Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 15 – The number of
Russians registered with the government as having combat experience has risen
from 878,000 in 2005 to 1,368,156 now, the result of Vladimir Putin’s military
actions in Georgia, Ukraine and Syria and more elastic definitions by the
defense ministry of who is a combat veteran and thus entitled to receive
benefits.
The number of such people has risen
by just under 33,000 in the last year alone, Russian blogger Denis Mokrushin
reports in a post that was published by the Moscow newspaper Vzglyad yesterday. He suggests the late rise reflects the number
of those who have served in Syria (twower.livejournal.com/2262483.html
and vz.ru/news/2018/5/14/922688.html).
In
his original post, Mokrushin gives the following annual figures for those registered
as combat veterans:
2005
– 878,081
2006 – 1,023,400
2007 – 1,097,482
2008 – 1,140,639
2009 – 1,177,219
2010 – 1,209,037
2011 – 1,238,820
2012 – 1,270,661
2013 – 1,290,629
2014 – 1,296,235
2015 – 1,312,071
2016 – 1,323,472
2017 – 1,335,776
2018 – 1,368,156
2006 – 1,023,400
2007 – 1,097,482
2008 – 1,140,639
2009 – 1,177,219
2010 – 1,209,037
2011 – 1,238,820
2012 – 1,270,661
2013 – 1,290,629
2014 – 1,296,235
2015 – 1,312,071
2016 – 1,323,472
2017 – 1,335,776
2018 – 1,368,156
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