Russia's silent crisis: Mass casualties spark no outrage
There will be no awakening of Russian society, no rebellion against the war, and no shocking reports, views of cemeteries, coffins, or dismembered bodies will shake them, believes Dr. Wojciech Siegień, a Polish expert in Russian propaganda. Photos from the largest frontline morgue leaked onto the Russian internet, and no one in Russia cared.
10:12 AM EST, November 27, 2024
The darkest and gloomiest place on Earth—this is how Russian independent journalist Alexey Kovalev describes the "central processing facility for the remains of dead soldiers" established by the army in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don. Photos published on social media from this military morgue show hundreds of bodies in various stages of decomposition and limbs scattered across hallway floors, waiting to be matched with other body parts.
"In wooden boxes lining the walls from floor to ceiling, row after row after row, are the lucky ones: those whose bodies were recovered from the battlefield, identified, sealed in zinc-lined caskets, and prepared for dispatch to their grieving relatives in the farthest corners of Russia," describes Kovalev in an article for "Foreign Policy."
According to the journalist, judging by the overload of the military morgue, Ukraine's reports that Russia is losing 1,500 soldiers per day are not exaggerated. The Russian does not sympathize with the dead. He describes that bodies on the fields is a consciously accepted way of waging war by the Kremlin.
Suicidal war strategy
The Russian disdain for human life extends to their own troops, which the Kremlin systematically uses in so-called human wave attacks and meat grinder tactics. Secondly, mass death among Russian soldiers has become part of an increasingly clear policy with which the Kremlin aims to rid Russia of undesirable elements and change the structure of the Russian population - comments the Russian journalist.
According to Kovalev's analysis, non-Russian ethnic minorities like Buryats, Tatars, Tuvans, as well as prisoners, who are sent to the most bloody sections of the front, mostly die in the war. They are sent into attacks until the Ukrainian defenders jam or run out of ammunition. Meanwhile, the Kremlin tries to spare politically important populations of Moscow and St. Petersburg.
These shocking reports from Russia do not upset Russians at all. Anyone expecting a Russian anti-war uprising is mistaken. There will be no awakening of Russian society, no shocking views will move them," comments Dr. Wojciech Siegień from the University of Gdańsk, an expert in Russian propaganda analysis and author of the podcast "Eastern Bloc" on Krytyka Polityczna, in a conversation with WP.
There is a Soviet term "obrabotka," which means working on society's views. We've reached a stage where nothing can shake Russian society anymore. The paradox of this war is that people from Siberia are dying in Ukraine, believing they are defending their homeland, as if they were truly threatened by NATO troops coming to their cities," adds Dr. Siegień.
The bloodiest month of the war
Dr. Siegień notes that not even the theory presented by Russian parliamentarian Alexander Borodai upset the Russians. He confirmed that the recording released two weeks ago, in which he explained that "useless people, of low social value" are dying in Ukraine, is true. Borodai described that everything is fine because it is about "opposing unnecessary manpower to the bravest people from Ukraine and thus exhausting the enemy society to the maximum."
The outcome of the war depends on the West's willingness to continue supporting Ukraine and the exhausted state of the Russian economy. Both sides are waiting for a breakthrough related to the latest moves by Joe Biden and the taking of office by Donald Trump," summarizes Dr. Siegień.
With an estimated rate of 1,500 casualties per day (killed and wounded), October was the bloodiest month of the war for Russia. Vladimir Putin throws everything he has into battle. Russian unofficial estimates of the number of dead range from 115,000 to 160,000, which is over 10 times more than the Soviet Union's death toll in the Afghan war.
The total number of Russian casualties, including the wounded, is estimated at about 800,000 people. According to Russian journalist Anastasia Kashavarova, the average Russian infantryman lasts less than a month on the front line before being killed.