Sales of antidepressants soar in Russia as reality of Ukraine war bites

Antidepressant sales in Russia have skyrocketed as the miserable reality of Putin’s war in Ukraine finally dawns on the public, Western officials have said.

Russians spent 70 per cent more on the pills in the first eight months of this year compared to last, even though they spent much of 2021 in Covid lockdowns, figures have shown.

‘Russians feel frightened’ as the ‘catastrophic error’ of Putin’s invasion – including conscription and a tanking economy – begin to hit people’s lives, the officials added.

That is underlined by the fact that at least 400,000 have fled since Putin announced he would begin drafting people into the army in September, significantly more than the 300,000 he added to his ranks.

Vladimir Putin is facing increasing dissent at home as miserable reality of his war dawns on Russians but there is no prospect of him being replaced, Western officials have said

Mobilistion has proved particularly unpopular with some 400,000 Russians fleeing the country rather than sign up while mass protests also broke out (file image)

Mobilistion has proved particularly unpopular with some 400,000 Russians fleeing the country rather than sign up while mass protests also broke out (file image)

Moscow ‘will reveal evidence UK helped Crimea attack’

Moscow will ‘in the near future’ summon the British ambassador to hand over ‘evidence’ of its claim that the UK helped orchestrate an attack on the Russian Black Sea Fleet in Crimea, the foreign ministry said Wednesday.

Russia has claimed UK ‘specialists’ helped Kyiv launch a drone attack on the fleet in Moscow-annexed Crimea at the weekend.

Russia has also accused London of being behind September explosions on the Nord Stream gas pipelines.

Russian authorities have so far provided no proof to back up their claims.

‘The UK ambassador will be summoned and will be given the appropriate materials,’ foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, adding the meeting would take place ‘in the near future.’

‘The basic materials will be handed over as evidence to the British side and will also be shown to the general public,’ she added.

Despite that, officials say there is no sign that Putin has decided to change course in Ukraine and no sign that anyone is preparing to replace him. 

Russia is now into its ninth month of fighting in Ukraine and has failed to achieve any of the military objectives set by Putin at the start of the war.

The Kremlin thought it was getting involved in an easy conflict that would take days to resolve and had ‘no Plan B’ for what to do if the war went awry, officials said.

‘They still don’t have Plan B,’ the officials added.

That has led to growing dissent both within the Russian population and the elite close to Putin, who are increasingly willing to voice that discontent in public.

Russians are not in favour of the war, the officials said, and elites are increasingly worried about the cost to their businesses and also the prospect that their children may be called to fight on the frontlines.

That has led to the likes of Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Wagner boss dubbed ‘Putin’s chef’, to publicly criticise the way the war is being run – though not Putin himself. 

Officials added there is ‘no likely prospect of a change of leadership’ in Russia in the near-term – though did flag elections due in 2024 as a moment of likely tension.

‘He has been weakened by this really catastrophic error,’ said the Western official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

‘We are seeing the Russian military humbled on the battlefield by Ukraine. People can see that he has made a big error,’ said the same official. 

Russia is now into its ninth month of fighting in Ukraine and 'still does not have a Plan B' after lightning strikes on Kyiv failed, officials have said

Russia is now into its ninth month of fighting in Ukraine and ‘still does not have a Plan B’ after lightning strikes on Kyiv failed, officials have said

Both Ukraine and Russia are digging in for what is likely to become a protracted and bloody war, with no end in sight

Both Ukraine and Russia are digging in for what is likely to become a protracted and bloody war, with no end in sight

‘That has to mean that people are talking more about succession, they are talking more about what comes next, they are imagining a life beyond. But what I am not doing is suggesting that that’s anytime soon.’

In an attempt to distract from his own failures, the officials said that Putin is making increasingly wild and baseless claims as a way of diverting attention.

They picked out threats of a ‘dirty bomb’, allegations that the UK and US attacked the Nord Stream pipes, and claims about Liz Truss’s hacked phones as examples.

Russia is also increasingly relying on missiles strikes on Ukraine’s power grid, water supplies and cities as a means of breaking Ukrainian support for the conflict.

But, if anything, it appears to have strengthened their resolve, the officials said.

They also revealed that ‘frequent’ conversations are taking place with Russian counterparts about ‘serious’ peace talks, though there is no sign of that yet.

Moscow is facing a dire situation on the battlefields of Ukraine as it attempts to defend a frontline hundreds of miles long with badly mauled units as winter hits.

The money was meant to go to their families in the impoverished Chuvashia region. 'It’s clear - we were f***ing fooled,' said one mutineer as the female officer tries to address their concerns

The money was meant to go to their families in the impoverished Chuvashia region. ‘It’s clear – we were f***ing fooled,’ said one mutineer as the female officer tries to address their concerns

Kyiv has taken advantage of that fact by launching counter-attacks in the north and south which have recaptured swathes of territory.

Troops continue to make plodding advances towards the city of Kherson and into Luhansk oblast, in the northwest, amid the hope of another breakthrough.

But as the ground softens through autumn those are expected to slow, while vehicles getting bogged down in mud.

Winter – which is bitterly cold in Ukraine – is expected to bring a near-total halt to advances as both sides dig in, before renewed fighting in spring.

During that time, hundreds of thousands of Russian conscripts are expected to arrive in Ukraine to plug holes in the defensive line and perhaps to carry out attacks when the conditions improve.

However, it remains vanishingly unlikely that Putin will be able to achieve his initial aim of toppling the government – and even the reduced aim of ‘liberating’ the Donbas region looks unlikely. 

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