The Russians out for revenge on Putin
The Russian Volunteer Corps and the Freedom of Russia Legion were formed in Ukraine in the wake of Moscow’s invasion. Now, the militias are taking the fight to the Kremlin – and aiming to topple the president. Kim Sengupta reports
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Your support makes all the difference.The fighters are exuberant after their cross-border mission, showing off a captured BRT armoured car and machine guns among their battle trophies, while vowing further attacks in a long campaign and predicting Vladimir Putin’s downfall.
They have not invaded Russia on Ukraine’s behalf, but started a war of liberation, declares Denis Kapustin, the head of the Russian Volunteer Corps (RVC) at a camp in northeastern Ukraine. “We went back to our homeland. There were no Ukrainian soldiers with us; they will not appear in the territory of the Russian Federation. This is our internal problem,” he insists.
The group, along with another anti-Putin militia, the Freedom of Russia Legion, claim that they were answering a cry for help from the people of Belgorod, the region in which they have taken over a few villages amid much publicity. The deputy commander of the Freedom of Russia Legion, call sign Caesar, says: “Not long ago, as you know, Russian Su-35s [warplanes] dropped two bombs over Belgorod. After this, we began to receive letters from local residents with a request to demilitarise the region. Our aim is to create a demilitarised zone in all regions neighbouring Ukraine. Russia’s armed forces pose a threat not just to Ukraine’s population, but also to Russians.
“Our next plan is to expand deeper into Russian territory – please wait for a little bit, just a few days, and you’ll hear from us again. After completing this task, we’ll begin to liberate Russia.”
Whatever happens to the long-term liberation plan, the reality is that the current incursions by fighters are part of the “shaping operations” being carried out by Ukraine ahead of a spring counteroffensive, which is supposed to begin in the near future.
The aim is to force Russian troops out of their positions and keep them moving with varying assaults. Similar probes are taking place in Zaporizhzhia, in the Donbas, and with airstrikes in Crimea.
The Kremlin had to send new units to the Belgorod region in response to the attacks, putting Colonel General Alexander Lapin, who was appointed chief of staff of Russia’s ground forces four months ago, in charge at the border. Those troops will now have to stay in the area – with the Russian-exile militias threatening further raids – while the Ukrainian offensive unfolds elsewhere.
While maintaining that the exiles have autonomy of action, Kapustin acknowledges there has been Ukrainian “assistance and encouragement from comrades”. He says the Ukrainians are asked: “What do you think of our plans, is this possible? What information can you give us?”, adding: “And we need to ask if such an operation would help or make things difficult for Ukraine.”
Caesar explains: “We all have Russian passports, or are ethnic Russians, who came to defend Ukraine. Of course we coordinate our activities with certain structures in Ukraine; it would be strange if it were otherwise.”
The Ukrainian government’s line is that it is not involved in actions carried out by opposition groups inside Russia. Volodymyr Zelensky said after the recent drone attack on the Kremlin and a spate of bombings on Russian territory: “Ukraine is defending our country within the territories of Ukraine. We are not in a foreign country.”
Members of the Russian Volunteer Corps have expressed far-right, neo-fascist views – something the Kremlin has sought to exploit. Ukrainian officials have tried to explain the country’s links with such groups with some difficulty. A senior officer in the SBU, the Ukrainian intelligence service, said: “Look, of course we don’t support extremist views ourselves. But ‘Our enemy’s enemy is our friend’ – isn’t that the English phrase? As for our activities, there are things we can’t talk about of course, like your MI6 and SAS. But there are a lot of Russians, we are finding, who are against Putin and this war, and willing to help – whether at the border, or St Petersburg, or Moscow.”
Members of the Freedom Legion have a more moderate political stance than their paramilitary partners. Caesar says that differences between the armed groups have to be buried, and he wants to contrast their unity with the “divided” Russian political opposition.
“The fact that we take a more centre-ground position and the Volunteer Corps is more right-wing does not change anything. Our goal is to protect Ukraine and liberate Russia. We are determined to fight and die for our cause. This is different from the political opposition, who are constantly slinging mud at each other. This only helps the Putin regime,” he stresses.
“If someone thinks that there is another way to put an end to Putin’s regime, he is either a scumbag or a fool. It’s clear that mass peace demonstrations in Russian will not change anything. People in the squares will be rolled into asphalt by tanks. With combat like in Belgorod, we have shown the only way to change power in the country is by force of arms.”
After more than a day of skirmishes, the Kremlin announced that “70 Ukrainian nationalists” had been “eliminated”. The militias say two of their fighters were killed and 10 wounded. The Russians also produced images of American Humvees and MRAP (light armoured) vehicles supposedly abandoned by the militias and captured.
The US administration has sought to distance itself from the attacks. At the Pentagon, Brigadier General Patrick Ryder of the US Air Force said: “The US has not approved of any third-party transfers of equipment to paramilitary organisations, nor has the Ukrainian government requested any such transfers. We’ll keep a close eye on the issue.” State department spokesperson Matthew Miller said: “We do not encourage or enable strikes inside of Russia. But, as we’ve also said, it is up to Ukraine to decide how to conduct this war.”
Asked about the American weaponry, Kapustin says: “I know exactly where I got my weapons from – unfortunately not from the Western partners.” Caesar adds: “Yes, we used Humvees. We buy them in international shops, war shops... everyone who has money can do this.”
The militias remain small in numbers, and it is far from clear that they have the capability to carry out deep penetration missions inside Russia. But the border raids have provided more ammunition to powerful figures in Russia who have been attacking the military high command over the war.
Yevgeny Prigozhin, whose mercenary fighters have been heavily involved on the frontline – especially in the battle for Bakhmut – has been one of their most vocal critics. “Sabotage and reconnaissance forces calmly enter Russia and march, uploading videos, driving their tanks, armoured infantry vehicles. Where’s the guarantee that they will not enter Moscow?” the Wagner boss has railed. “So far as I understand, nobody gives a s*** about residents of Belgorod region. I say to the elite of the Russian Federation: you sons of b****es, gather your children. Send them to war. When you come to a funeral and start burying them, people will say, ‘It is all fair now.’”
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