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Aug 31 33 tweets 6 min read Read on X
1/ Russian veterans of the war in Ukraine – known as SVOshniks – have a reputation for violence and abuse back home in Russia, committing many murders, rapes and assaults. Few are more exposed to the danger than Russia's prostitutes, whose experiences point to future trouble. ⬇️ Image
2/ The St Petersburg news outlet Bumaga ('Paper') has been speaking with prostitutes about how their business has changed since the start of the war in Ukraine. They say that soldiers now amount for as much as 50% of their clientele, but are also the most violent and difficult.
3/ While the police are causing many problems by repeatedly harassing prostitutes and closing down their salons, says St Petersburg single mother Veronica, "SVOshniks cause much more trouble."
4/ "Until recently, the ratio between them and other clients at our salon was about 50/50 – every second man was from the Special Military Operation (SVO). I think this happened because of the large amount of money that they were paid and which they wanted to quickly squander.
5/ "In September, a military client came to us, without arms and legs. He "blew" 3 million rubles ($36,600), then borrowed money from me for a ticket home to Volgograd.

Many of them behave disgustingly, constantly pestering you with reminders that they are heroes, and so on.
6/ "Those who are better behaved order girls for a long time, drink with them, sing songs. SVOshniks in general drink a lot and use drugs a lot. Probably to somehow forget [the war], but I think that [this way] you will not forget anything.
7/ "On the contrary, it will only get worse – you will drink too much or sniff too much, and you will completely go crazy. [To one degree or another] everyone has started having problems with their heads.
8/ "This is noticeable, even if the soldier communicates normally and seems rational."

Soldiers take out their frustrations with violence and threats, including shooting up salons and attacking the prostitutes.
9/ Veronica says that one soldier told her: 'I cut off the heads of the [Ukrainians], do you think I won't cut yours off?' Another SVOshnik decided to protect us, they got into a fight, the girls and I ran away."
10/ "The SVOshnik ran around the apartment after another girl with a knife, saying: 'I'm used to killing.'

In general, no one likes to go on visits to SVOshniks – everyone has heard about their antics, girls are mostly afraid of them.
11/ "You don't know in advance what he is like – whether everything is normal in his head, what he is capable of.

Most of the SVOshniks I met at work were contract soldiers, they went to the Special Military Operation for money.
12/ "During the entire war I had contact with two or three mobilised men, and that was a long time ago – now, it seems to me, there are almost no mobilised men left alive.
13/ "I also met soldiers who said that ‘we are right,’ that everyone must be ‘brought to their knees,’ but such ‘patriots’ probably make up only 30–35 per cent of them. There were also those who simply wanted to get out of prison – to fight for a year and live a normal life.
14/ "Usually they said that it would have been better to serve out the rest of their sentence.

There are many wheelchair users among such clients. On our visits we helped them bandage their limbs a couple of times – it was scary, but what can you do.
15/ "Once I talked to one of the contract soldiers – he was lying on a bed, only a finger on his hand remained of his limbs, and his legs and the other arm were torn off. I asked if it was worth the money? Of course, he answered no."
16/ Veronica is planning to leave sex work and become an eyelash specialist, as are many of her colleagues. They are all afraid of what will happen when the war ends.
17/ "When the war is over, the SVOshniks will return en masse, and that will be scary for the industry. Half of them will have weapons, they are used to getting [a monthly salary of] 200,000 [rubles] — who among them will go back to the factory now?
18/ "But they themselves don’t say anything about the end of the war. I asked some of them when it will all end – they answered that it will take a long time."
19/ 35-year-old Natalia calls soldiers "not so great clients – yes, they pay well, but their psyche is broken. How can I treat them if my friend in Rostov along with other girls was driven into a sauna by the SVOshniks and beaten half to death? God spared me."
20/ "It's dangerous to talk to many of them, even to joke around — they might misunderstand something, and then you could have a knife to your throat.
21/ "I don't understand how you can have a relationship or start a family with men like that, because he could kill his wife and children. They don't have enough war in civilian life, so they take it out on girls.
22/ "[From what I've seen,] few of the SVOshniks were eager to go there [to war]. Many said they were forced to go, some of them even spoke out against the Special Military Operation – I didn't meet any ideological patriots.
23/ "There are many who went for the money, and as I understand it, they get it quite easily. Or maybe they don't value it – I don't know. Everything they earn there for killing, they squander here on nothing.
24/ "They don't spend it on their families or their future, but on prostitutes, alcohol and drugs. There's nothing to talk about with them – I don't see a future in their eyes."
25/ "Many of them have become disabled – what plans can they have now? I went to SVOshniks who were left without arms, without legs. They kind of want [to have sex], but it's difficult for them – do you understand what kind of sex can there be if you have no legs?
26/ "The salons that still accept clients are posting more and more guards because of the SVOshniks, sometimes even with weapons."
27/ As the prostitutes' testimony indicates, Russian society is likely to face an epidemic of violence from ex-soldiers once the war in Ukraine ends. In 2023 alone, there was a 900% increase in the number of convictions of soldiers for murders committed in Russia.
28/ As of June 2025, court records show that at least 378 people have been killed by soldiers returning from the war. Around 137,000 soldiers have already been discharged, with many reporting difficulties in finding jobs because of their reputation for instability and violence.
29/ Russia has experienced this before. After the end of the war in Afghanistan in 1989, tens of thousands of combat veterans were left with untreated PTSD, crippling injuries, and little support from the state, and faced many difficulties in reintegrating with civilian society.
30/ As a result, Russia experienced a massive upsurge in violent crime, with Afghan veterans becoming the backbone of the Russian mafia and its main enforcers. The 1990s were scarred by car bombings, drive-by shootings and assassinations.
31/ While the Russian state is much stronger now than it was in the 1990s, controlling the returning veterans will be an even bigger challenge. Far more people have been involved in the war in Ukraine as a proportion of the population than was the case for Afghanistan.
32/ More than a million Russians are by now likely to have been killed or injured in the war in Ukraine. As a result, the war has almost certainly created a lost generation of psychologically disturbed men whose trauma and violence will play out for decades to come. /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Sep 2
1/ Russian warbloggers continue to be furious that, as one puts it, "our oil refineries continue to leave the chat". They are turning their anger on "oil barons" who, they suspect, are happy to see refineries exploding if it boosts their profits. ⬇️
2/ As the Russian government appears powerless to stop an intensive Ukrainian campaign against the country's refineries, warbloggers are now shifting to blaming the country's oil producers for failing to protect their own facilities.
3/ 'Veterans' Notes' comments:

"The enemy continues to systematically attack Russia's oil and gas infrastructure. According to experts, about 21% of all oil and gas refineries and stations have already been damaged or destroyed.
Read 21 tweets
Sep 1
1/ The Russian army has experienced a 20-fold increase in HIV cases compared to pre-war figures, according to Russian military doctors. Soldiers who have been infected with HIV and hepatitis C blame drug abuse and a widespread disregard for basic medical hygiene. ⬇️ Image
2/ An article in the Russian Ministry of Defence's Military Medical Journal reports a huge increase in the number of soldiers with detected cases of HIV, and the likelihood of a much larger number of undetected cases.
3/ The vast majority of infections have happened among contract servicemen (99.8% of the total), with 93.5% being regular soldiers and sailors (93.5%), and the rest comprised of officers (4.4%), warrant officers and midshipmen (1.8%), and cadets (0.1%).
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Sep 1
1/ An alleged kingpin of Russia's infamous cemetery mafia has been arrested. The Mayor of Vladimir is suspected of links to organised crime groups that have taken over Russia's funeral business, which is enjoying a boom due to the Ukraine war. ⬇️
2/ Organised crime gangs have used violence and arson to drive legitimate funeral firms out of business and take over cemeteries and even entire hospitals, often fleecing relatives for things that are supposed to be free, such as burial plots.
3/ This has been done in conjunction with corrupt officials in local administrations, ranging from clerks to mayors. The latter have typically provided 'krysha' ('cover') to the cemetery mafia, protecting them from investigation in exchange for a share of the profits.
Read 18 tweets
Sep 1
1/ As Moldova approaches a crucial parliamentary election, the Russian official responsible for election interference has reportedly been sacked and replaced. An investigation is said to have been opened into the theft of funds designated for vote-rigging. ⬇️ Image
2/ The VChK-OGPU Telegram channel reports that Dmitry Milyutin, the deputy head of the Fifth Service of the FSB, has been removed "based on the results of an organisational inspection," but in reality for failing to rig the Moldovan presidential election in Russia's favour.
3/ The election, which was held in two rounds concluding on 3 November 2024, was won by incumbent Maia Sandu, with a pro-Russian candidate winning 44.65% of the votes.
Read 12 tweets
Sep 1
1/ The constant threat of Ukrainian drone strikes and tougher restrictions imposed by the Russian army on troop movements in the rear now mean that Russian soldiers in occupied Ukraine live "almost like [in] a penal colony", according to a serving Russian soldier. ⬇️ Image
2/ Recent moves by the Russian military administration in occupied parts of Ukraine (known as "the Zone") have drastically reduced the freedom of Russian soldiers serving there, with infractions being punished by sending offenders into suicidal assaults.
3/ The author of the 'Vault No. 8' Telegram channel writes about the current situation in the distant rear, closer to the Russian border:
Read 25 tweets
Aug 31
1/ At least 250 Russian soldiers a day are being declared missing or dead by the courts, equivalent to the declared daily losses of the Russian army at the front. Although at least 50,000 men are missing, the Russian government is doing little to help relatives. ⬇️ Image
2/ Mediazona and Meduza report that by the beginning of August 2025, families of missing soldiers had filed about 50,000 claims to declare their relatives dead, so that they can obtain compensation. The vast majority of the missing are indeed likely to be deceased.
3/ The number of missing is almost certainly far higher than 50,000, due to a number of factors highlighted by Russian warblogger Anastasia Kashevarova. She complains that even now, the Russian military does not have a proper system for tracking them:
Read 27 tweets

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