Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 12 – Despite the fading of the Vagner private military company which
attracted so much attention earlier because of its increasing use of criminals
rather than former military personnel, the number of private military companies
in Russia is increasing rapidly in response to the Kremlin’s needs and the
enormous salaries those who work in them receive.
Andrey
Guselnikov, a URA journalist, says that many former military personnel have
broken with Vagner because of its use of criminals and of its extremely low
competence, things that they say led to the serious losses its employees
suffered in Syria earlier this year (ura.news/articles/1036276441).
Among the new and
more professional PMCs is the Patriot organization “which is close to the main
administration of the General Staff” and whose personnel are made up
exclusively of men with long military training and experience, the journalist
continues. But it is only one of many, and the number continues to grow.
According to Russian specialists on
these groups, Guselnikov says, the Patriot PMC “works effectively in the
countries of Africa and the Middle East already for more than a year.” They
have now been asked by Serbia to work in Kosovo as well, where they will
support “our Serbian comrades.”
“The participation of PMCs in
military conflicts is one of the components of geopolitical influence of a
country in the international arena in places where official armed forces can’t
be sent,” Iosif Linder, head of a global counter-terrorist organization,
says. And every country has them.
Russia had been lagging behind, he
continues, “as a result of the lack of serious ideological propaganda and
legislative action which still hasn’t been rectified to the necessary degree.”
But the profitability of PMCs and their obvious utility in the Donbass and
Syria is changing that.
Russia has a great advantage in one
regard, experts say. Its military produces a large number of highly trained
military personnel and so its PMCs do not have to spend money or time on
training. One someone has signed on, he is ready to go to war – and to make a
great deal of money, something not unimportant in the current difficult
economic situation at home.
Since 2015, the number of Russian
PMCs has exploded; and they have become an increasingly powerful force in the
international market for their services. Last summer, one of their operatives
said, American PMCs complained to President Donald Trump that Russian PMCs had
taken some three billion US dollars in contracts away from them.
“One of the recent examples of the successful
expansion of Russian PMCs is their use in the Central African Republic” where
they supplement the official military advisors Moscow has sent to the CAR
government, Guselnnikov says.
But the PMCs aren’t for everyone,
Aleksandr Zhilin, a prominent Moscow military commentator says. Many join up
out of romantic visions only to discover that the PMCs are “in fact private
armies which can be used in the interests of anyone whatsoever” and often in
ways that are anything but romantic.
The PMC market, he says, is “a priori dirty. It is like prostitution:
one may say that one bordello is cleaner than another, but it is still a
bordello.” And there are real problems
with working for one of these companies, Zhilin continues: there is a high probability
those in them will die, they won’t get any benefits because the PMCs are beyond
the legal field, and they may not even be paid what they are promised.
Nonetheless, Zhilin suggests, the
high pay will be enough to continue to fill their ranks even as the number of
such Russian PMCs continues to expand.
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