Russia is offering Moscow residents a record
$22,000 to fight in Ukraine
By Mariya Knight and Kathleen Magramo, CNN
3 minute read
Updated 6:11 AM EDT, Wed July 24, 2024
Russian
servicemen march on The Red Square in Moscow during the Victory Day military
parade on May 9, 2024.
Alexander
Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images
CNN —
Authorities in the city of Moscow are offering a record signing-on
bonus for new recruits to fight in Ukraine, in the latest sign of a
scramble to boost Russian troop numbers.
The financial sweetener comes as President Vladimir Putin struggles to
recruit soldiers for his army as Russia’s full-scale invasion of
Ukraine grinds on in its third year.
Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin introduced the one-time signing bonus of
1.9 million rubles (about $22,000) for city residents who join the military,
according to a statement on Tuesday.
Anyone taking up the offer would earn as much as 5.2 million rubles
($59,600) in their first year of service, the statement added.
Those willing to join the fight in Ukraine can also receive one-time
cash payments of about $5,690-$11,390 for injuries, “depending on the
severity,” and the family of a soldier killed in action could be paid $34,150.
While Russia’s casualty numbers remain shrouded in secrecy, estimates
say the death toll among troops is high. More than 70,000 soldiers were likely
killed or wounded in May and June alone, the UK defense ministry said in
an update on July 12, as the Russian army faced high losses on a new
front in the Kharkiv region.
It is estimated that Russia has lost 87% of the active-duty
ground troops it had prior to
launching its invasion of Ukraine and two-thirds of its pre-invasion tanks, a source familiar
with a declassified US intelligence assessment provided to
Congress told CNN in December last year.
Social media is filled with video footage taken by drones of Russian
troops being killed or left with life-changing injuries in what soldiers grimly
call “meat grinder” battles against Ukrainian defenders. Ukrainian soldiers have often
spoken of how their outnumbered forced face so-called human wave assaults from an enemy whose commanders appear happy to tolerate brutal
attrition rates.
As personnel deaths mount, the Kremlin is looking all over the place to
find fighters to send to the front.
Putin has ordered the country’s military to increase troop numbers by
170,000, which would take the overall number of Russian military personnel to
more than 2.2 million, including 1.32 million troops, according to a decree published by the Kremlin in December.
That equates to boosting the Russian army’s size by 15% and marks the
second such expansion of the army since Putin launched its invasion.
Putin initially ordered an immediate “partial mobilization” of Russian citizens in September 2022 following a string of
defeats that caused recriminations in Moscow. The mobilization meant citizens
who were military reservists could be called up and that those with military
experience were subject to conscription.
The conscription campaign led to fierce demonstrations – particularly
in Russia’s ethnic minority regions where mobilization efforts were concentrated – and has sparked an
exodus of military-age men fleeing the country to
avoid joining the war.
Although the mobilization campaign was suspended in November 2022 after officials said the target of recruiting
300,000 personnel had been met, Russia has been recruiting
fighters beyond its borders to fight in Ukraine.
Russia has recruited as many as 15,000 Nepalis to fight its war in Ukraine, with many of them left traumatized,
while an unknown number remain missing or possibly dead. A Nepali soldier who
spoke to CNN said Afghan, Indian, Congolese and Egyptian recruits were among
those being trained in Russia’s military academies for foreign fighters.
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