This is not a standard diplomatic dispatch; it is a chilling, ground-level autopsy of the intelligence failures that preceded the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Zichen Wang, writing from the perspective of a Chinese diplomat who stayed behind while the world fled, offers a rare glimpse into the terrifying gap between official optimism and the brutal reality on the ground. For the busy reader, the value here lies not in geopolitical grandstanding, but in the granular, human details of how a war is actually felt moments before the first missile strikes.
The Cost of Optimism
Wang's central thesis is a stark indictment of the collective blindness that plagued not just Kyiv, but the global intelligence community. He describes a diplomatic corps and a host government paralyzed by "fixed assumptions and an overreliance on experience." While the embassy's military attaché and Wang himself identified the threat, their warnings were "deliberately shelved" to avoid disrupting the prevailing narrative of peace.
The author writes, "Russia's actions were by no means routine deterrence. Rather, Russia was planning to launch a full-scale attack on Ukraine. Its operational objectives would not be limited to the eastern Donbas, but would be directed at the whole of Ukraine." This assessment, made months in advance, highlights a critical failure of institutional memory. As Wang notes, the prevailing view was that the conflict would remain confined to the Donbas, a region that had been a flashpoint since 2014. This echoes the diplomatic blind spots seen in earlier deep dives on the War in Donbas, where the international community often treated the simmering conflict as a frozen dispute rather than a prelude to total war.
The human cost of this miscalculation is immediate. Wang describes living in a high-rise known as the "Corn Cob," where he spotted "red cross markings on several walls." To the untrained eye, they might be graffiti; to a diplomat with military training, they were "coordinate indicators placed for precision artillery strikes."
"That discovery strengthened my conviction: Kyiv was Russia's core assault target, and a full-scale battle to seize the city was already on the brink of eruption."
Critics might argue that Wang's account is retrospective, shaped by the knowledge of what actually happened, and that the fog of war makes such certainty impossible in real-time. However, the specificity of his observations—the infiltration teams, the troop density of 360,000, the CIA Director's secret visit—suggests the intelligence was there, simply ignored by those in power.
The Flag That Stayed
Perhaps the most striking element of Wang's narrative is the decision to keep the Chinese embassy open when nearly every other mission evacuated. While the United States and European nations moved their staff to western Ukraine or neighboring countries, the Chinese flag remained flying over Kyiv. Wang notes that under international law, a fully evacuated mission must lower its flag, a signal of temporary closure.
As the war shadow deepened, the Ukrainian government's own press office expressed shock that the Chinese mission had no plans to leave. Wang recounts a chilling exchange with a Ukrainian official who, after confirming war was inevitable, simply said, "Take care." The author writes, "Only the five-star red flag above the Chinese Embassy remained standing against the wind, flying high."
This decision carries immense weight. By staying, the embassy became a lifeline, but also a target. Wang describes the scene on the eve of the invasion: "The whole city seemed wrapped in a suffocating stillness. The air was heavy, oppressive." While President Zelensky was publicly downplaying the crisis to "stabilise public sentiment," the reality was that fewer than ten hours remained before the full-scale outbreak of war.
The contrast between the calm surface and the impending violence is palpable. Wang describes walking through the government district, seeing "brightly lit" streets and calm passersby, unaware that the "shriek of missiles" would soon tear through the night. This dissonance between official reassurance and the reality of invasion is a recurring theme in modern conflict, one that leaves civilians dangerously exposed.
The First Day of Fire
When the invasion finally began at 4:45 AM on February 24, 2022, the diplomatic protocol of the previous months evaporated. Wang's account shifts from analysis to visceral horror. He describes the "deafening explosion" that jolted him awake, followed by the "sharp, acrid smell of smoke and explosives."
The immediate aftermath was chaos. Wang and his team rushed to the Kyiv railway station, a scene he describes as "harrowing and devastating." The station was packed with "tens of thousands of refugees," where "screams, cries, and desperate wails mingled in the air."
"Scenes of chaos I had only seen in Second World War documentary footage were now unfolding before my eyes."
This comparison to the Second World War is not hyperbole; it is a grim acknowledgment of the scale of displacement. The author details the plight of the vulnerable: "Elderly people struggling to walk, parents holding young children, and pregnant women with limited mobility were all swept up in the surging crowds."
The human cost is the undeniable center of this narrative. Wang does not focus on the strategic objectives of the Russian military or the political maneuvering of the administration; he focuses on the "displaced, frightened, helpless figures." This grounding in human suffering is what makes the piece so powerful. It strips away the abstraction of "geopolitics" and replaces it with the raw reality of war.
"The cramped station was packed beyond capacity, with tens of thousands of refugees stranded inside. Piercing air-raid sirens screamed without pause."
Critics might note that Wang's perspective is limited to the experience of the diplomatic corps and the specific group of Chinese citizens he was tasked with protecting. The broader suffering of the Ukrainian population, while acknowledged, is viewed through the lens of a foreign observer. However, this limitation does not diminish the horror of the scene; if anything, it underscores the universality of the trauma, as people of "different nationalities and skin colours pressed together in panic."
Bottom Line
Zichen Wang's account is a masterclass in the danger of ignoring early warning signs, offering a sobering reminder that the gap between intelligence and action can be fatal. Its greatest strength is the unflinching depiction of the human cost of diplomatic failure, while its vulnerability lies in its narrow focus on the Chinese diplomatic experience, which, while unique, cannot fully capture the totality of the Ukrainian tragedy. Readers should watch for how this narrative of "staying put" influences future diplomatic protocols in conflict zones, and whether the world has truly learned from the intelligence failures of 2022.