Russia blocked Telegram on 1 April, forcing users toward the state-controlled platform Max. The ISW assessed on 4 April that the crackdown produced harsher backlash than Moscow expected. Pro-war bloggers, who had served as nominally independent commentators reinforcing the war's justification, publicly stated that capturing Ukraine could take 100 years at the current pace.
Blocking Telegram removes the distribution infrastructure these bloggers built. Forcing migration to Max makes them officially embedded in state media, destroying the independence that gave them credibility. The backlash ISW observed is not from opponents of the war; it is from supporters who resent the loss of their preferred channel.
ISW links the censorship directly to frontline failures. Russia's spring offensive stalled against Ukraine's Fortress Belt , with daily engagements falling from 163 to 120. The bloggers who once promoted the advance are now its loudest critics. The Kremlin faces a binary choice: block them and lose the morale infrastructure, or permit them and lose the narrative.
