Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – Many commentators
have speculated that Moscow faces a potentially serious problem when those who
have gone to fight in Ukraine return to Russia with their anger and their
military skills, the Kremlin may face a more immediate danger: those returning
are undercutting Russian propaganda about what is happening in Ukraine.
Today, Yekaterinburg’s independent
online news agency reported that “about 180” volunteers from the Urals returned
from Ukraine today and are telling their families, friends and the media that “local
people [in Ukraine] called us occupiers,” an epithet that calls into question
Moscow’s messages (e1.ru/news/spool/news_id-422297.html).
The returnees were led by Vladimir
Yefimov, the spetsnaz veteran who recruited them to go to Ukraine in the first
place. When they left for Ukraine in March, they formed “the largest official
local group of volunteers since the declaration of the armistice. Only half
returned today; the rest continue to fight in the guard of the Donetsk Peoples
Republic.
“We worked in guard posts and went
on patrol,” Yefimov said. “There were no serious battles,” only occasional
shooting and provocations. But the
weather in the Donbas was terrible and everyone suffered with the flu, heart
problems and lung infections.
He added that he and his men “had
become disappointed in the Donetsk Peoples Republic to which they had gone
initially because of its ‘duplicitous leadership’ and the attitudes of the
local population.”
“According to Kyiv law, we are terrorists. According to a
Madrid court, we are also terrorists. According to the law of the Luhan
Republic, persons who are not included on the lists of its armed forces are
also members of illegal armed formations. And if one takes money for service
there, then we become mercenaries” under Russian law, Yefimov said.
But
it was the attitude of the local people in Luhansk, he said, that really
repelled him. “They are clearly drawn to Ukraine. They pay taxes to it. And the
local population in some places calls us occupiers. We simply lost the desire
to work in this republic and transferred to the
Donetsk Peoples Republic” where the situation is “much better.”
Yefimov
told the Yekaterinburg journalists that he had had to pay for the train tickets
of his men back home because of a quarrel he had with his original sponsor:
That individual objected to the fact that he had named him during a media
interview despite the fact that he wanted to remain anonymous.
Despite
all this, Yefimov said, he “plans to prepare a new group of volunteers” and has
already found 40 who are ready to go.
But his words about how the people of the Donbas really view “Russian volunteers”
like himself are likely to have a bigger impact on future events than anything
he or they might do in Donetsk.
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