1/ MEMOIRS OF A MOBIK, PART 3: 'Ukol', a Russian soldier who is a rare survivor of the original September 2022 mobilisation, continues his recollections of his service on the front lines in Ukraine. He speaks of his experiences as a medical orderly under Ukrainian bombardment. ⬇️
2/ Part 1, covering his initial mobilisation and transportation to Ukraine, is here:
4/ At this time, being a frontline medic was dangerous, but not as risky as it is now with constant drone surveillance. Ukol says that from November 2022 to Spring 2024 he treated 285 seriously wounded people with traumatic amputations or wounds to major organs.
5/ As for the lightly to moderately wounded, he dealt with "about 2,000 people. I'm not kidding, my average workday from late autumn 2022 to late spring 2024 consisted of 6-8 trips to provide assistance and evacuation. I walked 30-40 kilometres [per day]."
6/ "I lost most of my muscle mass on such activity - on a starvation diet and constant overexertion..."
By the time the spring thaw came in 2023 after a bitterly cold winter, morale was low among the poorly equipped soldiers and few wanted to risk themselves for the wounded.
7/ Ukol shows a photo of six Russian soldiers from his unit, standing in ankle-deep mud.
8/ "Only one of them has a bulletproof vest and a helmet, the rest are just in winter uniform, mostly "digital", but one in the photo was wearing a National Guard pea coat in the "moss" pattern.
9/ "The guys had almost no pouches for magazines and grenades, in their hands were automatic without tuning, with one magazine [each]. And that's it. Everyone's faces are extremely gloomy and sad."
Their mood was not improved by the regular bombardments they faced.
10/ "Once, the Ukies were pounding our position all day. It was scary to crawl out to the toilet. The last one (as it turned out) fired a 155 mm and it fell about 10 meters from my shelter.
11/ "I managed to close the door and take a step down the stairs, when I was knocked off my feet by the blast wave and spread out on the floor.
I sat down by the wall (there was no one else in the dugout except me). And for two hours I just stared stupidly ahead.
12/ "I lost my presence of mind and waited for the next shell, which, as it seemed to me, was supposed to be the last one. But it didn’t arrive, and I slid down the wall to my side and forgot myself in a nightmare, like a homeless person."
13/ His unit, which he calls the "Separate Death Rifle Brigade", was poorly led by its officers – who were also mobilised men – and suffered many casualties. "Our [commander] was just an alcoholic. I was invited to give him an IV drip."
14/ "He was forgiven a lot, but in the end he went overboard with the transfer of personnel to meat. For which he was fired.
They still remember him in the brigade. During one of my vacations, I had to go to the deployment point.
15/ "And there we have a whole bunch of cripples without legs and arms, who are either waiting for dismissal or continue serving because the army does not want to let them go so easily. And so at the checkpoint there is a detail of an officer and a couple of conscripts.
16/ "And there is a dog hanging around with them. So. The dog was nicknamed "Brigade Commander".
The mobiks had joined the brigade in the fall of 2022 to replace the regular soldiers, who had been wiped out during the initial part of the invasion.
17/ By the fall of 2023, most of the mobiks had been wiped out as well. They were replaced with new contract soldiers. Those were wiped out in turn during 2024, so the brigade is now on its "third or fourth" round of regeneration.
18/ They were not all killed, Ukol says, but "somewhere around February 2023, they stopped returning the wounded back to the brigade after recovery. Instead, we were distributed among units of the formation as a whole, and to other armies, and divisions too."
19/ "Therefore, for the brigade, people were lost even as a result of moderate injuries."
TO BE CONTINUED: how captured Ukrainians, including female soldiers, were tortured and killed, and how Ukol's frontline service came to an end
1/ The Russian authorities have published details of three people accused of Friday's shooting of Lt Gen Vladimir Alekseyev. Two men have been arrested, one in the UAE, while a woman is said to have escaped to Ukraine, which is blamed for the attack. ⬇️
2/ The Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation (roughly Russia's equivalent of the FBI) has issued a statement, which includes the following:
3/ "Investigators conducted a thorough inspection at the scene, during which they discovered the murder weapon – a Makarov pistol with an attached silencer and three rounds of ammunition.
1/ General Vladimir Alexseyev, who was shot yesterday in a Moscow apartment building, may have been secretly visiting his mistress before the attack. Despite a reputation as an uncorrupt officer, he is said to have enjoyed the same luxurious lifestyle as many of his peers. ⬇️
2/ The building where Alekseyev was shot is a fairly ordinary apartment building in Moscow's Shchukino District. Completed in 2022, it has 10 apartments on each floor. Alekseyev was using an apartment on the 24th floor.
3/ According to neighbours, the apartment is occupied by a younger woman with a young child. They say she was seen often with the child, but Alekseyev was only seen rarely. His 'official' wife is in her 60s (he is 64) and their children are in their 30s.
1/ Why has Russia failed so abysmally at providing secure battlefield communications to its troops in Ukraine? The answer, concludes Russian warblogger Oleg Tsarev, is that the military communications budget has been looted for years by corrupt generals and contractors. ⬇️
2/ Tsarev relates the dismal history of Russia's military communications programmes:
"I remember how, at the beginning of the Special Military Operation, all units were buying Motorola radios. There was no other communications."
3/ "Now, Elon Musk has shut down the Starlink terminals our military used in the Special Military Operation, and our communications at the front have been disrupted. I'm talking to military personnel: many say we still have virtually no communications of our own.
1/ The attempted assassination of Lt Gen Vladimir Alekseyev in Moscow this morning has outraged Russian warbloggers, who regard him as a hero of Russia. They have highlighted his key role and contributions to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. ⬇️
2/ Vladimir Romanov writes:
"An assassination attempt was made on Lieutenant General Vladimir Alekseyev [who is known as 'Stepanich'], First Deputy Chief of the Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) of the Russian Ministry of Defence."
3/ "An unknown assailant fired several shots into his back in the elevator lobby of a building on Volokolamsk Highway at 7:00 a.m. The assassin fled the scene. Alekseyev was hospitalised.
1/ Russia's battlefield communications are reportedly "in chaos" following the Starlink shutdown. Communications specialists are said to be scrambling to find alternative solutions, while warbloggers advocate torturing Ukrainian PoWs to get their Starlink passwords. ⬇️
2/ Yuri Podolyak writes:
"So, what everyone had long feared, but secretly hoped wouldn't happen until the end of the Special Military Operation has happened. Elon Musk flipped the switch, and 80% of Starlink terminals on the front line went down."
3/ "Moreover, it's highly likely that on our side, this will soon reach 100%, and only Russian ingenuity can attempt to circumvent it. And they will probably circumvent it somehow. But not with a return to 100% functionality as of yesterday morning.
1/ A Russian warblogger explains what the Russian army in Ukraine saw when they were disconnected en masse from Starlink yesterday. ⬇️
2/ "Starlink went down across the theatre of military operations in a rather strange way.
At around 22:00 Moscow time, it was like this:
3/ "– All terminals in the Ukraine theatre of operations are blocked. Both ours and those of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Even from their "white list". All of them.