Russian troops wiped out by their OWN mine as Putin sends Chechens to stop desertion

Ukrainian soldiers destroy Russian reconnaissance radar

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The incident took place inside Russia and close to the border with Ukraine, between the villages of Novy Put and Volfino on August 17 at around three o’clock in the afternoon. Reports in the local media claimed that a military truck ran over what is thought to be an anti-tank mine. The ensuing explosion killed one soldier and seriously injured two others, while writing off the vehicle.

The injured men have been taken to hospital, where they are receiving treatment.

It is the latest in a series of self-inflicted mishaps suffered by Russia’s military in its faltering Ukraine campaign.

In July a landing craft belonging to the Black Sea Fleet was destroyed after hitting a Russian mine near Mariupol.

Reports continue to circulate of plummeting morale among Putin’s exhausted army.

The Russians have been fighting for almost six months without a rest and have suffered huge casualties.

According to Ukraine’s military, almost 45,000 Russian soldiers have lost their lives since the invasion started on February 24.

The high death toll along with poor leadership and lack of basic supplies such as food have had a devastating effect, leading to mass desertions.

In a bid to stop the rot, the Russian president has dispatched yet another unit of fearsome Chechen warriors to prevent troops from running away.

Dmytro Pletenchuk, a press officer for the Mykolaiv Oblast Military Administration in southern Ukraine, said Putin was increasingly moving Chechen units to the Kherson region.

He claimed they were to act as a police force to stop Russian forces from deserting.

He wrote on his Facebook page: “More and more Kadyrovsty arrive in Kherson region as a force police unit.

“These units rely on occupation functions and parallel control of deserters from military formations that are not of Chechen ethnicity.”

The word “Kadyrovtsy” is derived from the the Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov and is used as a nickname for fighters from the country.

Reports of the new deployment of Chechens are consistent with previous Ukrainian intelligence bulletins that Russian forces are moving Rosgvardia and Chechen units to the left bank of Dnipro River to block Russian personnel from retreating from northern Kherson Oblast.

The Russians are preparing for a counteroffensive from Ukraine’s army, that in recent weeks has stepped up its activity in the south of the country.

The Russian government has still not admitted the full scale of the casualties its army has sustained.

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However, anecdotal evidence continues to emerge of the heavy losses suffered by their troops.

The Russian army has started to hand out funeral notices for the fallen soldiers that were printed during the Soviet era.

Dmitry Kolezev, an editor for the Russian independent media outlet Republic.ru, wrote on his Twitter page: “Funerals printed in 1974 are brought to the families of Russian military personnel.

“Firstly, this may mean that they were not ready for such losses and modern forms quickly ran out.

“Secondly, this is a terrible symbol – young men were sent to fight for the return of the USSR, and funerals for them come straight from there, from the Soviet Union.”

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