Putin’s deliberate brutality in Ukraine has a backstory
Image that could not be reproduced properly: Russian service members walk in a Victory Day parade in Moscow on May 5. (Anastasia Barashkova/Reuters) Opinion The past holds Russia prisoner. This cruelty in war shows how. Yesterday at 7:30 a.m. EDT By Antony Beevor Antony Beevor is the author, most recently, of “Rasputin: The Downfall of the Romanovs.” The deliberate brutality of Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine has raised a debate about its origins. Were killings such as the 2022 Bucha massacre “casual savagery,” as one commentator put it? Or did they derive from an ancient, underlying assumption in Russia that conspicuous cruelty is a necessary weapon of war? One can never generalize about a whole nation, especially not Russia, with all its different component nationalities and its split between Slavophiles and Westerners. Nor can there be such a thing as a DNA-based national character. At the same time, most countries are influenced, at least subconsciously, by a certain s...