Review the System Requirements page within cPanel’s documentation for a current list of supported operating systems. While Ubuntu 20.04 LTS is also supported, it is outside the scope of this guide. This guide covers AlmaLinux 8, Rocky Linux 8, and CentOS 7 (though cPanel does not recommend using CentOS 7 for new installations). Before You Beginįollow Linode’s Creating a Compute Instance guide, selecting a Linux distribution that’s supported by cPanel. These instructions should be performed as the root user via SSH. This product must be installed on a freshly deployed CentOS Linode. Additionally, Linode does not provide cPanel support, although you may contact cPanel support directly once you’ve purchased a license. This article was amended on 22 February 2024 to add the detail that the film commentary mentions the UN documenting cases of unlawful killings and executions of civilians in Bucha.You’ll need to obtain a VPS license directly from cPanel or an authorized distributor. Ukraine’s War: The Other Side airs in the UK on ITV1 at 10.45pm on Monday 19 February 2024 When a Russian soldier tells Langan, in an exposed muddy trench near Donetsk, that “my nerves are shot” as drones fly above and that “we are tired of war”, his sentiment is not invalid. But neither viewers nor broadcasters should completely disregard rarely heard points of view. This is not a film of sustained critical analysis, and at times it appears generous to the Russian position simply by giving its ordinary soldiers and civilians airtime (the blogger is the closest to an official voice in the film). Unlike most western journalists who will seek to minimise their exposure to the frontline, Langan – who was once taken prisoner by the Taliban for three months – choses to linger for hours, even stay overnight, when most prudent reporters would head home. Photograph: ITV/Youtubeīackground shelling brings their conversation to a hasty conclusion, and the sound of outgoing and incoming artillery is constant throughout. View image in fullscreen A scene from Ukraine’s War: The Other Side. But in others, as when a woman living near in a deserted suburb of Donetsk city makes him coffee in her flat, we simply see people caught on the far side of a frontline. Timofey Yermakov, a Russian war blogger, says “we are not monsters” before concluding the war in Ukraine will only end “when we kill the last Nazi”, which somewhat undermines his plea for sympathy. Ukraine said 458 bodies were found, of which 419 were shot, tortured or beaten to death, but Langan notes in the commentary that, while the UN did document cases of unlawful killings and executions of civilians in Bucha, he does not feel safe in pressing the soldier further.Īt other points, the mask slips completely. But he is allowed to speak unchallenged when he suggests the subsequent discovery of war crimes was fabricated in the days after the Russians retreated. A soldier in a balaclava tells Langan he was at Bucha, north of Kyiv, in the early weeks of the war. Throughout the documentary is careful enough to stress who is at fault for the invasion – Russia, and the overall narrative positioning justifies ITV’s decision to air it on its main channel, even in the aftermath of the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, widely believed to have been orchestrated by the Kremlin. So rare is his access, clearly carefully mediated by his well-connected fixer, Sasha – “I’m pro Ukrainian, but the Ukrainian government is against the Ukrainian people right now” – that it is tempting to conclude there must be a propagandistic purpose in the ensuing film.īut it is not quite the case, as Langan’s weary conclusion makes clear. ![]() Langan filmed over three trips in Russian-occupied Donbas, two in autumn 2022 before the final visit the following Easter. “I met a lot of good men on the frontlines,” he narrates shortly afterwards, “but in years to come, I couldn’t help wondering how many will still believe in the cause.” ![]() ![]() “We’re just protecting what is ours.”īut there is a look of disappointment when Langan says Americans are not protesting against the war as if it were Vietnam. “We are not invaders,” one Russian soldier says justifying Moscow’s bloody and unprovoked invasion of its neighbour in familiar, simplistic terms. View image in fullscreen Russian soldiers in Sean Langan’s documentary.
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