Russia military – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Fri, 29 Mar 2024 16:11:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Russia military – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Moscow to begin spring military draft amid mobilisation fears https://artifex.news/article68006673-ece/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 16:11:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68006673-ece/ Read More “Moscow to begin spring military draft amid mobilisation fears” »

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Russian President Vladimir Putin
| Photo Credit: AP

Russia will begin calling up tens of thousands of soldiers next week in a conscription drive to replenish its armed forces and build up its military reserves.

Moscow says conscripts are not sent to fight in Ukraine but the draft — which happens twice a year — comes amid persistent rumours of a new wave of mobilisation for the Ukraine offensive.

“The spring draft will be held from April 1,” deputy head of the defence ministry’s mobilisation department, Rear Admiral Vladimir Tsimlyansky, said in a briefing on March 29.

“Conscripts will not be sent to the armed forces’ deployment points in the new regions of Russia — the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, Kherson and Zaporozhzhia regions — or (be sent) to perform tasks of the special military operation,” he added, using Russia’s official language for its offensive against Ukraine.

Moscow unilaterally annexed the four Ukrainian regions in 2022 and has pressurised their residents to take Russian citizenship.

Some 1,47,000 conscripts were drafted during last year’s spring call-ups. The Army did not say how many it was targeting this year.

Russian men aged between 18 and 30 are eligible to be called up after lawmakers increased the upper age limit from 27 last year.

Military service lasts 12 months.

Conscripts face intense pressure once in the armed forces to sign voluntary military contracts which allow them to be sent to fight in Ukraine.

Fresh concerns

Russia says it recruited more than 4,00,000 for its campaign last year, with the defence ministry offering high salaries for fighters.

It has been accused of focussing recruitment on Russia’s poorest regions and ethnic republics.

Once conscripts have completed military service, they form part of Russia’s military reserves and are liable to be sent to the front lines if mobilised in the future.

Mobilisation rumours have persisted since the Kremlin forcibly drafted more than 300,000 in autumn 2022.

Putin said in December there was “no need” for another wave, pointing to successful recruitment efforts.

But his re-election victory earlier this month– combined with the defence ministry saying it would create two new armies by the end of the year and the Kremlin pointing at Ukraine for last week’s deadly attack on a Moscow concert hall – have all triggered fresh concerns.

“By voting for Putin, you voted for mobilisation,” Abbas Gallyamov, a former speechwriter for the Russian leader and now an anti-Kremlin campaigner, said on Telegram last week.

The team of late Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny on Thursday urged people who are issued military summons to ignore them and not report to draft offices.

Mr. Putin said in December that 617,000 Russian servicemen were deployed in the “conflict zone”.

He issued a decree last year that ordered the overall size of the army to be increased to 1.32 million troops, from its previous level of 1.15 million.



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How Russia’s Military Uses Volunteer Fighters To Plug Gaps In Ukraine https://artifex.news/how-russias-military-uses-volunteer-fighters-to-plug-gaps-in-ukraine-5122448/ Sun, 25 Feb 2024 01:54:56 +0000 https://artifex.news/how-russias-military-uses-volunteer-fighters-to-plug-gaps-in-ukraine-5122448/ Read More “How Russia’s Military Uses Volunteer Fighters To Plug Gaps In Ukraine” »

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Russian fighters injured in fighting with Ukraine transported through eastern Ukraine’s Balakliia

Balakliia, Ukraine:

When Russian forces withdrew from the town of Balakliia in eastern Ukraine in late 2022, pursued by Ukrainian troops and under artillery fire, they left a poorly equipped group of volunteers to guard their retreat.

The force of around 50 men came from the National Army Combat Reserve – known by its Russian acronym BARS – a loose assembly of units totaling several thousand fighters that Russia’s defense ministry has deployed in Ukraine to supplement its regular forces.

About four hours of footage from a bodycam worn by one of the fighters, obtained by Reuters, provides a rare first-hand view of the combat operations of a BARS unit, according to three military experts who reviewed the video to provide an assessment for the news agency of the unit’s military capability.

The invasion of Ukraine marked the first time BARS, which was founded in 2015, deployed units in combat. The video, coupled with interviews with four platoon members, shows the BARS unit was left to defend Balakliia with no heavy weaponry or air support, malfunctioning communications, and confused coordination with the regular military.

“Where is our air force?” asked one of the BARS fighters. His squad, tasked with defending a crossroads north of the town, was sharing a mess tin of cold meat stew during a break in Ukrainian shelling.

The squad leader, Anton Kuznetsov, whose bodycam recorded the exchange, told the men that there must be a good reason there was no air support. “Do they understand that we’re surrounded?” complained another soldier, off-camera.

Contacted by Reuters, Kuznetsov said that he had made the bodycam video and had then misplaced the camera’s memory card but he declined to comment on combat operations. The memory card was left behind in a rucksack after the retreat.

Russia’s defence ministry and the Kremlin did not respond to requests for comment about the video or the extent to which the military relies on the BARS irregulars. A deputy commander of the BARS 9 force that fought in Balakliia, contacted by Reuters, confirmed his position in the unit but declined to comment on its activities.

The news agency could not independently determine how representative the conditions in the video were of the operations of the wider BARS force.

Russia has made territorial gains along parts of the frontline in recent months. Ukraine, which replaced its military top brass in early February, has repeatedly said it needs more equipment and support from Western allies to prosecute the war.

On at least two occasions, President Vladimir Putin has publicly praised the contribution of BARS to Russia’s campaign. In a February 21, 2023, annual address to parliament, he said BARS fighters were patriotic volunteers and thanked them for their service.

As the war enters a third year, BARS is part of a patchwork of irregular forces that helps Russia avoid an unpopular general draft, the military experts said.

Rod Thornton, associate professor at the Defence Studies Department of King’s College London, estimated that BARS contributes between 10,000 and 30,000 men to a Russian force operating in or near Ukraine of about 200,000. Russia does not disclose the number of BARS fighters.

In recent months, BARS units have been fighting in north-east Ukraine and the southern Zaporizhzhia region, two of the most bitterly contested fronts, according to updates posted on social media by Dmitry Rogozin, the Moscow-appointed representative for Zaporizhzhia in the upper house of the Russian parliament, and a report from Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.

BARS units were useful in plugging gaps in Russian manpower, said Nick Reynolds, Research Fellow in Land Warfare at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), a UK-based defence think tank.

“With the Russian state clearly mobilizing for a longer conflict, a system such as BARS does provide an additional avenue from which to mobilize parts of the population, get them trained, and provide additional mass,” said Reynolds, who reviewed the bodycam footage.

He said the group shown in the video appeared “not particularly professional or well trained.”

“WE’D BEEN FORGOTTEN”

On September 6, 2022, the core of the Russian force in Balakliia was withdrawing in the face of a major Ukrainian counter-offensive. Ukrainian forces have already taken the nearby settlements of Verbivka and Lagery. But the BARS fighters stayed behind.

Kuznetsov, aged 29 and from Siberia, was one of the squad leaders of a BARS 9 platoon, in command of around a dozen men, the video showed.

The commander of the BARS platoon inside Balakliia ordered Kuznetsov’s squad to head to the crossroads and repel Ukrainian forces, the video showed.

They knew they would be outgunned by the Ukrainians, conversations caught on camera showed. The heaviest weapons Kuznetsov’s squad had at its disposal were machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, and mortars.

Two members of the BARS force were sent to find a spot with a radio signal to contact a nearby artillery unit to get support, according to one of the four fighters who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity.

After around 24 hours, they located an artillery unit, but they were already pulling back towards Russia, so could not help, the person said.

“My first impression was that we’d been forgotten,” he said. “It hit me very hard psychologically.”

TOY SOLDIERS

On September 7, the last day recorded on the bodycam, Kuznetsov’s squad was keeping watch from an apartment building overlooking the crossroads, as radio traffic reported Ukrainian forces approaching.

While they waited, Kuznetsov and two of his men played with a toy plane and toy tank, pantomiming a soldier requesting air support.

Soon after, a radio report came in saying five Ukrainian Humvees were spotted nearby. Kuznetsov tells his squad: “Right, men, let’s get into the mood for a battle.” The video footage ends as Kuznetsov heads downstairs into the street.

Two of the fighters told Reuters they did engage the Ukrainian forces, but the Russians were outnumbered.

After the retreat, BARS 9 temporarily disbanded, according to the same two fighters, though they said it has since been re-started.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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