Zelensky's Ukraine is real. Putin's doesn't exist
Putin has mis-fired
As Ukrainians of different backgrounds have embraced a civic understanding of their identity, Kremlin representatives have doubled down on ethno-national categories to describe Ukraine, and Zelensky himself. Zelensky's "Indigenous Peoples" bill incensed Putin, who compared it to Hitler's race laws for its exclusion of special protections of the language and culture of native Russian speakers. Notably, the bill, which was aligned with the United Nation's declaration on indigenous peoples, omits groups whose identity is reflected by an existing state, including Ukrainians.
"What about people with mixed blood?" Putin asked on Russian television after the bill was introduced. "Zelensky himself is an ethnic Jew, he may have mixed blood." Putin's preposterous confusion of indigenous cultural preservation with race laws is part of the larger (and equally inconsistent) narrative that he has cultivated to equate Ukrainian government to Nazism and Russian speakers with Nazi victims.
In a long article published on the Kremlin website in July 2021, Putin argued that Russians and Ukrainians are one people, the heirs of ancient Rus', with a shared language and religion.
Putin declares that Ukraine is a Soviet construct, and that, by rejecting Russia, Ukrainians are "attempting to create an ethnically pure state."
He compares Ukraine's anti-Russian sentiment to a "weapon of mass destruction."
The document, read in hindsight, was a declaration of war.
If such ideological rhetoric can be a weapon, Putin has mis-fired. In Putin's July 12 article he wrote, "Our relationship is passed down from generation to generation.
It is in the hearts, in the memory of people living in modern Russia and Ukraine, in the blood ties that unite millions of our families."
Few in the world can take this draconian insistence on the importance of "blood ties" seriously after Russia's bombing of Ukrainian hospitals, university buildings and theaters, wreaking particular violence on the largely Russophone cities of Kharkiv, Mykolaev and Mariupol.
Ukrainians' unity in defending their country and protesting the invasion has been inspiring.
Opinion: Zelensky's Ukraine is real. Putin's doesn't exist - CNN