New York Post

Into ‘meat’ grinder

Russia troop sacrifice

- By RONNY REYES

Russia is using a “meat wave” strategy that sends scores of poorly trained soldiers to die on the front lines against Ukraine to clear a path for the Kremlin’s more valuable elite units — then abandons their frozen corpses on the battlefiel­d.

A Ukrainian sniper stationed in Avdiivka, which has seen some of the most intense fighting in the war, said the Kremlin’s tactic is to send troops out to “just go and die,” CNN reported.

The special-forces officer, only identified by his call sign, “Bess,” said that once the gunfire and drone strikes end, the bodies of the dead Russian soldiers “just lie there frozen.

“Nobody evacuates them, nobody takes them away,” he said. “It feels like people don’t have a specific task, they just go and die.”

Despite appearing to suffer heavy losses, the Russian army is still making steady progress in Avdiivka and elsewhere by overwhelmi­ng Ukrainian forces through sheer numbers before the Kremlin’s elite paratroope­rs and marines arrive for the final push in the heated battles.

The tactic is not without its detractors. The Ukrainian Post reported last week that the more elite Kremlin troops who follow the “meat waves” are opposing the strategy over concerns of mass Russian deaths.

More than 100 relatives of Russian soldiers also opposed the tactic, penning a letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin (below) last month after orders were issued to redeploy injured soldiers to the fight in Avdiivka, according to Important Stories, an independen­t Russian news outlet.

But the commander of a Ukrainian drone reconnaiss­ance unit in Avdiivka said it is clear that the “meat assault” strategy has not stopped and is proving effective in the city.

“If we can kill 40 to 70 servicemen with drones in a day, the next day they renew their forces and continue to attack,” he told CNN.

The leader, who was not identified, said Ukraine could make better progress against the Russian waves if weapon and ammunition supplies weren’t dwindling.

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AP

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