THREAD on Azov movement personalities arrested in the latest SBU sweep in Kharkiv. Not among them, but worth mentioning first, is Artem Moshensky, who was shot in the neck on June 30 and transported in a private plane to a hospital in Israel.
Moshensky was one of the leaders of the East Corps, an Azov movement outfit in Kharkiv. The main leader was Oleh Shiryayev, who later split from Azov movement and formed the paramilitary force of Viktor Medvedchuk’s pro-Russian party OPZZh.
Azov movement leader Andriy Biletsky blamed Shiryayev for the assassination attempt. Shiryayev blamed Biletsky. Shiryayev got arrested on July 6. On Aug 2, SBU clamped down on his pro-Russian paramilitary force. ssu.gov.ua/novyny/sbu-nei…
The most prominent of the Azovians arrested in the latest sweep is Serhiy Velychko. From Metallist Kharkiv ultras milieu like most of them, Velychko is famously the author of Putin Khuylo (Putin is a prick) patriotic chant.
Less famously, Velychko was a co-founder of the security company AzGuard (Azov Guard). The other co-founder is Maksym Zhorin, a top figure of the pan-Ukrainian Azov movement. AzGuard’s adverts featured a phone number containing the cyphered Heil Hitler salute - 1488.
AzGuard’s logo copycats that of Wotanjugend - a Russian neo-nazi platform formed around the MOLOTH (Hitler’s Hammer) black metal band, which moved to Ukraine in 2015. Its lead singer Aleksey Levkin became one of Azov’s ideologists.
Another arrested Azovian is Serhiy Kozlyuk, who badly wounded cameraman Vadym Makaryuk in clashes at Barabashova market in Kharkiv in 2019. The screenshot shows him shooting at Makaruyk, who ended up in intensive care where he additionally suffered a stroke.
Kozlyuk went on trial after this incident, but as often happens with the far right going on trial in Ukraine, I can’t find any clues as to how it all ended. He was obviously free when arrested in the SBU sweep.
Also among the arrested is Artem Subochev, who injured a patrol policeman in Kharkiv in 2016. Local media noted at the time that he appeared in social networks under the nick fcmk1488 and his posts were full of photos showing people making nazi salute.
The last of the arrestees for now is Kyrilo Krikunov, who won Kharkiv police championship in sambo (a Soviet martial art) in 2017 as part of the East Corps team. He was evidently an employee of Ukrainian police at the time, like many Azovians. nackor.org/ru/vita-mo-pob…
I’ll continue this thread when I find out more about other arrested members of what SBU describes as a crime group involved in racketeering. Local press claims that they primarily targeted funeral businesses, a highly criminalised sphere in all ex-Soviet countries.
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Lots of interesting military and political nuance in UP’s interview with 3rd Assault Brigade commander and Azov Movement leader Andriy Biletsky. pravda.com.ua/rus/articles/2…
He says no amount of Western-made planes, tanks or guns will put Ukraine on par with Russia. His recipe is to invest in highly professional units, by which he of course means multiple iterations of Azov. These, he believes, can wage a successful asymmetrical war against Russia.
This is consistent with Azov’s ideology which puts at the forefront the caste of military aristocracy or - as they call it - natiocracy. The term was coined in the 1930s by OUN’s ideologist Mykola Stsyborsky who envisaged Ukraine as a “totalitarian, authoritarian” state.
Kremlin’s definition of victory/defeat in Ukraine is a mystery, so it is interesting when Rybar circulates a post clearly categorising possible outcomes. Caveat: This comes from the “angry patriots” faction, not the Kremlin. I’ll translate some of it below.
Post war trade-off is focused on:
- Ukraine’s future setup: Russia won
- NATO’s setup and European security: Russia won with a knock-out
- line of delimitation: a draw
- 1991 borders: Russia lost
- Russia’s future setup: Russia lost with a knock-out
Not able to read Putin’s mind (and mistaken when trying in the past), but IMHO the Kremlin will perceive a truce based on the current delimitation line (or anything more advantageous than Minsk) as a victory. But they will also insist on neutrality and demilitarisation.
Some trolling on the account of the Moscow drone attack by Ukraine’s most famous war crowdfunding figure Serhiy Prytula and his close ally Serhiy Sternenko, a far right personality. Prytula’s foundation specialises in acquiring drones for the Ukrainian army.
Prytula: Russians, this game can be played by two.
Sternenko: Good night, Moscow.
The pair is producing numerous sketches like this together, mainly with the aim of crowdfunding drones.
This video was released in the morning of the attack although the good night wish makes one wonder if it was recorded the night before.
An important piece by Ilya Zhegulev explaining, in broad brushes, why and how Putin made his decisions on Crimea, Donbas and Feb 2022 invasion. Based partly on Ukrainian, partly on anonymous Kremlin sources. Not the final truth, but crucial details. verstka.media/8964-2
A quick recap. The occupation of Crimea was a spontaneous, knee-jerk decision adopted by Putin on his own and against the opinion of his security aides. It was triggered by Kernes’ betrayal of Yanukovych in Kharkiv.
Donbas war was the result of private entrepreneurship by people like Malofeyev and Glazyev. Putin was not initially interested, but eventually got sucked in by getting Surkov involved.
In an interview with Interfax, Ukrainian land forces commander Col-Gen Syrsky paints a picture of Wagner’s tactics that’s quite different from the “zombie waves” propaganda narrative.
After devastating tank and artillery strikes, he says, roughy 10-men-strong assault groups proceed to capture the target, using apps which mark Ukrainian positions and backed up drones which direct artillery fire.
Not sure how this could lead to 1K per day losses sometimes claimed by the Ukrainian side.
Russian military propagandist Aleksandr Sladkov (not a dodgy milblogger, but fully-fledged government TV correspondent) has interviewed Wagner Group’s top neo-nazi Aleksey Milchakov. Not reposting the interview because it contains open justification of ethnocide and war crimes.
Sladkov openly asks Milchakov if he is a nazi. In response, the latter describes himself as Russian nationalist and claims he has nothing against the Jews and Dagestani. He dismisses neo-nazism as a subculture that was relevant in the past, but no longer.
His black sun (stylized swastika) patch appears in closing shots.
Asked about his Azov (ex)-pals (who often sport the same symbol), he says that they have betrayed their clan. Meaning Russian nazis who joined Azov.