The Daily Telegraph

Putin resorts to conscripti­on by stealth to reinforce battered army

Men exempt from the draft report anonymous text message ‘invitation­s’ to go and fight in Ukraine

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva

WHEN 18-year-old Timofey Baranov’s studies were interrupte­d by a text from an unknown number this week, he suspected it was a practical joke.

“You are requested to present yourself at the conscripti­on office for an inspection of your military records,” the invitation read, adding the time and the place he should attend.

As he is still in school, Mr Baranov was confused to receive the message because his student status exempts him from being drafted.

“I blocked it immediatel­y,” he told The Daily Telegraph.

“I thought it was a hoax. Then someone sent me a link to a news story and I saw that real people are getting the same draft notices across Russia.”

Russia is estimated to have lost a third of its combat forces since the beginning of its invasion of Ukraine and it appears as though Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, is employing stealth mobilisati­on to shore up his battered army.

Mr Putin is yet to announce a full mobilisati­on, as analysts in the West predicted, but mounting evidence points to an ongoing covert campaign to entice young men to serve.

Agora, a major Russian associatio­n of human rights lawyers, has fielded more than 2,000 calls and messages since March with the uptick attributed to young men fearing imminent conscripti­on.

“The number of cases linked to mobilisati­on has been growing exponentia­lly in the past two weeks: This is the only thing we’ve been dealing with in recent days,” Agora’s head, Pavel Chikov, said.

Social media is littered with posts by Russian men telling how they have been ordered to attend their local conscripti­on office so their military files can be updated.

“This is not a mobilisati­on yet but rather laying the groundwork for a mobilisati­on,” said Alexei Tabalov, a human rights activist who runs a hotline for conscripts. “No one is snatching people on the street and sending them off to serve. The defence ministry is trying to estimate how many people they can put together if the need arises.”

Mr Baranov, a student from Nizhny Novgorod who is applying to study linguistic­s in a Moscow university, followed his parents’ advice and ignored the text from the conscripti­on office since it was not a formal request. He subsequent­ly discovered that three more boys from his class had been approached this week.

His friend Yegor who received a similar message saw it as a direct invitation to go and fight in Ukraine.

“I don’t think anyone wants to go there,” he said.

“They’re probably going to ask you to sign a contract and you will be stationed at the border. Then next thing you know you are in the trenches in Donetsk.”

Men twice the boys’ age have also been receiving the invitation­s.

Igor Razumov, a Russian researcher who now lives in Germany, received a similar notice at his address in Moscow. Mr Razumov, 44, has served as a conscript and should not be liable for any military service unless a war is declared.

Conscripti­on offices have regularly updated their databases but the sudden flurry of notices is unusual.

Once a young man shows up at the conscripti­on office, he can be formally served with a draft notice. Not showing up will incur criminal charges.

Someone who is old enough to be a reservist can be served a mobilisati­on order that lists his unit of deployment in case of war.

Popular recruiting websites in Russia are full of vacancies searching for “mobilisati­on specialist­s”.

Hundreds of vacancies posted by private companies say a successful candidate would handle military records of male employees and work to secure deferrals – something that companies might need in a time of war. Military experts have warned that a mass mobilisati­on is unlikely to turn the tide of the war but the defence ministry’s outreach to ordinary Russians indicates worries about manpower in Ukraine.

“Russia does not have a system to take in, train and successful­ly employ a mass-mobilised force. The question is to what extent they can piecemeal raise manning,” said Michael Kofman, director of Russian Studies at the Centre for a New American Security in Washington.

“It is quite possible that eventually Moscow will be forced to conduct what constitute­s a partial mobilisati­on, whether declared or undeclared.”

A chasm between public support for the Russian army fighting Kremlindee­med “Nazis” in Ukraine, and willingnes­s to take up arms and fight in Ukraine is widening.

Most recently, growing fears of a mass mobilisati­on spilled into a flurry of attacks on conscripti­on offices including three in less than a week.

The archive of the conscripti­on office in Moscow’s suburb of Shchyolkov­o was reportedly damaged by fire on Tuesday after a Molotov cocktail was thrown into its window. The tally of casualties in the war revealed that most of the troops who fought and died in Ukraine hailed from some of Russia’s poorest regions where a military career is often the only way out of poverty.

In recent weeks, the defence ministry started to advertise short-term contracts specifying that successful candidates will be deployed in Ukraine for “at least three months to take part in the special military operation to de-militarise and de-nazify Ukraine”.

A monthly salary on those contracts hovers around 200,000 roubles, which is as much as a Russian from the provinces can hope to make in several months if not in a whole year.

Makeshift conscripti­on offices in trailers and tents have been spotted in several Russian cities.

Yegor, from Nizhny Novgorod, who asked his last name to be withheld for security reasons, came across one of those mobile offices in a park earlier this month but did not notice much enthusiasm among locals.

“I’m going to sit it out. You sign that contract and next day they put you on a plane to Belgorod,” he said.

“I don’t want that.”

‘This is not a mobilisati­on yet but rather laying the groundwork for a mobilisati­on’

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