201cWe love to wage war. Am I right,&nbsp;Mansur?\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cIt\u2019s true,\u201d he said. \u201cWe also fight against our demons.\u201d I hoped to pursue the topic, but Khairutdinov changed the subject: \u201cSanctions have united us even more as a&nbsp;people.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As the skewered lamb arrived, Khairutdinov said that before the war I would have been eating \u201cshit lamb from New Zealand,\u201d but that this meat, tender and tasty, was Russian. Not only that, but up until yesterday the lamb had been grazing just a few miles away. He had raised it himself, he claimed. His business was in organic lamb and goose meat. He had opened stores all over Tatarstan. \u201cThere\u2019s no competition, it\u2019s amazing,\u201d he said. \u201cJust think, we used to import geese from Romania and France. Now I export goose legs and cured meat to&nbsp;Turkey.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I asked why they hadn\u2019t raised lamb and geese before the war, or why Russia, with all its intelligent and industrious entrepreneurs, produced so little and imported almost everything without generating significant income outside of the oil and gas industry. The mullah looked me in the eyes and told me that this was precisely the Russian genius: \u201cBuying without producing,\u201d he said. \u201cWhy should I make a bicycle if I can just buy one? I spend less money.&nbsp;Easy.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>More than thirty years ago, I wrote about the first stirrings of conflict from the beaches of Yugoslavia, which was then collapsing. I remember an orchestra of elderly musicians playing the foxtrot just for me, the only guest at a grand hotel on the isle of Rab. At the time, mortars were falling and people were dying just a few miles from the Dalmatian coast. Here along the Volga, war and death felt like spectral presences. People danced to techno and indulged in cocktails with improbable names: Hiroshima, Russian\u2013Japanese War, and Drunken German. In almost a month of traveling, I saw only four bombers, passing over Tver, near the source of the Volga; felt the rumbling of fighter jets just once, in the low course of the river; encountered a few unarmed soldiers on leave; and saw a column of twenty trucks with tanks covered by tarps probably setting off for the front, hundreds of miles away. The rest was Russia as usual. But an unusually dynamic Russia, to be sure. I saw construction sites and cranes operating in the suburbs, buildings and churches being restored, significant repairs being made to the federal roads (although the famous potholes were still there), workers installing new pipelines, teams of gardeners in the parks, diligent garbage collectors emptying trash cans. Cars flooded the streets each weekend, when Russians went out to their country&nbsp;homes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Was this fatalism? Indifference? Or arrogance, as Piotrovsky had implied back at the Hermitage? I struggled to find room in hotels or on ferries, all of which were overflowing with tourists forced to give up on the Mediterranean and make do with the Volga. Take Tatiana, the middle-aged manager of a supermarket chain. When I met her on a ferry in Yaroslavl, she wore a Panama hat, Gucci sunglasses, and capri sandals; she was heading downstream, to the same dacha where she had spent her summers as a girl. \u201cI\u2019ve had a boat docked in Mykonos for three years\u2014who knows when I\u2019ll see it again,\u201d she told me. \u201cI\u2019m getting to know my river again. I\u2019m running into friends I haven\u2019t seen in thirty years. An interesting vacation.\u201d I told her she looked a bit sad and resigned. \u201cRussians have been sad and resigned for thousands of years,\u201d she replied. \u201cIt\u2019s how we stay resilient. I\u2019m against this war, but I can\u2019t do anything but wait, like everyone else. They manipulate us with artificial ideas. Garbage. But the West has been humiliating us for too long. Don\u2019t we also have a right to be who we want to be without feeling like barbarians?\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18-1124x749.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"855\" height=\"570\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18-1124x749.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18-180x120.jpg 180w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_18.jpg 1500w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288637\">Tourists, St. Petersburg<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To think that the anti-Western ideas coursing through the country\u2019s veins are simply the fruits of regime indoctrination would be to overestimate Putin\u2014and to ignore what has driven Russia throughout its history, at least since the time of Peter the Great: a fascination with the West, paired with a proud and slightly overbearing defense of its own vast territory and resistance to assimilation. Russians have always vacillated between wanting to be included and fearing contamination or corruption, from harboring an inferiority complex to delusions of grandeur. It\u2019s a clash that could be understood in terms of the intellectual conflict between the pro-Western Turgenev and the Slavophile Dostoevsky. Unfortunately, we\u2019re no longer cruising at that altitude. There is arguably even less debate today than in the days of the USSR, and it\u2019s clear that Russians are now more fully in a Dostoevsky phase: their desire to lock themselves in a small but boundless world is reemerging, even among those who reject Putin and the Orthodox Church\u2019s revanchist narrative.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I met a woman named Anna, for example, who described herself as an \u201canti-establishment, pacifist, pagan environmentalist,\u201d and said that \u201cwe must be zombies to be killing our own brothers.\u201d Yet she defended \u201cfamily values\u201d and \u201clove of the ancestors.\u201d Her priority, she said, was to \u201cpreserve Russian tradition.\u201d She rejected \u201cmodern Western culture where anything goes and everything is easy and fun. Because it\u2019s obviously a sham.\u201d She went so far as to say that it\u2019s people like her \u201cwho keep old Russia in their hearts, who are the ones who safeguard the roots of Europe.\u201d Her hair was as long and blond as grain, her eyes emerald-green, and she wore traditional necklaces and a long jade dress. She was thirty-four years old and lived in the \u201cJamaica of the Volga,\u201d at the foot of the Zhiguli\u2014the only mountains in the Russian plains until the Urals\u2014which plunge into the river and create incredible botanical effects, including the growth of wild marijuana. Volunteers come from all over Russia to harvest it. \u201cMemorable parties,\u201d Anna assured me, \u201cbut now the government has practically banned non-official gatherings, it\u2019s like being in jail.\u201d She told me that she is a shamanic healer, even if her official title is nurse. \u201cIf I didn\u2019t have four children I would have been sent to the Donbas for sure,\u201d she said. Her partner composes and plays Volga dub, a kind of Russian reggae\u2014the soundtrack of the pacifist pirates of the&nbsp;river.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To reach their secret island hideout, I set out after sundown on a ramshackle raft made of pallets and surfboards. I was hosted by locals named Shukhrat and Albert: they had christened the island \u201cShubert.\u201d Their friendship was changed and deepened by the war\u2014Shukhrat lost a son, Albert sent his to Sweden. They had decided to abandon reality, taking over a strip of sand that magically emerged from the Volga in the spring. They camped out with their families and were gradually joined by other fugitives. Thus began an independent community with its own rules, foremost of which is to avoid the news. They hold meetings, yoga classes, meditation sessions. They sing antiwar reggae songs, using only traditional instruments such as balalaikas, domras, and bayans. Every Friday night, friends and musicians arrive from Kazan, Samara, and Tolyatti and put on a music festival. \u201cWe\u2019re not distancing ourselves from the world,\u201d said Albert, a former security systems engineer, \u201cbut creating our own separate world. This is our country now, based on authentic Russian values. Everything is scary out&nbsp;there.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But Shubert Island\u2019s remoteness hadn\u2019t assuaged all his concerns. He had established a special relationship with two Ukrainian YouTubers who spoke Russian and was planning on biking out to visit them in the Donbas during that fateful February 2022. \u201cThey left me voice messages asking if I was their enemy now and why were we bombing them and killing them,\u201d he told me. \u201cI still don\u2019t know how we ended up on the other side\u2014it\u2019s terrible. I can only cry, but my mom used to say that boys don\u2019t cry.\u201d These were the only tears I saw on my&nbsp;voyage.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_19.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"799\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_19.jpg 1313w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_19-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_19-1124x844.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_19-768x577.jpg 768w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288638\">Zarina and Valentina hold a photograph of Pavel, Nizhny&nbsp;Novgorod<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One Friday evening in Nizhny Novgorod, the birthplace of Maxim Gorky, I ended up on the main thoroughfare alongside the Kremlin, where I was almost trampled by a horde of drunken youths. The bars were overflowing with people dancing on the sidewalks, drinks in hand. The fa\u00e7ade of a six-story building was covered with the letter&nbsp;<em>Z,&nbsp;<\/em>a symbol of support for the war. I was walking with Artjom Fomenkov, a historian and political science professor. I asked what he thought of the scene, of the unsettling contrast between the partiers and their peers being sent to the front. \u201cThose fighting aren\u2019t from big cities, but from small towns,\u201d he explained. \u201cThe most downtrodden places,\u201d that is, where they only enlist for the money. \u201cIt\u2019s unlikely that the bulk of the urban population would feel directly affected by the war.\u201d He thought for a moment and added, \u201cand that\u2019s why they go on living like that. They\u2019re not involved, and so they do the same thing they were doing two years ago, one hundred years ago, two hundred years ago\u2014marinating in their despair.\u201d This is what I would hear referred to as the \u201cRussian syndrome,\u201d which is a mixture of nostalgia, melancholy, and affliction. \u201cPutin is just the latest to exploit this passive attitude,\u201d he said. \u201cRemember, Russians are agents of their destiny, not victims.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But just five hundred meters from the chaos, we encountered a sobering scene. Osharskaya Ulitsa is still known as the brothel street, because of its reputation in Gorky\u2019s day. A building that once served as a brothel now supposedly hosts military offices. Anyone dragged in there at night has a high chance of being sent to a training camp the next morning, and then to the front. Fomenkov seemed to reconsider his earlier comments. \u201cThe kids you saw are actually terrified, they drink much more than before,\u201d he said. \u201cThey know not to be found in certain places alone, drunk, and without a solid alibi, or at least an important last&nbsp;name.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The next day I ended up on a nameless street, in the living room of a blue cottage besieged by skeletal hens and the carcasses of old cars repurposed as chicken coops. This was the home of Pavel, who died in the Donbas in the fall of 2022, only forty days after enlisting. His eighteen-year-old daughter, Zarina, was pregnant, and looked at me with astonished eyes, green and yellow like the grass of the steppe in summer. She was sitting on a burgundy couch next to her mother, Valentina, who looked worn out. They told me that Pavel had been a taxi driver and had gone into debt. One night, he came home drunk and said he had enlisted. He showed Valentina the contract, for just over two hundred thousand rubles a month. Driving a cab had earned him fifty thousand rubles at most, and some months almost&nbsp;nothing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The ceiling was low and had been painted to resemble the sky. On the walls hung pictures of the kids\u2014one showed them swimming in the Volga with their father. Then there was Pavel, beaming with his new weed wacker. \u201cHe was a good man, respected,\u201d Valentina said. \u201cI couldn\u2019t stop him. He did it for his three children, to pay off the mortgage.\u201d Ten days of training and he left. Apparently he had stepped on a mine. \u201cThey sent him ahead to check out the terrain. But we\u2019ll never really know,\u201d said Zarina, biting her lip. Two military officers had arrived on their doorstep to deliver Putin\u2019s form letter and a medal. Valentina assured me that people were there for her\u2014even neighbors whom she hadn\u2019t spoken to in years had come by with bread and vodka. She and Pavel had loved each other, she told me, but they had never married. Valentina was now suing his mother to obtain the millions of rubles the state provided to compensate the families of the fallen. \u201cWhat was he thinking?\u201d she said. \u201cPavel had his own ideas. He used to say it was time to stick it to everyone who left the USSR. But he left to make a few bucks, so in the end he was just a mercenary,&nbsp;right?\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the corner, near the stereo and CDs, lights illuminated a small shrine flanked by the Russian flag: Pavel\u2019s accordion, his straw hat, fake sunflowers, images of the Madonna, whom he worshiped, and the teddy bears he had bought Zarina. And then, smiling above it all like a kindly uncle, Stalin. \u201cHis beloved Stalin,\u201d Valentina&nbsp;said.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_20-1400x0-c-default.jpg\" alt=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_20.jpg\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>A teenager wearing a Stalin T-shirt on a ferry<a href=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/archive\/2024\/01\/behind-the-new-iron-curtain\/#gallery-2-1706008877\"><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Stalin, as far as I could tell, had become the symbol of the summer, a totemic figure along the lines of Che Guevara. Lenin may be one of the most common statues in the world, with seven thousand in Russia alone\u2014but it is no longer Lenin\u2019s arm that points to the future. Stalin is experiencing a Second Coming, his name recurring like a mantra. He even has his own namesake sausage brand. His biggest sponsor, perhaps, is Putin, who knows that by invoking him he is pulling on a magic string that will reawaken secret dreams of&nbsp;glory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cPutin can\u2019t compare himself to Lenin,\u201d the historian Dmitry Rusin told me. \u201cHe was too intellectual and complex in these days of easy approximations. It\u2019s too European.\u201d Rusin is a professor at Ulyanovsk State University. In 1970, they built an enormous Lenin memorial in the city center. \u201cPutin prefers to be compared to Stalin, just as Stalin drew his ruthless idea of Russian power from Ivan the Terrible,\u201d said the professor as we approached the memorial. \u201cNot a European idea, but an Asian one, that doesn\u2019t hold the life of the individual in consideration. I find this return to the cult of Stalin, especially among young people, horrifying. I feel a catastrophe coming.\u201d The fountain in front of the complex had run dry. \u201cThey closed the complex for renovations five years ago,\u201d Rusin said. \u201cIt was supposed to reopen in 2020, now they\u2019re saying 2025. But no funds are coming from Moscow. They want to make Ulyanovsk&nbsp;poor.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Volgograd is a different story. Putin wants to change its name back to Stalingrad, the better to exploit the symbol of the battle. \u201cWe are again being threatened by German Leopard tanks,\u201d the president said in February 2023, inaugurating a new monument to Stalin at the museum dedicated to the two-hundred-day siege, when more than a million Soviet and German soldiers were reported dead, wounded, missing, or captured. \u201cAgain and again, we have to repel the aggression of the collective&nbsp;West.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet Samara, five hundred miles north of Volgograd, is where the ghost of Stalin really makes one realize just how little the outside world understands about Russia. The city is located at the point where the Volga veers east, as if attracted by the pull of the Urals. The city is generally known as the Russian Chicago, because of its great industrial vitality and popularity with merchants and criminals. But in the summer, Samara becomes the Saint-Tropez of the Volga, with elegant beaches and a fashionable riverside promenade that is second only to Sochi\u2019s. And just like Sochi, it seems to be a destination for hardcore Putin supporters. Bourgeois kids traverse its streets on scooters, wearing expensive American sneakers and the hottest T-shirt of the season\u2014one bearing Stalin\u2019s face and the phrase&nbsp;if i were here, we wouldn\u2019t be dealing with all this shit.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Stalin built a secret bunker under an old Communist Committee building in town in 1942, just after the narrow Soviet victory at the Battle of Moscow. These days it\u2019s a pilgrimage destination. I went on a tour of the bunker, in which at least half my group consisted of people in their twenties. We descended to find the control room and apartment for the head of the USSR. The bunker was never used, but the guide explained that it was updated during the Cuban Missile Crisis and again after the annexation of Crimea in 2014. Today it can hold up to six hundred people for five days and \u201ceven gets cell phone service.\u201d Andrei, a twenty-four-year-old electrical engineer who was visiting from Moscow with three friends, spontaneously told me of Stalin that \u201che was a winner.\u201d We were in front of an original military map of the Soviet counteroffensive. \u201cFor us young people, Stalin is number one. We must fight evil like during the Great Patriotic War.\u201d Did any negative associations come to mind? \u201cThey say a lot of things, but what matters is the results,\u201d he said. \u201cI think there were more deaths in the Nineties with the gang wars and alcohol. That was our first experience with democracy\u2014the worst period of our history.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In this second summer of what Andrei called the \u201cwar on evil,\u201d even the most zealous popes indulge the Stalin worship, despite his confiscation of Orthodox Church assets and the fact that he has turned many of their cathedrals into prisons, factories, and army barracks. It was Piotrovsky, at the Hermitage, who suggested I meet a young priest named Mikhail Rodin, whom he called \u201can emerging voice.\u201d He lived in Balakovo, Piotrovsky added, \u201ca place forgotten by&nbsp;God.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Father Rodin, who is forty-four and has four children, belongs to the Russian Orthodox Old Believer Church, which was born out of a seventeenth-century schism with the official Orthodox Church. A long history of repression and semi-clandestine masses followed. But today, the conflict with the main church, presided over by the crusading Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, seems to have subsided, with both factions supporting Russia\u2019s sacred mission in&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I arrived in Balakovo in the evening, the smell of ammonia in the air. Though the city revolved around two of the biggest power plants on the Volga, all its roads were dark. The only sign of life came from the Lucky Pub, which was hosting a concert by the Kiss, a popular local rock band\u2014all the kids seemed to know their songs. I entered and felt like I was in the Midwest; there were pool tables, darts, French fries in baskets with checkered paper, and a sign reading&nbsp;make love not war.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Batyushka Rodin, who speaks excellent English, said that his church near Balakovo\u2019s squalid industrial zone\u2014a luxury lodge with fragrant pine logs, an oven to make the communion bread, icons donated by parishioners\u2014had been financed by one Robert Stubblebine, an American native who relocated to Moscow. He\u2019s known as a VP and early shareholder of Yandex, the Russian Google, started by his business partner Arkady Volozh, an oligarch who has called the war \u201cbarbaric\u201d (probably just in an unsuccessful bid to be taken off the list of sanctioned billionaires).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_22-1124x844.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"828\" height=\"622\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_22-1124x844.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_22-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_22-768x577.jpg 768w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/12\/CUT_22.jpg 1313w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-288629\">Holy Trinity Cathedral choir,&nbsp;Saratov<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Rodin had other ideas. \u201cThe war is the last opportunity to bring salvation to the human soul,\u201d he said with a beatific smile. \u201cIn the Book of Revelations, John the Apostle wrote of these last trying times for the human race, when everyone would have to choose their own path: they will either stay with God or go forth to great pain and suffering forever.\u201d His tone didn\u2019t change when I asked about Stalin\u2019s resurgent popularity. \u201cI don\u2019t want to judge, because God can\u2019t be removed from the hearts of Russians,\u201d he said. \u201cNo one called Stalin for help, no one called the Party for help. Everyone cried out to&nbsp;God!\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I know Russian priests fairly well\u2014they tend to be rough and arrogant. Rodin was different, at once modern and archaic. He uses social media and medieval mannerisms. He has traveled a bit, but for him there is no place like Russia. I asked him what being Russian meant to him. \u201cWe\u2019re influenced by the immense nothingness around us, and by the harsh climate,\u201d he said. \u201cIn a land like this, you have to have an objective, a dream. We Russians need to have something big to strive for. We dreamed of communism, equality, and of a life where no one is exploited by anyone. Every person the same as the next.\u201d He went on: \u201cIf Russians believe in something, they believe until the end. They believe in God. They\u2019re ready to die for their faith. They believe in communism. They\u2019re ready to die for that. They believe in Russia and they\u2019re ready to sacrifice themselves for&nbsp;Russia.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even the atomic bomb,&nbsp;<em>batyushka<\/em>?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cOf course,\u201d he replied quickly. \u201cWe\u2019re ready to sacrifice ourselves. Because if we don\u2019t win, we\u2019ll burn it all down. If we can\u2019t achieve this bright future, then what\u2019s the point in living?\u201d He grew more heated. \u201cOur president is saying what everyone is thinking. If we don\u2019t have the Russia we want, we\u2019re ready to martyr ourselves, sacrifice ourselves and the whole world if it\u2019s unjust and evil. There\u2019s no need for a world like&nbsp;that.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I was back out on the street when I saw that I had a voicemail from Albert, from Shubert Island. He had composed a new reggae song: \u201cAt sunset the Volga is bathed in pure light,\u201d he sang, \u201cwhen illuminated by love, my heart is the&nbsp;same.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Back to News The cover story in the January edition of Harper&#8217;s Magazine is instantly captivating by reminding that we pay scant attention to the internal realities and culture which, and human beings who, constitute the largest nation on earth&#8211;and the one that has very possibly lit the fuse of a world war three that [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1001004,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[55,54],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15150"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1001004"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=15150"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15150\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":17318,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15150\/revisions\/17318"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=15150"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=15150"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=15150"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}