Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 5 – Moscow has now
dispatched another of what it calls “a private military company” to fight in
Syria, a reflection of its desire to avoid having regular army units there, its
unwillingness to rely on the Vagner group alone, and its interest in having a
force that will do some of its dirty work on a deniable basis.
The new group, called “Patriot,” the
independent Moscow television channel Dozhd says, is mentioned alongside an
appeal to the authorities signed by retired General Leonid Ivashov, Vladimir
Petrov of the Honor and Motherland organization, and Yevgeny Shabayev of the
All-Russian Officers Assembly who confirm its existence (tvrain.ru/news/patriot-467148/).
In their appeal, the three mention
that it is long past time to legalize the status of groups like Vagner and
Patriot. Under existing Russian law, such groups are illegal because they are
mercenaries, something the authorities use despite a longstanding Russian legal
prohibition against doing so.
According to Shabayev, most of those
in these groups have served in the regular military. Ivashov for his apart adds
that the fighters in such organizations are assisted by specialists from the Main
Administration of the General Staff, military lawyers, and special operations forces.
Those in Patriot are paid more than
those in Vagner, the three say, with salaries varying “depending on speciality
from 400,000 to one million rubles a month (6600 to 16,000 US dollars a month). Most serve in its ranks only a month or two.
The commanders get even more both directly and as a cut of their men’s pay.
According to Dozhd’s sources, one
result of the appearance of the Patriot group is that is has set up competition
with the Vagner organization, with the two vying for the same contracts and
thus at least potentially reducing the costs for the Russian government.
The authors of the appeal add that
Patriot is not the only new group, there are “other new groups which have
entered “this market,” although they say that they “do not know their exact
names.” They are being used in Libya, Yemen, Sudan, and Brunei. Now there is an
entire complex of consultations about African countries as well,” Shabayev
says.
One of these nameless groups now
guards the construction site of a Russian bank in Burundi, according to the
television channel’s other sources who say that it coordinates its work with
the foreign ministry, the Military-Space Forces of the Russian government and,
of course, the FSB.
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