Wednesday, March 11, 2026

First Russian Orthodox Church Parishioners in Africa Martyred for Their Faith

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 7 – The Russian Patriarchal Exarchate of Africa says that two of its parishioners in Nigeria were killed by Islamist terrorists during an attack in Turan on March 6. It says that the death toll is likely to rise because at least 50 Orthodox Christians there were attacked and forced to flee, and the Russian church appealed for contributions to help them (https://rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=121344).

            The centrality of martyrdom in the thinking of the ROC MP and the issue of Christians being under attack by Islamists in the view of many around the world mean that the Russian church in Africa is now exploiting its position there not only to recruit soldiers but to help Russian government agencies on that continent.

            The Moscow Patriarchate with the Kremlin’s help can be expected to broadcast news of this tragedy to the West in order to gain support from Christians in Western countries who are increasingly concerned about attacks on their co-religionists and to use this to form a renewed alliance between the Moscow church and these denominations.

What Happens in Ukraine and Whether Sanctions are Maintained Determine When Moscow Can Attack Baltics, Lithuanian Department of State Security Says

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar.9 – What happens in Ukraine and whether the West maintains sanctions on Russia or not determines when Moscow will be in a position to attack Lithuania and her Baltic neighbors, according to an assessment contained in the annual report of the Lithuanian Department of State Security.

            If the war continues at current level and if sanctions are maintained, the report says, Russia’s ability to launch an attack on the Baltics or elsewhere in eastern Europe will be limited, the report says (vsd.lt/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2026-GR-LT-El_NAUJAS.pdf discussed at novayagazeta.ee/articles/2026/03/09/rossiia-mozhet-nachat-voennuiu-operatsiiu-v-stranakh-baltii-cherez-god-dva-posle-sniatiia-sanktsii-i-zakliucheniia-mira-v-ukraine-razvedka-litvy-news).

            But if the conflict is frozen and sanctions are eased or eliminated, Moscow will be able to rebuild its forces and be able to attack to the West in three to five years; and if there is a peace treaty and sanctions are lifted, then that period will be reduced to one to two years, according to the Lithuanian intelligence service.

            The Lithuanian projections are perhaps the clearest indication of what the end of the war in Ukraine will mean for others and the way in which the maintenance of sanctions of their removal will affect the timing of a new Russian move toward the West.  As such, they speak to a broader issue than just the security of Lithuania. 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Kremlin Ignores Realities of Russian Family Life and Instead, to Boost Birthrates, Uses Highly Offensive and Ineffective Propaganda, Arkhipova Says

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 6 – Moscow’s current demographic policy, especially since Putin launched his expanded war against Ukraine in 2022, Aleksandr Arkhipova says, “ignores the reality of serial monogamy” among Russians, the economic constraints and unstable partnerships they live with and other factors that shape people’s reproductive decisions.”

            Instead, the independent Moscow anthropologist says, the Russian state “attempts to influence reproductive behavior through language and text,” putting up posters telling women their job is to have children and telling doctors to use “pseudo-folksy and patronizingly patriarchal language” (istories.media/opinions/2026/03/06/zai-rozhai-kak-ustroena-demograficheskaya-propaganda/).

            “The solicitous tone of doctors’ conversations and the avoidance of unpleasant words ike abortion,” according to guidance the government provides medical professionals and uses in posters and advertising, “are supposed to encourage women to make ‘the right reproductive choice.’ Otherwise, both the women and the doctor face public shame and moral censure.”  

            But demographics are difficult to change with slogans alone,” Arkhipova says. “Language can shape social norms but it cannot replace social policy; and when the state tries to compensate for the lack of systemic solutions with symbolic pressure and newspeak, the result is not an increase in the birth rate but an increase in public cynicism.”

            In a detailed article, the social anthropologist documents each of these statements by examining posters, advertising, documents given to medical professionals and teachers, and in-depth conversations with Russian women. Her implicit conclusion is a dark one: Moscow won’t boost the birthrate by slogans alone. Instead, it will breed resistance to propaganda in general.

Poland Seeks to Involve Armenia in a Neo-Promethean Movement Against Russia, Makarov Says

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 4 – Russian nationalist commentator Vladislav Makarov says that Poland is seeking to involve Armenia in Warsaw’s effort to revive the Promethean Movement of the interwar period in order to set the countries around Russia’s periphery against Moscow and that Armenia under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is receptive to that idea.

            Makarov’s attack on Poland and Armenia is the latest in a string of such attacks on all neighbors of the Russian Federation and non-Russian groups within that country who were involved with the Promethean League between the wars and who have expressed various degrees of interest in that history and its potential revival.

            (For Makarov’s article, see ritmeurasia.ru/news--2026-03-04--polskij-prometej-durachit-armeniju-86222; for background on the interwar Promethean movement, its recent revival, and Moscow’s alarm at that  development, see jamestown.org/moscow-alarmed-by-revival-and-spread-of-promethean-ideas/ and the works cited therein.)

            What makes this linkage noteworthy is that Armenians in the 1920s and 1930s were far less involved with the Promethean movement and so bringing up the role of the Armenian National Center in Paris which did cooperate with Warsaw is a clear signal that present-day Moscow is becoming ever more hostile to the current Yerevan government.

            Indeed, Makarov says that Armenia, having suspended but not ended its membership in the Moscow-led Organization for the Collective Security Treaty, is now cooperating with what the Moscow commentator suggests is a NATO structure, something he argues is indefensible and both offensive to Russia and dangerous for Armenia’s future. 

Putin-Appointed Leaders in North Caucasus This Year Make No Mention of Stalin when Talking about His Deportations of Nationalities

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 8 – The Putin-appointed leaders of Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachayevo-Cherkessia, and Ingushetia in their remarks on the anniversary of the deportation of their nations this year did not refer to Stalin, the author of that crime against humanity, but instead blamed those events of the 1940s on Lavrenty Beriya and other agents of the Kremlin dictator.

            Their failure to mention Stalin stands in sharp contrast to the statements of the leaders of the ethnic movements of the peoples he forcibly deported to Central Asia and Siberia all of whom condemned the dictator and represents yet another effort by Putin to minimize Stalin’s crimes (kavkazr.com/a/v-kabardino-balkarii-vspominayut-zhertv-deportatsii/33698794.html).

            That Stalin was responsible for this crime is well-documented and widely understood both among historians and by the peoples of the North Caucasus, but apparently Putin is prepared to rewrite history in this way to boost his personal hero and to minimize criticism of the Soviet leader he sees as having brough victory in World War II.

            Indeed, what Russians call the Great Fatherland War is for Putin and his team a universal moral solvent that wipes out whatever crimes they have committed; and thus, in the case of Stalin, it is best and certainly safest for his officials not to mention his name when they are talking about what happened in his time. 

 

Kremlin’s Use of Monetary Stimuli to Get Russians to Serve in Ukraine No Longer Working as Well as It Did, Inozemtsev Says

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 5 – To avoid the negative popular reaction that any mass mobilization for his war in Ukraine, Putin has offered enormous bonuses and high pay to those individuals who sign up, something that “shifted the war from being a shared national burden to a private matter affecting only a small segment of society, Vladislav Inozemtsev says.

            That has benefitted the Putin regime enormously, the Russian economist says, because this approach “allowed Putin to sustain the conflict without encountering serious domestic pushback and to do so without “launching another wave of full-scale mobilization” that likely would have provoked that (ridl.io/ru/smertonomika-2-0-pochemu-sistema-nachinaet-buksovat/).

            But now this system, which Inozemtsev earlier defined as “deathonomics,” because the lure of money if one was prepared to serve even at the risk of death as “the single most economically efficient use of a human life,” is no longer working as well as before and likely will have to be dropped in favor of mobilization or an end to the conflict.

            “The key strength” of this system has been “in its deeply market-driven nature,” the economist says. “The federal and regional authorities have been offering huge payments – lump-sum signing bonuses of from one to three million rubles (15,000 to 30,000 US dollars) plus monthly combat pay of 200,000 rubles (2750 US dollars) or more to attract those” who aren’t succeeding in the civilian economy.”

            Initially, this system worked well, but it rapidly began to suffer from “a critical weakness – its entanglement with the irrational bureaucratic machinery of Putin’s ‘state.’” The costs of using this method rose dramatically but the Russian military did not use those so recruited more rationally and efficiently, a violation of economic principles.

            Of course, Inozemtsev continues, “the system was never designed to deliver an outright military victory in the conventional sense: that would have required far better equipment, commanders and the ability to rapidly scale up the size of forces.” Instead, “its primary objective was always to sustain the capacity to wage war without generating significant domestic protest.”

            Up to now, he says, this approach has succeeded as far as that metric is concerned, but “the Kremlin now confronts a multi-faceted economic and socio-political crisis. The willingness to enlist for what is almost certain death is declining, even as losses on the battlefield continue to mount.”

            There are obvious reasons for this slowdown in recruitment. The original pool of 2023-2024 volunteers – “those with lower economic integration and few prospects – has been largely exhausted.” Household incomes have gone up even faster than bonuses for enlistment, service and in cases of death which are adjusted only on the basis of understated official inflation figures.

            And ever more Russians recognize that “the war could drag on indefinitely, with no genuine short-term contracts on offer” and see that the military command isn’t interested in improving operational efficiency because “when the supply of manpower appears virtually unlimited, there is little incentive to refine tactics or strategy.”

            Absent a sudden conclusion of a peace or radical shifts in the way the Russian military operates, neither of which is likely, Inozemtsev says, “the shrinking flow of contract soldiers can be addressed in only two ways: a drastic increase in money for those who might sign up or a new mobilization. There is little money for the former and no political stomach for the latter.

            As a result, and because death tolls on the frontline continue to rise without the prospect for victory, deathonomics is unlikely to continue to work as well in the future, Inozemtsev says.

Moscow Now Singling Out Ethnic Ukrainians Living in ‘Wedges’ inside Russian Federation as ‘Extremists and Terrorists,’ Kyiv Study Documents

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 6 – Before Putin launched his expanded invasion of Ukraine, only about five percent of those on Moscow’s register of extremists and terrorists were ethnic Ukrainians, had Ukrainian names or were citizens of Ukraine. Now, that figure has risen to approximately 50 percent of a much higher total, Kyiv researcher Nina Belyaeva says.

            But among Ukrainians put on this list, she reports, it is noteworthy that a disproportionate share of those charged are from regions where ethnic Ukrainians have traditionally lived, the so-called “wedges” (kliny). There, those with Ukrainian names are approximately twice as likely to be declared extremists or terrorists than are those without such names.

            Not surprisingly, Belyaeva continues, many Ukrainians there are hiding their ethnicity by Russianizing their names and by declaring themselves ethnic Russians or no nationality at all in the latest Russian census, a practice that led to the more than halving of the total number of ethnic Ukrainians between the 2010 and 2020/21 censuses. 

(For Belyaeva’s report, see abn.org.ua/en/analysis/criminalization-of-ethnicity-how-ethnic-ukrainians-in-russia-are-declared-terrorists/; for background on the history of these wedges and Moscow’s growing concern about attitudes there, see jamestown.org/moscow-worried-about-ukrainian-wedges-in-russia-and-their-growing-support-from-abroad/.).)

This problem has not attracted the attention it deserves because Russian and Western human rights organizations seldom list such people as political prisoners and even Ukrainians both in the government and the population at large seldom talk about them or make the detention of such people an issue.

Belyaeva concludes her report on this issue by saying that “the persecution of ethnic Ukrainians in Russia is not a side effect of the war but a deliberate policy of intimidation and the eradication of all things Ukrainian from the territory of the Russian Federation,” has roots going back to Stalin’s time, and both can and must be denounced and fought.