Russia

In November 2023, Alexei Zhilyaev made a fateful decision.
Opposed to Russias invasion of Ukraine, the 39-year-old IT specialist from a St.
Petersburg suburb enlisted as a medic in the Russian army, believing he could save lives on the battlefield.Less than a year later, disillusioned and haunted by the futility of his work, Zhilyaev deserted from the ranks.
He now lives in France, where he is waiting for political asylum.His story sheds light on the horrors faced by both soldiers and civilians in Moscows nearly three-year war and the brutality of the Russian military.The Moscow Times could not independently verify the details of Zhilyaevs account.
But Idite Lesom (Get Lost), a Russianproject that helps men avoid combat, confirmed that he served as a combat medic in eastern Ukraine and deserted with the groups help.Ive always been against this regime.
I protested with Navalnys supporters, Zhilyaev told The Moscow Times.
When the war started, my wife and I argued: She was repeating the propaganda trope, Theyve been bombing Donbas for eight years, but I was against it.On Nov.
20, 2023, while meeting a friend at St.
Petersburgs Moskovsky train station, Zhilyaev saw waves of soldiers, maimed and broken, being transported to sanatoriums.
Trained as a medic in his youth, he felt compelled to act.Within hours, he signed a contract and was sent to a training camp in Pogonovo near Voronezh.
Days later, he was deployed to the front line near Svatove and Kreminna in Ukraines Luhansk region.In occupied eastern Ukraine, Zhilyaev witnessed destruction on a scale hed never imagined.
Everything was obliterated.
People who stayed worked in markets, garages and brothels.
There was nothing left no industry, no jobs, he said.Despite being stationed at the zero line trenches behind those directly engaging in combat he was tasked with evacuating the wounded and dead from the battlefield every day.On my first mission, five wounded soldiers approached us during a mortar barrage.
I screamed, Get in the BMP [armored vehicle] now! One of them had an open fracture but still managed to run.
Adrenaline is a strange thing I pulled a man into the vehicle with one hand, despite me not being buff or really strong, he said.While no injured soldiers died in Zhilyaevs care, he said their suffering was immense.Even the good stories are horrific, he said.
Survivors often lose limbs.
Traumatic amputations are a daily reality.He said he was shocked by the Russian militarys reliance on meat assaults sending waves of poorly equipped soldiers to storm fortified positions.Ukrainian forces value their soldiers.
If Russian troops advance, Ukrainians retreat to the prepared positions with all eyes and guns on the seemingly lost position and bombard the attackers, he said.
A 15-man assault group might see only three return alive.
On average, we evacuated about seven Russian bodies and one or two Ukrainian ones.In contrast, Ukraine sends swarms of drones rather than men.There are swarms of Ukrainian drones, sometimes five per Russian soldier on the front line.
I remember an 18-year-old whod just arrived.
Hed been at the front line for 20 minutes.
An FPV drone with a TNT charge hit him he was finished.
Drones haunt every mission of ours too, he said.Russian forces, meanwhile, often use drones in a different, more limited way on the battlefield.Commanders often used high-tech Orlan drones just to watch assaults unfold, on several screens like a video game, Zhilyaev said.
A drone operator told me he was just sitting and watching waves of people die without intervening.Participation in these meat assaults was more of a punishment than a standard duty.
The men that made up these storm brigades ranged from men being punished for not shaving to the penal ones, where the commanders would send the undesirables, like conscientious objectors or gepatitchicki people infected with hepatitis C.Punishments were brutal and arbitrary.
Getting sent to the "pit," a makeshift detention area, was the most extreme form of punishment.In Mozhnyakovka, a lieutenant was thrown into the pit and left to lose both feet to frostbite because the officer disliked him, Zhilyaev said.
We barely got him out by attracting the volunteers attention.Another soldier was sent on a suicide mission after political officers responsible for investigating incidents like self-inflicted wounds to avoid fighting and refusals to follow orders forced him to sign a document saying he had intentionally wounded himself and would redeem his sin by blood in battle, Zhilyaev said.Twenty prisoners in the pit would receive a couple of loaves of bread and 1.5 liters of water for the whole day, during which they would be forced to do hard physical labor, abused both physically and psychologically.
Some were forced into assault units essentially death squads with a near-zero survival rate, Zhilyaev said.While the Constitution claims the occupied territories are Russian, no one is protected by any law here.
Commanders can do as they please, Zhilyaev said, with Ukrainian POWs and civilians particularly vulnerable.Once, a young Ukrainian soldier from a recon group was captured by the 283rd platoon, his comrades KIA.
They brought him to the zero line with a gunshot wound in his leg.
After we administered aid, the FSB immediately took him away, Zhilyaev recalled.
Another time, in May, I treated a Ukrainian POW whose feet were shot by a drunken Russian ex-convict.
His name is Volodymyr.
We had a chance to talk during treatment a fine guy.
He only survived because other soldiers intervened, and even then he was guarded in the field hospital.But the most haunting incident, he said, involved a civilian woman in July 2024.We were stationed at the division command post in Zhitlovka.
At one point, a duty officer suddenly called us to a checkpoint.
There was a dirt road between the command post and the forest the locals who were still there would regularly go down it on bikes and the like.
There was a girl lying on the ground with her four-wheeler.
Shed been shot so many times there was no chance of saving her.Zhilyaev was even more shaken by the killers reaction.We ran to the watchman who did it to beat him, but the command was already there.
He shot half a magazine and had the audacity to say that he shot twice as a warning and to kill.
Then, when my surgeon colleague Matvey asked him Why?!, the shooter shrugged and said, And what about her? Thats what he said after killing a human being.
His superior never punished him.After months of witnessing bloodshed, death and suffering, Zhilyaev became increasingly certain that his efforts to help people were futile.The people we were supposed to liberate, according to Putin, hated us, and made it apparent just by the looks wed get in a store.
I knew I was a part of the occupying force every soldier there did.
Its the civilians back home who still dont get it, Zhilyaev said.I would remember some of the surnames of the soldiers I evacuated.
Once, I recognized a name on a casualty report.
Id treated that man weeks earlier.
And then this happened again and again, he said.
Thats when I realized how meaningless my work was from the medical perspective.
The life cycle of a Russian soldier inevitably ends in an assault where one has to kill or be killed.
And I want to do neither.Zhilyaev was wounded in February 2024 when a mortar shell hit his armored vehicle during a body recovery mission.
Despite his injuries and the risk of infection from the dead bodies, he managed to perform first aid on himself and get evacuated to a hospital.
The experience deepened his resolve to escape.If not for the fact that military hospitals are like jails guarded by the military police, I would probably have tried to escape back then, he said.In August 2024, using a leave pass granted by his commander, he traveled back to Russia.
After a short stay at home in St.
Petersburg, he flew to Belarus, where he contacted Idite Lesom.
The group helped him make his way to France, where he requested asylum upon arrival.
If he returns to Russia, he faces up to 15 years in prison.Today, he is grappling with new anxieties resulting from PTSD.The first evacuation wasnt scary as I didnt know what I had signed up for.
The second one was.
Then, you stop feeling anything.
The fear comes back now from realizing how easily I could have died, Zhilyaev said.Ive worked with a psychologist, and Im slowly recovering.
Im also helped by a friend from the Ukrainian army I made here he became a veteran after being injured.
He tells me the trauma will ease its grip in a year or so, said Zhilyaev.Despite everything, Zhilyaev said he remains proud of his actions as a medic.I love [French singer] dith Piaf, he said.
There is a song of hers Non, je ne regrette rien I dont regret anything.
I saved lives, a lot of them.
And I think thats worth something.Zhilyaev, like the six Russian deserters from the Proshchai, Oruzhiye (Farewell to Arms) group who arrived in France to seek asylum in October, believes his story could change minds back home.I hope that my story can help people back home realize there is nothing right with this war.
And Im not afraid to talk all fear I would ever have I left there, in the war, he said.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


[Russia] - Cable Damage Slows Internet for Millions of Customers Across Russia


Poland Accuses Russia of Planning Global ‘Air Terror’ Acts


Teenager Dies After Volunteering to Clean Up Oil Spill in Southern Russia – Reports


‘I Realized My Efforts Were Futile’: How a Russian Combat Medic Deserted From the Front Lines


Russia and Ukraine Exchange 50 POWs in First Swap of 2025


Putin Awards Payments to WWII Veterans Ahead of Soviet Victory Anniversary


Russia’s War Machine Fed by Free-Flowing Exports of Uzbek 'Guncotton' Pulp, Reports Say


[Russia] - Russia Will Send 'Humanitarian' Gas Supplies to Transnistria, Moscow-Backed Leader Says


[Russia] - VKontakte Overtakes YouTube in Web Traffic for First Time in Russia


Central African Republic Leader Arrives in Moscow for Bilateral Talks


[Russia] - Museum of Moscow Removes Exhibit Section on Soviet Repression-- Reports


[Russia] - Russian Airstrikes Damage Critical Infrastructure Across Ukraine, Authorities Say


[Russia] - Kremlin Courts Trump Behind the Scenes as His Foreign Policy Rhetoric Rattles U.S. Allies


[Russia] - Czech Republic Finishes Pipeline Extension, Ending Reliance on Russian Oil


[Russia] - Ukraine May 'Cease to Exist' in 2025, Putin Aide Says


Russia's Hidden War Debt Creates a Looming Credit Crisis


Lavrov Welcomes Trump’s Signals on Ukraine War, Awaits Concrete Proposals


[Russia] - United Kingdom Declassifies Confessions of 'Cambridge Five' Soviet Spies


[Russia] - Russia Labels Ukrainian Meme 'Terrorist Organization'


[Russia] - Russia Signs Nuclear Energy Deal With Vietnam


[Russia] - Ukrainian Army Hits Russian Military, Industrial Sites in Overnight Barrage


[Russia] - FSB Officer Fatally Shot in Moscow Defense Ministry Building


[Russia] - Lots of Tankers Carrying Russian Oil Stuck Idling After U.S. Sanctions


[Russia] - Fires Erupt at Russian Gas, Industry Sites After Ukrainian Drone Attack


[Russia] - Kursk Governor Bans Officials From Censoring Online Criticism


Full Support or Quiet Resistance: Ukraine War Splits Russia’s Buddhists


[Russia] - Ukraine Stops Production at Pokrovsk Coal Mine as Russian Troops Close In


German Police Probe Drone Sightings Over Military Facilities


China-Russia Trade Hit Record High in 2024


Russia, Iran to Sign ‘Comprehensive Strategic Partnership’ Treaty – Kremlin


[Russia] - Soldier Awarded 'Hero of Russia' Title After Viral Close Combat Video


[Russia] - Gazprom Weighs Laying Off 1,600 Managers Amid Wartime Losses


Rental Prices in Russia Rose 31% in 2024, Experts Say


[Russia] - Kremlin Declines to Comment on North Korean POWs in Ukraine


Russia Accuses Ukraine of ‘Energy Terrorism’ Over Alleged Pipeline Strike


[Russia] - Russia Labels Media Outlets as 'Terrorist Organizations' for First Time Ever


[Russia] - Saratov Oil Depot Fire Contained 5 Days After Ukrainian Drone Strike


Around 300 North Korean Soldiers Killed Fighting for Russia, South Korean Lawmaker Says


Zelensky ‘Ready’ to Hand North Korean POWs to Pyongyang


Russia Claims New Villages in Eastern Ukraine


Seoul Confirms Ukraine Captured 2 North Korean Soldiers


Russia Says U.S. Risks Global Energy Instability With New Sanctions


Ukraine Says Questioning 2 Captured North Korean Soldiers


Germany Races To Secure Stricken ‘Russian Shadow Fleet’ Oil Tanker


Russia Eyes Libya to Replace Syria as Africa Launchpad


Kadyrov Linked to Suspects in Botched Uzbekistan Assassination


[Russia] - 'Everything Depends on Moscow': In Separatist Transnistria, Residents Await End to Sweeping Energy Crisis


[Russia] - U.S., U.K. Unveil Sweeping Sanctions Against Russia's Oil Sector


Transnistria Appeals to Russia Amid Worsening Energy Crisis


Ukraine Hits Army Facility in Russia, Kyiv Source Says


Damaged Oil Tanker Springs New Leak in Southern Russia


[Russia] - Moscow Accuses Lithuania of Provoking Territorial Dispute Over Kaliningrad


Russia Opens Terrorism Case Over Arson Attack on War Donation Center – Reports


NATO to Send 2 Ships to Guard Baltic Sea Infrastructure, Finland Says


Northern Sea Route Shipping Falls Short of Russia’s 2024 Target


Japan Expands Russia Sanctions With Fresh Asset Freezes, Export Bans


Putin Open to Speaking With Trump, Kremlin Says


[Russia] - Ukrainian Airstrikes on Occupied Donetsk Kill 3, Moscow-Backed Official Says


Russian Exiles Fleeing War and Persecution Seek Refuge in Mexico


Civilian Planes Face ‘High Risk’ Flying Over Russia, EU Agency Says


Trump Says Meeting With Putin Being Arranged


[Russia] - European Imports of Russian LNG Hit 'Record Levels' in 2024


Finland To Keep Russian Border Shut, Extend Contested Law


Russian State Media Sees Audience Numbers Fall in 2024


Russian Forces Establish Bridgehead Across Frontline River in Eastern Ukraine


[Russia] - Russian Court Blocks Fast Fashion Retailer Shein's Website Over LGBTQ+ Bracelet


Putin Criticizes Slow Response to Black Sea Oil Spill


[Russia] - Zelensky Says Western Troops in Ukraine Would Help 'Force Russia to Peace'Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday stated he supports the release of Western troops to Ukraine as one of the best instruments to force Russia to peace. T


Russian Court Rules to Block Website of Fast Fashion Retailer Shein Over LGBTQ+ Bracelet


[Russia] - Russia's GRU Paid Taliban to Target U.S. Forces in Afghanistan-- Insider


2 Firefighters Killed as Russia Battles Oil Depot Blaze Day After Ukrainian Drone Attack


Kremlin Monitoring Trump Over Greenland Rhetoric


[Russia] - Russian Passport Climbs in Travel Freedom Ranking


RT Chief Simonyan Says Husband in Coma After Undergoing ‘Clinical Death’


Poland Shutters Consulate in St. Petersburg on Russian Order


[Russia] - Russian Strike on Zaporizhzhia Kills At Least 13


[Russia] - Transnistria Says It Has Less Than a Month of Gas Left


[Russia] - Abkhazia Expands Power Cuts


Russia Doubles Migrant Expulsions in 2024


Ukraine Says Hit Oil Depot in Russia Used by Moscow’s Air Force


Ukraine Says Conducting Combat Operations in Russia’s Kursk Region


Heating Failures Hit Russia's Far East Amid Subzero Temperatures


[Russia] - Swedish Navy Recovers Anchor of Tanker Suspected of Baltic Sea Cable Damage


Looking Ahead at Russia’s Ethnic Republics in 2025


Russia ‘Shares Grief’ Over Tibet Earthquake, Putin Tells Xi


Ukraine Advances in Kursk Region Amid Renewed Offensive – Reports


[Russia] - Ukraine Says Clinging On to Part of Key Town Russia Says Captured


Russian IT Growth Faces an Uncertain Future


Baltic Sea Telecoms Cables Repaired After Suspected Sabotage


Tensions Rise Between Moldova and Russia as Transnistria Fears Electricity Collapse


Russia’s Opposition, Past and Future: A Conversation With Jan Matti Dollbaum


Russia 'Guilty' Over Downed Azerbaijan Plane, Aliyev Says


Ukraine Launches Renewed Kursk Offensive: What We Know


Blinken Says Russia Plans To Share Advanced Satellite Tech With N. Korea


Russia Says Captured Key Eastern Ukrainian Town of Kurakhove