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Big losses help get small advances

Russians recruit criminals as easy targets for bullets

- By Andrew E. Kramer

LVIV, Ukraine — Creeping forward along a tree line late at night toward an entrenched Ukrainian position, the Russian soldier watched in horror as his comrades were mowed down by enemy fire.

His squad of 10 ex-convicts advanced only a few dozen yards before being decimated.

“We were hit by machinegun fire,” said the soldier, a private named Sergei.

One soldier was wounded and screamed, “Help me! Help me, please!,” the private said, although no help arrived. Eight soldiers were killed, one escaped back to Russian lines, and Sergei was captured by Ukrainians.

The soldiers were sitting ducks, sent forth by Russian commanders to act essentiall­y as human cannon fodder in an assault.

And they have become an integral component of Russia’s military strategy as it presses a new offensive in Ukraine’s east: relying on overwhelmi­ng manpower, much of it comprising inexperien­ced, poorly trained conscripts, regardless of the high rate of casualties.

There are two main uses of the conscripts in these assaults: as “storm troops” who move in waves, followed by more experience­d Russian fighters, and as intentiona­l targets, to draw fire and thus identify Ukrainian positions to hit with artillery.

In recent interviews, a half-dozen prisoners of war provided rare firsthand accounts of what it is like to be part of a sacrificia­l Russian assault.

“These orders were common, so our losses were gigantic,” Sergei said. “The next group would follow after a pause of 15 or 20 minutes, then another, then another.”

Of his combat experience, he said, “It was the first and last wave for me.”

By luck, the bullets missed him, he said. He lay in the dark until he was captured by Ukrainians who slipped into the buffer area between the two trench lines.

The New York Times interviewe­d the Russians at a detention center near Lviv, in Ukraine’s west, where many captured enemy soldiers are sent. The Times also viewed videos of interrogat­ions by the Ukrainian authoritie­s. The prisoners are identified only by first name and rank for security reasons, because of the possibilit­y of retributio­n once they are returned.

The soldiers in Sergei’s squad were recruited from penal colonies by the private military company known as Wagner, whose forces have mostly been deployed in the Bakhmut area. There, they have enabled Russian lines to move forward slowly, cutting key resupply roads for the Ukrainian army.

Russia’s deployment of former convicts is a dark chapter in a vicious war. Russia Behind Bars, a prison rights group, has estimated that as many as 50,000 Russian prisoners have been recruited since last summer, with most sent to the battle for Bakhmut.

In the early phases of the war, the Russian army had copious armored vehicles, artillery and other heavy weaponry but relatively few soldiers on the battlefiel­d. Now, the tables have turned: Russia has deployed about 320,000 soldiers in Ukraine, according to Ukraine’s military intelligen­ce agency.

But using infantry to storm trenches, redolent of World War I, brings high casualties. So far, the tactic has been used primarily by Wagner in the push for Bakhmut. This month, the head of Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin, said he would end the practice of recruiting convicts.

But Russia’s regular army this month began recruiting convicts in exchange for pardons, shifting the practice on the Russian side in the war from the Wagner private army to the military.

Some military analysts and Western government­s have questioned Russia’s strategy, citing rates of wounded and killed at about 70% in battalions featuring former convicts. On Sunday, the British defense intelligen­ce agency said that over the past two weeks, Russia had probably suffered its highest rate of casualties since the first week of the invasion.

Interviews with former Wagner soldiers at the Ukrainian detention center aligned with these descriptio­ns of the fighting — and shed light on a violent, harrowing experience for Russian soldiers.

“Nobody could ever believe such a thing could exist,” Sergei said of Wagner tactics.

The soldiers arrived at the front straight from Russia’s penal colony system, which is rife with abuse and where obedience to harsh codes of conduct in a violent setting is enforced by prison gangs and guards alike. The same sense of beaten subjugatio­n persists at the front, Sergei said, enabling commanders to send soldiers forward on hopeless, human wave attacks.

“We are prisoners, even if former prisoners,” he said. “We are nobody and have no rights.”

Sergei said he had worked as a cellphone tower technician in a far-northern Siberian city, living with his wife and three children. In the interview, he admitted to dealing marijuana and meth, for which he was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2020.

In October, he accepted an offer to fight in exchange for a pardon. The arrangemen­t, he said, was not offered to rapists and drug addicts, but murderers, burglars and other prisoners were welcome.

“Of course, any normal person fears death,” he said. “But a pardon for eight years is valuable.”

In three days at the front south of Bakhmut, Sergei first served as a stretcher bearer, carrying out mangled, bloody former prisoners who had been killed or wounded in an omen of what awaited him when ordered to join an assault.

On the night of Jan. 1, they were commanded to advance 500 yards along the tree line, then dig in and wait for a subsequent wave to arrive. One soldier carried a light machine gun. The others were armed with only assault rifles and hand grenades.

The sequential assaults on Ukrainian lines by small units of former Russian prisoners have become a signature Russian tactic in the effort to capture Bakhmut.

“We see them crawl for a kilometer or more,” toward Ukrainian trenches, then open fire at close range and try to capture positions, Col. Roman Kostenko, chair of the defense and intelligen­ce committee in Ukraine’s parliament, said in an interview. “It’s effective. Yes, they have heavy losses. But with these heavy losses, they sometimes advance.”

Sergei said he had initially been pleased with the offer of a pardon in exchange for service in Wagner.

But after his one experience in an assault, he changed his mind.

“I started to think things over in a big way,’’ Sergei said. “Of course, it wasn’t worth it.”

 ?? NICOLE TUNG/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Russian soldier sits in an infirmary for treatment Feb. 6 at a prison camp in Ukraine.
NICOLE TUNG/THE NEW YORK TIMES A Russian soldier sits in an infirmary for treatment Feb. 6 at a prison camp in Ukraine.

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