A militant mobilized by Russia from the occupied Luhansk region wrote a suicide note. In it, he complains that he “didn't even live normally,” and Russia used them as “cannon fodder.”
The note was found by Ukrainian scouts of the Dike Pole special forces battalion of the First Separate Special Forces Brigade named after Ivan Bohun. The militant even wrote where to send her if he was killed.
“Sent as “cannon fodder”: the militant wrote a suicide note to his wife
B In a letter to his 26-year-old wife, pro-Russian militant Tarasenko says that:
- he was “forgotten”;
- The Russian command did not give them any weapons, ammunition, or personal protection;
- the Russians turned them into “cannon fodder”.
The sheet says that the pro-Russian militant, D. U. Tarasenko, is from a quasi-republic in the Lugansk region. from the urban-type settlement of Kalinino, Luhansk region.
A pro-Russian militant admitted in a suicide note that they were abandoned as “cannon fodder”/Photo of the Ivan Bohun Brigade
He also complained to his wife so that the children would remember him.In the letter, he notes that he “drank” and writes “emotionally”.
However, he wants the woman to tell the children: “Say that dad was an athlete, not drank and didn't smoke. It's bad to die in the summer, now it would be at sea.”
Russia lost more than 50,000 infidels in the war
In early September, Russian losses had already reached more than 50,000. In particular, Russia, as of On the morning of September 6, it has already lost 50,150 personnel.
As of the morning of September 9, the Russian army has already decreased by 51,900 personnel.