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.
"Why do we see donkeys, horses, and camels at the front?
Why do soldiers go into battle in Ural, Bukhanka, and Niva trucks?
Why do we use an enemy state's satellite constellation for communications and drone control?"
4/ "Why do we use Telegram and Discord for communication?
Why...?
Here's an example of why."
5/ Alexander Kartavykh is furious at the leniency shown to Kovalenko, whose fine amounts to only about 0.1% of the amount stolen:
"It's obvious that even seasoned Shoigu witnesses will be a little freaked out by this news. Holy shit, was that even allowed?"
6/ "Well, apparently it is. And maybe it should be. Am I confused by the signals you're sending, or what the hell is this? Gentlemen decision-makers, you're literally talking live on a slow-motion, but still unblocked, Telegram.
7/ "Can you wait until the information space collapses into a singularity? And only then will you completely freak out?
I'm so fucking sick of all this, you know. I want a vacation."
8/ The verdict comes shortly after a different court ordered the Russian government to return a luxury mansion confiscated from the imprisoned former First Deputy Minister of Defence, Timur Ivanov. 'DSHRG Rusych' is angry at the apparent coddling of the corrupt:
9/ "This is the kind of justice we have.
One day, the embezzler Ivanov gets his house back (which neither he nor his family would have ever officially earned), the next, another embezzler gets released due to health reasons.
10/ "And then we're told there are no double standards in the justice system."
'Lawyer in the South' compares Kovalenko's treatment to that of 'ordinary' thieves:
11/ "Reading these lines, one marvels at how humane a Russian court can be.
He stole nearly 600 million, disrupted the combat readiness of units and formations, endangered people and the state, and all he did was receive a fine and be released from punishment “due to illness.”
12/ "Incidentally, the “respected” Rear Admiral most likely retained his military rank, pension, and other benefits, as there is no information about this in the media.
13/ "Thus, the grandfather who stole hundreds of millions, effectively a traitor to the country (since he knew the consequences of his actions), received only a fine amounting to just over 0.1% of the damages, since he will not serve the sentence "due to illness."
14/ "However, justice is usually much stricter when it comes to less respected individuals.
15/ "In October 2025, a robber was convicted in Perm for breaking a glass door at night in April 2025 and entering an M. Video store, where he stole three expensive phones. The court sentenced him to 5.5 years in a general regime penal colony.
16/ "4.5 years for 592,000,000 rubles, which the thief will not serve "due to illness," and 5.5 years in real life for less than 300,000 rubles.
It's time for justice to open its eyes, as more and more questions are being raised."
17/ Yuri Podolyak compares Kovalenko's lenient treatment with the five-year sentence handed down in April 2025 to the popular former general Ivan Popov:
"What a (selectively) humane "garrison" court we sometimes have."
18/ "For the THIEF Kovalenko, it's humane. For the THIEF Ivanov, it's humane. And for the combat general Popov, it's as if he's from a NATO "garrison" (just kidding).
19/ "And then someone wants to restore trust in our courts. With this approach, there WILL be NO trust. Well, it won't be with sentences like these, no matter how much they tell him he's fair.
20/ "And it's not the bloggers' fault. It's selective humaneness and injustice.
You can't fool the people. After all, everyone understands everything perfectly well. And Kovalenko was released for a reason. And not out of humanity.
People aren't idiots; they see everything.
21/ "How "garrison courts" release thieves and condemn combat generals.
And they draw conclusions..."
As for ordinary soldiers convicted of such an offence, they can only look forward to being sent to their death on the battlefield, as 'Soldiers' Truth' notes:
22/ "Stealing half a trillion rubles from the treasury as part of a group and escaping punishment by citing illness...
What a scheme!
Almost like grandma's.
But now grandpa's.
23/ "Unfortunately, this scheme doesn't work for those without big stars on their shoulder straps and huge sums in their accounts.
You'll either do time or die in the assaults. Even if you didn't steal anything, lived fairly, and fought for your soul." /end
1/ Leaked messages and photographs from a senior Russian general show his role in the murder, torture and abuse of captured Ukrainians, some of whom had their ears cut off. The messages illustrate how routine extreme brutality is in the Russian army, even at senior levels. ⬇️
2/ Major General Roman Demurchiev, Deputy Commander of the 20th Combined Arms Army of the Russian Federation, has been commanding Russian forces in Ukraine since 2022. He has been given awards and promotions for his service.
3/ Ukrainian sources have obtained an archive of his personal data by undisclosed means, almost certainly by hacking his phone. The correspondence, published in part by Radio Liberty, includes open references to the mistreatment of Ukrainian POWs.
1/ The barrel of Russia's troubled AK-12 assault rifle bends after intensive use and its trigger mechanism often breaks, according to a Russian warblogger. He says that AK-12s are frequently issued in defective condition, requiring soldiers to buy expensive parts to fix them. ⬇️
2/ The AK-12 has had a troubled history since its launch in 2018 as a replacement for the AK-74M. Described by some as "the worst AK", it has had multiple design, reliability, and functional deficiencies, which led Kalashnikov to issue a simpler "de-modernised" version in 2023.
3/ "No Pasaran" writes:
"Someone asked me why I don't like the AK-12.
Excuse me.
Barrel bending. I've never seen this problem on a Soviet AK, but I've seen it with my own eyes on a Russian-made AK-12."
1/ The near-simultaneous shutdown of Starlink and Telegram are having a massive impact on Russian forces in Ukraine, according to Russian warbloggers. They say that recent Ukrainian advances are a direct consequence of the problems that are being caused. ⬇️
2/ 'Two Majors' writes:
"[W]e can say that it was precisely the combined communication problems that have led to the localized Ukrainian Armed Forces offensives in the south of Kupyansk and in the Zaporizhzhia direction in recent days.
3/ "We didn't make this up; veterans from various parts of the front told us so.
Why are we so angry? Our people are dying there. Our comrades. And if our grumbling can make even a small difference, then it won't have been for nothing that we've all gathered here."
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/ 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.