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Feb 23 20 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/ With manpower increasingly in short supply, Russia is reportedly turning instead to womanpower. Women, particularly convicts and migrants – some still only teenagers – are being forced to join the army, in some cases to serve in frontline combat roles. ⬇️ Image
2/ Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reports that the Russian prison service is putting female convicts under intense pressure, including through starvation, to sign contracts to join the army. Hundreds of women – both Russians and foreigners – are thought to have signed up.
3/ The Uzbek human rights organization Ezgulik reports that it has received letters from the relatives of dozens of Uzbek women who say they are being abused and mistreated to force them to sign military contracts.
4/ According to the mother of one of the women, her daughter and others "were deprived of food for 10 days to 'break' them and make them agree to go. Some girls, fearing being sent to war, attempted suicide."
5/ One 18-year-old Kyrgyz girl who is being held in Omsk on drug smuggling charges says that she was beaten, tortured with a stun gun, and threatened with a 15 year prison sentence unless she agreed to go to Ukraine.
6/ They have had little help from their own governments, which are generally anxious to avoid upsetting relations with Russia. Relatives of the Uzbek women say that the Uzbek government responded to their appeals for help by jailing them for several days.
7/ They were also forced to sign papers stating that they would not give interviews or talk about their situation. In many cases, forcibly conscripted women may face the additional penalty of being jailed for mercenarism by their governments if they return home.
8/ According to Ezgulik, the Uzbeks are "mostly women who worked as couriers or did other menial jobs. According to the information we've received, most of them are in prison because of a setup. Drugs were planted on them."
9/ There have been reports since 2022 of women being recruited for military service, often as cooks, mechanics, nurses, or medics. Some are known to have been sent to fight, and at least two Ukrainian units have published videos of female soldiers being injured by drone attacks.
10/ ASTRA reported in August 2025:

"On 31 July [2025], the 24th Separate Mechanised Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces published drone footage of an attack on a group of Russian soldiers in the town of Chasiv Yar."
11/ "At least three Russian women have been identified among the assault team. Due to critical losses, the Russian command is throwing even women—likely recruited from prison colonies—into the meat grinder.
12/ "On 3 August, the Spartan Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine posted a video on its Telegram channel of a drone attack on what it claimed was a [Russian] service member. The footage shows a bloodied woman lying on the ground, breathing heavily."
13/ The Spartan Brigade said of the video: "The Russian Federation has begun deploying women to the assault on the Pokrovsk sector. During active combat, we've seen many things – assault troops on crutches, former prisoners, drugged occupiers."
14/ "However, this is the first time a woman has been deployed. Spartan drones don't discriminate: anyone who comes to Ukrainian soil is an enemy and will be destroyed."
15/ Even in non-combat roles, however, women recruited into the Russian army face a difficult time. Female Russian soldiers have complained that they are pressured to become the 'field wives' – essentially sex slaves – of Russian officers.
16/ The situation of forcibly recruited migrant women is likely to be even worse. The director of Tong Jakhoni, a migrant aid organisation, recalls trying to dissuade a female convict from Kazakhstan from signing a military contract:
17/ "I told her, 'You understand that you’re not being recruited as a cook, you’re being recruited as a “regimental prostitute.”' They cook the food there, but that doesn’t rule out the position of “regimental prostitute.” It’s simply a combination of professions.
18/ "She said, 'No, that can’t be. But even if I want to, I'll do it by myself. If I don't want to, it won't happen.'
19/ "I told her, 'Nobody will ask you [for permission] there. You're being recruited into a brigade of 500 people. They'll just pass you around constantly. And you won't have any protection there.'" /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Feb 25
1/ Russians who have never served in the Russian army and have never signed a military contract are nonetheless being rounded up as deserters and sent to their deaths in assault squads. It's the result of an ongoing and still unresolved bureaucratic blunder by Russia's MOD. ⬇️ Image
2/ During the war in Donbas, between 2014 and the full-scale Russian invasion of February 2022, thousands of Russian nationalists volunteered to fight for the militias of the Luhansk and Donetsk 'People's Republics'. Many were subsequently discharged.
3/ In December 2022, Russia formally incorporated the Luhansk and Donetsk militias into the Russian Army as part of the annexation of both 'People's Republics'. All current and former members of the militias were reclassified as soldiers of the Russian army.
Read 19 tweets
Feb 24
1/ What is the war in Ukraine even for?, asks a Russian warblogger and paramilitary leader. After four years, the shifting goals of the Russian government have left many of its citizens confused about what its aims are in Ukraine, making it unclear what victory actually means. ⬇️ Image
2/ Zakhar Prilepin sums up the complaints of many warbloggers about the vagueness of Russia's objectives:

"Yesterday, I received a lot of congratulations, and the phrase "I wish you victory!" was a common one.

I hope people say it ritualistically, not seriously."
3/ "It's not even that Russia can't win yet. The point is that we don't have such a goal. We're not planning to go to Kyiv, and we're not planning to go to Odesa. This means there will be no demilitarisation or denazification.
Read 16 tweets
Feb 24
1/ The results of Russia's war have been "mediocre", says a Russian warblogger who is fighting in Ukraine. The army is beset by "corruption, scheming, and collusion", and by the mass intimidation and coercion of soldiers by commanders. He sees tough challenges still to come. ⬇️ Image
2/ 'Vault No. 8' writes:

"The war was not easy from the outset.

The enemy still retains counterattack capabilities; over time, the enemy has become capable of targeting the economy of pre-war Russia and conducting mass terror and sabotage, including in Moscow."
3/ "However, it was only in the fourth year of the war that we began to properly employ strategic strike weapons, which began to yield maximum success. Only in the fourth year of the war did we bring the drone component up to a modern level.
Read 15 tweets
Feb 24
1/ Russia is "entangled in too many sins" for it to have succeeded in Ukraine over the past four years, argues Russian warblogger Yuri Podolyaka. He sees the war as a "salvation plan" for Russia that went badly wrong and "laid bare" the country's problems. ⬇️ Image
2/ "Four years ago, a special military operation began...

It obviously didn't go according to plan. Or rather, not according to the plan our military and political leadership had originally.

As a result, the country changed irreversibly.
3/ "No matter how much anyone would like to turn everything back. And this, perhaps, is the most important result of these four years. Difficult years. But, apparently, necessary. Since God decided so.
Read 7 tweets
Feb 24
1/ Four years on from the start of the Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russian warbloggers are reflecting on the changes that the war has wrought in Russia. Some Russian soldiers are wondering what it was all for. ⬇️ Image
2/ Nikita Tretyakov writes:

"Our varied thoughts and questions converge on one thing: what is going on out there, in the rear, while we are here, far from our families, loved ones, and past lives, defending the Motherland as best we can and seemingly honourably as possible?"
3/ "What is going on there in this very Motherland behind our backs?

Why does it feel more and more uncomfortable to walk around our cities in military uniform – now including Donetsk and Luhansk – every year? Is it even inappropriate?
Read 12 tweets
Feb 23
1/ It's generally been assumed that the Russian government wants to force its soldiers off Telegram and onto the government-approved MAX app. However, it seems that MAX may also be banned for military use, and an unnamed specialised military messenger may be imposed instead. ⬇️ Image
2/ The generally reliable Fighterbomber Telegram channel reports on a possible ban of both MAX and Telegram in the military (referring to "Laos" as a commonly-utilised euphemism for Russia, to evade the censors):
3/ "Sources within the Security Council suggest that, amid the suppression of Telegram by all available means, Lao troops have received orders banning the use and installation of the world's most secure national messenger on devices with advanced multimedia capabilities,…
Read 19 tweets

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