ChrisO_wiki Profile picture
Mar 22 28 tweets 7 min read
1/ A volunteer from Tatarstan's Alga volunteer battalion has spoken out about his experiences fighting in Ukraine. He says his unit was 'almost completely' destroyed near Vuhledar. He is now facing criminal charges for leaving it and returning home after being injured. ⬇️
2/ Tatarstan formed two volunteer battalions, Alga and Timer, last summer. The regional government advertised for volunteers and offered a relatively generous pay package – 260,000 rubles on joining, 170,000 per month when in combat and another 2,000 a day from Tatarstan.
3/ The Tatarstan government was also supposed to be paying for the cost of equipping the men. The thread below from @RALee85 documents their recruitment and training, prior to their deployment to Ukraine's Kherson region.
4/ A battalion member, whose name has not been disclosed, says that he suffered a traumatic brain injury during Ukraine's successful offensive in the Kherson region in September–November 2022 when a projectile exploded near him. The battalion was badly mauled in the offensive.
5/ "We were standing 800 meters away from [the Ukrainians], holding the defence, so they wouldn't go [forward]. We could not storm in by ourselves: they stood on the heights, we were below, they could see us as if in the palm of their hand.
6/ A lot of people [from the battalion] were killed. Maybe half of them."

He had previously served in the army during the Second Chechen War in 1999-2000, but found the Ukrainian war a far more difficult experience. "This war [in Ukraine] is certainly tougher. Drones work here.
7/ "We also have them, [Tatarstan] bought very expensive drones for us. But in the end [the Ukrainians] brought them down. We should come up with a way to prevent their drones from reaching us as well.
8/ "As it turned out, we shoot down a drone with a machine gun, and literally within three seconds artillery, mortars, or rockets start coming [at us]. You can't attack or take cover, because thermal imaging cameras are operating. It is very hard to fight."
9/ The volunteer was paid 147,000 rubles by the Russian Ministry of Defence and was given a lump sum of 185–195,000 rubles when he volunteered, plus additional payments that brought his salary to over 200,000 ($2,589) per month.
10/ However, he had to buy all his equipment himself, including clothes, gloves, helmets, boots and so on, which cost around 60-70,000 rubles.
11/ The Tatarstan government seemingly didn't fulfil its promise to equip the volunteers, who have also complained that they received less money than the 250,000 a month they were promised.

Their weapons they were given were also inadequate, antiquated and unreliable.
12/ "The guns were also problematic: they would start shooting and then would jam until you cleaned them. The [combat] equipment was made in 1973, 1978, 1964, it didn't even fire.
13/ "When we entered [the Kherson region], we had ten pieces [of equipment], five pieces didn't even arrive. The rest broke down within a week, one [combat vehicle] more or less went back and forth and eventually stopped too."
14/ After retreating across the Dnipro, the volunteer received medical treatment for his concussion, but experienced ongoing health effects that left him unable to continue fighting. He and around 15 other volunteers decided to resign their contracts and go home.
15/ Although he says that, as volunteers, they were entitled to resign, the military treated them evasively. "The chief of staff took one copy of the report for himself, removed it, put another one in, and the report was sort of "lost"."
16/ Ever since, they have been trying to find out why their discharge order has not been signed. They are in a kind of limbo: "We don't get paid, and we don't get dismissed. We have no status." Some returned to the front lines. Others were listed as deserters and investigated.
17/ The volunteer was lucky to have missed the Russian 'human wave' offensive against Vuhledar in early 2023, which he says has virtually destroyed the Alga battalion and its counterparts from Bashkortostan and Orenburg. He says:
18/ "When I watch TV now I feel like spitting. They don't talk about it on TV, but on 6 February [during the offensive] towards Vuhledar, the Alga battalion was put down almost completely.
19/ "After that they put down the Orenburg battalion, the Bashkir battalion, where they were all volunteers. My comrade, who is in hospital now, says that there was no reconnaissance, there was no reconnaissance shelling.
20/ There were eight to ten men in each APC, and once they went [on the offensive], some didn't even realise what had happened [when they were attacked]."
21/ The disastrous attack was documented in the thread below by @Tatarigami_UA. Many Alga soldiers were captured by the Ukrainians. Relatives say at least two companies – which would mean 250-300 men – were killed.
22/ The volunteers attempting to resign from their contracts now face criminal prosecution, as the Russian state says that Putin's mobilisation order of last September overrides the expiry of their four-month contracts.
23/ "In this case," argues a representative of the Union of Paratroopers, "the contract of volunteers is extended for an indefinite period. Most likely, until the end of the special military operation."
24/ The volunteers and their lawyers dispute this, as they say it contradicts Russian federal law: "The presidential decree [on mobilisation], according to the Constitution, cannot be higher than the federal law."
25/ The case may provide an important test of what remains of the rule of law in Russia. Which will be the deciding factor – the Russian constitution, or the decrees of Vladimir Putin? /end

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with ChrisO_wiki

ChrisO_wiki Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ChrisO_wiki

Mar 23
1/ Russia's Kursk region is to spend 3.2 billion rubles ($42.1 million) on building border fortifications by 5 June this year – equivalent to a third of its annual health budget and more than it spends on housing and utilities. ⬇️ Image
2/ The Kursk regional government has issued two contracts for constructing fortifications, according to the independent Russian news outlet Verstka. The 3.2 billion ruble cost exceeds the regional health budget (2.9 billion) and is a third of the health budget (10.2 billion).
3/ Kursk has already been building fortifications along its border with Ukraine's Sumy region. The regional governor, Roman Starovoit, has posted a number of pictures of the defences, which include trenches, dragon's teeth and apparently prefabricated bunkers. ImageImageImageImage
Read 17 tweets
Mar 23
1/ Sanctions are having one unexpected effect on Russia: the country is running out of human corpses to use for medical science. Now Russian doctors are having to go to nearby countries to study anatomy and test new skills and equipment on cadavers.
2/ The Baza Telegram channel reports that Russia faces a "cadaveric famine". Russian law makes it difficult to donate one's body to science, restricting the domestic supply of cadavers. Ironically, many of the cadavers previously used by Russian doctors were imported from the US.
3/ However, Baza explains, "After 24 February 2022 deliveries to our country stopped. There is simply no supply on the market because not all countries supply cadavers (for example, in Muslim countries or in India any manipulation with corpses is prohibited)."
Read 5 tweets
Mar 21
1/ Last night's reported Ukrainian drone attack on the railway station at Dzhankoy in Russian-occupied Crimea is reported to have caused serious damage to infrastructure, as well as wounding one person. The local authorities have tried to play it down. ⬇️
2/ The independent ASTRA Telegram channel reports that "at least five addresses were seriously damaged by drone attacks.
3/ Four of them belong to the railway station (locomotive depot, station security building, inventory and fuel depot), one is an agricultural store at 51 Perekopskaya Street.
Read 9 tweets
Mar 21
1/ The Russian Ministry of Defence is reportedly coercing convicts to join the Russian army by threatening them with being incarcerated alongside men who are available to be raped, regarded as untouchables in Russian prison culture. ⬇️
2/ Russia's prisons operate a brutal caste system based on a sexual hierarchy, where some prisoners are treated as available to be raped by anyone. These men are known as the "cocks", "offended", "lowered", "forced" or "crests", and are made to sleep next to the toilets.
3/ Importantly, "cock" status is treated as being contagious. They are literally untouchable: interacting with "cocks", sharing their food, touching them or their possessions (unless you are raping them) is regarded as being enough to make you a "cock" as well.
Read 15 tweets
Mar 20
1/ Moscow students are reportedly being handed mobilisation orders along with their diplomas, literally at the very minute that their exemption from military service expires. This is happening at the same time that Russia is reportedly seeking 400,000 new soldiers. ⬇️ Image
2/ The independent Russian news outlet Verstka reports that the Moscow Aviation Institute – a well-regarded university which feeds engineering graduates to Russia's aerospace industry – is refusing to give students their diplomas unless they agree to go to the enlistment office.
3/ "They don't issue a diploma until you sign a summons [to go to the military enlistment office]. The military commissar sits right in the office where they issue the diploma," one of the students says.

"Along with the diploma they require you to sign a contract at once.
Read 8 tweets
Mar 20
1/ Russian contractors are urgently seeking builders and carpenters to construct trenches and fortified positions in the occupied Crimea. Adverts have appeared on Avito, Russia's equivalent of eBay, offering up to 7,000 rubles ($91) a day for the work – but it can be risky. ⬇️
2/ Many contractors are currently advertising for labourers, carpenters and foremen to work on trench construction around Krasnoperekopsk on the strategic Isthmus of Perekop. This is the main land route into Crimea and has been fortified and fought over for more than 2,000 years.
3/ Russia has recently been building up its fortifications in the area as it prepares for a likely Ukrainian offensive to recapture occupied territory in the south. As @bradyafr has documented below, lines of fortifications have been built on the isthmus. google.com/maps/d/u/0/vie…
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(