1/ A retired Russian rear admiral has been convicted of stealing over half a billion rubles allocated to repairing anti-aircraft missile systems. He was fined 500,000 rubles and immediately released from custody. ⬇️
2/ Rear Admiral Nikolai Kovalenko was found guilty yesterday in the Moscow Region Garrison Court of organising a large-scale embezzlement of Russian Ministry of Defence funds allocated to four contracts for the repair of anti-aircraft missile systems between 2013 and 2017.
3/ The fraud involved purchasing faulty components from Ukraine in 2012 – before the annexation of Crimea and the invasion of the Donbas – for only 40 million rubles ($521,000) and passing them off as refurbished ones. A total of 592 million rubles ($7.7 m) was reportedly stolen.
4/ As well as Kovalenko, several other military and civilian personnel were convicted. The fraud involved several companies including the Saratov Radio Equipment Plant, Soyuz-M, and the Elektropribor plant, whose heads were personally involved as co-conspirators.
5/ The court sentenced Kovalenko to 4.5 years of imprisonment and a fine of 500,000 rubles ($6,519). He was immediately released on health grounds and will not have to serve time in a prison colony.
6/ Six of his accomplices were less fortunate and were sentenced to between three and eight years' worth of imprisonment, fines, and in the case of service members, being stripped of their ranks. They are:
7/ 🔺 Retired Captain 1st Rank Vasily Vitchenko, former head of the missile and artillery weapons service at the Main Command of the Russian Navy (3.5 years, fine of 400 thousand rubles, stripped of rank);
8/ 🔺 Retired Captain 3rd Rank Andrei Klokotsky, former consultant to the Navy Department of Rosoboronexport (3 years, fine of 400 thousand rubles);
🔺 Zamir Akhmedov, former head of the Soyuz-M company (4 years, fine of 500 thousand rubles);
9/🔺 Mutalib Emiraliyev, former head of the Elektropribor plant (8 years, fine of 800 thousand rubles);
🔺 Evgeny Murashev, former director of the Saratov Radio Equipment Plant (3 years, fine of 500 thousand rubles);
10/ 🔺 Captain 1st Rank (Reserve) Vadim Movchan, Head of the Missile and Artillery Weapons Development and Operation Service of the Navy's Shipbuilding Directorate (5.5 years, fine of 500 thousand rubles, stripped of military rank).
11/ While it pre-dates the current war, the case helps to illustrate how so much Russian military equipment was in such poor condition at the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
12/ Corrupt military officials and contractors had orchestrated the systematic looting of the Russian military budget for decades, with this being just one of many similar cases. /end
1/ Russia may be preparing to announce a mass mobilisation, a bad peace deal with the US, or confiscate people's savings to fund the war effort, according to Russian warbloggers. They suspect that the government wants to ban Telegram to block public dissent over such moves. ⬇️
2/ Russian officials have hinted strongly that Telegram, which is currently being slowed down and partly blocked by the government, faces a total ban by 1 April 2026. 'Alex Parker Returns' writes (in a since-deleted post) that the government faces a dilemma:
3/ "Either capitulate in accordance with the renewed spirit of Anchorage—freezing the line of contact, surrendering the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and other whimsical proposals that our esteemed partners will come up with along the way, …
1/ An ongoing epidemic of murder and extortion in the Russian army has reached such a level that Russian warbloggers say the army has become a "gangster supermarket". "Extortion under the threat of death has become an entire shadow industry", says one Russian blogger. ⬇️
2/ Fresh reports of men being "zeroed out" by their commanders are published almost daily. Recently leaked data from the Russian human rights commissioner records over 6,000 complaints in 6 months from soldiers and their relatives about abuses in the army.
3/ Corrupt Russian commanders routinely extort their men with the threat of having them murdered, or sending them into unsurvivable assaults. "Life support" bribes – paid either by the men or their relatives to keep them out of assaults – are commonplace.
1/ Why are Russian soldiers so ill-equipped that they are forced to rely on combat donkeys? Russian warbloggers draw a direct connection to cases of egregious military corruption, such as the recent conviction of Rear Admiral Nikolai Kovalenko for stealing 592 million rubles. ⬇️
2/ Kovalenko's case – for which he was fined just 500,000 rubles ($6,519) and spared jail – has attracted outrage from many Russian commentators. As they point out, it is merely one of many similar cases over the past three decades.
1/ Ukraine's rapid advances in recent days have revealed that many Russian claims of capturing settlements along the length of the front were false or tenous. Russian warbloggers complain that this has exposed more lies by their side's commanders. 📷
2/ Rybar provides a gloomy assessment of Ukraine's progress:
"The situation on the western flank of the Zaporizhzhia front has deteriorated sharply over the past 24 hours."
3/ "The enemy is attempting to cut off the penetration toward Zaporizhzhia along the shore of the former Kakhovka Reservoir. Ukrainian forces have launched an offensive along a sector approximately 20 kilometers wide.
1/ The Russian army is continuing to send grossly unfit men to fight in Ukraine. They include a crippled elderly pensioner, a man with a withered arm, and a legless man who has been designated an assault machine gunner. ⬇️
2/ The pensioner is – or now most likely was – 59-year-old Sergei Zuikov from Salavat, who was forced by his employer to sign a military contract in March 2025 despite having a spinal injury. He was not given a medical fitness review before being sent to Ukraine.
3/ Only two months later in May 2025, he was wounded by a mine explosion and received multiple injuries for which he underwent treatment and rehabilitation. His family say that he received no compensation for his wounds.
1/ Russian casualty ratios in Ukraine are in places as high as 25 to every 1 Ukrainian defender, according to the UK Defence Secretary John Healey. A newly published account by warblogger 'Bch3' of the lives of Russian convict stormtroopers helps to illustrate why. ⬇️
2/ "Different people. Different faces. Someone with a hoarse convict's voice, twisted by life like a Karelian birch; another simple, without his own opinion, just tagging along with fate. Mice with petty souls and predatory wolves; team players and loners.
3/ They're told — "You know cold and hunger, so go ahead, you are more prepared by life to survive, not to go crazy during a bloody assault." On all fronts, they are at the forefront of the attack, they do not receive medals and orders, those who follow.