Raia wa Urusi ni wahanga wakuu wa vita inayoendelea

Gama

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Raia wa urusi ni wahanga wakuu wa vita inayoendelea sasa, awali waliaminishwa kuwa vita ina nia njema ya kuikomboa nchi dhidi ya wanazi na kuwa itachukua muda mfupi lakini sasa haijulikani itaisha lini


FUATILIA HAPA

As war drags on, weary Russians yearn for a return to normal life​

Robyn Dixon - Yesterday 7:00 AM

RIGA, Latvia — For Russia’s urban middle class, the war on Ukraine has messed up plans, ruined longed-for vacations and stripped away joys like shopping for a favorite foreign clothing brand, turning the key in a new Japanese car, even biting into a Big Mac.

© Provided by The Washington PostAs war drags on, weary Russians yearn for a return to normal life
As the war drags on, many yearn for life to go back to normal, before prices went crazy and foreign companies quit the country over Russia’s invasion. But these Russians are equally sure that President Vladimir Putin will keep on fighting until he wins, because that’s what he always does.

After convincing the majority of the population that the war was necessary to “liberate” Ukrainians from “Nazis,” state television propagandists are now doggedly preparing Russians for a long war, ominously warning that it might end in nuclear war.

In Ukraine, that means more civilian casualties, bombed houses and dozens of soldiers killed daily defending the country’s east.

Russian hardships may be trivial by contrast, but the deadening gloom of a long war worries the Kremlin, according to analysts, because of the challenge of dragging the population along as sanctions bite, businesses retrench, prices continue to surge, and it dawns on people that life may never go back to the way it was.

But the old Kremlin playbook, accusing the West of plans to gobble up Russia, is working so far. Denis Volkov of independent polling agency Levada-Center said the latest polling for April showed almost half of Russians unconditionally support the war and about 30 percent support it with reservations, with 19 percent opposed. Many in focus groups saw it as an existential confrontation with the West, not Ukraine.



 
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