
Author Sergei Lebedev: ‘Trump is a huge gift to Putin's Russia'
'This is my first book that will not be published in Russia,' says Sergei Lebedev, looking, not for the last time in our conversation, unspeakably weary. After a moment, however, his face brightens. 'But my Ukrainian friends and colleagues have been able to read it in Russian. And they've said: 'you've done good.''
Lebedev is currently one of the most admired novelists from Russia, if not in Russia. His books have been translated into 20 languages and the New York Review of Books has called him 'the best of Russia's younger generation of writers'. His latest novel, The Lady of the Mine, which explores the events that inaugurated the current Russian-Ukrainian conflict over a decade ago, is his first book since the acclaimed Untraceable, which was translated into English in 2021.
An offbeat thriller about the Russian inventor of a Novichok-style nerve agent who is pursued by assassins after defecting to the West, Untraceable was inspired by the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury in 2018. Lebedev is amazed that some people were taken by surprise when Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine: the Salisbury affair, to him, had been a clear demonstration of Putin's contempt for the notion of sovereignty.
'I don't think that anyone [in the West] took the Skripal poisoning really seriously, or [Alexander] Litvinenko's [in 2006] as well. It was like: OK, this is what we expect from the Russians, this is their business as usual. But if it is not an act of state terrorism in miniature, I don't know what to call it.'
Lebedev, 43, is an exile: he's talking to me over Zoom from his home in Potsdam, an hour from Berlin. He moved to Germany in 2018 with his wife, a political scientist and historian, when she was offered a job there. Initially he made frequent return trips to Moscow, but not any longer now that 'the Iron Curtain has fallen again'.
Potsdam, with its former KGB prison and Soviet barracks, is a salutary place to live, he says. 'Feeling these traces of the former presence of the Imperial force, it keeps you on the alert, it keeps you vigilant: it reminds you that the Russian version of history – that this was a liberation, not an occupation – is not true, though that is something that very few Russians, even intellectuals, would admit. For Putin and his generation of decision-makers, they do remember [the Soviet withdrawal from East Germany] as a retreat, as a defeat, and they of course would like one day to regain it.'
I ask him what he thinks of President Trump's recent intervention in the ongoing saga of Putin's imperial ambitions. 'Maybe I'm naive but I'm highly surprised by this course of events. I think it's – how to put it in a diplomatic way? – a betrayal of Ukraine's trust. It's an attempt to get rid of the moral language which includes the terms 'aggressor' and 'victim', and to depict the whole conflict in terms of business: Ukraine as just a proxy in a big conflict between two superpowers who can negotiate. Which is what Russian propaganda has been saying for years. This approach is a huge gift to the Putin side.'
Lebedev's latest novel, The Lady of the Mine, is set during the annexation of parts of eastern Ukraine by Russian separatists in 2014. It examines the impact of these events, including the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, on the residents of a former mining town in the Donbas; but it also delves further back into the area's history.
The coal mines of this region have been a convenient dumping ground for corpses over the years, from opponents of the Bolsheviks to tens of thousands of Jews murdered by the Nazi invaders during the Second World War. Lebedev lends one of these forgotten bodies a voice, allowing him to tell us about his life and afterlife in an impressionistic, incantatory lament.
These murdered Jews in eastern Ukraine have been forgotten – 'on our mental map, the eastern border of the Holocaust is Babi Yar in Kyiv' – because the Soviets knew that if they brought the world's attention to this Nazi atrocity, they would also draw focus on to the mass murders earlier committed by Russians. 'They literally covered for the Nazis. This is the place where the two systems of these bitter enemies, the Soviets and the Nazis, overlapped in a very strange and eerie romance.
'For me this was the departure point for attempting to understand how the Soviet Union, which positioned itself as a stronghold of anti-fascism, eventually turned into what is now a fascist state. This red monster's skin is now turning brown, and this is what I try to depict and to understand in this novel.'
Lebedev was born in Moscow in 1981, the son of two geologists (he followed them into the field for several years in his 20s). As a small boy he devoured English-language books his father had picked up on a trip to London as part of a scientific delegation: 'my passion in childhood was Mr Sherlock Holmes. Of course, when I went to London earlier this year, I visited Baker Street.
'What Mr Sherlock Holmes shows is that every evil leaves a trace – nothing will go unnoticed if you are intelligent enough – and this was something subconsciously important for me in my childhood. It is what geology teaches, too: it is possible to reconstruct a whole epoch. And this was my inspiration when I faced Soviet history, full of disconnections, full of loopholes, missing links, chains and witnesses; but still, if you dare, you can go there and you can reconstruct.'
He has retained a love of English literature: readers of Untraceable will remember the assassin who loves Auden's poetry. 'This was my way to learn English, I translated [Auden] into Russian, together with Leonard Cohen – maybe a strange couple.'
For many years Lebedev was a journalist but it was 'a metaphysical crisis' that turned him into a novelist: he discovered that his grandmother's second husband had been a senior officer in the NKVD, Stalin's secret police. 'I simply wasn't able to cope with the fact that a member of the family was a mass murderer. Then I realised that the way of dealing with this was to write a book about it – and because the state archives are classified, it had to be fiction.
'And I realised all of a sudden that this whole generation of evil-doers had simply disappeared from the public memory and conscience. We can all produce a mental image of an SS officer but this was not the case with the Soviets, and I realised that I needed to bring this figure back on to the cultural scene, made of flesh.' The result was his first novel, Oblivion (2011), which confronted its readers with the obscene actions of the men who ran Stalin's gulags.
I ask Lebedev if he thinks he can ever return to Moscow. 'You know, I'm not thinking about this right now because it is weakening to go into these kinds of deliberations. I have many things to do, I have my texts to write, I have my language to be defended from those who use it as a language of aggression. And this is it for now.'
Friends in Moscow report that the war is an accepted fact of life now: 'even for those who say, or think, that they are anti-Putin, anti-war, this has become a new reality that you cannot fight with. And of course a new social stratum has been born – soldiers, soldiers' families, those who produce military equipment, millions of people involved in the war effort – who, whatever they really think, will say that this is a just war. And the problem is that I don't see any real political leverage to remove this stratum from its position of power even in the best-case scenario.'
I ask Lebedev if he has ever received any flak from the Russian authorities. 'Not seriously – not yet.' Does he worry about placing himself in danger by being so outspoken?
'It doesn't feel good, but I think it's part of the job description. There's also something very personal here. Generations of my family lived in the Soviet Union and they all kept silent. At least half of my family was destroyed by the Bolsheviks. My grandmother was one of the only survivors, and despite this she was the editor of many volumes of Lenin's works.
'She took care of the writings of the man on whose orders her relatives were executed, and she never expressed any resistance or disagreement.' That is not Lebedev's way: 'I think that I'm physically just tired of this burden of unspoken words.'
The Lady of the Mine, tr Antonina W Bouis (Apollo, £18.99), will be published on April 24
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
Russia launches the biggest aerial attack since the start of the war, Ukraine says
KYIV, Ukraine — Russia launched its biggest aerial attack against Ukraine overnight, a Ukrainian official said Sunday, part of an escalating bombing campaign that has further dashed hopes for a breakthrough in efforts to end the 3-year-old war. Russia fired a total of 537 aerial weapons at Ukraine, including 477 drones and decoys and 60 missiles, Ukraine's air force said. Of these, 249 were shot down and 226 were lost, likely having been electronically jammed. The onslaught was 'the most massive airstrike' on the country since the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022, taking into account both drones and various types of missiles, Yuriy Ihnat, head of communications for Ukraine's air force, told The Associated Press. The attack targeted several regions, including western Ukraine, far from the front line. Poland and allied countries scrambled aircraft to ensure the safety of Polish airspace, the country's air force said. Three people were killed in each of the drone strikes in the Kherson, Kharkiv and the Dnipropetrovsk regions, according to the three governors. Another person was killed by an airstrike in Kostyantynivka, local officials said. In addition to aerial attacks, a man died when Russian troops shelled the city of Kherson, and the body of a 70-year-old woman was found under the rubble of a nine-story building hit by Russian shelling in the Zaporizhzhia region. In the far-western Lviv region, a large fire broke out at an industrial facility in the city of Drohobych following a drone attack that also cut electricity to parts of the city. Ukraine's air force said one of its F-16 warplanes supplied by its Western partners crashed after sustaining damage while shooting down air targets. The pilot died. Russian troops reportedly advance in Donetsk Russia's Defense Ministry said it had shot down three Ukrainian drones overnight. Two people were wounded in another Ukrainian drone attack on the city of Bryansk in western Russia, regional Gov. Alexander Bogomaz said Sunday morning, adding that seven more Ukrainian drones had been shot down over the region. Meanwhile, Russia claimed Sunday that it had taken control of the village of Novoukrainka in the partially Russian-occupied Donetsk region. Russian forces have been slowly grinding forward at some points on the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line, though their incremental gains have been costly in terms of troop casualties and damaged armor. In other developments, Russia's foreign intelligence chief, Sergei Naryshkin, said he had spoken on the phone with his U.S. counterpart, CIA Director John Ratcliffe. 'I had a phone call with my American counterpart and we reserved for each other the possibility to call at any time and discuss issues of interest to us,' Naryshkin said in remarks to state TV reporter Pavel Zarubin, who posted them on his Telegram channel on Sunday. Sunday's attacks follow Russian President Vladimir Putin's comments two days ago that Moscow is ready for a fresh round of direct peace talks in Istanbul. Two recent rounds of talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul were brief and yielded no progress on reaching a settlement. Zelenskyy withdraws Ukraine from an anti-land mine pact Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed a decree to withdraw Ukraine from the Ottawa Convention banning antipersonnel land mines, a Ukrainian lawmaker said Sunday. The move follows similar recent steps by the Baltic states and Poland. The 1997 treaty prohibits the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of antipersonnel land mines in an effort to protect civilians from explosives that can maim or kill long after fighting ends. 'This is a step that the reality of war has long demanded,' said Roman Kostenko, secretary of the Ukrainian parliamentary committee on national security, defense and intelligence. He noted that Russia is not a party to the convention 'and is massively using mines against our military and civilians.'


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Russia has launched biggest air attack of the three-year war, Kyiv says
Russia has fired more than 500 aerial weapons at Ukraine overnight, in a barrage that Kyiv described as the biggest air attack so far of the three-year war. Ukraine's air force said on Sunday that Russia fired 477 drones and decoys as well as 60 missiles overnight. While 475 of these were shot down or lost, the onslaught marked the 'most massive airstrike' on the country since Russia began its full-scale invasion in February 2022, Yuriy Ihnat, head of communications for Ukraine's air force, told The Associated Press. The bombing appeared to target several regions that are far from the frontline, he said, including in western Ukraine. The Russian army said on Sunday its overnight attack hit Ukrainian military-industrial complex sites and oil refineries, and that it had intercepted three Ukrainian drones overnight. The scale of the attacks called into question comments made on Friday by Vladimir Putin, in which the Russian president said that Moscow is ready for a fresh round of direct peace talks in Istanbul. Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said on Sunday that the barrage of bombs in fact showed that Putin had decided to pursue war. 'Moscow will not stop as long as it has the capability to launch massive strikes,' Zelenskyy wrote on social media. In the past week alone, Russia attacked Ukraine with more than 114 missiles, more than 1,270 drones and nearly 1,100 glide bombs, he said. 'This war must be brought to an end – pressure on the aggressor is needed, and so is protection,' he added. 'Ukraine needs to strengthen its air defence – the thing that best protects lives.' He reiterated Ukraine's willingness to buy US air defence systems, adding that his country counts on the 'leadership, political will, and support of the United States, Europe and all our partners'. Meanwhile, Ukraine's air force said an F-16 warplane supplied by its western partners had crashed after sustaining damage while shooting down air targets, killing the pilot. 'The pilot used all of his onboard weapons and shot down seven air targets. While shooting down the last one, his aircraft was damaged and began to lose altitude,' the air force said on Telegram. The pilot did not have time to eject, it added. Local officials in Ukraine said the strikes killed two people and injured at least 12, including two children. As air raid sirens rang out across the country, residents in Kyiv took refuge in bomb shelters and metro stations, while in the city of Drohobych, in the western Lviv region, a large fire broke out at an industrial facility after a drone attack that cut electricity to parts of the city. Explosions were heard in Kyiv, Lviv, Poltava, Mykolaiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Cherkasy and the Ivano-Frankivsk regions, witnesses and regional governors told Reuters. Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion Russia's escalating campaign comes as talks on ending the fighting remain largely at an impasse. Two recent rounds between Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul yielded no progress. On Sunday, Ukraine's presidential website said the country had begun the process of withdrawing from the international treaty banning antipersonnel landmines. A senior Ukrainian lawmaker, Roman Kostenko, said on social media that parliamentary approval was still needed. 'This is a step that the reality of war has long demanded,' he said. 'Russia is not a party to this convention and is massively using mines against our military and civilians,' he added. 'We cannot remain tied down in an environment where the enemy has no restrictions.' In recent months, and to an outcry from anti-mine campaigners, five European countries have announced similar plans to withdraw from the 1997 landmark mine ban treaty, citing concerns about the growing threat of Russia.


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Russia launches largest missile and drone attack on Ukraine since start of war
A Russian missile attack killed three people and wounded at least 14 in the city of Samar in Ukraine 's Dnipropetrovsk region on Friday, the governor said. This was the second Russian missile attack in the last three days on the industrial city in central Ukraine. Regional officials have no immediate details on the damage. It comes as South Korea 's intelligence agency warned that Russia could be preparing to launch a big summer attack on Ukraine with help from more North Korean troops. The country's National Intelligence Service (NIS) said Moscow could be readying to mount a large-scale assault against Ukraine in July or August. The NIS told South Korean lawmakers that North Korea would likely send 6,000 additional military personnel to Russia. Meanwhile, Ukraine has received from Russia a number of its soldiers who were hailed as "heroes" for their role in defending besieged Mariupol, part of the latest prisoner swap between the two countries that was agreed in Istanbul. Trump would join peace talks between Putin and Zelensky, says Erdogan Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that Donald Trump told him he would attend potential peace talks between the leaders of Ukraine and Russia in Turkey. But it all depends on if Russian president Vladimir Putin also agreed to take part, Mr Erdogan said. On his return flight from a Nato summit at The Hague, where he met Mr Trump for the first time since the latter returned to office, Mr Erdogan said he told the US president Ankara aims to bring the Russian and Ukrainian leaders together in Turkey for peace talks. "He (Trump) said, 'if Russian president Vladimir Putin comes to Istanbul or Ankara for a solution, then I will also come," Mr Erdogan told reporters, according to his office. "We will hold the necessary contacts and God willing realise this meeting as soon as possible." Alexander Butler27 June 2025 13:00 Airstrikes and sleeper agents: how Putin has repeatedly tried to killed Zelensky Airstrikes and sleeper agents: how Putin has repeatedly tried to killed Zelensky Ukrainian President has reportedly survived dozens of assassination attempts - Kyiv's security service says they have foiled at least three Alexander Butler27 June 2025 12:00 Zelensky welcomes home fresh batch of Ukrainian prisoners of war Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed home a new batch of the country's soldiers taken captive by Russia as the two sides exchanged more prisoners of war yesterday. 'We are continuing the exchanges, another stage has taken place. Today, warriors of the Armed Forces, the National Guard, and the State Border Guard Service are returning home. Most of them had been in captivity since 2022,' he said in a post on X. 'We are doing everything possible to find each person, to verify the information on every name. We must bring all our people home,' he said, just days after he said Russia had sent some of its own dead soldiers to Ukraine in a swap of fallen soldiers. He also shared an emotional video of the Ukrainian soldiers reuniting with their loved ones upon return to the country at an undisclosed location. The returned soldiers are seen draped in Ukrainian flags, hugging and crying their loved ones, calling their family members, drinking a beverage and smoking. Alexander Butler27 June 2025 11:30 Moscow planning summer attack with North Korea, Seoul warns South Korea's intelligence agency warned that Russia could be preparing to launch a big summer attack on Ukraine with help from more North Korean troops. The country's National Intelligence Service (NIS) said Moscow could be readying to mount a large-scale assault against Ukraine in July or August. The NIS told South Korean politicans that North Korea would likely send 6,000 additional military personnel to Russia. Alexander Butler27 June 2025 11:02 North Korea's deployment to Ukraine will be 'significant battlefield inflection' – ISW North Korea's deployment of its troops to Ukrainian territory will represent 'significant battlefield inflection', the Institute for the Study of War. 'The North Korean and Russian military commands authorising the deployment of North Korean forces to Ukrainian territory would mark a significant battlefield inflection that may improve Russian forces' ability to sustain simultaneous offensive operations in multiple directions, which the Russian military has traditionally struggled to conduct,' the US-based think tank said in its latest assessment. According to the South Korean intelligence, North Korea may deploy an unspecified number of additional North Korean forces to Russia to fight against Ukraine as early as July or August 2025 and that North Korea continues to arm Russia with artillery ammunition and missiles. Alexander Butler27 June 2025 11:00 Russian missile attack kills three A Russian missile attack killed three people and wounded at least 14 in the city of Samar in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region on Friday, the governor said. This was the second Russian missile attack in the last three days on the industrial city in central Ukraine. Regional officials gave no immediate details on damage. Alexander Butler27 June 2025 10:54 Watch: Trump shows concern for worried BBC Ukraine reporter during press conference Alexander Butler27 June 2025 10:30 Ukraine and Russia battle it out in war's hottest sector Sumy. Here's what we know so far Ukraine has announced it has pushed back Russian forces on the battlefield and said they have prevented an advance into the northern Sumy region, which has been one of the hottest fighting areas along the war frontline. Ukraine's top military commander, Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi, said that Ukrainian successes in Sumy have prevented Russia from deploying about 50,000 Russian troops, including elite airborne and marine brigades, to other areas of the frontline. Here's what we know about the region caught in heavy attacks. Sumy, the city which is the capital of the Ukrainian region of the same name, had a prewar population of around 250,000. It lies about 20km (12 miles) from the frontline. Russia's push into the region earlier this year compelled Ukraine to strengthen its defences there. Sumy borders Russia's Kursk region, where a surprise Ukrainian incursion last year captured a pocket of land in the first occupation of Russian territory since the Second World War. The long border is vulnerable to Ukrainian incursions, Russian president Vladimir Putin said, and creating a buffer zone could help Russia prevent further cross-border attacks there. General Syrskyi said a special defence group has been formed to improve security in Sumy and surrounding communities, with a focus on improving fortifications and accelerating construction of defensive barriers. Alexander Butler27 June 2025 10:00 Britain must 'actively prepare' for a war on home soil, major government review warns UK must 'actively prepare' for a war on home soil, major government review warns The new National Security Strategy has been published with a grim warning as international turmoil in the Middle East and Ukraine continues Alexander Butler27 June 2025 09:30 The myriad countries arming Russia and Ukraine – and the billions it costs Alexander Butler27 June 2025 09:00