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Mar 11 34 tweets 6 min read
1/ Dozens of mobilised Russians from Volgograd are reported to have died after being sent to fight in Ukraine without being given any ammunition. Their deaths are said to have been covered up subsequently, but independent Russian journalists have reported on their story. ⬇️
2/ The 'No Future' project has published a long report on the fate of the men, who were part of the first wave of Russia's mobilisation in September-October 2022. They seem to have accepted their mobilisation orders as their patriotic duty.
3/ One man told his wife: "Do you understand that the next day they will come to bomb us? I have a sister here, a mother, goddaughters. I'm going to protect you first."

Relatives sold cars and other personal items to equip their men before they were sent to a training area.
4/ Training turned out to be minimal. A wife says that that the men "played on their phones" for two weeks and had one session at a firing range where they shot ten blank rounds from a sniper rifle. According to No Future:
5/ "Relatives say that the mobilised rebelled and demanded to be taken to exercises more often, to which one of the unit commanders replied: "You are meat."
6/ Disillusionment set in. One man told his wife, "Don’t believe anything that they say in the news, they are bullshitting, not a single word of truth, a complete lie.”
7/ The men were sent to Dzhankoy in Crimea and were briefed about how to deal with the civilian population in the occupied Kherson region, where they were to be sent. As a wife put it, "You can’t trust anyone there at all - not a grandmother, not a child, not anyone.
8/ "There are civilians there who treat Russian soldiers almost like their own children, and there are residents who promote Bandera, who are for Ukraine, they call [the Russians] occupiers there, they hate them.
9/ They were told that if a civilian doesn't surrender, doesn't lay down, doesn't raise his hands, he will be wasted."
10/ The men were cautioned against being too lenient with Ukrainian civilians. "Many boys die foolishly. Because the civilians are human beings, [the soldiers] feel sorry for them, and here they are."
11/ The men were sent to a forest belt 30 km from Kherson (in the area which was then held by the Russians on the north bank of the Dnipro) on 16 October and told to dig in there. They were heavily bombarded and had only occasional food deliveries.
12/ They kept themselves going for eight days amid liquid mud, drinking alcohol to cope with the bitterly cold night temperatures.

However, the men had no idea what they were supposed to be doing there.
13/ One of them, a man called Vladimir, says: "To the question "what were you doing there?" everyone answers the same way – nothing, they just dug in and sat there. We were all wondering the same thing – why are we sitting here?
14/ What our tasks are, where the enemy is – no, we were not told, it's probably a military secret, it's not disclosed."
15/ Absurdly, the men were not even issued with ammunition. The photograph at the top of this thread was taken in the forest belt near their trenches. The men pose with their weapons – but none of them are loaded or have any ammunition for them.
16/ Another of the men, 'Burda', says that they were told they didn't need ammunition because they were told, "You’re not going to fight, you’ll be on guard". However, the men discovered that they were expected to attack the Ukrainians even without ammunition.
17/ "We were enrolled in a mobile assault unit. When mortar shelling occurs, we are obliged to run at the enemy, shout “For victory!” and go into battle. But, as you understand, you can’t run far without ammunition. Where can I run with an empty gun? Take it to a pawnshop?"
18/ Ukraine's advance in the Kherson region put the men at danger of being surrounded and overrun. On 23 October they were ordered to withdraw. Late at night, they were hastily put on board three trucks, which turned out to already be half-full of materiel:
19/ "Around 11pm, the vehicles – two military Kamaz trucks and a Ural with an awning instead of a roof – arrived. There was not enough room. Half of the bodies were crammed with goods, we were loaded chock-full, on top of one another, with our heads pressed against the awning."
20/ An argument broke out between the mobilised men and their officers, who were urging them to board. The exchange went something like this, according to the men:
21/ "– The trucks are overcrowded! We won't go like this!

– If there is shelling, an attack, close combat, we just won't get out of here!

– There's no time, no time, no time! Hurry up and get in!"
22/ The trucks drove off to the bridge over the Dnipro at the Kakhovka hydroelectric power station. As they approached the bridge, they were blocked by a civilian car. Second later they were hit by HIMARS rockets, which wrecked the trucks and killed or injured many of the men.
23/ One survivor recalls: "[There was] an explosion, a bang and seconds later it hit my Ural. A green flash, my helmet just flies off, falls to the ground. I don't understand what is happening in this Ural, the guys all bowed their heads.
24/ I asked: "All alive? Is everybody alive? Everybody alive?". And my head starts bleeding. I start throwing my boys, who had started moaning, out of the Ural. The others were completely silent, they were just killed.
25/ I just have half my skull missing, I start throwing earth into my head in the first puddle ditch I come across. We didn't even have first-aid kits, nobody gave us any. The guys were all running around."
26/ The men blamed their commanders for the deadliness of the attack, as the trucks were close together and travelling slowly when they were hit. They say their commanders ran away after the attack.
27/ "The company commander and battalion commander forced people to get into overcrowded vehicles, did not coordinate the march with the leadership, sent the column without cover and drove along a dangerous route.
28/ [The battalion commander] ditched the wounded, ditched the dead, and just ran away from there. When the boys were left under fire, he left his position and went to another place, supposedly to look at new positions and wait for the boys there."
29/ Burda says that 70 died in the initial attack on the right (north) bank of the Dnipro, with more being killed on the left (south) bank. He says that he personally identified 32 dead from one of the trucks in the convoy, in which everyone inside was killed.
30/ Some of the men suspect they were set up by people on their own side collaborating with the Ukrainians, but this seems unlikely, as the bridge had come under repeated HIMARS attacks and was likely being watched by the Ukrainians for vehicles crossing it.
31/ A stream of corpses arrived back at Volgograd a few days later. Relatives lamented on social media: "The coffins are flowing", "How many more for this date?", "So many corpses and not a word".
32/ The exact number of casualties is unclear. No Future has been able to confirm 24 names. Other sources have counted between 25 and 70 dead.

/end

Source:
nofuture.press/klub-24/

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Mar 10
1/ Many videos have been posted by mobilised Russians in the past month, complaining about the conditions they face in Russia's current offensive. Here's a deeper look at their complaints and a major new factor – the role of the Donetsk and Luhansk 'People's Republics'. ⬇️
2/ For a summary of the videos and the timeframe of their posting, see the thread below. The videos all follow the same general format of an appeal to Russian president Vladimir Putin to resolve problems at the front line in Ukraine.
3/ The 'appeal to the Tsar' is a deep tradition in Russian history, going back centuries. Petitions used to be called 'chelobitnye', literally 'forehead-beating documents', reflecting petitioners' ritual bowing of their foreheads to the ground before the Tsar.
Read 34 tweets
Mar 10
1/ Anna Colin Lebedev (@colinlebedev) has written an important thread in French on the social and political implications of the latest wave of videos from unhappy mobilised Russians. Here's an English translation. (See below for the videos.) ⬇️
2/ "Videos of complaints from mobilised Russians, most often addressed to regional governors and Putin, are proliferating on social media. They are systematically recorded by investigative journalists and volunteers, for example from
@CITeam_en.
3/ The media outlet Verstka notes a sudden rise in the number of such videos. The content is always the same: 5 to 10 (hooded) men identify their military unit and their region of origin, and make complaints, while affirming their patriotism.
verstka.media/%D0%BC%D0%BE%D…
Read 11 tweets
Mar 9
1/ Mobilised Russians who recorded an appeal to Vladimir Putin are reported to have been "blown to pieces" during failed assaults on Ukrainian positions in the Kreminna region. A new video and information from relatives has revealed their apparent fate.
2/ In the original video, recorded around 3 March, mobilised men from the Russian republics of Mordovia and Mari El said that they left Russia on 17 January 2023 and were attached to the 'Luhansk People's Republic' (LNR) military, likely the 2nd Army Corps.
3/ They complained that they had been reassigned to assault roles, despite having no training in assault tactics and being armed only with automatic rifles. They were sent to the front lines and recorded an appeal to Putin to resolve their situation.
Read 10 tweets
Mar 9
1/ Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin is complaining that the Russian Ministry of Defence is ghosting him – it's not picking up his phone calls and his representatives' passes have been deactivated, to stop him nagging them for ammunition. ⬇️
2/ In response to a question from a Russian news outlet about whether Wagner's ammunition shortages have been resolved, he has posted an audio reply on his official Telegram channel. Translation:
3/ "No, it didn't get any better with ammunition. Basically, nothing has changed at all. But there are indeed changes.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 9
1/ Mobilised Russians from at least 16 regions of Russia have posted videos in the last few weeks complaining about poor training, lack of equipment, brutal commanders, mistreatment, and being used as "meat" for suicidal assaults on Ukrainian positions. ⬇️ Image
2/ Anyone who has been following @wartranslated (if you don't, you should) will have seen many of these videos. The independent Russian news outlet Verstka has been analysing them and has identified where the people appearing in them came from.
3/ As the map at the top of this thread shows, they are from places across the European and west Asian regions of Russia. Notably, though, they are fairly peripheral regions; the wealthiest parts of western Russia do not seem to be represented. Verstka summarises:
Read 18 tweets
Mar 9
1/ Russian convicts are being recruited directly by the Russian Ministry of Defence to fight in the war in Ukraine, but are being sent directly into assaults with little training or equipment. After 75 convicts went into one assault, only 11 reportedly survived. ⬇️ Image
2/ In a series of posts and videos, the Russian Telegram channel 'Caution, News' (ON) reports on the experiences of prisoners recruited from penal colony no. 4 (IK-4) in the Stavropol Territory. Russian MOD representatives came to the colony on 9 February to recruit prisoners.
3/ The MOD had previously left prisoner recruitment to the Wagner mercenary group, which is reported to have recruited as many as 50,000 convicts. However, Wagner's huge losses and its quarrels with the MOD leadership have ended its recruitment activities inside jails.
Read 17 tweets

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