The Japan Times - Russian offensive inspires golden age of military bloggers

EUR -
AED 4.304688
AFN 77.355324
ALL 96.579421
AMD 447.10003
ANG 2.098431
AOA 1074.764616
ARS 1698.533883
AUD 1.771797
AWG 2.112609
AZN 1.997128
BAM 1.95746
BBD 2.360802
BDT 143.347881
BGN 1.956252
BHD 0.441843
BIF 3469.249715
BMD 1.172044
BND 1.515285
BOB 8.099661
BRL 6.480587
BSD 1.172094
BTN 105.021364
BWP 16.48698
BYN 3.444921
BYR 22972.058926
BZD 2.357308
CAD 1.615018
CDF 2648.819464
CHF 0.931545
CLF 0.027232
CLP 1068.306688
CNY 8.252302
CNH 8.244344
COP 4474.19525
CRC 585.381385
CUC 1.172044
CUP 31.059161
CVE 110.356693
CZK 24.316218
DJF 208.296089
DKK 7.470824
DOP 73.420377
DZD 152.112583
EGP 55.772648
ERN 17.580657
ETB 182.087338
FJD 2.676601
FKP 0.875487
GBP 0.876027
GEL 3.153256
GGP 0.875487
GHS 13.46207
GIP 0.875487
GMD 86.149734
GNF 10245.42526
GTQ 8.981386
GYD 245.221656
HKD 9.120464
HNL 30.879184
HRK 7.535192
HTG 153.680312
HUF 386.28045
IDR 19588.075399
ILS 3.758804
IMP 0.875487
INR 104.961975
IQD 1535.502013
IRR 49372.346446
ISK 147.213174
JEP 0.875487
JMD 187.544226
JOD 0.831025
JPY 184.532486
KES 151.08862
KGS 102.495683
KHR 4703.807946
KMF 493.43086
KPW 1054.822384
KRW 1731.249821
KWD 0.360029
KYD 0.976828
KZT 606.5588
LAK 25385.875913
LBP 104961.714595
LKR 362.898427
LRD 207.460604
LSL 19.662669
LTL 3.460741
LVL 0.708958
LYD 6.353279
MAD 10.743597
MDL 19.843318
MGA 5330.383407
MKD 61.55124
MMK 2461.094974
MNT 4162.407764
MOP 9.394325
MRU 46.907574
MUR 54.090266
MVR 18.120241
MWK 2032.47139
MXN 21.098395
MYR 4.778468
MZN 74.905763
NAD 19.663173
NGN 1710.914853
NIO 43.135472
NOK 11.869118
NPR 168.034182
NZD 2.034147
OMR 0.450659
PAB 1.172049
PEN 3.947146
PGK 4.986228
PHP 68.641337
PKR 328.393552
PLN 4.206963
PYG 7863.365752
QAR 4.273114
RON 5.090308
RSD 117.397814
RUB 94.408949
RWF 1706.647134
SAR 4.396158
SBD 9.540574
SCR 17.72541
SDG 704.988668
SEK 10.85656
SGD 1.514433
SHP 0.879336
SLE 28.250554
SLL 24577.177236
SOS 668.64986
SRD 45.055127
STD 24258.940784
STN 24.520792
SVC 10.255433
SYP 12959.414354
SZL 19.660671
THB 36.80645
TJS 10.800882
TMT 4.113874
TND 3.430821
TOP 2.822001
TRY 50.15469
TTD 7.955542
TWD 36.945756
TZS 2924.24973
UAH 49.560324
UGX 4192.555035
USD 1.172044
UYU 46.018235
UZS 14090.587304
VES 327.250345
VND 30839.403086
VUV 142.286183
WST 3.269255
XAF 656.488457
XAG 0.017381
XAU 0.000269
XCD 3.167507
XCG 2.112437
XDR 0.815493
XOF 656.502472
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.474275
ZAR 19.614392
ZMK 10549.805058
ZMW 26.518808
ZWL 377.397633
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    15.25

    -0.98%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.295

    +0.02%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • VOD

    0.0850

    12.885

    +0.66%

  • GSK

    0.5650

    48.855

    +1.16%

  • NGG

    0.4000

    76.79

    +0.52%

  • RELX

    0.2450

    40.895

    +0.6%

  • AZN

    1.1400

    91.75

    +1.24%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    78.38

    +0.96%

  • BCE

    0.1450

    22.995

    +0.63%

  • BCC

    -2.8100

    74.89

    -3.75%

  • BTI

    -0.0450

    56.995

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.44

    +0.07%

  • BP

    0.6750

    33.985

    +1.99%

  • CMSD

    -0.0380

    23.242

    -0.16%

Russian offensive inspires golden age of military bloggers
Russian offensive inspires golden age of military bloggers / Photo: Handout - TELEGRAM / @Vladlentatarskybooks/AFP/File

Russian offensive inspires golden age of military bloggers

Before Russia's offensive in Ukraine, Mikhail Zvinchuk's Telegram channel was mainly known to military buffs. Today, it boasts more than a million followers, exceeding that of many media outlets.

Text size:

Numerous Russian military bloggers like him have gone from obscurity to celebrity since the start of the conflict, distinguishing themselves by being more outspoken than traditional media under strict government control.

They publish information before the government does, and criticise some of its decisions.

To some, this makes them more credible than Russian authorities -- at the risk of ruffling feathers.

When Russia launched its offensive on February 24, 2022, "the (official) institutions in charge of information were thrown into turmoil," said Zvinchuk, whose Telegram account is called Rybar, or fisherman in Russian.

"Officials couldn't agree on which narratives to release to the public," the 31-year-old told AFP.

So "we rose to defend our motherland in the world of information. We became its shield."

A military interpreter by training, Zvinchuk was decorated for his missions in Syria and Iraq and once worked for the Russian defence ministry's press service.

The Arabic and English speaker publishes on Telegram in several languages.

He has a staff of around 40 people, including a data team that puts together maps and graphics with more detail than those released by the authorities and traditional media outlets -- content even picked up by Western institutions.

In just a matter of months, Rybar has seen its readership go from 36,000 followers to over a million.

- Hungry for info -

For Tatiana Stanovaya, an analyst at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Centre, the bloggers are responding to the Russian public's "hunger for information".

"The Russian defence ministry provides practically no adequate picture of what is happening" in Ukraine, she said.

The bloggers are "well informed, in touch with those who take part in combat. Even if they're politically engaged -- in support of the offensive -- they're publishing facts that can't be found elsewhere," she told AFP.

Alexander Sladkov, a 57-year-old military reporter for the state television channel Rossiya, has covered every armed conflict since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, including in Chechnya.

He now reports on east Ukraine while also feeding his own Telegram channel, Sladkov+, which has more than 900,000 followers -- double that of the defence ministry and six times that of the Kremlin.

"War coverage is easy. No need to look for heroes. They are right there in front of you... All the emotion is like bare wiring coming out of the walls," he told AFP.

He denies being a propagandist: "I am not a soldier of the information war."

"I'm a reporter, someone who grabs his viewer by the hand and takes him through the screen to a place where he can't go," he said.

According to independent political expert Konstantin Kalachev, "the military correspondents and bloggers have gained the trust of the people thanks to their courage and the fact that they don't hesitate to criticise" the defence ministry.

- Closely monitored -

But their popularity and willingness to speak freely can irritate the authorities.

Last autumn, several military bloggers strongly criticised the Russian army after a series of setbacks in Ukraine and a mobilisation drive seen as chaotic, marked by a lack of training and old equipment sent to the front.

One of the military correspondents, Semyon Pegov, accused the army at the time of having made a list of bloggers whose publications had to be "verified".

The bloggers are suspected of "discrediting" the army, a charge widely applied in Russia to imprison opponents of the Ukraine offensive.

Rybar is also on the list. Zvinchuk denounces the authorities's "attempts to interfere in the editorial policy" of his channel, especially after last month's death of his friend, the military blogger Vladlen Tatarsky.

He was killed in a bomb attack that Moscow blamed on Kyiv and the Russian opposition.

"It has been suggested that we should be less active, under the pretext of ensuring our security," Zvinchuk said.

"They say, 'guys, let's not make our problems public... The enemy will know and use it'," he added.

"But the enemy will find out anyway... If we release footage of mobilised people having trouble and propose solutions for resolving it, that does not make us Russia's enemies."

S.Ogawa--JT