United States | The talent war

America has an opportunity to lure Russia’s tech talent

Good for America, bad for Vladimir Putin

Passengers gather in front of a departures board at Moscow's Domodedovo airport - the base of Russian carrier S7 - on March 5, 2022, the day S7 Airlines cancelled all its international flights due to sanctions imposed on Russia over the country's invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)
|Washington, DC

Before the war in Ukraine, Nikolai Shevchik was happy working at an American technology startup in St Petersburg. But an economic slump and Vladimir Putin’s crackdown on dissent changed his mind. “For anyone who opposes the war, it is a question of safety now,” says Mr Shevchik, who is thinking of emigrating. He runs a channel on Telegram, a messaging app, where 50,000 or so like-minded Russians look for tech jobs abroad or remote work that pays in dollars or euros. Many have already fled to Turkey or Armenia.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Russians wanted, sort of”

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