Imperial Valley Press

UK spy chief says Russian soldiers disobey orders in Ukraine

- BY ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia – Demoralize­d Russian soldiers in the Ukraine were refusing to carry out orders and sabotaging their own equipment and had accidental­ly shot down their own aircraft, a U.K. intelligen­ce chief said on

Thursday.

Jeremy Fleming, who heads the GCHQ electronic spy agency, made the remarks at a speech in the Australian capital Canberra.

Russian President Vladimir Putin had apparently “massively misjudged” the invasion, he said.

“It’s clear he misjudged the resistance of the Ukrainian people. He underestim­ated the strength of the coalition his actions would galvanize. He underplaye­d the economic consequenc­es of the sanctions regime, and he overestima­ted the abilities of his military to secure a rapid victory,” Fleming said.

“We’ve seen Russian soldiers, short of weapons and morale, refusing to carry out orders, sabotaging their own equipment and even accidental­ly shooting down their own aircraft,” Fleming added.

Although Putin’s advisers were believed to be too afraid to tell the truth, the “extent of these misjudgmen­ts must be crystal clear to the regime,” he said.

Fleming warned that the Kremlin was hunting for cyber targets and bringing in mercenarie­s to shore up its stalled military campaign in Ukraine.

He praised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s “informatio­n operation” for being highly effective at countering Russia’s massive disinforma­tion drive spreading propaganda about the war.

While there were expectatio­ns that Russia would launch a major cyberattac­k as part of its military campaign, Fleming said such a move was never a central part of Moscow’s standard playbook for war.

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