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Russia is desperate for troops and is promising big cash bonuses for volunteers to deploy to Ukraine, UK intel suggests

Katie Anthony   

Russia is desperate for troops and is promising big cash bonuses for volunteers to deploy to Ukraine, UK intel suggests
  • Russia appears to be offering 'lucrative cash bonuses' to soldiers who deploy to Ukraine, UK intel suggested on Wednesday.
  • The incentives come as enthusiasm for volunteering in Putin's war drops.

Russia appears to offering cash bonuses to troops to deploy to Ukraine in a new combat unit as "enthusiasm" for volunteering drops, UK intelligence suggested on Wednesday.

A UK intel update alleged Russia is promising recruits "lucrative cash bonuses" once they arrive in Ukraine.

The incentives are believed to be part of Russia's attempt to build up a ground-forces unit called the 3rd Army Corps, which they're hoping to fill with "volunteer battalions," according to the update.

The update claimed there are "very limited levels of popular enthusiasm for volunteering for combat in Ukraine," making it difficult for Russia to build up the 3rd Army Corps to Russia's typical army corps size: about 15,000 to 20,000 troops.

In May, Russia was offering signing bonuses up to four times a monthly salary to try to attract soldiers, the Moscow Times reported.

Then, some people who signed up for a three-month military service contract were being offered 170,000 rubles, or $3,000, a month — about four times the average salary in the region, the Times reported. Another recruiter was reported to offer a monthly salary of 300,000 rubles, or $5,200.

Recruitment to deploy to Ukraine is open to men under the age of 50 with only middle school education, according to the UK intelligence update.

Russia's unprovoked invasion in late February quickly ground to a standstill as Russian forces were plagued with logistical issues and ran into fierce opposition from Ukrainian defenders.

After failing to take Kyiv, the Kremlin shifted its focus to Ukraine's east, where they've had some success in securing major Ukrainian cities like Mariupol, but have largely failed to push farther west.



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