‘So what is there to be scared of anymore?’
Interview with Marc Santora, a NYT journalist who has been working in Kyiv since the beginning of the war

What turned out to be the most difficult thing for both the citizens and the journalists in the early days of the Russian invasion of Ukraine? How has the situation in Kyiv changed over the year? Do people still feel the same fear that they had in the beginning? Should Ukraine prepare for a new Russian offensive and can we predict when the war will end? Novaya Gazeta Europe spoke with Marc Santora, a journalist for The New York Times who has been based in Kyiv since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
But what I also saw very quickly — I then went from Kyiv to Lviv, and I spent weeks there watching as basically baristas, janitors, accountants, lawyers all joined together pretty quickly, got over the shock and started to think about how do we fight back.
And there’s other ways we can better understand what’s happening in the occupied areas. But honestly, I think it’s one of the stories that are the hardest to tell.
They think that the fighting of the next six months will maybe be able to answer that question better. Is this a long forever war or something else?
I think one of the goals for the Ukrainians is to drive forward enough so that they can target Russian positions in Crimea. And if we get to that point in the war, that’s a huge change. And then we’ll see what that change does.

Military fatigue
Are peace negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow currently out of the question?

Gunpowder, treason and plot
Olga Musafirova on how two articles about Ukraine published in The Economist and TIME magazine last week have been received domestically

‘Commander, I’m not going out there.’
A Russian officer gives a harrowing account of the carnage he witnessed in the battle for the Ukrainian town of Avdiivka

‘I’d be facing 15 years in prison’
A Russian draftee on his escape from the army, the Russian regime, and hope

The Great Escape
A Ukrainian prisoner abducted by the Russian military during its retreat from Kherson last year describes the brutal 10-month ordeal he and 250 of his fellow inmates shared

Testing times
Should Putin’s claim that Russia has successfully tested a new experimental nuclear armed missile be cause for alarm?

Slaughter of the innocents
The list of civilians killed in targeted Russian missile strikes in Ukraine continues to grow

Holiday from reason
While the Kremlin still doesn’t have full control of the four Ukrainian regions it claims to have absorbed, it has made the anniversary of their 'return' to Russia a new holiday

The hours
Air-raid sirens have sounded in the Ukrainian capital for over 1,000 hours since the Russian invasion began



