1/ The Russian officer who oversaw the occupation of Bucha in 2022, during which an estimated 458 Ukrainians were murdered, has been targeted by a bomb attack in the Russian Far East. Major General Azatbek Omurbekov's condition is currently unknown; another officer was killed. ⬇️
2/ According to VChK-OGPU, the attack took place on 28 April at a military garrison located in the village of Knyaze-Volkonskoye-1 in the Khabarovsk Krai. A bomb exploded in a mailbox, killing Lieutenant Colonel Kuzmenko, the commander of the training communications battalion.
3/ The target appears to have been Major General Azatbek Omurbekov, who has been the head of the 392nd District Training Centre for Junior Specialists of the Eastern Military District since 2023.
4/ As a colonel in 2022, he commanded the 64th Separate Motorised Rifle Brigade, which operated in Bucha near Kyiv during the notorious massacre in February-March 2022. His condition after the explosion is not known, and no claim of responsibility has been made.
5/ A combat diary from the time recorded how the brigade carried out a 'zatchistka' or 'cleansing' operation during which Ukrainian civilians were rounded up and shot. The brigade's role in massacres was described by one of its soldiers in August 2022.
6/ According to the soldier, Daniil Frolkin, during a five-week occupation of the village of Andriivka, Omurbekov ordered soldiers to fire at civilian vehicles, as well as to kill “anyone you find who has a phone.”
7/ Omurbekov was said to have aroused the hatred of his men by staying in a basement for days on end while casualties mounted. Within 4 months of the invasion, at least 25% of the brigade's men were dead. Only 50 of Frolkin's battalion of 300 were still alive when he deserted.
8/ When some of the soldiers began to refuse to carry out his orders, Omurbekov "started to freak out, hit one guy with the rifle butt in the face, held a gun to another guy’s head and was like: 'I’m gonna shoot you right here and get away with it.'"
9/ As many other Russian commanders have done and continue to do in the war, Omurbekov was said to have faked reports of his military successes. He ordered his men to pose for 'photo reports' – sometimes while they were still under fire – to send glowing reports to his superiors.
10/ This ended up getting Omurbekov wounded when he falsely reported that a forest had been captured and was subsequently injured there in a Ukrainian attack. It worked out for him, though, as he was evacuated and given awards for his 'courage'.
11/ Omurbekov is an ethnic Kyrgyz, born in Uzbekistan and educated in a small town in Siberia. While this would normally have been a hindrance to progression in an army dominated by ethnic Russians, he comes from a long-standing military family.
12/ His father was a colonel in the Soviet border guards and his grandfather was a Soviet WW2 veteran. It's likely that his family history and connections have played an important role in his rapid rise to a generalship. /end
1/ One indication of the increasing sense of a fin de régime in Russia is that Russian warbloggers are becoming steadily bolder in being critical of, or even abusive towards, Putin himself – previously a bright red line. One commentator lambasts him as a "bunker granny". ⬇️
2/ Comparing him to an old woman in a so-called frontline 'granny village', who shelters in her basement as the village is destroyed around her, 'Bomber Harris did nothing wrong' is brutally critical of Putin:
3/ "Regarding the threats to organize a Brown Line for encroaching on the parade from our talking heads and the bunker granny.
1/ As Victory Day approaches in Russia, warbloggers are increasingly despondent and predict the fall of the regime in the face of drone attacks and social and economic problems. They perceive a rapid worsening of the situation and a sense that 'things can't go on like this.' ⬇️
2/ Alex Kartavykh responds scornfully to a government statement, declaring:
"[The government is] noticing a noticeable shift in public sentiment here. And I'll also note for the record. My audience is slowly going nuts."
3/ "Everyone's going nuts and getting embittered, too; only a fool lacking empathy doesn't feel it. There's a fucking strong demand for radicalism. For someone to explain who the biggest asshole is and whose face needs to be punched.
1/ As Russia prepares to celebrate Victory Day, its death toll from the ongoing war in Ukraine is so enormous that in parts of the country it is approaching or exceeding the number of casualties sustained in World War II. Vast memorials are being installed across the country. ⬇️
2/ In Naberezhnye Chelny, a recently inaugurated memorial (video above) commemorates the dead of four wars. A single column contains 67 names of those who died in Afghanistan and Chechnya. 800 more names are listed for Ukraine, covering 16 columns.
3/ Another memorial in Kyzyl, the capital of the republic of Tuva, lists 1,332 of the 1,700 residents who are known to have died in the war. Tuva, like other Russian ethnic republics, has suffered a disproportionate number of casualties.
1/ The paranoia of the Russian authorities is killing vital hypersonic missile research, say Russian warbloggers following the conviction of two researchers for publishing a paper on air intake design. As a result, they say, practically nobody now wants to work on hypersonics. ⬇️
2/ Two physicists have been convicted of treason and sentenced to 12½ years in a maximum-security penal colony. The two men – senior researcher Valery Zvegintsev and associate professor Vladislav Galkin – are the latest in a series of scientists to be jailed in the last 2 years.
3/ Given their ages and poor health – Zvegintsev is 82 and Galkin is 71 – supporters say that their prison terms are effectively death sentences.
1/ Independent drone development in Russia is being crushed by the heavy hand of the state, according to Russian warbloggers. They say that large corporations have captured the military procurement system, effectively locking out independent developers. ⬇️
2/ The 'Forge of Mordor' Telegram channel asks why Ukraine is innovating faster than Russia, and points to the problems being caused by the Russian state's military procurement system:
3/ "Let's talk about the technical side of the issue.
Several years ago, at the Crocus exhibition organized by Slutsky (from the Liberal Democratic Party), I asked electronic warfare manufacturers at the plenary session:
1/ The appointment of Colonel General Alexander Chaiko as the new head of Russia's Aerospace Forces is being criticised by Russian warbloggers, who point to his failure to take Kyiv in February-March 2022. It's being called a reward for incompetence. ⬇️
2/ 'Imperium Z' is harshly critical of Chaiko's record, with an only slightly veiled criticism of Putin as well:
"As we've written repeatedly, personnel issues are the main problem facing the current government in general and the president in particular."
3/ "Every appointment represents another descent down the ladder of qualifications and competencies, into the basement of nepotism, loyalty, and the convenience of superiors.