From NYT:
“'Coffins Are Already Coming':
The Toll of Russia's Chaotic Draft”
(Russian conscript soldiers watch
a tank biathlon at the annual Army International Games near Moscow, Aug. 21,
2022.)
A half-dozen Russian soldiers
talk about being shipped to an area of intense fighting in eastern Ukraine just
11 days after their mobilization. Asked about his shooting practice, a bearded
conscript says, “Once. Three magazines.” In a town near Yekaterinburg, in
central Russia, newly mobilized men march in place in their street clothes. “No
machine guns, nothing, no clothes, no shoes,” says an unidentified observer.
“Half of them are hungover, old, at risk — the ambulance should be on duty.” Elsewhere,
scores of relatives of freshly drafted Russian soldiers crowd outside a
training center, passing items through its fence to the recruits — boots,
berets, bulletproof vests, backpacks, sleeping bags, camping mats, medicine,
bandages and food. “This is not how it’s done,” a woman named Elena told the
news outlet Samara Online. “We buy everything.”
Despite draconian laws against
criticizing the “special military operation” in Ukraine, Russian social media
is awash with scenes such as those above captured in widely circulating videos.
Such posts are taking the Ministry of Defense to task for acting just as
Western military experts predicted: rushing thousands of newly drafted,
untrained, ill-equipped soldiers to Ukraine, too desperate to plug holes in its
defensive lines to mold the men into cohesive units. “They are giving them, at
best, basics and, at worst, nothing and throwing them into combat, which suggests
that these guys are just literally cannon fodder,” said William Alberque, a
specialist in the Russian armed forces and the director of the arms control
program at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a research
organization based in London.
An extreme sign of disorder came
Saturday, when two men from a former Soviet state opened fire at a Russian
training camp. They killed 11 volunteers and wounded 15 before being shot dead,
Russian outlets reported. Russia’s military is struggling to balance two
objectives, military analysts said: deploying enough troops to halt recent
Ukrainian advances while rebuilding ground forces decimated during eight months
of war. Inevitably, some draftees have already been killed or captured,
stirring ever-harsher criticism of the mobilization effort announced Sept. 21
and considered a shambles from the start. In theory, the draft was of men in
the reserves with military skills that needed refreshing, but in practice, it
pulled in virtually anybody, critics said. “The result of the mobilization is
that untrained guys are thrown onto the front line,” Anastasia Kashevarova, a
military blogger who has supported the war, wrote in an angry post, one of
several such broadsides. “Chelyabinsk, Yekaterinburg, Moscow — zinc coffins are
already coming,” she added. “You told us that there would be training, that
they would not be sent to the front line in a week. Were you lying again?”
Thus far, the Kremlin has
tolerated criticism of the conduct of the war, while jailing or fining those
who questioned any need for the invasion. But there were rumblings this past
week that it should crack down on military critics, too. On Friday, Russian
President Vladimir Putin confirmed at a news conference that 16,000 recruits
had already been deployed to combat units, some with as few as five to 10 days
of training. The recruits were sorely needed, given that the front in Ukraine stretched
for nearly 700 miles, he said, adding that the training would continue there. Evidence
of the lack of training is anecdotal, but the sheer number of videos from
across Russia, along with scattered threats from draftees to strike over the
conditions, other news reports and commentaries, underscores the depth of the
problems.
In a widely circulated video, a
recruit from Moscow assigned to the 1st Tank Regiment — a storied unit hit hard
early in the invasion — said the regimental commander had announced there would
be no shooting practice or even theoretical training before the men deployed. Another
video showed a group of about 500 disheveled men, most of their faces covered
by balaclavas, standing by a train in the Belgorod region, near the border with
Ukraine. The narrator said they had not been assigned to specific units, had
lived in “inhuman conditions” for a week, had to buy their own food and lacked
ammunition. The Belgorod governorate announced that most of the men would be
returned to central Russia for additional training. Even Roman Starovoit,
governor of the neighboring Kursk region, decried the training conditions. He
described ruined canteen buildings, rusty or broken showers, and a lack of beds
and uniforms. “In some places it’s OK, and in some places it is just awful,” he
said on social media.
On Thursday, another governorate,
Chelyabinsk, was among the first to officially announce the deaths of untrained
soldiers, with five killed in eastern Ukraine. The announcement did not detail
the circumstances, but the BBC’s Russian service quoted friends and relatives
of the men as saying they were deployed “like meat” without combat training. Similarly,
the 28-year-old head of a department in Moscow’s city government, Aleksei
Martynov, who lacked combat experience, was killed in Ukraine just days after
being mobilized, Natalya Loseva, a journalist with the state-run RT television
channel, reported on Telegram. Her report could not be independently confirmed.
“The Russian military leadership is continuing to compromise the future
reconstitution of the force by prioritizing the immediate mobilization of as
many bodies as possible for ongoing fighting in Ukraine,” the Washington-based
Institute for the Study of War said in a recent assessment. A report from
Britain’s Ministry of Defense seconded that evaluation, stating: “The failure
of Russian crews to destroy intact equipment before withdrawing or surrendering
highlights their poor state of training and low levels of battle discipline.”
Not surprisingly, Russian
officials are seeking to put a positive spin on the call-up. Russian Defense
Minister Sergei Shoigu announced that 200,000 recruits were preparing at about
80 training grounds and six educational centers. Putin called a halt to the
unpopular mobilization, saying 220,000 conscripts would be enough, rather than
the initially announced target of 300,000. The number of Russian troops in
Ukraine remains murky. An estimated 200,000 soldiers were deployed for the
invasion, but Western intelligence agencies say that anywhere from one-third to
one-half have been killed or wounded. The Defense Ministry has pumped out a
stream of videos showing happy “mobiks,” as the recruits are known in Russian
slang, learning to shoot, attack tanks, tie a tourniquet, plant a land mine and
other military tasks. “In general, the personnel are fully equipped, ready for
combat operations and eager to join the ranks of combat units and to destroy
the enemy,” said a soldier identified only by his first name, Magomed, in a
Ministry of Defense video shot at a training ground somewhere in or near
eastern Ukraine.
An injection of hundreds of
thousands of draftees might stop Ukrainian advances in the short term, but
military analysts said Russia would struggle to reverse its fortunes in the
months ahead. “The Russians will have to make a choice — build a unit properly
over time and then risk losing the war, or using that unit now because the war
demands it, but the unit will be half ready,” said Johan Norberg, a Russia analyst
at the Swedish Defense Research Agency.
Russia’s lines in eastern Ukraine
have collapsed repeatedly under the onslaught of better-trained,
better-motivated soldiers. Analysts say the Russian military has a glaring lack
of cohesive units in which infantry, artillery and air power are trained to
work together. Andrei Gurulev, a hard-line deputy in the federal Parliament and
a senior officer in the reserves, wrote on Telegram that it would take at least
one or two months before Russia could deploy trained units. Others suggested it
would take until the winter. Some Russian military cadets are being released
early to become officers, the Ukrainian general staff reported.
The Soviet Union maintained a
permanent military training infrastructure, which was dismantled after its
collapse in 1991. With the start of the war, military trainers were shipped to
Ukraine, leaving units struggling to fill the gap with veterans or teachers
from military academies. “They have lost a lot of military specialists,” said
Gleb Irisov, a Russian air force veteran and former analyst for state-run news
agency TASS. “There is nobody to train these new people.” Even before the war,
Irisov and others noted, Russia struggled to train its two classes of about
100,000 conscripts every spring and fall, with reports of problems such as
ill-fed troops. “The system of military training is very weak and has been that
way for a long time,” Irisov said. Much of the training appeared only on paper,
he said. “They could not manage to do this in peacetime, so in wartime, it is
even more difficult.”
Unexpectedly, some of the most
concentrated training is happening in the Donbas, the area of eastern Ukraine
that has been inflamed by war since Russia ignited a separatist movement there
in 2014. In the spring, men in the Donbas were being snatched off the streets
and dispatched directly to the front lines. But amid the carnage, attitudes
shifted, said Kirill Mikhailov, a researcher at the Conflict Intelligence Team,
an organization founded in Russia to track conflicts involving Russian troops.
Officials in the region realized that they had “squandered their manpower for
little gain,” he said, and so they knew they would need to make better soldiers
out of the Russian recruits. For the moment, however, with thousands of
recruits pouring into Ukraine, it appears that the Kremlin is emphasizing
quantity over quality. Or, as Norberg put it, citing a Russian expression, “Not
with skill, but with numbers.”
^ Russia is not the World's Super
Power the USSR once was. It's not even a European Regional Power. It is a poor
Developing Country (which would have been called the 3rd World in the past.)
With that said, it is no surprise
that 11 days after Putin mobilized (and where the Russian Police and Military
went to apartments, schools, universities, hospitals, prisons, etc. and forced
the very young, the very old, the disabled the sick Men to go immediately to
Training Camps and after 5 to 10 days of training were sent to the Front Lines
in Ukraine where many are already either captured by the Ukrainians or
returning to Russia in Body Bags.
Russia doesn't have modern
Military Equipment, enough Military Uniforms, enough Military Training Sites,
enough Food, etc. inside the Russian Federation much less at the Front Lines in
Ukraine to take care of its Military.
They are using old Soviet things
that were old even before the USSR collapsed in 1991 (so they are even older
than 31 years.)
There is no way this will end way
for Putin or for the Russian People. The sooner they realize that fact the
sooner they can end their War in Ukraine and try to save some of their few
remaining Men and Boys.
I have had Russian Friends write
me and beg me to help them - I only help those that were against the War back
in February 2022 and not those who once supported it until they had to go die
in it. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/coffins-already-coming-toll-russias-114804341.html
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