Exclusive: Russian losses in Syria jump
in 2017, Reuters estimates show
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[August 02, 2017]
By Maria Tsvetkova
BELORECHENSK, Russia (Reuters) - Ten
Russian servicemen have been killed fighting in Syria so far this year,
according to statements from the Defence Ministry.
But based on accounts from families and friends of the dead and local
officials, Reuters estimates the actual death toll among Russian
soldiers and private contractors was at least 40.
That tally over seven months exceeds the 36 Russian armed personnel and
contractors estimated by Reuters to have been killed in Syria over the
previous 15 months, indicating a significant rise in the rate of
battlefield losses as the country's involvement deepens.
Most of the deaths reported by Reuters have been confirmed by more than
one person, including those who knew the deceased or local officials. In
nine cases, Reuters corroborated a death reported in local or social
media with another source.
(For a graphic on Russian casualties in Syria's conflict click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2hjq3Et)
The data may be on the conservative side, as commanders encourage the
families of those killed to keep quiet, relatives and friends of several
fallen soldiers, both servicemen and contractors, said on condition of
anonymity.
The true level of casualties in the Syrian conflict is a sensitive
subject in a country where positive coverage of the conflict features
prominently in the media and ahead of a presidential election next year
that incumbent Vladimir Putin is expected to win.
The scale of Russian military casualties in peace time has been a state
secret since Putin issued a decree three months before Russia launched
its operation in Syria. While Russia does not give total casualties, it
does disclose some deaths.
Discrepancies in data may be explained partly by the fact that Russia
does not openly acknowledge that private contractors fight alongside the
army; their presence in Syria would appear to flout a legal ban on
civilians fighting abroad as mercenaries.
Asked about Reuters' latest findings, the Defence Ministry did not
respond.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday that
Russians private citizens fighting alongside the Syrian army are
volunteers and the Russian Defence Ministry did not send them to Syria.
"If there are Russian citizens in Syria as volunteers and so on, they
have nothing to do with the state," Peskov said in response to a
question about the Reuters story on a daily conference call with media.
The government has previously denied understating casualty figures in
Syria, where Moscow entered the conflict nearly two years ago in support
of President Bashar al-Assad, one of its closest Middle East allies.
Months after soldiers die, Russia quietly acknowledges some losses,
including private military contractors. Their families get state
posthumous medals and local authorities sometimes name schools, which
fallen soldiers attended as children, after them.
Of the 40 killed, Reuters has evidence that 21 were private contractors
and 17 soldiers. The status of the remaining two people is unclear.
MISSION CREEP?
Little is known about the nature of operations in Syria involving
Russian nationals. Russia initially focused on providing air support to
Syrian forces, but the rate of casualties points to more ground
intervention.
The last time Russia lost airmen in Syria was in August, 2016, and it
suffered its first serious casualties on the ground this year in
January, when six private military contractors died in one day.
Reuters has previously reported gaps between its casualty estimates and
official figures, although the difference widened markedly this year.
Russian authorities disclosed that 23 servicemen were killed in Syria
over 15 months in 2015-2016, whereas Reuters calculated the death toll
at 36, a figure that included private contractors.
IN IT FOR THE MONEY?
One private contractor whose death in Syria was not officially
acknowledged was 40-year-old Alexander Promogaibo, from the southern
Russian town of Belorechensk. He died in Syria on April 25, his
childhood friend Artur Marobyan told Reuters.
Promogaibo had earlier fought in the Chechen war with an elite Russian
paratroops unit, according to Marobyan, who was his classmate at school.
He said his dead friend had struggled to get by while working as a guard
in his hometown and needed money to build a house to live with his wife
and small daughter.
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The grave of Russian special forces officer Maxim Sorochenko killed
in Syria in November 2015, is seen at a cemetery outside Moscow,
Russia, December 27, 2016. 2016. REUTERS/Maria Tsvetkova
Last year he decided to join private military contractors working
closely with the Russian Defence Ministry in Syria and was promised
a monthly wage of 360,000 roubles ($6,000), about nine times higher
than the average Russian salary.
According to multiple sources, Russian private military contractors
are secretly deployed in Syria under command of a man nicknamed
Wagner.
Private military companies officially don't exist in Russia. Reuters
was unable to get in touch with commanders of Russian private
contractors in Syria through people who know them.
"I told him it was dangerous and he wouldn't be paid the money for
doing nothing, but couldn't convince him," Marobyan said, recalling
one of his last conversations with Promogaibo.
According to Marobyan, he got the job offer at a military facility
belonging to Russia's military intelligence agency (GRU) near the
village of Molkino. The agency is a part of the Defence Ministry and
does not have its own spokesperson.
The Kremlin did not reply to requests for comment.
Promogaibo went there for physical fitness tests and failed twice.
He was accepted only after showing up for the third time having
losing 55 kg after seven months of training.
"He left (Russia) in February," said Marobyan, who only learnt that
his friend had been killed in Syria when his body was delivered to
his hometown in early May.
One more person who knew Promogaibo said he died in Syria.
Reuters was unable to find out where in Syria Promogaibo was killed.
Igor Strelkov, former leader of pro-Russian rebels in eastern
Ukraine who stayed in touch with Russian volunteers who switched to
battlefields in Syria, said in late May that military contractors
from Russia recently fought near the Syrian town of Homs alongside
Iranian-backed Hezbollah.
GRAVESTONES COVERED UP
Fifty-one-year-old Russian Gennady Perfilyev, a lieutenant colonel,
was deployed in Syria as a military adviser. He was killed in
shelling during a reconnaissance trip on April 8, his former
classmates at Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School said.
"Several grammes of metal hit his heart," Pavel Bykov, one of his
classmates, told Reuters.
One more classmate confirmed to Reuters Perfilyev was killed in
Syria on a reconnaissance trip.
His name has not appeared in the Defence Ministry's official notices
of military deaths in Syria.
He was buried at a new heavily guarded military cemetery outside
Moscow where visitors have to show their passports and are asked at
the entrance whose grave they want to visit.
On Perfilyev's gravestone, his name and the date of his death are
covered by his portrait.
Several other servicemen killed in Syria and buried nearby also have
photos obscuring their names and the dates of their death, which if
visible would make it easier to trace how and where they died.
Names on other graves, of non-Syrian casualties, were visible.
Asked if this was a special secrecy measure, a cemetery official,
Andrei Sosnovsky, said the names were covered up temporarily until
proper monuments could be built.
($1 = 59.8930 roubles)
(Additional reporting by Denis Pinchuk in Moscow, Natalya Shurmina
in Yekaterinburg, Russia; Editing by Andrew Osborn and Mike
Collett-White)
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