From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: Putin tells
Russian soldiers' mothers he shares their pain”
(Russian President Vladimir Putin
(centre left) participates in a meeting mothers of Russia's servicemen fighting
in Ukraine at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence, outside Moscow. 25 November
20220
"We share your pain,"
Russian President Vladimir Putin has told a group of mothers of Russian soldiers
who have been fighting - and some of whom have been killed - in Ukraine. "Nothing
can replace the loss of a son", he said in his opening remarks, shown on
Russian state media. Several of the mothers are members of pro-Kremlin
movements. Critics say they were carefully chosen for the meeting.
Within Russia, opposition to his
invasion of Ukraine has been growing. Across the country, groups of mothers of
serving soldiers have been openly complaining that their sons are being sent
into battle poorly trained and without adequate weapons and clothing,
especially as the bitterly cold winter sets in. Some have also accused the
Russian military of turning those forcefully deployed into "cannon
fodder", following a string of heavy military defeats in recent months. Around
100,000 Russian and 100,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed or injured
since the war began on 24 February, according to the most senior US general,
Mark Milley. In a rare admission, the Kremlin said in September that mistakes
had been made in its drive to mobilise army reservists.
What is Vladimir Putin
thinking and planning? At Friday's meeting at his state residence near
Moscow, Mr Putin was shown sitting at a large table with a group of 17 mothers.
Some of them wore dark headscarves - a symbol of mourning. "I want
you to know that I personally, and all the leadership of the country, we share
this pain," the president said. He told one mother her son had
"achieved his goal" and "didn't die in vain". Mr
Putin said he wanted to meet the mothers face-to-face to hear from them
first-hand about the situation on the ground. And he revealed that from
time to time he was speaking directly to Russian soldiers on the battlefield,
describing them as "heroes". The president also urged the
women not to believe "fakes" and "lies" about the raging
war on TV or the internet. While getting balanced news on the situation
in Ukraine is difficult in Russia because of the Kremlin's control over the
media, many people have turned to using virtual private networks (VPNs) to
bypass the censorship. In a transcript of the meeting released by the Kremlin
hours later, several of the women were identified as being part of pro-Putin
movements. The women were from different parts of Russia, it said, with
at least one from the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic in eastern
Ukraine, which Moscow declared annexed earlier this year. A member of the
Kremlin-backed All-Russian Popular Front was also there as well as a
participant of the Combat Brotherhood organisation, which collects humanitarian
aid for Russian soldiers. A lawmaker from the governing United Russia party was
also at the meeting, according to some opposition media outlets.
Analysis box by Steve
Rosenberg, Russia editor In recent weeks mothers and wives of Russians
drafted into the army have been posting collective video messages complaining
about how their sons and husbands have been sent off to war untrained and
ill-equipped. Some women have been appealing directly to President Putin, the
commander-in-chief, to sort things out. The "Putin meets
mothers" event seems to be an attempt by the Kremlin to convince Russians
that their president cares about the soldiers he's sending into battle, as well
as their families. "We understand nothing can replace the loss of a
son, a child," Mr Putin said. "Especially for a mother, to whom we
are all indebted for bringing this child into the world." Considering
the scale of death and destruction in Ukraine from Russia's invasion, these
words are certain to infuriate Ukrainians. Mr Putin tried to come across
as a caring Kremlin leader. But keep in mind: it was his decision to invade
Ukraine. The "special military operation" is his idea.
And in public at least he has no
regrets. He told one mother: "Some people die of vodka, and their lives go
unnoticed. But your son really lived and achieved his goal. He didn't die in
vain." On Friday, President Putin declared that "life is more
complicated than what they show on TV or even on the internet". I'd agree
with him, about television in Russia, which continues to portray the Kremlin's
parallel reality of events in Ukraine.
^ Putin is just pure evil. He
orders the torture and murder of innocent Ukrainian Men, Women and Children and
tries to play the victim. He sends 300,000 Russian Men to die as War Criminals
and again tries to play the victim to their Mothers. One can only hope that the
Mothers, Wives, Sisters and Girlfriends of the Russian Soldiers being used as
cannon-fodder in Ukraine will help end the War soon – maybe not these Mothers
because they seem to be too brainwashed to be of any use to anybody, but
hopefully some of the others. There Russia has lost 100,000 Soldiers in 9 months
of fighting - that’s a lot of grieving Families.
^
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