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
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1/ MEMOIRS OF A MOBIK, PART 2: Three years after he was mobilised, a Russian medical orderly with the callsign 'Ukol' talks with a fellow 'mobik' about his experiences. He describes the chaos and carnage he found when he was sent to fight in Ukraine. ⬇️
2/ For the first part, in which Ukol describes how he was mobilised and transported to Ukraine in a train filled with wildly drunken men and officers who were preparing to die, see below:
3/ Having arrived in the occupied Luhansk region in October 2022, "We were indeed brought and initially settled in settlements a couple of dozen kilometers from the immediate rear. The brigade's reinforcements were concentrated."
1/ Three years ago, in September 2022, Russia began mobilising 300,000 men to fight in Ukraine. Most are now dead or disabled, but two survivors have been discussing their experiences of mobilisation, enduring Ukrainian attacks, surviving "meat waves," and murdering POWs. ⬇️
2/ The author of the 'Vault No. 8' Telegram channel is a serving frontline Russian soldier and one of the original September 2022 'mobiks'. He says that he is the only one of his cohort to have lasted this long without being killed or taken out of the war through disablement.
3/ He has been interviewing another surviving September 2022 mobik, a man with the callsign 'Ukol' who is serving as a medical instructor in what he calls the 'Separate Rifle Death Brigade', which he says is "a complete asshole. A bloody asshole."
1/ A prominent Russian political scientist has proposed sending Russian veterans of the war in Ukraine to Siberia, as a way of securing a new Asian destiny for Russia. This has received a frosty response from Russian warbloggers. ⬇️
2/ The proposal was made by Sergey Karaganov, the scientific director of the Faculty of World Economy and World Politics at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, and Honorary Chairman of the Presidium of the Council on Foreign and Defence Policy.
3/ In an article titled "Logistics for Greater Eurasia", Karaganov argues that Russia should turn its back on an ungrateful Europe and focus instead on an Asian destiny.
1/ Russia's mass drone incursion in Poland is only the latest episode in a long-running series of incursions in nine other European countries, as far away as Croatia, since 2022. There have been at least 56 instances of Russian drones and missiles landing outside Ukraine. ⬇️
2/ The Russian independent news outlet Verstka reports that Russian drone and missile debris was found in countries other than Ukraine seven times in 2022, 16 times in 2023, 17 times in 2024 and 16 times in 2025 prior to 10 September.
3/ Romania has been the worst affected, with 20 such incidents since 2022 – one in 2022, 7 in 2023 and 2024, and 5 in 2025. This is closely correlated with Russian attacks on Ukrainian ports on the Danube river, which marks the Ukraine/Romania border.
1/ The assassination of Charlie Kirk has prompted some to make comparisons with the death in 1934 of Sergei Kirov – a pivotal event in Soviet history. Who was Kirov, and what lessons can be drawn from his demise? ⬇️
2/ Kirov was a veteran revolutionary – an 'Old Bolshevik' – who, at the time of his death, was the head of the Communist Party in Leningrad and a member of the Politburo. He was assassinated on 1 December 1934 by Leonid Nikolaev, an expelled party member with a grudge.
3/ There is still a lot of uncertainty around Kirov's death. While Nikolaev was certainly the assassin, later Soviet politicians and historians suggested that Stalin might have had a hand in it. Kirov was a popular Party figure with his own power base, independent of Stalin.
1/ Russia is lagging far behind Ukraine in the production and use of drones, according to a commander of the Chechen Akhmat unit. He provides a lengthy critique of Russian efforts and an explanation of how Ukrainian drone tactics are impacting Russia's attempts to advance. ⬇️
2/ The man, who uses the callsign 'Hades', says that it's a huge mistake to underestimate Ukraine, and cites his experiences of the faltering Russian campaign in the Sumy region on the border of north-eastern Ukraine.
3/ "Here the enemy began to use the same tactics of using UAVs. Yes, we have an advantage in missiles, and they also have an advantage in missiles. But while we hit precisely somewhere, they rain down anywhere they want.