• CyberMonkey404@lemmy.ml
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    8 days ago

    Is it bad, or is it a sign of internal power struggle? Judging by the circus with Arestovich and the like, I would say there’s ample evidence of other people wanting the top spot on the grift. Not counting for true believers and pissed off military officials

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      8 days ago

      I’m sure there’s a lot of palace intrigue happening as people start to realize that the gig is up. That said, the fact that these kinds articles can even be published in Ukraine now is an indication that it’s becoming impossible to hide that the war is lost.

  • multitotal@lemmygrad.ml
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    7 days ago

    Looks like I missed this. Like others I wanna be cynical and say this is evidence of some kind of power struggle, but then what I really think is that this is journalists with integrity who decided to print what the soldiers on the front line said. There’s no way to dress up the reality nicely. Maybe, like many others in Ukraine they’re fed up with the war and see that there’s no way to fight it any more, they’d rather get on with their lives.

    • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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      7 days ago

      Where were those “journalists of integrity” for the past 2 years? Those are the same people that were writing the nonsense all the time. It’s either like others say, internal struggle, or the reality is already so visible that literally no one is buying the previous stories anymore.

      • multitotal@lemmygrad.ml
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        7 days ago

        Where were those “journalists of integrity” for the past 2 years? Those are the same people that were writing the nonsense all the time.

        Probably fearing reprisal from the government. Zelensky’s government has a tight grip on the news and media, they are from the media industry themselves, they know how important and powerful it can be. They banned all TV channels except their own, Telemaraton or something like that. They put restrictions on what newspapers can publish and limit access to areas, like the front line.

        Some Ukrainian journalists have also warned that military handlers’ tight oversight of journalists is skewing coverage of the war. “If a soldier tells me, ‘I hate this war so much,’ the press officer asks him to reply, ‘Yes, the war is hard, but we are keeping our spirits up,’” Skyba, a freelancer who regularly works with Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper, told the Committee to Protect Journalists.

        That is the narrative much of the Ukrainian public is getting. Following Russia’s invasion, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy ordered a 24-hour, unified “news telethon” in which some of the country’s major broadcasters — two that are public and the rest owned by oligarchs — provide war coverage in alternating, six-hour blocks. Late last year, Zelenskyy also signed legislation giving the government vast powers over the media; the European Federation of Journalists had called an early draft of the bill “worthy of the worst authoritarian regimes.” Source

        the reality is already so visible that literally no one is buying the previous stories anymore

        That too. It has become ridiculous to pretend Ukraine is winning when Russians are taking more territory every day. Everyone sees the Kursk excursion for what it is, and that it in no way challenges Russia or has any chance of causing “unrest that will topple Putin” inside of Russia. Russia has cut down Ukraine’s electricity production by some 75%. People are most likely running out of money to pay for fuel for their generators. Men are being snatched off the street and being sent to the front as literal cannon fodder. You see a few of them run away and about the same number where people fight the TCC officers.

        The “internal struggle” is the people of Ukraine fighting against their government that has decided to sacrifice them for US/NATO interests.

        • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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          7 days ago

          Probably fearing reprisal from the government. Zelensky’s government has a tight grip on the news and media, they are from the media industry themselves, they know how important and powerful it can be. They banned all TV channels except their own, Telemaraton or something like that. They put restrictions on what newspapers can publish and limit access to areas, like the front line.

          You are most probably correct, but the word “integrity” still feels not very accurate even in this case.

          The “internal struggle” is the people of Ukraine fighting against their government that has decided to sacrifice them for US/NATO interests.

          I hope very much. Note that unlike rest of former socialist countries, Ukraine had to be couped every decade at least once to keep them on leash: 1991, 2004, 2014, 2022

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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        7 days ago

        I suspect it’s actually both, the reality is so bad that it’s impossible to pretend that there’s any chance of victory, and that’s undermining the existing power structures leading to an internal struggle as people see the opportunity to grab power for themselves.