Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 28 – Pro-Kremlin
outlets are talking more about private military units than are opposition ones,
Vladimir Pastukhov points out, arguing that this reflects the fact that the
Kremlin hopes to prevent Russians from drawing parallels between losses in
Putin’s war in Syria and those in earlier wars such as Chechnya and Ukraine.
And in addition, the Britain-based
Russian historian says, all the regime’s talk about mercenaries is intended to
obscure a still more disturbing truth: Units of the Russian military itself
suffered a crushing defeat when they went up against the army of the “main
enemy,” the United States (bbc.com/russian/blog-pastoukhov-43214176).
The Kremlin’s calculation about how
Russians view the losses among “mercenaries” is at least in part justified.
Their deaths have not generated much sympathy among Russians or led to
comparisons between the Russian losses in Syria and those in earlier conflicts
like Chechnya or Ukraine.
As a result, Pastukhov says, “a military
defeat unprecedented in modern Russian history in a clash with the ‘main’
foreign opponent has passed so far for the authorities without particular
consequences: People are discussing the details, many are arguing about the
number of victims, but they are not reflecting about the essence of what
happened.”
Pastukhov suggests that in reality “the
private military company ‘Vagner’ is a political and media phantom, a myth consciously
put out with the goal of concealing a still more unwelcome truth” than talk
about seizing oil field for the oligarchs.
And that truth, he says, is that “in
essence there were no ‘mercenary’ Vagner soldiers. That is simply how they look
today in the era of the hybrid wars of the Russian army. Precisely this army
and not some mythical mercenaries suffered a crushing defeat near Deir az-Zor”
in Syria.
In the contemporary world and
especially in Russia, Pastukhov continues, “the border between military
personnel and mercenaries in present-day armies is extremely conditional.” In
Russia in particular, there are both draftees and professionals in the military,
the latter being paid for their services just as mercenaries are.
What this means, he argues, is that
a mercenary is just the same as a contract soldier, with just one difference: the
contract soldier reaches an agreement directly with the state while the
mercenary does so with a nominally private company than in the case of Russia
is simply a front for the state.
Groups can be moved from one category
to another as needed, be it in Ukraine or now in Syria where contract troops
become regular army units or alternatively regular army units become
contractors depending on what the situation requires. If the Kremlin wants to
avoid responsibility, it simply labels its troops contractors or in this case
mercenaries.
The ease with which the Kremlin
makes this shift “is explained by the fact that no mercenaries or private
military companies which they recruit exist in reality” in Russia. The
government controls them all whatever it may say.
“The unprecedented mystification of
the so-called private military company Vagner and the demonization of its supposed
protector Prigozhin,” who at the same time was caught up in the scandal of Russian
interference in the American elections, may make it more difficult to sort
things out; but it does not preclude that.
According to Pastukhov, the
available evidence shows that the Vagner company doesn’t exist. It is not an example of outsourcing because “outsourcing
presupposes the use of some really existing external resource which the state
doesn’t have.” That is not what is going on in this case.
“The state pays, instructs, sends off
to the point of service, kills and compensates the heirs of those killed,” he
says. “A private military company is
needed only to mask the state’s participation.” Therefore, talk about
legalizing such entities in Russia is “nonsense” as one can’t legalize
something which does not exist.
Those involved in such activities
are in reality state employees at one remove; and this is “the very essence of
Russian ‘hybrid war,’” be it in the Donbass or in Syria. One can call these groupings “’an army’” only
by stretching the truth. They are simply “a convenient myth and successful
marketing move.”
What is most unsettling in the current
situation has been the willingness of the US to accept the notion that its
forces were fighting with Russian mercenaries analogous to private American
military companies. Indeed, it appears
that “someone in the White House very much wants to help the Kremlin save face”
and to avoid confronting the more dangerous reality.”
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