Tatarsky was one of the better known of a group of reporters whose personal Telegram channels covering the Russian military’s invasion of Ukraine quickly became a popular alternative news source for Russians bored of state media.
Tending to report from the frontlines and often effectively embedded with the Russian military, the war correspondents’ reports felt first-hand. That combined with their readiness to criticise Russia’s Defence Ministry mandarins and the army’s top brass for their perceived failures in the campaign, lent the war correspondents a legitimacy that state media reporters lacked and brought some of them nationwide recognition.
To mark the first anniversary of Tatarsky’s assassination, political scientist Konstantin Pakhalyuk read his biographical and literary works to discover the man behind the self-made myth. What he discovered was a self-penned literary portrait of an amoral cipher; a cynical adventurer to whom ideology meant nothing, but to whom war, murder, and basking in reflected glory meant everything.