1/ A civil engineer who was mobilised into the Russian army despite ill-health has escaped to Germany and spoken about the chaos and brutality he saw. His regiment was told by its commander: "You came here to die." He was later arrested and tortured for trying to flee. ⬇️
2/ 44-year-old Georgy from Lyubertsy near Moscow has told his story to Radio Free Europe. He was mobilised in September 2022 despite serious heart problems and was sent to a training ground where he "wandered aimlessly" and "fired a few times from rusty automatic rifles".
3/ He had protested against being mobilised but was assured initially that he would be sent to a construction battalion, where his skills as a civil engineer would be valuable. Despite this, he was sent to a front-line Russian unit fighting in Ukraine in November 2022.
4/ "The feeling was that no one knows anything, terrible chaos, no coordination, no supplies… It was as if we were transported in a time machine to 1941, when the Germans were advancing on Moscow, complete chaos, only the form was different.
5/ "Late autumn, rain, mud, muddy roads, destroyed villages, war passed over the land."
6/ He and his comrades were sent to a forest near Svatove in the Luhansk region, without raincoats or tools to chop wood for shelters. They bought supplies from local people at their own expense.
7/ "The first days were like Robinson Crusoe on a desert island – surviving in the wild without anything, they didn’t give us anything, we slept on the ground in the rain and snow, lit fires. And I was thinking about how to escape from there.
8/ "I immediately realized that this was a one-way ticket. Judging by the attitude of the officers, the command staff, it was clear that they weren’t considering us as a combat unit, as soldiers,...
9/ ...they had simply brought a portion of cannon fodder that had to play its role and die heroically. It was clear from how they saved on supplies – why feed them and water them if they would be killed tomorrow?
10/ "In the neighbouring forest, there were [Chechen] Akhmatovites and air defence men – and judging by the equipment, it was clear who needed to be protected and who didn’t."
11/ The area was the focus of heavy fighting at the time. At one point his regimental commander, Colonel General Alexander Zavadsky, turned up to give a motivational speech.
12/ "He lined everybody up and said: ‘You came here to die.’ At least he was honest. ‘If you want to go on holiday - 300‘, i.e. wounded, “if you want to go for good – 200”, i.e. killed,’ he said. That's the kind of motivational speech it was."
13/ Georgy managed to escape from the disorganised encampment and hitched a lift to Troitske in the northern Luhansk region, near the Russian border, which was equally chaotic.
14/ "There was Brownian motion – a bunch of mobilised people, no one had anything, everyone was spreading out to neighbouring cities and villages in search of food and materials to set up their daily lives.
15/ "They would arrive in the city, not have time to go to the store – they needed somewhere to spend the night. Some officers tried to help their soldiers, but not all of them – and the hospital’s emergency room was turned into a flophouse."
16/ A local man helped Georgy and three others to travel to a point near the border, which was sealed with a barbed-wire fence. While they were crossing it, a Russian helicopter spotted them and opened fire, killing two of the escapees.
17/ Georgy and the other survivor were captured by FSB border guards and were taken back across the border, where they were imprisoned in an army-run torture centre in a basement in the Luhansk region village of Rozsypne.
18/ The site is a former Ukrainian border service facility which President Zelensky visited in November 2020. It has now been repurposed by the Russian army as a place of pain and terror.
19/ Georgy describes it as "A brand new building, the basement has sandy floors. They nailed together bunks, divided the space in half: for the 'good' ones, who could be re-educated, where I ended up, and for the 'bad' ones, who, as I understood, were not needed."
20/ "People were beaten to death there: we were taken there to clean up, there was even blood on the ceiling. You sit in a stone cell, they take you out to the toilet in the morning and evening, there is no connection with the outside world.
21/ "They feed you poorly, I think so that people suffer from hunger: at 8 in the morning and at noon. And you sit without food until the next day.
People were abused, beaten, tortured there. It was shocking that in the 21st century you encounter such things.
22/ "I am a person of the previous generation, not young, and we were brought up that there were fascists and our people fought this evil. But it turned out that we ourselves have it, and it was clear that this is not an initiative of some sadists, but a systemic thing.
23/ "Someone specially took people into service and trained them. It was shocking that this was possible – especially when propaganda says that you are going to fight fascism, and then boom –we have a copy of the fascist Gestapo.
24/ "When I arrived, as a 'greeting' they hit me with a stun gun, then beat me up. There are specialists working there – they beat us, but so that there are no injuries. And if they just beat us, then the 'bad' ones they killed. Fortunately, I did not see it, I only heard.
25/ "They did it without witnesses."
Georgy suffered a heart attack under torture, but managed to get some medical treatment. The army brought him back to Svatove with other refuseniks who agreed under duress to return to the war.
26/ He was sent to a hill west of the town where thousands of men who had left their units were forced to live in the open with no food or shelter. (Other refuseniks have given similar accounts.)
27/ While some men waited there for days or weeks, Georgy was almost immediately press-ganged into a Storm Z unit, comprised of convicts and deserters, who were routinely used as cannon fodder in assaults. However, his frontline career did not last long.
28/ "They took me to the 'zero line' and told me to wait for a combat mission. Nearby, sappers were unloading explosives from a KamAZ [truck], they had just finished when a shell landed and everything exploded.
29/ "There was nothing left of the sappers, we were 50 meters away, we were crushed by the blast wave. I suffered a concussion, a broken leg and another heart attack."
30/ This time, Georgy was evacuated back to Russia on a fuel tanker. The driver ordered him off the truck when they came under fire, but he managed to order a taxi to Moscow. He was able to get treatment from a friendly doctor and went into hiding in the countryside.
31/ Georgy was arrested while making a visit to Moscow in December 2023 and was flown to Kaliningrad, where he was assigned to the 7th Guards Motorised Rifle Regiment. He soon realised that he had been imprisoned again, albeit in better conditions.
32/ "In fact, it's a military prison, an old military base, still German – they say the SS 'Death's Head' division was based there, even the oak parquet flooring from those times has been preserved. In one of the barracks they set up a prison for people like me.
33/ "Access to the doctors is under escort, to the canteen too. Only you don't sit in the basement, but on the second floor. And they feed you three times a day, not two."
34/ Despite his two heart attacks and a broken leg, he was "miraculously" declared fit, as were other injured soldiers being held there. "I saw many there who, with a wave of a pen, turned from practically disabled into healthy people. Not only those with a heart problem."
35/ "A person had a third of his stomach cut off – he is fit and healthy. Another one froze his feet in the war, they cut off half of his foot, and he is also fit."
36/ Georgy was able to escape a third time, in May 2024, when his new regiment's corrupt commander began building himself a dacha outside the city, using the soldiers as free labour. "It was illegal, so there was no escort, [we were] under the major’s responsibility."
37/ "I saw that no one was watching, and there was a city behind the fence. I also consulted with experienced people – more than half of the people in prison were convicts. They told me how to hide, one guy gave me a T-shirt and pants to change into civilian clothes."
38/ "Plus, that major told me that there was chaos everywhere, constant mistakes, and that we were in Kaliningrad – “on an island”, where, most likely, “no one will put a guard on you”. That is, when you come to buy a ticket, it will not set off any alarms."
39/ He climbed over a fence and escaped back to the city, from where he was able to get a flight to St Petersburg, where he reunited with his wife and his passport, and then flew to Belarus. From there, he went to Tashkent in Uzbekistan before eventually going to Georgia.
40/ Georgy left Georgia after the October 2024 electoral victory of the pro-Russian Georgian Dream party, lived in Montenegro for a while, and then applied for asylum in Germany along with his wife and children. They had remained in Russia but were harassed by the authorities.
41/ His story has been verified by the dissident organisation "Farewell to Arms", which supports conscientious objectors and anti-war deserters. The family is now hoping to rebuild their lives in Germany. /end
1/ Nikolai Patrushev, a key adviser to Vladimir Putin, says that Russia is fighting a pan-European neo-Nazi alliance, and advocates Russian naval action in the English Channel. He warns the Baltic states of "the end of ... peaceful, carefree life and sovereignty." ⬇️
2/ Patrushev is a former Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, a former head of the FSB, and a highly influential presidential adviser. He has been spoken of as a possible successor to Putin. Like Putin, he has often shown an extremely paranoid, aggressive worldview.
3/ This outlook is on display in an interview headlined "When War Is on the Doorstep" with Russia's main state newspaper, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, in which he addresses his views on the war in Ukraine and Russia's wider geopolitical situation.
1/ Russia's former chief doctor Gennady Onishchenko says that the current fuel crisis is positively beneficial for Russia: it's making the air cleaner, and city residents are becoming fitter by being deprived of their cars. Russian commentators are wondering what he's smoking. ⬇️
2/ The comments were made by Onishchenko, an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, in an interview on Friday with the Moscow Speaks radio station:
3/ "We even stopped walking to the neighbouring [building] entrance and started driving in cars. If we talk about Moscow, it's much more sensible to give up cars. Most people can easily and comfortably ride the metro, and leave cars for trips outside the city.
1/ A Russian general has been arrested by a military court after being accused of 'selling' nearly 90 soldiers to a mercenary leader who is accused of extortion, kidnapping, arms trafficking, torture, and murder. Lt Gen Alexander Dembitsky denies the accusations. ⬇️
2/ The case involves Alexey Marushchenko, the head of the 'Yastreb' private military company, which fought in Ukraine. Yastreb's recruiters are said to have promised those who wished to enlish for military service that they would fight with Yastreb, rather than the regular army.
3/ The prospective contract soldiers were required to pay up front for this privilege. However, Russian criminal investigators found that Yastreb pocketed the recruits' money and they were sent straight to regular military units without any opportunity to serve with Yastreb.
1/ An infamous Russian 'butcher commander' accused of sending his subordinates to their deaths to cover up his own drug-dealing has been promoted to command the 114th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigade. His many critics aren't impressed by this apparent favouritism. ⬇️
2/ Colonel Igor Puzik, callsign 'Evil,' gained notoriety in 2024 after two drone operators with the callsigns 'Goodwin' and 'Ernest' publicly accused Puzik of drug trafficking in a social media video. He sent them to their deaths in an infantry assault a few days later.
3/ The practice of deliberately killing unwanted subordinates by sending them on suicide missions has since been dubbed 'Puzikism' by Russian warbloggers. Despite their criticism and an official investigation, Puzik seems to have prospered under his superiors' protection.
1/ Soaring fuel prices in Russia are providing an unparalleled opportunity to make a quick profit through price gouging, artificial scarcity, and corruption. A Russian warblogger highlights how gas station owners and operators are exploiting the crisis. ⬇️
2/ The Russian 'Kovpak's Detachment' Telegram channel writes:
"In the case of absolutely any shortage, tension in society is created by those who want to make money on it."
3/ "In the case of fuel – gas station owners and various scum, who, with the tacit permission (obviously, not for free) of the gas station management, hang around them.
1/ Russia's deal with India to supply fuel to alleviate the current shortages involves the Indians selling fuel refined from discounted Russian oil back to Russia at full market prices. As warblogger Yuri Baranchik points out, this is extraordinarily bad value for Russia. ⬇️
2/ Baranchik grumbles:
"Well, gentlemen, it's happened: we're witnessing the birth of a new economic reality, which can safely be called "a cycle of enrichment for the Indian oil refining sector at the expense of the Russian budget and the patience of its citizens."
3/ "Look at the elegant business model that's emerging. We're pumping crude oil to India. A lot, a record amount, sometimes as much as 2.7 million barrels per day. Naturally, we're pumping it at that legendary discount that's become the talk of the town.