Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 28 – Three days
ago, Aleksandr Kots, the military correspondent for Komsomolskaya Pravda, published a breakthrough article on something
Russian officials have long sought to minimize or deny altogether – Moscow’s
use of private military companies and soldiers of fortune in Syria (kp.ru/daily/26748/3777439/).
In the intervening period, that
article has been republished and discussed in outlets across the country, a
development that shows no signs of slowing and that entails real dangers for
the Putin regime as Russians seek answers for the question Kots posed in the subtitle
to his article, “What are Russian ‘soldiers of fortune’ fighting and dying for
in the 21st century?”
That
pattern reflects the fact that ever more incontrovertible evidence has surfaced
about the capture of such Russian fighters and ever more reports of combat
deaths have surfaced in regional media – but only occasionally in Moscow (themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-death-cert-reveals-real-syrian-casualty-count-59400).
On the one hand, Kots’ article seeks
to place the Russian use of mercenaries in an international context – other countries
are doing it so why shouldn’t Russia? – and stresses that Russia too can take
advantage of the deniability that such forces gives governments and the ability
of such forces to do things that regular militaries are not trained for or
permitted.
But on the other hand, as the
journalist acknowledges, there is an “ethical” side to this question. Why does
Moscow need this deniability if its goals in Syria are as lofty as the Kremlin
insists they are? And why if these
fighters are doing Moscow’s will doesn’t the Russian government take
responsibility for them when they are captured or killed?
And it is precisely questions like
these, questions that the Kremlin certainly doesn’t want Russians to be asking
in this electoral season, that makes the appearance of this article and its
replication across Russia a potential problem for the regime. Indeed, the repeated publication of Kots’
words may say more about the actual level of support for Putin’s wars than any
poll.
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