1/ Is a rebellion brewing in the Russian army? A Russian soldier's video appeal to meet with Vladimir Putin to avert a mutiny over the appalling conditions on the frontline has gone viral, and has clearly struck a nerve at the Kremlin. ⬇️
2/ Alexander Lunin, a self-proclaimed Russian Ukraine war veteran, attracted widespread attention on 25 June when he published a startling video on Russian social media in which he claims to have met with government officials who asked them to convey certain demands to Putin.
3/ He says he wants to be broadcast live on a federal media channel, where he will tell "the whole truth about what is currently happening in the country," specifically about the murders, torture, and extortionist commanders at the front:
4/ "Yesterday, I met with people, high-ranking officials from the Ministry of Defence and the security forces. They conveyed a message to Putin that if he doesn't grant a live audience, I will tell the whole truth about what's happening in our country right now.
5/ "At this very moment, tens, hundreds, thousands of our soldiers are sitting in dungeons, punished by their commanders. They sit there, rot, subjected to torture and violence by the so-called "Gestapo." For refusing to carry out stupid, suicidal orders.
6/ "For refusing to hand over their financial resources.
And ultimately, they are being wiped out and declared missing. Vladimir Vladimirovich, pay attention to this, invite me to your office.
7/ "The consequences will be very serious. If I don't come to the Kremlin soon and speak live, right next to you, the army will turn its weapons against the Kremlin. I am simply delivering a message."
8/ The 39-year-old's video immediately went viral, reaching 2 million views and 80,000 likes on Instagram within only 4 hours of its publication.
9/ Lunin is a former member of the reconnaissance unit in the Sudoplatov volunteer battalion. According to leaks, in 2023, Lunin (previously known as Pustovalov) traveled to Melitopol and served in the Sudoplatov battalion as a gunner and commander.
10/ The news outlet 'Agency' reports that he later worked at the State Unitary Enterprise "Sudoplatov Technical Development and Services Centre" in the Russian-occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region.
11/ He says that he was later expelled from the BARS reserve unit for a video in which he described how two fighters were sent on a mission without guns. He says that the FSB came to him and there was "a lot of stuff".
12/ ASTRA has found that he appears to hold neo-Nazi and neo-pagan views, and has posted photos of figurines with a swastika and the inscription "ODIN" in runes. He also has a tattoo of the "Black Sun" or Sonnenrad, a common neo-Nazi symbol, on his body.
13/ Lunin has told 'Agency' that he receives messages and videos from acquaintances on the frontline about the current situation, which he is afraid to post, "because there are terrible images".
14/ He says that he decided to appeal to Putin "to show him personally, to talk to him personally".
After his initial viral video, Lunin subsequently published a series of follow-up videos in which he insists this is not a bluff and explains his motives.
15/ According to Lunin, if the authorities do not heed the "message" conveyed through him by "high-ranking representatives of the security forces and the Ministry of Defence," the soldiers at the front will abandon their positions.
16/ He claims to have been approached by security officials from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry of Defence approached him yesterday, who he says demanded that he record the appeal because of the situation at the front.
17/ He claims they told him: "Nobody wants bloodshed. Just tell the president that we'll be in complete chaos if this continues. Because so many people are being sent on missions that are completely impossible."
18/ "And they're not coming back. And people don't want to go anymore, and they're being punished for it."
19/ An official from the administration in his home region of Voronezh did visit Lunin, who published a video of the meeting. However, the official refused to listen to him constantly interrupting, and only asked whether his family was receiving assistance from the authorities.
20/ Lunin's sudden celebrity prompted questions to the Kremlin about his appeal. Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the the presidential administration has heard about Lunin's appeal to Putin, but they haven't watched it yet:
21/ "We were told that there is such an appeal, but we haven't had time to review it yet. So I wouldn't say anything. Judging by what you've said, there are some rather strange formulations, we need to review it first."
22/ On Friday 26 June, Lunin published a new video, in which he stated that he is driving to Moscow, supposedly at the invitation of pro-Kremlin activist and lawyer Vitaly Borodin.
23/ He criticised Russian warbloggers who had been attacking him for his temerity: "All those who portrayed me as some kind of traitor, especially the Z-channels, I guarantee you, you'll start changing your tune now, because you're all on record."
24/ "All those who portrayed me as a liberal yesterday, you're all on record. I will not deviate from my path."
He also asked his followers to send him "the crimes committed against our soldiers by all these Gestapo men."
25/ "Don't be afraid of anyone or anything if you're on the right path, the righteous path, the path of justice. I'm telling you, it gives me goosebumps. Never before has scum and rottenness been able to defeat the real truth, as it is, the truth."
26/ However, the inevitably harsh response from the authorities was not long in coming. On Friday night, according to Lunin's wife Tatyana, their house was raided by the police.
27/ In a video that was only up on TikTok for about three hours, she says that police officers came to their home in the village of Lisenovka and conducted a search, during which they seized "everything they found: flash drives, computers, laptops, a disk, nunchucks".
28/ As for Lunin himself, she said that "Either Sasha was detained and is being questioned now, but naturally, they should release him later. Or he's still en route, and they have poor communication there."
29/ She subsequently deleted the video and posted on her VKontakte page that "Sasha is alive and well" and asked followers not to comment on anything. He is said to have been administratively detained for 11 days.
30/ While Lunin's ultimate fate can only be guessed at, his appeal – however quixotic it may be – has clearly struck a chord at a dangerous moment for the Kremlin, with increasing talk of a "1917 scenario". The 'Brothers in Arms' Telegram channel comments:
31/ "Let's be honest. Everyone who has spent more than a month on the frontline knows perfectly well that basements and pits for their own are our fucking reality. People are written off as missing simply because they didn't want to die for a red tick on the commander's map.
32/ "And here you are sitting in a trench under shelling and thinking: why are we even shedding blood here? Our Motherland sent us here to defend it, but they treat us worse than cattle for slaughter.
33/ "No respect at all, we're just expendable material that can be mixed with shit and buried in a forest clearing. If the top brass don't wake up and start arresting these little kings with epaulets then it'll be too late for many. Patience isn't endless." /end
1/ The continued success of Ukraine's FP-5 'Flamingo' cruise missile in hitting targets deep inside Russia is causing frustration and anger among Russian warbloggers. They criticise Russian air defences, but concede clever Ukrainian tactics. ⬇️
2/ The fact that Volgograd – the former Stalingrad – was hit is seen as particularly symbolic and insulting to Russia. Vladimir Romanov complains that Russia's leadership is shying away from ordering Ukraine's leaders to be killed and Kyiv nuked to deter such attacks:
3/ "Looking at the footage of today's leisurely flight of FP-5 "Flamingo" missiles by the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Volgograd - I ask myself: if our air defence has degraded to such an extent - what will happen if NATO countries decide to launch a massive strike?
1/ Russia's fuel crisis isn't just about a lack of fuel being produced by refineries. The country is in the grip of a full-blown fuel panic, with people buying far more fuel than normal to get ahead of shortages and in some cases to resell fuel for profit. ⬇️
2/ As the 'Intelligence Diary' Telegram channel reports:
"Russia is gripped by a fuel panic.
People are buying up gasoline by the hundreds of litres. There are huge queues at gas stations. Prices are rising.
It's a real fuel scare.
A true gasoline vendetta."
3/ 'New Look' reports:
"In response to government calls not to stockpile fuel, Muscovites emptied auto parts stores en masse, buying up every canister. This was immediately taken advantage of by resellers, who are now reselling the containers online at a significant markup."
1/ A Russian military police officer who stole 2 million rubles from a mentally disabled recruit was sent to an assault unit. However, illustrating the current state of morale on the front lines, he and three comrades reportedly blew their own legs off to avoid going to fight. ⬇️
2/ Russian warblogger 'BCh3' tells the story in three posts:
"We usually write about heroes, but here we have an anti-hero. One of those who profit from war; one of those who ‘while some suffer, others benefit’. Meet one of the staff officers of the Military Police."
3/ "Briefly, the situation...
A training ground. New arrivals are undergoing training. One of the fighters is a quiet guy, but something is wrong with his head. He is unwell.
1/ Why aren't Russia's treaty partners helping it in the war against Ukraine, ask Russian warbloggers. They wonder what use the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) is if it can't even help Russia to conquer a neighbouring state. ⬇️
2/ The CSTO was established in 2002 as a military alliance of six post-Soviet states – Armenia (which is in the process of withdrawing), Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan. Its charter requires participants to abstain from the use or threat of force.
3/ Despite this, Russian warbloggers can't seem to understand why none of the CSTO states will provide military assistance against Ukraine. 'Direct Action Z' laments:
1/ Russia is constructing shelters for its heavy bomber aircraft to protect them from Ukrainian drone strikes, such as the famous 'Operation Spider's Web'. However, Russian warbloggers say it's too little, too late. ⬇️
2/ The shelters are being constructed at the Engels air base near Saratov, which has previously been attacked by fixed-wing Ukrainian UAVs. It houses the 22nd Heavy Bomber Aviation Division, which includes a single squadron of Tu-160s and another of Tu-95s.
3/ At least 17 shelters are being built to accommodate the strategic bombers housed at the base. Reportedly, the work began in April 2025, before the June 2025 'Spider's Web' attacks.
1/ Wounded Russian soldiers are having to wait for anything from 48 hours to a remarkable 90 days for evacuation from the battlefields of Ukraine. Russian medical specialists say that there is a widespread lack of field medical expertise, likely dooming many of the wounded. ⬇️
2/ The Bulletin of the Russian Military Medical Academy has published a new report "On the Impact of the Nature of Combat Operations on the Structure of Medical Losses and the Organization of Surgical Care for the Wounded." However, commentators say it doesn't reflect reality.
3/ The data in the report is old, covering 2022-2024, and for some reason was not published until now. As the specialist military-medical warblog '5mg. KGV.' notes, it's not representative of the current situation on the battlefield. The blog's author writes: