Formed in Kyiv on the first day of the invasion, the Committee brought together several anarchist and anti-fascist groups that intended to resist the Russian advance. It initially fought in the Battle of Kyiv, before many of its members were transferred to the Eastern front, where some of its fighters have died. It also established a mutual aid network in order to supply its fighters and provide humanitarian aid to civilians.
It has defined itself as an anti-authoritarian and anti-imperialist organisation, and has demanded a number of reforms including mass debt relief, the introduction of a welfare system and the self-management of society.
History
Formation
During the crisis that surrounded the Russian military buildup along the Ukrainian border, anarchists in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv began preparing for the predicted invasion.[3] When the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine came on 24 February 2022, Ukrainian anarchists quickly formed a consensus on the need to resist it, despite initial disagreements over command structure.[4] Together with a number of foreign volunteers[5] – some of whom had lived in Ukraine since the Revolution of Dignity in 2014,[1] or fought in Rojava during the Syrian Civil War[3] – Ukrainian anarchists established the Resistance Committee (RC) in order to coordinate anarchist resistance to the invasion.[4] They were soon joined by other leftists, including anti-fascists and democratic socialists.[6]
Although initially unwilling to integrate into larger structures, on 28 February,[4] the militant anarchist organisation Revolutionary Action decided to join the Resistance Committee,[7] bringing 20 of its members into the unit.[4] It was also joined by the anti-fascist football hooligan group Hoods Hoods Klan,[8] which is made up of fans of FC Arsenal Kyiv.[9] It was later joined by Black Flag Ukraine,[8] despite some ideological differences between it and the Resistance Committee's founding members.[1]
Since the outbreak of the war, the Resistance Committee has maintained a consistent social media presence,[13] posted a number of online photos and videos showing their fighters on the frontlines.[8] In one video, they declared their support for four Belarusian anarchists that had been served with lengthy prison sentences over charges of terrorism.[1] On 20 May, the Resistance Committee published its manifesto,[8] which defined the organisation as a "space for dialogue and coordination of anarchist, libertarian and anti-authoritarian initiatives" in Ukraine. It declared its three main functions in the conflict to be active combat operations, public relations and volunteering.[1]
Mutual aid operations
Supported by people outside Ukraine, the Resistance Committee also helped to establish a mutual aid network,[14] known as Operation Solidarity. This non-combatant organisation was dedicated to providing protective gear to frontline fighters and humanitarian aid to civilians. According to Greek journalist Alexis Daloumis:[1]
[Operation] Solidarity and the Resistance Committee have been organically linked since the beginning. Before the war, anarchists from different sides (and in coordination with other antifascists) got together and decided that some would join the armed resistance and some will handle logistics. They have been administered, however, autonomously from each other, and Operation Solidarity also supports other groups and individual anarchists within the armed resistance in various other places of Ukraine.
First established by anarchists, the Resistance Committee came to be a broad tent that included different tendencies of left-wing politics.[16] According to Dmitry Petrov, then known by the pseudonym "Ilya", "not everyone in our unit identifies as an anarchist. The more important thing is that a lot of people organized spontaneously to help each other, to guard their neighborhoods and towns and villages and to confront the occupiers with Molotov [cocktails]".[6] In the last point of their manifesto, they called for "common access to the means of self-defense as a condition of freedom and opportunity to protect oneself from aggressors."[1]
Unlike far-right detachments such as the Azov Brigade, the Resistance Committee is made up of members who reject fascism. They likewise reject what they see as a "false anti-fascism" espoused by Vladimir Putin's government, which they consider to be a "homophobic, sexist and xenophobic regime [...] similar to fascism".[15] To Petrov, "it is clear that the Kremlin's propaganda about 'fighting Nazis in Ukraine' is just a smoke screen to disguise greed for power and the desire to establish harsh authoritarian rule."[3]
Anti-imperialism
To the Resistance Committee, the invasion was a direct manifestation of "the imperialist policies of Putin's regime."[3] Petrov considered it necessary for the invasion to be defeated, "both for the sake of justice and the basic survival of Ukrainian society."[3] Although it supports non-combatant activists, the Resistance Committee rejects pacifism, with Petrov declaring "[w]hen the enemy is attacking you, it is very difficult take an antiwar pacifist stance, and this is because you need to defend yourself."[6]
The Resistance Committee is critical of the Ukrainian state, but considers "Russian imperialist aggression" to be a greater threat and rejects the idea that Russian intervention can solve the country's problems. To Petrov, "taking sides against Russian aggression [...] does not necessarily mean solidarizing with Ukrainian state."[6] Volunteers of the Resistance Committee have rejected that they are fighting for the Ukrainian state, and have instead claimed to be fighting for the Ukrainian people.[12]
They also declared their intention to support the opposition in Russia and Belarus.[1] Their manifesto stated that: "Until the nest of tyranny in Moscow is removed, the whole region will constantly face harassment against its freedom. [...] Every local tyrant, suppressing his rebellious people, will be assisted by the tsar of Moscow."[3] It concluded by declaring: "We want to set ourselves and our neighbours free. It means that we should put an end to Putin’s regime."[17]