Europe | A new role

After Russia’s invasion the people of Bessarabia switched sides

A traditionally pro-Russian part of Ukraine now feels very differently

Old men do squats on the banks of the Danube near Izmail, Bessarabia.
Photograph: Tim Judah
|Izmail

WHEN RUSSIA first attacked Ukraine in 2014 Bessarabia was a place to worry about. Less than half of its people identified as Ukrainian. The region was poor and, for historical and economic reasons, many people thought that Vladimir Putin might be their saviour. But Russia’s endeavours to stir up trouble in this strategic Ukrainian borderland have failed. Ukrainian forces beat back Russian attempts to land commandos at the beginning of the full-scale invasion in 2022, and the security services arrested dozens of agents. Although the Russians damaged and closed one of the two bridges linking Bessarabia to the rest of the country, they have failed to shut down the other.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Going full Ukrainian”

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