Ukraine’s General Staff reported Sunday that Russia has used a national guard unit to shoot soldiers who plan on deserting or surrendering to Ukrainian forces.
The Ukraine staff said in its daily briefing that Russia is using its Rosgvardiia force to shoot would-be surrenders “to maintain military discipline and prevent the spread of panic among personnel.”
Rosgvardiia is the national guard composed of about 340,000 soldiers mostly employed to handle internal conflicts within Russia. Rosgvardiia troops reportedly shot six Russian soldiers who’d intended on deserting, the report read.
U.K. intelligence reported in early November 2022 that Russia began deploying such troops along the Russia-Ukraine border as “barrier soldiers” to prevent Russian soldiers from retreating by the threat of shooting them.
This comes after Ukraine launched a hotline three months ago called “Hochu Zhit,” which translates to “I want to live.” This was more than a month before the Russian death toll hit 100,000, according to the Ukraine Defense Ministry.
Russia has lost more than 111,000 troops since the war began on February 24, 2022, according to Ukrainian officials. That includes 430 in the last day and more than 10,000 over the last two weeks.
“They are afraid. You can feel it. And they are right to be afraid. Because they are losing. Drones, missiles, anything else will not help them. Because we are together. And they are together only with fear,” Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Just one week ago, Zelensky said Russia has lost a lot in this war, but that Russian President Vladimir Putin will keep pressing forward.
SOURCE: newsweek.com