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Russian occupation forces start fires in tinder-dry steppes of Donbas
iNFORM NAPALM ^ | 09/03/2020 | Sveta SVETIKOVA

Posted on 09/03/2020 11:25:30 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com

On September 2, 2014, Russia fired at us with all kinds of heavy fire from its territory, and today #2_September_2020, everything is on fire.

It started yesterday in a gray zone behind a demolished school building (many “thanks” for the withdrawal of troops), and today there is a fire in Bolotenny and Sizom.

These villages are right at the Russian border.

I am not hinting at anything, but I am very interested in why does it burn exactly where the Russian snout is sticking out?!

In short: we are f***ed.

The photo was taken just now at the Olkhovsky dachas, in our yard.

Just now I found out that in the direction of the village of Kamyshny, behind the village of Yuganovka, there was a strong fire on the Russian side of the border.

All the locals agree that this is sabotage done by the Russian occupation troops.

This summer was very dry, but the fires all along the line of contact in the Luhansk Oblast began to rage simultaneously!

Moreover, all the arsons were made at the moment when the wind blew from the north, from the Russian side … Believe me, as I had the opportunity to study all the habits of the wild Russian horde over the last 6 years.

Let the two senile grandpas [Kravchuk and Fokin, the octagenarian “representatives” of Ukraine at the talks with the occupier troops. – G.P.] come here and grasp the real situation …

UKRAINIAN JOINT OPERATION FORCES FIGHT AGAINST FIRE, WHICH COVERS 200 HECTARES OF TERRITORY

Units of the Joint Forces Operation and other units of the Ukrainian Armed Forces continue to fight fires in areas of the Stanychno-Luhansk and Novoaidar districts of the Luhansk Oblast. Also, the fight against wildfires takes place in two districts of the Donetsk Oblast, near Bakhmut and Yasynuvata.

The quantity of equipment and the numbers of the personnel involved in extinguishing and localizing these fires is sufficient for accomplishing this task. The Armed Forces of Ukraine, the State Emergency Service, the National Guard and the police are fighting the steppe and forest fires, working side by side. The operation is being carried out on a total of six sites, with a total area of about 200 hectares.

We are sad to report that Sergeant Artem Bondarenko, who was considered missing during the firefighting operations in Luhansk Oblast was found dead. The body of the serviceman was found under the rubble of a dugout. According to his colleagues, while they were extinguishing the fire, which was rapidly approaching the positions, Artem was trying to evacuate military property.

The Joint Forces Command expresses its deepest condolences to the relatives and friends of the fallen soldier.

Conclusions

Joint Operation Forces press center also stated in a recent dramatic video of the fire-fighting effort that there are signs of intentional arson from the side of the Russian occupation forces. These actions show their full disregard for the environment and the lives of Ukrainian citizens, fully disproving Russian propaganda talking point of “protecting the Russian-speaking population of Ukraine”.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: democratpropaganda; putinsbuttboys; russia; russkietrolls; ukraine

1 posted on 09/03/2020 11:25:30 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

MULTIPLE NEWS ARTICLES AND VIDEOS
https://www.facebook.com/informnapalm24en/


2 posted on 09/03/2020 11:26:21 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

InformNapalm.org
InformNapalm·Saturday, February 15, 2020·
About Us

INFORMNAPALM is a volunteer initiative to inform both Ukrainian citizens and the foreign public about the crises in Ukraine. We are all volunteers giving our time and efforts for this project. The project team consists of journalists, political scientists, military experts, public figures, IT specialists, editors, and translators. While the team is mostly Ukrainian we have also welcomed supporters into our ranks from around the world.

The team is committed to fighting for the freedom of Ukraine from the aggression of the Russian Federation in its attempt to break up and dominate Ukraine. Ukraine will choose its own course in history. There are many websites publishing on the situation of Ukraine. We don’t wish to duplicate this work, and we cannot cover everything. Therefore our focus is clearly on the military situation, although we must reflect how the military intertwines with the social, economic and political aspects.

The foreign language platform was first published under the name BurkoNews but now all media is published under the common name of INFORMNAPALM.

While committed to the freedom of Ukraine, the team also strives to be accurate and honest in the information it publishes. We are not neutral but we are not a propaganda site. We strive to publish our sources where this is possible. Unfortunately this is a war situation and in many cases sources must be kept secret for their own protection. Many of our sources are in the Ukrainian military, and we also extensively use contacts from the separatist held areas. Be assured we do not publish on the basis of rumours; sources of articles are always checked as best as is possible (from a war zone).

We invite people to re-publish our articles. However in terms of copy right we require you to acknowledge the author and our website by providing a link back to the InformNapalm.org


3 posted on 09/03/2020 11:29:59 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Russian occupation forces start fires in tinder-dry steppes of Donbas
https://informnapalm.org/en/russian-occupation-forces-start-fires-in-tinder-dry-steppes-of-donbas/?fbclid=IwAR0NyD3Eb0_2aplXTEohKS9RxGEjTaRZgx4jMqb0NfOuMmus4FKg765LdPw

VIDEO FOUND AT END OF ARTICLE


4 posted on 09/03/2020 11:35:26 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Inform Napalm, really?


5 posted on 09/03/2020 11:40:42 PM PDT by NorseViking
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

https://informnapalm.org/en/russian-occupation-forces-start-fires-in-tinder-dry-steppes-of-donbas/?fbclid=IwAR0NyD3Eb0_2aplXTEohKS9RxGEjTaRZgx4jMqb0NfOuMmus4FKg765LdPw

Video Overview of the Russian Weaponry in Donbas
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=54&v=sdICpPpivV0&feature=emb_logo


6 posted on 09/03/2020 11:52:32 PM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

7 posted on 09/03/2020 11:58:02 PM PDT by Veggie Todd (Voltaire: "Religion began when the first scoundrel met the first fool".)
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To: Veggie Todd; UMCRevMom@aol.com; All

8 posted on 09/04/2020 12:15:43 AM PDT by NachOsten
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
The role of Russian PMCs in armed conflicts Up until recently private military companies (PMCs) had been considered as non-government contractors providing professional security and bodyguard services. Their tasks were predominantly limited to guarding production facilities, escorting valuable cargoes or protecting VIPs against violent attacks. Yet, over the last few years Russia has brought this craft to a new level, demonstrating that PMCs can carry out offensive missions and even build a backbone of an occupation army. While it is clearly prohibited by a number of international laws, the world community has not been able to produce a meaningful response to this new threat. PMCs on steroids have become a handy tool for Russian foreign military operations, ideally fitting the concept of Moscow's all-time favorite 'hybrid warfare'. PMC personnel raised to the role of aggressive mercenary troops gives many advantages to a government seeking to hide its face behind legal discrepancies. It offers: Flexibility. Soldiers of fortune can come from and be deployed anywhere. Low cost. Despite a high risk to their life PMC contractors get $1,500 to $3,600 a month [1, 2] in the war zone depending on the type of their tasks. Moreover, these payments are made in cash and bypass any financial statements. Deniability. Moscow can pretend that Russian government has nothing to do with unruly PMCs that engage into combat on foreign soil. Next to none legal responsibility. Russia as a state cannot be held legally accountable for what the Kremlin insists are the actions of volunteer foreign fighters. In addition to that, PMCs can emerge and dissolve whenever needed, leaving no opportunity to be brought before court. All these advantages make it possible for Russia to rapidly increase its military presence in different parts of the world, including Ukraine, Syria, Central African Republic (CAR), Sudan, and Lybia. This list has been growing quickly, matching the Kremlin's untamed appetite for easy gain. Evolution of Russian PMCs The tactics of using irregular troops abroad to keep the end beneficiary in the shadow is not new for Russia. In modern Russian history mercenaries appeared immediately after the collapse of the Soviet Union. They surfaced in early 1990s in Yugoslavia and Moldova (Transnistria), later they played an important role in the occupation of Georgia. In April 2012 Putin, who was the Prime Minister of Russia at that time, supported the idea to create a network of Russian PMCs working abroad. "I think it can really be the tool to implement national interests without the direct involvement of the state" [3]. This idea became central for Moscow's reinvention of PMCs, making them today one of the top instruments of Russian foreign policy and a looming threat for the world order. Now Russian PMCs actively participate in armed conflicts around the world. Given that, they may choose among the following roles: carry out operations in a combat zone of an already ongoing conflict provoke and ignite a new armed conflict (like they did in the East of Ukraine) create an affiliate organization abroad and train its members, so that they will be able to handle one of the two previous tasks. The list of the Russian PMCs that were reported to carry out offensive missions outside of Russia currently embraces 11 companies with the most recent addition of PMC Patriot. Some of these 'non-state' actors are not new to mercenary business. The longest existing mercenary organization is the Cossacks who have been moving from one war zone to another since 1992 when they first took part in the armed conflict in Moldova (Transnistria). Now, 27 years after, they are still very active. South Ossetia, Crimea and Donbas were among their latest destinations. Yet, over the last few years Cossacks-type infantry units are getting gradually replaced by well-equipped assault troops with clear command-and-control structure mirroring the organization of the Russian Army. MAR, E.N.O.T. Corp., Wagner Group and Patriot manifest a new age in Russian traditional proxy warfare with privateers reinvented for the 21st century and redeployed on land instead of sea. Professing not to be connected to the Russian Armed Forces these armed groups surprisingly enjoy much freedom in a state where siloviki control politics and business and where no move on international arena is done without President Putin’s approval. Their ability to travel wherever they want with bulky military equipment, such as howitzers, IFVs and MBTs, looks even more far-out given that PMCs are illegal in Russia. Illegal, but above the law The Russian Criminal Code explicitly prohibits creation or participation in armed formations that are not stipulated by a federal law. It also foresees prison sentence for mercenary activities or recruiting, training, funding or supply support of mercenaries. These restrictions are clearly articulated in the Article 208 "Organization of an illegal armed formation" and Article 359 "Mercenary" of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. Needless to mention that the same Criminal Code sets out severe punishment for illegal purchase / sale or smuggling of arms. Despite the illegal status of PMCs in Russia thousands of mercenaries keep fighting in different parts of the globe on a day-to-day basis. Only the Wagner Group is generally estimated to include 3,000 members (one of the estimates gives the number of 6,000 members [4]) and none of them have been convicted. At the same time, Vadim Gusev and Yevgeny Sidorov, the owners of Slavonic Corps which became the backbone and paved the way for the Wagner Group, were convicted to 3 years of imprisonment in 2014. The only feasible explanation of such selective justice can be attributed to the ties of some PMCs versus the others. Hybrid war is the type of Russian business that has a strictly limited number of beneficiaries with carte blanche from the Russian government. Connection to the Russian government The PMCs not only remain mysteriously in the blind zone of Russian law officials, but they also seem to get direct assistance from the government. The most notorious cases of such assistance refer to the Wagner Group. The first test ground for the Wagner Group was Ukrainian Crimea [5]. Built on scraps of Slavonic Corps, which had a disastrous experience in Al-Shukhnah, Syria, the Wagner Group, unlike its predecessor, demonstrated close collaboration with the Russian Army from the very beginning. According to the reports, in 2014 Wagner fighters were helping Russian regular military units seize facilities and disarm Ukrainian Army servicemen during the covert occupation of Crimea [6]. Russian forces were putting a lot of effort into concealing their identity and origin, and the Wagner Group coped pretty well with this task in Crimea. Later on Wagner mercenaries strove to preserve this secrecy when they surfaced in the East of Ukraine where Russia continued its occupation. Yet, they could not fully reach this goal. On December 28, 2014 the first photos of the Russian KamAZ-43 269 Dozor infantry mobility vehicles (IMV) deployed in Luhansk Region of Ukraine appeared on the web. These Dozor IMVs were later traced to Sanzharivka, Donetsk Oblast (Ukraine) where they became a part of the assault force attacking the Valera strongpoint held by the Ukrainian Army in January 2015. During the clash at least 11 Wagner mercenaries were killed and two IMVs got destroyed [7]. According to the phone intercept [8] published by the Security Service of Ukraine, the commander of the Wagner Group Dmitry Utkin instructed his subordinate Sergey Kovalev to urgently evacuate the wrecks of Russian military equipment despite the great risk. It was to prevent the disclosure of Russia's direct involvement in the Donbas war. KamAZ-43 269 Dozor IMVs were pieces of hard evidence, being solely in service with the Russian Army. In February 2015 Wagner mercenaries lost two other Dozor vehicles near Verhulivka, Luhansk Oblast, which confirmed the connection between the Wagner Group and the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD). This odd practice of the Russian MoD to share military equipment with what is proclaimed to be a private military company is not the only link which connects them. Numerous reports state that the primary training base of the Wagner Group is located in Molkino village, Krasnodar Krai (Russia) right next to the military unit 51532 belonging to the Russian 10th Special Forces Brigade of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) [9, 10]. Locals say that this facility with restricted access has been preparing Wagner mercenaries for combat operations in Ukraine, Syria and, more recently, Africa. The site has been in operation for the last 5 years, and this proximity of illegal mercenary squads does not seem to bother the 10th Brigade command, law enforcers, local government authorities or Russian MoD officials. More than this, courtesy of the Russian MoD extends to giving airplane rides to Syria for the Wagner Group. While many of the airlifts are done by civilian passenger planes operated by a Syrian airline Cham Wings [11], some Wagner mercenaries state they were transported to Syria by military freighters [12, 13]. One of the mercenaries said in a interview [14] that he flew to Syria with other members of the Wagner Group from Chkalovsky military airport (Moscow Oblast) by a cargo plane belonging to the 76th Air Assault Division (garrisoned in Pskov). Despite the abundance of evidence pointing at the connection between private military contractors and Russia's Armed Forces, Moscow keeps denying everything. On February 14, 2018 Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "The possibility cannot be excluded that there are Russian citizens in Syria. But they are in no way connected to the Russian Armed Forces". Yet, it is wiser to judge by deeds rather than words. If Russian mercenaries have nothing to do with the Russian Armed Forces, then why do they get combat decorations issued by the state? Journalist investigations conducted by different media outlets have identified at least 15 members of the Wagner Group that have received state military decorations for operations in Ukraine and Syria. Private armies as a business Russia is trying to build up its influence in the Middle East and Africa and is desperately clinging to the remains of faded dominance in post-Soviet states. A country that could never break the vicious circle of raw-material economy, now is more than ever dependent on new resource bases. Putin and his entourage need more money, but corrupt and inefficient Russia cannot generate enough profit to match oligarchs' perception of luxurious lifestyle. Therefore, mercenary armies not only have to achieve certain geopolitical goals set by the Kremlin — they must make a profit. It is a special form of business: regular Russian citizens may lose money, but the house, i.e. Putin and his pocket oligarchs, always wins. Several sources, including the U.S. intelligence, reported that Russian oligarch Evgeny Prigozhin was almost certainly appointed to control Russian mercenaries in Syria. Prigozhin himself has been denying any connection to the Wagner Group. At the same time, The AP reported that it had obtained a copy of the contract between Euro Polis company affiliated with Prigozhin and Syrian state-owned General Petroleum Corp. The contract stipulated that Euro Polis would receive "25% of the proceeds from oil and gas production at fields its contractors capture and secure from Islamic State militants" [16]. Evgeny Prigozhin is believed to be closely connected to Putin, and until recently he used to be the largest supplier of food and cleaning services for the Russian Army [17]. Internet Research Agency, Concord Management and Concord Catering, indicted by the Washington D.C. grand jury for illegal interference in the 2016 presidential elections, are also controlled by Prigozhin. According to the U.S. intelligence intercept [18], Prigozhin told a senior Syrian official he had gotten a green light from a Russian minister to move forward with a "fast and strong" initiative to take place in early February 2018. This 'initiative' actually took place. Dozens of Wagner mercenaries were killed on February 7 in an unsuccessful assault on Syrian Democratic Forces HQ. The most probable goal of this assault was to take control over the gas processing plant and gas and oil resources of the region. Mercenaries keep fighting and dying for the interests of the Russian elite merged with the government. Still, the government of Russia is reluctant to disclose this fact to the public and offer any legal status to those they view as cheap cannon fodder. Under the circumstances, this past July Russian veterans organization All-Russian Officer Assembly called on the government to officially recognize private military contractors fighting abroad as combat veterans: "For three years already, we have been receiving complaints and appeals from Russian citizens who were injured in Syria and cannot undergo medical treatment in Russia. Soldiers and officers of these combat units have no social, medical or financial support from the state … We demand that the status of combat participants in private military companies be recognized" [19]. It is unclear if Russian officers will eventually achieve what they demand, but at the moment it does not look like the Kremlin is ready to reveal the driving force of the Russian hybrid operations to the world. The growing threat of Russian PMCs to the world order While Russian PMCs continue redoubling their squads, their true threat remains largely underestimated by the democratic West. The geography of the conflicts is expanding. Russian mercenary groups not only work in Syria now — they are spotted in the Central African Republic, Sudan, Yemen and Libya. To give an example, PMC RSB-Group currently is very active in Libya [20]. Some reports indicate that Russian PMCs are also active in Brunei and Burundi. There are signs that Russian mercenaries work in other African countries, but short dispatches about their presence have not yet been supported by convincing evidence. European countries are in danger, too. Not only Ukraine which has seen the whole kaleidoscope of Russian hybrid forces, including mercenaries posing themselves as PMCs (the Wagner Group, E.N.O.T. Corp., MAR, the Cossacks, etc.). According to several reports Serbian president Vučić was seeking Putin's assistance to deal with Kosovo, and he may get it through a new Russian PMC Patriot [21] closely affiliated with the Russian MoD. In fact, Patriot is an upgraded version of the Wagner Group where all members are military professionals who are, apparently, still serving in Special Operations Forces or The Main Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation (formerly GRU). Patriot members get higher salaries that may go up to $6,100 - 15,200 a month [22]. Discreet apparent practice is taken to the extremes. This shift from patchy Wagner crowd to top-qualified military professionals may indicate that Russia wants to raise the stakes. Facing no real counteraction on behalf of the world community the Kremlin brings into play the plan of massive hybrid expansion. This threat should not be taken lightly. Essentially, Putin seeks to use the tactics of Genghis Khan: conquer new territory and increase your army by recruiting people from newly conquered lands. Then repeat. To most Western countries this Medieval approach may look bizarre, for it seems to have no positive outcomes — both in terms of economic profit (conquered lands should be taken care of) or image on the international arena. However, there is one important factor that changes everything: the goal of this expansion is not prosperity of Russia as a country, it is immediate gain for a limited number of people in power. This is exactly what Russia did and does in Abkhazia, Transnistria, South Ossetia, Donbas. Locals who had fought for Moscow's interests in occupied Moldova and Georgia in 2014 joined mercenary troops who went to fight in Donbas. Ukrainian locals who joined Russian hybrid occupation army in the East of Ukraine now fight in Syria. A perfect example of this is Wagner Group's Karpaty company task force. Most of its personnel (excluding Russian citizens who hold command positions) are Ukrainian mercenaries who first fought for the interests of the Russian Federation in Donbas, and then went on to earn a living in Syria [23]. Brainwashed poor people in a land devastated by war, with no job and no prospects, eagerly risk their life in exchange for money. Russian PMCs have been rapidly evolving, and now they are almost indistinguishable from most regular armies. They have assault units, reconnaissance and artillery, they operate MANPADS and armored vehicles, including MBTs [24]. Right now Russian mercenary troops lack only warships, submarines, warplanes and ballistic missiles, but with the current pace it could be just a matter of time when they get them. At the same time, they can use any type of uniform or insignia to achieve their goals and cover up their true affiliation. Thus, one of the Wagner Group mercenaries Alexander Pichugin, personal number M-1706, commander of the Gun Position Office (GPO) platoon, was spotted in Syria wearing Desert Hawks uniform and insignia [25]. The practice of using PMCs to cover up full-scale armies ideally fits Soviet classical playbooks. They provide the perfect basis for Russian officials to obfuscate the chain of command and avoid command responsibility for crimes against peace and other international crimes. By playing a 'non-state actors' card Putin is hoping to capture as many resources as possible before the UN, other international organizations and the world community in general can generate any impactful response. Ambiguity of PMC status in Russia should fool no one. Legal or not, Russian PMCs: demonstrate an increase in quantity and quality rapidly expand their geography build up their influence in the regions of expansion stretch their budgets and get more funding from covert government and non-government sources. In simplistic terms, the occupation army is growing and keeps conquering new lands. Proposed ways to counter hybrid armies under PMC disguise All things considered, the international community should stop pretending like nothing is happening and produce the response that would curb Moscow's appetite before it is too late. More pressure is absolutely necessary, and currently existing legal framework should be updated to respond to the threat of Russian PMCs. Firstly, there is an urgent need to institute an international authority that would establish unified rules and provide strict control over PMCs. All PMCs in the world must become a subject to licensing and periodically go through checks and a rigorous license renewal process. PMCs without such license should be treated as illegal combatants. Secondly, it would be wise to clearly define PMCs in the international law, including the Rome Statute. Right now many illegal combatants avoid fair punishment for their actions because they insist they are either regular civilians, or foreign fighters who receive no monetary incentives. Thirdly, all countries should take a hard stand against mercenarism. United Nations Mercenary Convention has only been ratified by 35 countries and it is largely unable to respond to new challenges. National legislation of separate countries in most cases also lacks effective mechanisms of holding mercenaries accountable for their crimes. Fourthly, the world needs to unify the efforts with the goal to stop this immoral and cynical business. Killing people for money should bear consequences of such force that would discourage the overwhelming majority of mercenaries from continuing their bloody missions. They and their families should not gain from war. Mercenaries should be prosecuted internationally, and all assets that they obtain through war must be seized by court orders. Migration authorities ought to pay close attention to the mercenaries that may attempt to hide from criminal prosecution abroad. Fifthly, the free world should increase economic pressure on Russia, Iran and other countries waging hybrid wars through the employment of PMCs and other paramilitary organizations. They seek supremacy, but only to make their outdated, deeply corrupt and inefficient regimes sustainable. This sustainability needs to become a target for all international efforts. The relatively small costs that these regimes are paying now should become unbearable. In the 21st century war must not become a source of revenue.
9 posted on 09/04/2020 12:20:46 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
I realize that you have been with us a long time, but can you please learn enough HTML to add paragraph breaks?

Otherwise I'll suspect that you are posting under UMCRevMom@aol.com‘s account and are not her at all.

10 posted on 09/04/2020 12:38:26 AM PDT by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

http://informnapalm.rocks/pmc_rush

Wagner and others. Mercenaries of totalitarian regime
https://www.ukrinform.net/rubric-defense/3048989-wagner-and-others-mercenaries-of-totalitarian-regime.html

The ‘Hybrid’ Role of Russian Mercenaries, PMCs and Irregulars in Moscow’s Scramble for Africa
https://jamestown.org/program/the-hybrid-role-of-russian-mercenaries-pmcs-and-irregulars-in-moscows-scramble-for-africa/

Russian Use of Private Military and Security Companies-the implications for European and Norwegian Security
https://www.cmi.no/pubelications/file/6637-russian-use-of-private-military-and-security.pdf

UNDERSTANDING RUSSIAN SUBVERSION
Patterns, Threats, Rsponses
https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/perspectives/PE300/PE331/RAND_PE331.pdf

Grey is the new black: covert action and implausible deniability
https://watermark.silverchair.com/iiy067.pdf?token=AQECAHi208BE49Ooan9kkhW_Ercy7Dm3ZL_9Cf3qfKAc485ysgAAArQwggKwBgkqhkiG9w0BBwagggKhMIICnQIBADCCApYGCSqGSIb3DQEHATAeBglghkgBZQMEAS4wEQQMn1-DDfu4nSMKi37UAgEQgIICZ_Li81Kes8uSak_WW7WY5aFos9fCxBGl6kmU0jqyJwnWy8YopOQLWadRlzEd6my3ZXQu8hzXowLAR2J—sK5OF4S1FpHp9Gx5Pht_csDtk2P05H2XT3LeKHTKxabfhbCJMebz9UPtIAJ5j_gGnb73E7P_b1W4VmuluzVaUJ3wkE59-HOx-m8s6RfpyE2vCxRWrQfzL3-f_Z3Fp5FKhBTwm2svFqgLx1srdNGQnY78FwO27j4BWlMl5sXpjGylizAkHP5-CnIKYkxTbUYTb5F46ge-vs3HIBHJZ1jUklRC1-THzAAogrO96eZyW2OINYZwxq1jGfkZbaN8d0tIWs07tJLUToZpVvrCYV6OahfStWcn8apcAjUOGS7w5NUc2n-SAwbm3khBC9JGV_ZuE70URTWZvckUZJsByh-GRAyhK-56hvWt5mMz8KrovW9YkkFkZGWrxRj5SdY9JLG3s0Nm6sPNy3WtXWakMAh0p4VFvAs8_Qmq-dJ-d6L4Oez_f1z7vAammRhjxM1YXpAfn-bNWHbS_68LQcfQtcZH0svGciMbyeF4UzHgP7teFkU-e4KpPIc_6HEMYyJdxSCHonb8RlSkYiNJ1Gix4kkO9wdMpHPUbSAU-fnjrzIiRskumxR-YTETzQ9bkNk_fIo352Pc-i-v4XNam4NDjOZZ4wFZBHJk0kDPswnhlG353iYzk49dnmuzC9VX-Y0MBY05qW4M_SI61vzJOWoI5cWtD0P-eOLL1rMfEec7diFOXi16Jei_wduGIVc9j3giQ4Mk3sje6_ykMdz51-1W7XGnvzW-pzsstGcdLwNMw


11 posted on 09/04/2020 12:43:02 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: texas booster

I am me. But, when I add photos the paragraphs merge.
Sorry


12 posted on 09/04/2020 12:52:40 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Fire as a weapon of war. Jihadists muslims are particularly fond of this weapon.

JoMa


13 posted on 09/04/2020 3:18:18 AM PDT by joma89 (Buy weapons and ammo, folks, and have the will to use them.)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

No, not Dumbear, Dunbar.


14 posted on 09/04/2020 8:34:28 AM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts)
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A quick 'n' dirty formatting improvement:
The role of Russian PMCs in armed conflicts Up until recently private military companies (PMCs) had been considered as non-government contractors providing professional security and bodyguard services. Their tasks were predominantly limited to guarding production facilities, escorting valuable cargoes or protecting VIPs against violent attacks. Yet, over the last few years Russia has brought this craft to a new level, demonstrating that PMCs can carry out offensive missions and even build a backbone of an occupation army.
While it is clearly prohibited by a number of international laws, the world community has not been able to produce a meaningful response to this new threat. PMCs on steroids have become a handy tool for Russian foreign military operations, ideally fitting the concept of Moscow's all-time favorite 'hybrid warfare'. PMC personnel raised to the role of aggressive mercenary troops gives many advantages to a government seeking to hide its face behind legal discrepancies. It offers: Flexibility. Soldiers of fortune can come from and be deployed anywhere. Low cost.
Despite a high risk to their life PMC contractors get $1,500 to $3,600 a month [1, 2] in the war zone depending on the type of their tasks. Moreover, these payments are made in cash and bypass any financial statements. Deniability. Moscow can pretend that Russian government has nothing to do with unruly PMCs that engage into combat on foreign soil. Next to none legal responsibility. Russia as a state cannot be held legally accountable for what the Kremlin insists are the actions of volunteer foreign fighters.
In addition to that, PMCs can emerge and dissolve whenever needed, leaving no opportunity to be brought before court. All these advantages make it possible for Russia to rapidly increase its military presence in different parts of the world, including Ukraine, Syria, Central African Republic (CAR), Sudan, and Lybia. This list has been growing quickly, matching the Kremlin's untamed appetite for easy gain. Evolution of Russian PMCs The tactics of using irregular troops abroad to keep the end beneficiary in the shadow is not new for Russia.
In modern Russian history mercenaries appeared immediately after the collapse of the Soviet Union. They surfaced in early 1990s in Yugoslavia and Moldova (Transnistria), later they played an important role in the occupation of Georgia. In April 2012 Putin, who was the Prime Minister of Russia at that time, supported the idea to create a network of Russian PMCs working abroad. "I think it can really be the tool to implement national interests without the direct involvement of the state" [3].
This idea became central for Moscow's reinvention of PMCs, making them today one of the top instruments of Russian foreign policy and a looming threat for the world order. Now Russian PMCs actively participate in armed conflicts around the world. Given that, they may choose among the following roles: carry out operations in a combat zone of an already ongoing conflict provoke and ignite a new armed conflict (like they did in the East of Ukraine) create an affiliate organization abroad and train its members, so that they will be able to handle one of the two previous tasks. The list of the Russian PMCs that were reported to carry out offensive missions outside of Russia currently embraces 11 companies with the most recent addition of PMC Patriot.
Some of these 'non-state' actors are not new to mercenary business. The longest existing mercenary organization is the Cossacks who have been moving from one war zone to another since 1992 when they first took part in the armed conflict in Moldova (Transnistria). Now, 27 years after, they are still very active. South Ossetia, Crimea and Donbas were among their latest destinations.
Yet, over the last few years Cossacks-type infantry units are getting gradually replaced by well-equipped assault troops with clear command-and-control structure mirroring the organization of the Russian Army. MAR, E.N.O.T. Corp., Wagner Group and Patriot manifest a new age in Russian traditional proxy warfare with privateers reinvented for the 21st century and redeployed on land instead of sea. Professing not to be connected to the Russian Armed Forces these armed groups surprisingly enjoy much freedom in a state where siloviki control politics and business and where no move on international arena is done without President Putin’s approval.
Their ability to travel wherever they want with bulky military equipment, such as howitzers, IFVs and MBTs, looks even more far-out given that PMCs are illegal in Russia. Illegal, but above the law The Russian Criminal Code explicitly prohibits creation or participation in armed formations that are not stipulated by a federal law. It also foresees prison sentence for mercenary activities or recruiting, training, funding or supply support of mercenaries.
These restrictions are clearly articulated in the Article 208 "Organization of an illegal armed formation" and Article 359 "Mercenary" of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. Needless to mention that the same Criminal Code sets out severe punishment for illegal purchase / sale or smuggling of arms.
Despite the illegal status of PMCs in Russia thousands of mercenaries keep fighting in different parts of the globe on a day-to-day basis. Only the Wagner Group is generally estimated to include 3,000 members (one of the estimates gives the number of 6,000 members [4]) and none of them have been convicted. At the same time, Vadim Gusev and Yevgeny Sidorov, the owners of Slavonic Corps which became the backbone and paved the way for the Wagner Group, were convicted to 3 years of imprisonment in 2014.
The only feasible explanation of such selective justice can be attributed to the ties of some PMCs versus the others. Hybrid war is the type of Russian business that has a strictly limited number of beneficiaries with carte blanche from the Russian government. Connection to the Russian government The PMCs not only remain mysteriously in the blind zone of Russian law officials, but they also seem to get direct assistance from the government. The most notorious cases of such assistance refer to the Wagner Group. The first test ground for the Wagner Group was Ukrainian Crimea [5].
Built on scraps of Slavonic Corps, which had a disastrous experience in Al-Shukhnah, Syria, the Wagner Group, unlike its predecessor, demonstrated close collaboration with the Russian Army from the very beginning. According to the reports, in 2014 Wagner fighters were helping Russian regular military units seize facilities and disarm Ukrainian Army servicemen during the covert occupation of Crimea [6].
Russian forces were putting a lot of effort into concealing their identity and origin, and the Wagner Group coped pretty well with this task in Crimea. Later on Wagner mercenaries strove to preserve this secrecy when they surfaced in the East of Ukraine where Russia continued its occupation. Yet, they could not fully reach this goal. On December 28, 2014 the first photos of the Russian KamAZ-43 269 Dozor infantry mobility vehicles (IMV) deployed in Luhansk Region of Ukraine appeared on the web. These Dozor IMVs were later traced to Sanzharivka, Donetsk Oblast (Ukraine) where they became a part of the assault force attacking the Valera strongpoint held by the Ukrainian Army in January 2015. During the clash at least 11 Wagner mercenaries were killed and two IMVs got destroyed [7].
According to the phone intercept [8] published by the Security Service of Ukraine, the commander of the Wagner Group Dmitry Utkin instructed his subordinate Sergey Kovalev to urgently evacuate the wrecks of Russian military equipment despite the great risk. It was to prevent the disclosure of Russia's direct involvement in the Donbas war. KamAZ-43 269 Dozor IMVs were pieces of hard evidence, being solely in service with the Russian Army. In February 2015 Wagner mercenaries lost two other Dozor vehicles near Verhulivka, Luhansk Oblast, which confirmed the connection between the Wagner Group and the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD).
This odd practice of the Russian MoD to share military equipment with what is proclaimed to be a private military company is not the only link which connects them. Numerous reports state that the primary training base of the Wagner Group is located in Molkino village, Krasnodar Krai (Russia) right next to the military unit 51532 belonging to the Russian 10th Special Forces Brigade of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) [9, 10].
Locals say that this facility with restricted access has been preparing Wagner mercenaries for combat operations in Ukraine, Syria and, more recently, Africa. The site has been in operation for the last 5 years, and this proximity of illegal mercenary squads does not seem to bother the 10th Brigade command, law enforcers, local government authorities or Russian MoD officials.
More than this, courtesy of the Russian MoD extends to giving airplane rides to Syria for the Wagner Group. While many of the airlifts are done by civilian passenger planes operated by a Syrian airline Cham Wings [11], some Wagner mercenaries state they were transported to Syria by military freighters [12, 13].
One of the mercenaries said in a interview [14] that he flew to Syria with other members of the Wagner Group from Chkalovsky military airport (Moscow Oblast) by a cargo plane belonging to the 76th Air Assault Division (garrisoned in Pskov). Despite the abundance of evidence pointing at the connection between private military contractors and Russia's Armed Forces, Moscow keeps denying everything. On February 14, 2018 Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said:
"The possibility cannot be excluded that there are Russian citizens in Syria. But they are in no way connected to the Russian Armed Forces".
Yet, it is wiser to judge by deeds rather than words. If Russian mercenaries have nothing to do with the Russian Armed Forces, then why do they get combat decorations issued by the state? Journalist investigations conducted by different media outlets have identified at least 15 members of the Wagner Group that have received state military decorations for operations in Ukraine and Syria.
Private armies as a business Russia is trying to build up its influence in the Middle East and Africa and is desperately clinging to the remains of faded dominance in post-Soviet states. A country that could never break the vicious circle of raw-material economy, now is more than ever dependent on new resource bases. Putin and his entourage need more money, but corrupt and inefficient Russia cannot generate enough profit to match oligarchs' perception of luxurious lifestyle. Therefore, mercenary armies not only have to achieve certain geopolitical goals set by the Kremlin — they must make a profit. It is a special form of business: regular Russian citizens may lose money, but the house, i.e. Putin and his pocket oligarchs, always wins.
Several sources, including the U.S. intelligence, reported that Russian oligarch Evgeny Prigozhin was almost certainly appointed to control Russian mercenaries in Syria. Prigozhin himself has been denying any connection to the Wagner Group. At the same time, The AP reported that it had obtained a copy of the contract between Euro Polis company affiliated with Prigozhin and Syrian state-owned General Petroleum Corp. The contract stipulated that Euro Polis would receive "25% of the proceeds from oil and gas production at fields its contractors capture and secure from Islamic State militants" [16].
Evgeny Prigozhin is believed to be closely connected to Putin, and until recently he used to be the largest supplier of food and cleaning services for the Russian Army [17].
Internet Research Agency, Concord Management and Concord Catering, indicted by the Washington D.C. grand jury for illegal interference in the 2016 presidential elections, are also controlled by Prigozhin. According to the U.S. intelligence intercept [18], Prigozhin told a senior Syrian official he had gotten a green light from a Russian minister to move forward with a "fast and strong" initiative to take place in early February 2018. This 'initiative' actually took place.
Dozens of Wagner mercenaries were killed on February 7 in an unsuccessful assault on Syrian Democratic Forces HQ. The most probable goal of this assault was to take control over the gas processing plant and gas and oil resources of the region. Mercenaries keep fighting and dying for the interests of the Russian elite merged with the government.
Still, the government of Russia is reluctant to disclose this fact to the public and offer any legal status to those they view as cheap cannon fodder. Under the circumstances, this past July Russian veterans organization All-Russian Officer Assembly called on the government to officially recognize private military contractors fighting abroad as combat veterans: "For three years already, we have been receiving complaints and appeals from Russian citizens who were injured in Syria and cannot undergo medical treatment in Russia. Soldiers and officers of these combat units have no social, medical or financial support from the state … We demand that the status of combat participants in private military companies be recognized" [19].
It is unclear if Russian officers will eventually achieve what they demand, but at the moment it does not look like the Kremlin is ready to reveal the driving force of the Russian hybrid operations to the world. The growing threat of Russian PMCs to the world order While Russian PMCs continue redoubling their squads, their true threat remains largely underestimated by the democratic West. The geography of the conflicts is expanding. Russian mercenary groups not only work in Syria now — they are spotted in the Central African Republic, Sudan, Yemen and Libya. To give an example, PMC RSB-Group currently is very active in Libya [20].
Some reports indicate that Russian PMCs are also active in Brunei and Burundi. There are signs that Russian mercenaries work in other African countries, but short dispatches about their presence have not yet been supported by convincing evidence. European countries are in danger, too. Not only Ukraine which has seen the whole kaleidoscope of Russian hybrid forces, including mercenaries posing themselves as PMCs (the Wagner Group, E.N.O.T. Corp., MAR, the Cossacks, etc.).
According to several reports Serbian president Vučić was seeking Putin's assistance to deal with Kosovo, and he may get it through a new Russian PMC Patriot [21] closely affiliated with the Russian MoD. In fact, Patriot is an upgraded version of the Wagner Group where all members are military professionals who are, apparently, still serving in Special Operations Forces or The Main Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation (formerly GRU). Patriot members get higher salaries that may go up to $6,100 - 15,200 a month [22].
Discreet apparent practice is taken to the extremes. This shift from patchy Wagner crowd to top-qualified military professionals may indicate that Russia wants to raise the stakes. Facing no real counteraction on behalf of the world community the Kremlin brings into play the plan of massive hybrid expansion. This threat should not be taken lightly. Essentially, Putin seeks to use the tactics of Genghis Khan: conquer new territory and increase your army by recruiting people from newly conquered lands. Then repeat. To most Western countries this Medieval approach may look bizarre, for it seems to have no positive outcomes — both in terms of economic profit (conquered lands should be taken care of) or image on the international arena.
However, there is one important factor that changes everything: the goal of this expansion is not prosperity of Russia as a country, it is immediate gain for a limited number of people in power. This is exactly what Russia did and does in Abkhazia, Transnistria, South Ossetia, Donbas. Locals who had fought for Moscow's interests in occupied Moldova and Georgia in 2014 joined mercenary troops who went to fight in Donbas. Ukrainian locals who joined Russian hybrid occupation army in the East of Ukraine now fight in Syria.
A perfect example of this is Wagner Group's Karpaty company task force. Most of its personnel (excluding Russian citizens who hold command positions) are Ukrainian mercenaries who first fought for the interests of the Russian Federation in Donbas, and then went on to earn a living in Syria [23].
Brainwashed poor people in a land devastated by war, with no job and no prospects, eagerly risk their life in exchange for money. Russian PMCs have been rapidly evolving, and now they are almost indistinguishable from most regular armies. They have assault units, reconnaissance and artillery, they operate MANPADS and armored vehicles, including MBTs [24].
Right now Russian mercenary troops lack only warships, submarines, warplanes and ballistic missiles, but with the current pace it could be just a matter of time when they get them. At the same time, they can use any type of uniform or insignia to achieve their goals and cover up their true affiliation. Thus, one of the Wagner Group mercenaries Alexander Pichugin, personal number M-1706, commander of the Gun Position Office (GPO) platoon, was spotted in Syria wearing Desert Hawks uniform and insignia [25].
The practice of using PMCs to cover up full-scale armies ideally fits Soviet classical playbooks. They provide the perfect basis for Russian officials to obfuscate the chain of command and avoid command responsibility for crimes against peace and other international crimes. By playing a 'non-state actors' card Putin is hoping to capture as many resources as possible before the UN, other international organizations and the world community in general can generate any impactful response.
Ambiguity of PMC status in Russia should fool no one. Legal or not, Russian PMCs: demonstrate an increase in quantity and quality rapidly expand their geography build up their influence in the regions of expansion stretch their budgets and get more funding from covert government and non-government sources. In simplistic terms, the occupation army is growing and keeps conquering new lands.
Proposed ways to counter hybrid armies under PMC disguise All things considered, the international community should stop pretending like nothing is happening and produce the response that would curb Moscow's appetite before it is too late. More pressure is absolutely necessary, and currently existing legal framework should be updated to respond to the threat of Russian PMCs.
Firstly, there is an urgent need to institute an international authority that would establish unified rules and provide strict control over PMCs. All PMCs in the world must become a subject to licensing and periodically go through checks and a rigorous license renewal process. PMCs without such license should be treated as illegal combatants.
Secondly, it would be wise to clearly define PMCs in the international law, including the Rome Statute. Right now many illegal combatants avoid fair punishment for their actions because they insist they are either regular civilians, or foreign fighters who receive no monetary incentives.
Thirdly, all countries should take a hard stand against mercenarism. United Nations Mercenary Convention has only been ratified by 35 countries and it is largely unable to respond to new challenges. National legislation of separate countries in most cases also lacks effective mechanisms of holding mercenaries accountable for their crimes.
Fourthly, the world needs to unify the efforts with the goal to stop this immoral and cynical business. Killing people for money should bear consequences of such force that would discourage the overwhelming majority of mercenaries from continuing their bloody missions. They and their families should not gain from war. Mercenaries should be prosecuted internationally, and all assets that they obtain through war must be seized by court orders. Migration authorities ought to pay close attention to the mercenaries that may attempt to hide from criminal prosecution abroad.
Fifthly, the free world should increase economic pressure on Russia, Iran and other countries waging hybrid wars through the employment of PMCs and other paramilitary organizations. They seek supremacy, but only to make their outdated, deeply corrupt and inefficient regimes sustainable. This sustainability needs to become a target for all international efforts. The relatively small costs that these regimes are paying now should become unbearable. In the 21st century war must not become a source of revenue.

15 posted on 09/04/2020 10:26:37 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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