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Russia's chaotic draft leaves some out in cold, without gear

The mobilized reservists that Russian President Vladimir Putin visited last week at a firing range southeast of Moscow looked picture-perfect.
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FILE - A Russian recruit and his wife hug outside a military recruitment center in Volzhskiy, Volgograd region, Russia, Sept. 28, 2022. Since Russian President Vladimir Putin announced his mobilization on Sept. 21 for the war in Ukraine, independent media, human rights activists and draftees themselves have painted a bleak picture of a haphazard, chaotic and ethnically biased effort to round up as many men as possible and push them quickly to the front, regardless of skill or training. (AP Photo/File)

The mobilized reservists that Russian President Vladimir Putin visited last week at a firing range southeast of Moscow looked picture-perfect.

Kremlin video of the young men headed for the showed them in mint-condition uniforms, equipped with all the gear needed for combat: helmets, bulletproof vests and sleeping bags. When Putin asked if they had any problems, they shook their heads.

That stands in stark contrast to the complaints circulating widely on Russian news outlets and social media of , poor living conditions and scant training for the new recruits.

Since Putin announced the mobilization Sept. 21, independent media, human rights activists and those called up have painted and push them quickly to the front lines, regardless of skill, training and equipment.

Videos on Russian social networks showed conscripted men complaining of cramped, filthy accommodations, toilets overflowing with trash and a lack of food and medicine. Some showed men displaying rusty weapons.

In one video, a group of draftees milled in a field, claiming they had been left there with no food or shelter. Other clips depicted men forced to sleep on bare benches or tightly packed on the floor.

鈥淲e didn't seek you out; you called us. Here, look at this! How long can this go on?鈥 an exasperated voice says in a video.

Putin鈥檚 decree on the partial mobilization didn鈥檛 outline the criteria for draftees or say how many would be called up. Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has said it will affect only about 300,000 reservists with relevant combat or service experience.

Conscription protests have been harshly put down, and to neighboring countries to avoid being pressed into service.

In the week after the decree, a young man , seriously wounding him. On Oct. 15, . Enlistment offices and other administrative buildings also have been set on fire.

It's now clear that in a country where almost all men under 65 are registered as part of the reserve, the mobilization process wasn鈥檛 carried out carefully. There has been a flood of reports of call-up summonses being served to those with no military experience. Police rounded up men in the streets of Moscow and other cities, or raided hostels to apprehend guests of fighting age. Enlistment offices often skipped required health checks.

The hasty call-up will hardly achieve anything other than 鈥渟lowing down the advances鈥 of Ukrainian troops in the 8-month-old war, military analyst Pavel Luzin said in an interview.

Moscow is simply 鈥減rolonging the agony鈥 in Ukraine, said Luzin, a visiting scholar at The Fletcher School at Tufts University.

Activists also say ethnic minorities in some regions were drafted in disproportionate numbers. Videos circulated of protests in the Muslim majority region of Dagestan, with relatives complaining that the area was providing more recruits than elsewhere.

Vladimir Budaev of the Free Buryatia Foundation told AP that Indigenous people in Russia鈥檚 Far North and along the Mongolian border were 鈥渞ounded up in their villages鈥 in the drive.

In remote regions of Sakha and Buryatia, enlistment officers scoured the taiga for potential draftees, and 鈥渉anded out summonses to anyone they met,鈥 he said.

According to Yekaterina Morland, an ethnic Buryat volunteer at the Asians of Russia Foundation, Buryatia has seen mobilization rates up to six times higher than Russia鈥檚 European regions.

In the first two weeks of the call-up, authorities in some regions reported sending home hundreds of men who were drafted despite not meeting the criteria.

鈥淭he task of a military enlistment office is to recruit 鈥 recruit whoever they can grab,鈥 says Elena Popova, the coordinator of the Movement of Conscientious Objectors.

Putin himself publicly acknowledged 鈥渕istakes鈥 in the process and demanded its improvement.

But even when the summonses went to those who had served in the army, it didn鈥檛 necessarily mean that they had battlefield skills. Some former conscripts often don鈥檛 get proper military training when they serve and instead are engaged in menial labor.

A woman who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because she feared reprisals said her 31-year-old husband did his mandatory service six years ago and had "no training at a firing range, or any combat drills in the field,鈥 but authorities tried to draft him anyway.

In fact, he had only held a weapon once, when they were taught how to strip down and reassemble an automatic rifle, she said. Mostly, she added, 鈥渢hey were sweeping (the compound), cleaning the snow."

Relatives of conscripts reported having to spend their own money on gear and basic necessities. Online groups were formed to raise funds for equipment.

One campaign was run by Kremlin-backed lawmaker and state TV host Yevgeny Popov, who said reservists in the Taman artillery division got shoes and clothes, but had "an acute shortage of drones, walkie-talkies, smartphones with maps (for gunners), binoculars, headlamps (and) power banks,鈥 he said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Wednesday acknowledged persisting problems with equipment for the draftees, but 鈥渧igorous measures taken to rectify the situation are already yielding the first positive results.鈥

He said regional authorities are involved in providing 鈥渢he missing gear,鈥 and now Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov 鈥渋s personally responsible for this鈥 in a coordination council Putin has created.

Russian media reported multiple deaths of reservists in Ukraine, with their relatives telling news outlets that they had received very little training.

When asked by a reporter why several reservists had died in Ukraine only three weeks after being called up, Putin confirmed that training could last as few as 10 days and as many as 25.

Luzin, the military analyst, said Russia isn't able to train hundreds of thousands of men. 鈥淭he army was not ready for mobilization. It never prepared for it,鈥 he said.

Putin has promised to finish the mobilization drive by November, when the regular fall draft is scheduled. Military experts and rights groups say enlistment offices and training camps can鈥檛 process both at the same time, warning that the call-up may resume months later.

As of mid-October, 222,000 reservists have been recruited, Putin said. Whether it will be possible to enlist another 80,000 in the remaining two weeks is unclear.

To try to broaden the pool, the Russian parliament on Wednesday lifted a ban on mobilizing men who have been convicted of a grave criminal offense and who have been released from prison but whose convictions are still on the books.

Even though masses of Russian men are no longer fleeing the country and street protests have all but halted, there are still those resisting the effort.

Independent and opposition-leaning media have published instructions on how to avoid the call-up legally. Rights groups advise men not to sign the summons 鈥 which is required for it to be considered legally served 鈥 and not to go near enlistment offices.

Some men are seeking alternative civil service, a right that lawyers say is guaranteed by the constitution.

Kirill Berezin, 27, responded to a call-up notice shoved under the door of his St. Petersburg apartment by going to a enlistment office to apply for the alternative civil service, but he was taken to a military unit anyway, according to his friend, Marina Tsyganova.

Berezin, who has since been sent to a training facility in southern Russia, submitted a document to his commanders that said he 鈥渃an鈥檛 serve with weapons, can鈥檛 kill people and help people who do it鈥 because it was 鈥渃ontrary to my conscience.鈥

Tsyganova told AP that she represented him in a St. Petersburg court, which last week rejected Berezin鈥檚 lawsuit, saying only regular conscripts under 27 are eligible for alternative civil service. His defense team plans to appeal, she said, and at the very least, she hoped he won鈥檛 be sent to Ukraine while the legal battle proceeds.

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This story was reported from outside Russia by The Associated Press.

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Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at

The Associated Press

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