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ID: WMqqAogD/pol/508187094#508191543
6/21/2025, 3:19:42 PM
>>508191176
>A Russian veteran of the Chechen war who has deserted from the war in Ukraine has described how poorly-equipped Russian soldiers were forced into assaults
>>508191360
13/ The refuseniks were put to work evacuating the wounded. Many of the men were so poorly equipped, wearing Chinese-made Airsoft helmets, that they had little protection against blast and fragmentation injuries.
https://x.com/ChrisO_wiki/status/1936133786019762317
14/ "Many of the wounded quickly became 200s [dead], evacuation would not have helped them. The dugouts were full of this – corpses were sitting in bandages.
15/ Some with severe injuries had bullet wounds – a team close to "the emperor's ass" [the commander] went around and finished off people."
16/ Food and equipment were in short supply. Alexander and his comrades had to scavenge both from the bodies of the dead. The bodies they evacuated were not taken away for identification.
17/ Instead, he says, "Not far from Klishchiivka, about a kilometer and a half from the contact line, there were pits, off to the side. An ordinary pit, covered with an awning or covered with branches. And under the branches - corpses. They threw the dead there."
18/ Alexander's unit was under constant observation by Ukrainian drones, which called in artillery strikes or drone attacks within minutes. "If you stopped in a car for five minutes – that’s it. You are always a target." They had six dead and 23 injured in a single attack.
19/ He encountered blocking detachments, Russian units comprised of military police or the feared Akhmat unit from Chechnya. They stationed themselves at crossroads to examine cars and searched houses for deserters, whom they sometimes executed.
>part 3
>A Russian veteran of the Chechen war who has deserted from the war in Ukraine has described how poorly-equipped Russian soldiers were forced into assaults
>>508191360
13/ The refuseniks were put to work evacuating the wounded. Many of the men were so poorly equipped, wearing Chinese-made Airsoft helmets, that they had little protection against blast and fragmentation injuries.
https://x.com/ChrisO_wiki/status/1936133786019762317
14/ "Many of the wounded quickly became 200s [dead], evacuation would not have helped them. The dugouts were full of this – corpses were sitting in bandages.
15/ Some with severe injuries had bullet wounds – a team close to "the emperor's ass" [the commander] went around and finished off people."
16/ Food and equipment were in short supply. Alexander and his comrades had to scavenge both from the bodies of the dead. The bodies they evacuated were not taken away for identification.
17/ Instead, he says, "Not far from Klishchiivka, about a kilometer and a half from the contact line, there were pits, off to the side. An ordinary pit, covered with an awning or covered with branches. And under the branches - corpses. They threw the dead there."
18/ Alexander's unit was under constant observation by Ukrainian drones, which called in artillery strikes or drone attacks within minutes. "If you stopped in a car for five minutes – that’s it. You are always a target." They had six dead and 23 injured in a single attack.
19/ He encountered blocking detachments, Russian units comprised of military police or the feared Akhmat unit from Chechnya. They stationed themselves at crossroads to examine cars and searched houses for deserters, whom they sometimes executed.
>part 3
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