Paul Goble
Staunton, Mar. 27 – The Kremlin’s own policies regarding the Russian military in Ukraine and the handling of veterans of that conflict on their return home ensure that the veterans from Putin’s war will be a far larger problem than the Afgantsy were a generation ago, according to leading Russian specialists.
Three of these are especially important, these experts believe. First of all, Moscow not only made service there all about money but recruited heavily from Russian prisons to fill the ranks, guaranteeing that criminal values and an obsession with cash will dominate the veterans (dw.com/ru/boevye-bratstva-veterany-svo-organizuutsa-v-opg/a-76571419).
Second, Moscow has made it virtually impossible for employers to fire any veterans they do hire, a policy that is backfiring because most employers don’t want the problems that presents and thus aren’t hiring veterans in the first place, forcing an even larger percentage of them into or back into a life of crime.
And third, Moscow must deal with the fact that few veterans fear new jail terms for any crimes they do commit, confident that they can always volunteer again to fight in Ukraine or in some other war Putin may start and see their sentences for any crimes commuted or even cancelled altogether.
All these factors, not to mention the way in which the Kremlin is promoting veterans as the new elite and giving them special privileges such as priority entrance into higher educational institutions is deepening the divide between veterans and non-veterans and leading the former to look at the latter as their enemies and appropriate targets for attack.
The Russian experts Deutsche Welle spoke with believe that this will lead Moscow to avoid allowing any single mass return of veterans lest that lead to an explosion. Instead, the Kremlin will likely try to organize the return of some while keeping others in the field either in Ukraine or in some other military action elsewhere.
And to the extent that is so, Moscow’s growing fears about the impact of the returning veterans on Russian social and political society could quickly become a reason that the Putin regime will choose new targets for the use of its forces abroad – lest veterans of his war in Ukraine threaten Russia and himself.