A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 29, 2024

1440th Russian Rifle Regt Conscripts Refuse To Advance On Zaporizhia Front

Russian conscripts deployed with the 1440th Motorized Rifle Regiment refused orders to advance 'to suicide' on the Zaporizhia front, leading them to be arrested by military police. 

The incident is similar to others that have been reported about Russian units along the front this summer and fall. Russian conscripts are not even supposed to be serving in Ukraine, but that promise is widely disregarded by desperate commanders short on personnel. JL

Kateryna Zakharchenko reports in the Kyiv Post:

Russian soldiers  from certain squads of the 1440th Motorized Rifle Regiment refused to go on the offensive in the Zaporizhzhia region. It was reported that the refusers have been arrested by the Russian military police. "Advancing there is suicide for the Russians.” The Russian military intends to deploy new units to the sector, replacing those who refused to advance. Russian conscripts play an ambiguous role in Russia’s war against Ukraine. Officially, they are not supposed to participate in combat operations, as the Russian military guaranteed that only contract soldiers are involved in the so-called “special military operation.” But this does not reflect reality.

Russian servicemembers are refusing to advance in the Zaporizhzhia region, agents of the Ukrainian partisan movement Atesh reported on Monday, Oct. 28.

According to the post, agents from the 1440th Motorized Rifle Regiment stated that certain squads are refusing to go on the offensive in the Zaporizhzhia region. It was reported that the refusers have been arrested by the Russian military police.

An informed Kyiv Post source in Ukraine’s security services said, “in the Zaporizhzhia sector, there is a solid and fortified line of combat engagement.”

 

“Therefore, advancing there is suicide for the Russians,” the source told Kyiv Post on condition of anonymity, adding that “nobody is advancing there now; they’re just biting each other.”

 

In response, the Russian military staff intends to deploy new units to the specified sector, replacing those that have retreated with the conscripts. This is occurring amid assurances from the military-political leadership that conscript soldiers will not participate in the so-called “special military operation.” Of course, their words do not inspire confidence among the soldiers.

Russian conscripts play an ambiguous role in Russia’s war against Ukraine. Officially, they are not supposed to participate in combat operations, as the Russian military leadership has guaranteed that only contract soldiers are involved in the so-called “special military operation.” However, this does not always reflect reality.

 

Conscripts are often used to reinforce units already engaged in combat. This includes replacing losses among contract soldiers.

Many Russian conscripts express dissatisfaction with their deployment to the front, which casts doubt on the military-political leadership’s statements about their exclusion from combat operations. Servicemen who refuse to comply with orders to participate in combat may face consequences such as detention by military police.

 

Last month, Kyiv Post visited a pre-trial detention center where Russian prisoners of war captured during the Ukrainian offensive in Russia’s Kursk region are held. A Kyiv Post journalist spoke with Russian army conscripts and Chechen captives, learning about the orders given by the Russian staff, what the captives think about the events in the Kursk region, and more. Additionally, the Russian conscripts shared how they ended up on the front lines and subsequently in Ukrainian captivity.

1 comments:

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